| Major general | |
|---|---|
British Army and Royal Marines insignia | |
| Country | |
| Service branch | |
| Abbreviation | Maj Gen |
| Rank group | General officer |
| Rank | Two-star rank |
| NATOrank code | OF-7 |
| Next higher rank | Lieutenant general |
| Next lower rank | Brigadier |
| Equivalent ranks | Rear admiral (Royal Navy) Air vice-marshal (Royal Air Force) |
Major general (Maj Gen) is a"two-star" rank in theBritish Army[1] andRoyal Marines. The rank was also briefly used by theRoyal Air Force for a year and a half, from its creation in April 1918 until August 1919. In the British Army, a major general is the customary rank for the appointment ofdivision commander. In the Royal Marines, theCommandant General holds at least the rank of major general.
A major general is senior to abrigadier but subordinate to alieutenant general. The rank is OF-7 on theNATO rank scale, equivalent to arear admiral in theRoyal Navy or anair vice-marshal in theRoyal Air Force and the air forces of manyCommonwealth countries.
The rank insignia is the star (or 'pip') of theOrder of the Bath, over a crossed sword and baton.
In terms of orthography, compound ranks were invariably hyphenated prior to about 1980. Nowadays the rank is almost equally invariably non-hyphenated.[a] When written as a title, especially before a person's name, both words of the rank are always capitalised, whether using the "traditional" hyphenated style or the modern un-hyphenated style. When used as common nouns, they might be written in lower-case: "Major General Montgomery was one of several major generals to be promoted at this time."
In the British Army, adivision is commanded by a major general. However, other appointments may also be held by major generals. For example, theCommandant of the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst is a major general.
Until around the 1980s, the heads of each branch of service, such as theRoyal Armoured Corps, theRoyal Artillery and theCorps of Infantry, were major generals. Other, administrative, commands were also appointments for a major general. In addition, the senior officer of theRoyal Army Chaplains' Department, theChaplain-General, is accorded "the relative precedence" – the respect, courtesies and insignia, rather than the full powers and authority – of the rank of major general.
The office ofCommandant General Royal Marines (CGRM), the professional head of the Royal Marines, was created at the rank of full general in 1943. In 1977, the rank was downgraded to lieutenant general, and it was further reduced to major general in 1996.[2] On 30 April 2021,Lieutenant General Robert Magowan assumed the office of CGRM;[3] he was succeeded on 25 November 2022 byGwyn Jenkins, who already held the rank of fullgeneral from his appointment asVice-Chief of the Defence Staff.[4][5][6]
Royal Marines in tri-service roles may still hold the rank of major general: in April 2019, James Morris was appointed as commander of theStanding Joint Force, with the rank of major general.[7]
As in the British Army, a Royal Marines major general ranks below a lieutenant general and above a brigadier.
From its foundation on 1 April 1918 to 31 July 1919, theRoyal Air Force (RAF) briefly used the rank of major-general. The service was a wartime amalgamation of the Army'sRoyal Flying Corps and the Navy'sRoyal Naval Air Service, so the ranks were a compromise between these two traditions. The insignia of the rank was derived from that of a Royal Navy rear-admiral and featured a broad gold stripe on the cuff below one narrow gold stripe. The two stripes were surmounted by an eagle (volant and affronty) under a King's crown. The RAF replaced the rank of major-general with the rank of air vice-marshal on 1 August 1919.
Despite the short duration, the significance of the RAF to modern warfare was indicated by the number of senior officers who did hold the rank of major-general in the RAF: