Private (E-1)
Private (PVT), the lowest Army rank, is
normally only held by new recruits while at Basic Combat Training (BCT), but
the rank is occasionally assigned to soldiers after a disciplinary action has
been taken. The Army Private (E-1) wears no uniform insignia.
Private 2nd Class (E-2)
Private 2nd Class (PV2) is the first
promotion most enlisted Soldiers can earn after completing basic combat
training (BCT). The Private’s job is be to apply the new skills and knowledge
learned during basic training and to continue to learn how to follow orders
given by higher-ranked supervisors.
Private First Class (E-3)
Private First Classes (PFC) are the basic
workforce strength and rank of the U.S. Army. PFC is the point in which junior
enlisted soldiers begin the transition from apprentice to journeyman by
developing technical and leadership skills.
Army Specialist (E-4)
Specialist (SPC) is considered one of the
junior enlisted ranks in the U.S. Army. Ranked above Private First Class (E-3)
and holding the same pay grade as the Corporal, the Specialist is not
considered an NCO.
The Specialist’s job is focused on
technical expertise and they normally have less personnel leadership
responsibilities than Corporals. they are often promoted to the E-4 pay grade
due to enlisting. Those enlisting with a four year college degree or who have
certain specialized civilian skills or training can enter BCT as a Specialist.
Army Non-Commissioned Officers (E-4 to E-6)
Like nearly all the other branches of the
Armed Forces, the United States Army consider all ranks E-4 and above to be
NCOs. Corporals (E-4) are referred to as junior NCOs, however, they are given
the same respect as any other NCO.
Corporal (E-4)
The rank of corporal was established in
1775 with the birth of the Army and the NCO Corps. Along with the rank of
sergeant, the corporal is the only rank which has never disappeared from the
NCO Corps.
The rank of corporal has always been placed
at the base of the NCO ranks. For the most part, corporals have served as the smallest
unit leaders in the Army: principally, leaders of teams.
Like the grade of sergeant, corporals are
responsible for individual training, personal appearance and cleanliness of
their soldiers.
As the command sergeant major is known as
the epitome of success in the NCO Corps, the corporal is the beginning of the
NCO Corps. As the NCO Corps is known as the backbone of the Army, the corporal
is the backbone of the NCO Corps.
Information Courtesy of the U.S. Army
Moving up the Army ranks: Normally, unit commanders
may advance PFCs to Corporal once they
have met the following qualifications:
Twenty-six months in service
Six months' time in grade, waiverable to
three months
Security clearance appropriate for the MOS
in which promoted; advancement may be based on granting an interim security
clearance.
Like the junior enlisted ranks commanders
may advance soldiers on an accelerated basis.
Sergeant (E-5)
Sergeants (SGT) operate in an environment
where the sparks fly - where the axe meets the stone. Although not the lowest
level of rank where command is exercised, this level is the first at which
enlisted soldiers are referred to as sergeant, and of all the grades of the
NCO, this one, very possibly, has the greatest impact on the lower ranking
soldiers. Privates, who are the basic manpower strength and grade of the Army,
generally have sergeants as their first NCO leader. It is the grade sergeant
that the privates will look to for example.
Like the next grade, the staff sergeant,
the sergeant is responsible for the individual training, personal appearance
and the cleanliness of their soldiers.
The sergeant is also responsible for
insuring that
Each member of their unit is trained to
competency in their MOS as prescribed in the appropriate soldiers manual.
All government property issued to members
of their unit is properly maintained and accounted for at all times and
discrepancies are promptly reported.
While on duty status, they be ready at all
times to report to the location and activity of all members of their unit.
Their unit is trained to function in its
primary mission role.
The authority of the sergeant is equal to
that of any other grade or rank of the NCO.Professionally competent leaders
inherently command respect for their authority and the sergeant must be
unquestionably competent in order to carry out the mission correctly,
accomplish each task and care for assigned soldiers.
The rank of sergeant is not a position for
learning how to become a leader, no apprenticeship here. While certainly the
new sergeant will be developing new skills, strengthening old ones and
generally getting better, he is a sergeant!!! and is therefore, no less a
professional than those grades of rank to follow.
Moving up the Army ranks: Unlike the
promotion processes for Privates, Specialists, and Corporals, promotions to
Sergeant (SGT) and Staff Sergeant (SSG) is based on an Army-wide competition.
The competition is based on a point system which grants points for firing range
scores, performance evaluations, physical fitness, education level, awards and
promotion board ranking.
Corporals and Specialists must meet the
following basic eligibility criteria to compete:
Command Recommendation
36 Months Time-in-service
Eight Months Time-in-grade
Must graduate the Primary Leadership
Development Course (PLDC)
Possess a High School Diploma, GED
Equivalency, or College degree.
Staff Sergeant (E-6)
The Staff Sergeant rank closely parallels
that of the sergeant in duties and responsibilities. In fact, the basic duties
and responsibility of all the NCO ranks never change, but there are significant
differences between this step in the NCO structure and the preceding one.
The major difference between the staff
sergeant and the sergeant is not, as often mistakenly believed, authority, but
rather sphere of influence. The staff sergeant is in daily contact with large
numbers of soldiers and generally has more equipment and other property to
maintain.
The SSG often has one or more sergeants who
work under their direct leadership. The SSG is responsible for the continued
successful development of sergeants as well as the soldiers in their section,
squad or team.
Moving up the Army ranks: SSG candidates
must meet the following basic eligibility criteria to compete:
Command Recommendation
84 Months Time-in-service
10 Months Time-in-grade
Must graduate the Primary Leadership
Development Course (PLDC)
Possess a High School Diploma, GED
Equivalency, or College degree.
Army Senior Non-Commissioned Officers (E-7
to E-9)
Although the Army does not make the official
distinction in the rank structure, enlisted ranks of Sergeant First Class and
above (E-7 – E-9) are generally referred to as Senior NCOs and they carry
increasing levels of responsibility and demand greater levels of respect and
deference.
Although there are only three pay grades,
the SNCO ranks actually cover six separate ranks or designations – Sergeant
First Class (Platoon Sergeant), Master Sergeant, First Sergeant, Sergeant
Major, Command Sergeant Major, and the Sergeant Major of the Army.
Unlike the promotion processes for Private
through Staff Sergeant, unit commander have little to do with the promotion
process to the SNCO ranks. These promotions are completely centralized at the
Head Quarters of the Department of the Army (HQDA).
There is no minimum time-in-grade (TIG)
requirement for promotion to the Army SNCO ranks, but candidates must meet the
following minimum time-in-service (TIS) requirements to be eligible for
promotion:
Sergeant First Class (E-7) - 6 years.
Master Sergeant/First Sergeant (E-8) - 8
years.
Sergeant Major (E-9) - 9 years.
Sergeant First Class (Platoon Sergeant)
(E-7)
The SFC is the first level at which the
term senior NCO properly applies. The platoon sergeant or sergeant first class
generally has 15 to 18 years or more of military experience and is rightfully
expected to bring that experience to bear in quick, accurate decisions that are
in the best interest of the mission and the soldier.
Depending on experience and billet
assignments, the SFC's role may be that of platoon sergeant or NCOIC (NCO in
Charge) of the section.
'Platoon Sergeant' is a duty position, not
a rank, the platoon sergeant is the primary assistant and advisor to the
platoon leader, with the responsibility of training and caring for soldiers.
The platoon sergeant takes charge of the platoon in the absence of the platoon
leader. Platoon sergeants teach collective and individual tasks to soldiers in
their squads, crews or equivalent small units.
The position title of platoon sergeant is
considered key in the command structure of the Army. The platoon sergeant
generally has several staff sergeants who work under his direct leadership.
During the Vietnam era, the platoon
sergeant was affectionately referred to as the “Plat-Daddy”, and although the
term has since faded, the role remains that of the “Father of the Platoon.”
Information Courtesy of U.S. Army
Master Sergeant and First Sergeant (E-8)
The Master Sergeant’s Roles and
Responsibilities - The Master Sergeant is the principal NCO at the battalion
level, and often higher. Not charged with all the leadership responsibilities
of a First Sergeant, but expected to dispatch leadership and other duties with
the same professionalism.
The Sergeant First Class's Roles and
Responsibilities - When you are talking about the first sergeant you are
talking about the life-blood of the Army. When 1SGs are exceptional, their
units are exceptional, regardless of any other single personality involved.
Perhaps their rank insignia should be the keystone rather than the traditional
one depicted here. It is the first sergeant at whom almost all unit operations
merge. The first sergeant holds formations, instructs platoon sergeants,
advises the Commander, and assists in training of all enlisted members.
The 1SG may swagger and appear, at times,
somewhat of an exhibitionist, but he is not egotistical. The first sergeant is
proud of the unit and, understandably, wants others to be aware of his unit’s
success.
The title of address for this grade is not
sergeant, but first sergeant! There is a unique relationship of confidence and
respect that exists between the first sergeant and the Commander not found at
another level within the Army.
In the German Army, the first sergeant is
referred to as the “Mother of the Company." The first sergeant is the provider, the
disciplinarian, the wise counselor, the tough and unbending foe, the confidant,
the sounding board, everything that we need in a leader during our personal
success or failure. The Mother of the Company...
Information Courtesy of U.S. Army
Sergeant Major and Command Sergeant Major
(E-9)
The Sergeant Major's Roles and
responsibilities - The SGM is the key enlisted member of staff elements at
levels higher than battalion. The sergeant major’s experience and ability are
equal to that of the command sergeant major, but the sphere of influence
regarding leadership is generally limited to those directly under his charge.
The Command Sergeant Major's Roles and
Responsibilities - Enlisted soldiers who attain the distinction of being
selected by the Department of the Army for participation in the command
sergeants major program are the epitome of success in their chosen field, in
this profession of arms. There is no higher grade of rank, except Sergeant
Major of the Army, for enlisted soldiers and there is no greater honor.
The command sergeant major carries out
policies and standards of the performance, training, appearance, and conduct of
enlisted personnel. The command sergeant major advises and initiates
recommendations to the commander and staff in matters pertaining to the local
NCO support channel.
Perhaps slightly wiser and more experienced
than the first sergeant, the CSM is expected to function completely without
supervision. Like the old sage of times past, the command sergeant major’s
counsel is expected to be calm, settled and unequivocally accurate, but with an
energy and enthusiasm that never wanes, even in the worst of times.
Assignable to any billet in the Army, the
CSM is all those things, and more, of each of the preceding grades of rank.
Information Courtesy of U.S. Army
The Sergeant Major of the Army (E-9S)
The Sergeant Major of the Army (SMA) is a
rank held by only one enlisted Soldier at a time. The holder of this rank is
the most senior enlisted member in the Army. The SMA’s primary function is to
address the issues of enlisted soldiers at the Army's highest levels. The SMA
is the senior enlisted advisor to the Army Chief of Staff and is selected based
on his (or her) outstanding leadership, extensive experience, and ability to
communicate both up and down the Army chain of command. The SMA is giving the
highest level of honor and respect of any other enlisted Soldier.
Each SMA’s duties are determined by the
current Chief of Staff. However, as a rule the SMA serves as the Army
hierarchy’s eyes and ears keeping the Chief of Staff abreast on virtually any
subject that affects enlisted Soldiers and their families.
E-1 Private, E-2 Private, E-3 Private First
Class, E-4 Corporal/Specialist, E-5 Sergeant, E-6 Staff Sergeant, E-7 Sergeant
First Class, E-8 Master Sergeant/First Sergeant, E-9 Sergeant Major
Air Force: E-1 Airman Basic, E-2 Airman,
E-3 Airman First Class, E-4 Senior Airman, E-5 Staff Sergeant, E-6 Technical
Sergeant, E-7 Master Sergeant, E-8 Senior Master Sergeant E-9 Chief Master
Sergeant (Note: Air Force First Sergeants can be in the pay grades of E-7, E-8,
or E-9)
Navy/Coast Guard: E-1 Seaman Recruit, E-2
Seaman Apprentice, E-3 Seaman, E-4 Petty Officer Third Class, E-5 Petty Officer
Second Class, E-6 Petty Officer First Class, E-7 Chief Petty Officer, E-8
Senior Chief Petty Officer, E-9 Master Chief Petty Officer
Marine Corps: E-1 Private, E-2 Private
First Class, E-3 Lance Corporal, E-4 Corporal, E-5 Sergeant, E-6 Staff
Sergeant, E-7 Gunnery Sergeant, E-8 Master Sergeant/First Sergeant, E-9 Master
Gunnery Sergeant/Sergeant Major
Warrant Officers (all branches except the
Air Force):
W-1 Warrant Officer, W-2 Chief Warrant
Officer Two, W-3 Chief Warrant Officer Three, W-4 Chief Warrant Officer Four, W-5
Master Chief Warrant Officer Five
Commissioned Officers:
Army/Air Force/Marine Corps: O-1 Second
Lieutenant, O-2 First Lieutenant, O-3 Captain, O-4 Major, O-5 Lieutenant
Colonel, O-6 Colonel, O-7 Brigadier General, O-8 Major General, O-9 Lieutenant
General, O-10 General
Navy/Coast Guard: O-1 Ensign, O-2
Lieutenant (Junior Grade), O-3 Lieutenant, O-4 Lieutenant Commander, O-5
Commander, O-6 Captain, O-7 Rear Admiral (lower half), O-8 Rear Admiral (Upper
half), O-9 Vice Admiral, O-10 Admiral
"You are in command now … Admiral
Piett."
―Darth Vader promoting Captain Piett[src]
The Rank insignia of the Galactic Empire,
or Imperial Rank Plaques, were a system of badges used to indicate and
distinguish officer rank within the forces of the Galactic Empire. The system
was primary an adaption and further development of the rank insignia of the
Galactic Republic. It was not restricted to the imperial military during the
time of the New Order. Also political organization such as, COMPNOR, made use
of this system.
A rank plaque consists of a rectangular
metal chrome plate fitted with raised colored squares. It was designed to be
worn on the top left torso region of Imperial service uniforms, dress uniforms
and even on battle armor. If an officer’s function demanded code cylinders
(containing encrypted data and high level access codes), they were worn on
either side of the rank plaque. As code cylinders indicated importance, they
were frequently referred to as “rank cylinders”. The colored squares of rank
plaques were typically red, blue or yellow, and arranged in single or double
rows. Very low ranking officers, like Imperial Academy cadets, were commonly
fitted with only a single colored square, while top ranking officers, like
grand moffs, displayed up to 12 squares. Because of the colorful display,
fellow servicemen could easily recognize rank from a distance.
There were many similarities among the rank
plaque designs of the Imperial Navy, the Imperial Army, and the Imperial
Stormtrooper Corps. For instance, all three military branches had lieutenants
displaying their rank with two red squares placed on top of two blue squares.
But there were also many sub-branches, specialized units and divisions within
the imperial military. Manny of these deviated from the mainstream double
rowed, red and blue rank insignia. The majority of the alternate rank displays
were arranged in single rows. It was not uncommon to see Imperial Navy, Army
and Stormtrooper officers wearing single rowed rank plaques. Also the ISB
officers of COMPNOR made use of single rowed rank plaques.
Contents [show]
Examples of Imperial Rank InsigniaEdit
Double Rowed Insignia Single Rowed Insignia Single Rowed Insignia
Grand Admiral Thrawn
General Tagge
Major Rahz
Grand Moff Tarkin
Admiral Motti
An Imperial recruiter
Moff Tarkin
Commander Praji
Lieutenant Treidum
Fleet Admiral Ozzel
An officer on Kashyyyk
An officer on SSD Executor
General Mohc
Chief manager Bast
An officer on Svivren
Major General Veers
Captain Khurgee
Gantry officer aid
Captain Needa
A Death Star officer
An Imperial cargo ship bridge officer
Stormtrooper Lieutenant
ISB Colonel Yularen
First Mate Darklighter
An Imperial officer in a News Feed
An ISB Agent
Imperial Academy Cadet Darklighter
HistoryEdit
Over a hundred years after the death of
Emperor Palpatine, under the Fel Empire and later during the Darth Krayt
Galactic Empire and the Empire-in-exile, rank plaques of similar design were
still in use. At this time the Imperial forces wore the insignia on the top
center torso region and alternately on the collar of uniform.
Behind the scenesEdit
In the Star Wars movies, the seniority of
Imperial officers is generally indicated by increasing numbers of rank squares
and code cylinders, but there is no easy way to extrapolate a simple hierarchy
of ranks and insignia, and no direct evidence that George Lucas or the movie
costume designers and production crew ever created a strict system. Only
between The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi are there many points of
contact in terms of the specific insignia used, but even here, there are
distinct incongruities.
It is important to note that a spoken title
may not be synonymous with an officer's actual rank. For example in a time of war
it is common for officers to be promoted and/or transferred often. Thus a
commander may be referred to as captain if he were acting as captain in a
"graded" captain's absence, even though the title confers no inherent
promotion of that commander. Additionally when two or more officers aboard a
naval vessel would have the grade of captain, "graded" captains not
serving as commanding officer may at times assume the title of
"commander" out of respect to the adage that a ship may have only one
"captain". Also, a commanding officer may assume the senior title of
"commander" as a sign of command, particularly in situations where
the commanding officer would command a formation of more than one vessel, or be
in command of several ground units. This would also be true on a large project,
such as the Death Star, where titles may not synchronize with actual ranks and
rank badges to reduce confusion along the chain of command.
The Expanded UniverseEdit
The rank system used in Expanded Universe
material is, in contrast to the films, largely consistent and systematic. While
there are a few inconsistencies, a basic hierarchy of ranks and insignia, which
first appeared in West End Games sourcebooks for the D6 role-playing game in
the late 1980s, has recurred in novels, comics and computer games down to the
present day. This system is generally assumed to have originated with the RPG,
although it is possible that it may have been based on production notes or
costume-design sketches from the films. WEG certainly had access to large
amounts of such official material.
Of course, not every aspect of the canon
WEG rank system is clear. It is impossible for this simple system to provide an
exact match with all the variety of movie badges. In addition, the relationship
between Navy and Army ranks and insignia is vague and ambiguous. The bulk of
confusion among fans has stemmed from the fact that the rank hierarchy
associated with this system inconsistent with the real-world Anglo-American
(UK/US) standard. The appearance of Commander ranking between Captain and Major
is often remarked on. Nevertheless, the naval rank system of the Rebel
Alliance, as well as real-world Scandinavian[1][2][3][4] and other
European[5][6] navies, also places commanders above captains.
The English word commander as well as the
word commodore has its origins in the French word commander/commandeur ,
meaning to command[7][8]. Historically, the title Commander has generally been
used to describe officers in command of military formations or operations. Many
European countries adopted several French words and military norms during the
18th century and all the way up to the Napoleonic Wars. The “Commander” title
found its way into formal rank designations of several Armies and Navies. With
this in mind, Star Wars ranks may have been conceived out of ranking systems of
non-Anglo-American origin.
Fanon insignia systemsEdit
Over time, a number of alternative fanon
insignia systems have appeared on the internet. These speculative systems
rarely conform to the canon tabulations, and do not always accommodate the full
range of specific examples shown in canon material–although in fairness, their
creators may not know all the relevant official sources.
Probably the most notable of the various
fan-constructed systems is that on the influential Star Wars Technical
Commentaries website. This offers detailed discussions of ranks and insignia,
but although hypotheses from these websites have found their way into the
general fan consciousness, they have no canon status, and involve a number of
important assumptions incompatible with EU material.
The RotJ "rank blooper"Edit
Lastly, mention should be made of the
supposed rank badge blooper in Return of the Jedi. It is often said in fan
discussions that a wardrobe mistake resulted in the actors playing Imperial
officers being given costumes with the wrong insignia, but there appears to be
no official source that confirms this.
What is clear is that Kenneth Colley is
once again wearing the insignia which he wore when his character was a Captain,
while Michael Pennington as Moff Jerjerrod shares his badge and cylinder
combination with a (presumably rather more junior) officer in the Endor
garrison. But it is unclear whether the inconsistency here is really a
"blooper," or just another change in the usage of insignia, like the
wholesale discontinuity between the first two movies.
For a blooper to exist would also imply
that the production crew were working with an idea of what rank insignia were
appropriate to certain positions–but what can be said for sure is that much
remains uncertain or ambiguous about the processes that have given rise to the
complex system of rank insignia used in canon material.
Study of Imperial rank insigniaEdit
The first thing that must be noted in any
study of Imperial rank insignia is the lack of any clear overall survey of the
system. There are several partial tables, and numerous specific examples, but
no guide to how to bind them all together.
The second observation that must be made is
that, while the basic visual vocabulary of rank badges remained broadly
consistent throughout the Empire's history, the specific insignia in use did
not always remain constant. The insignia of a typical Lieutenant serving as a
crew-pit supervisor on the bridge of a Star Destroyer just after the
Declaration of a New Order in 19 BBY were markedly different from the
rank-badges of an officer of the same rank serving in the same role on a Star
Destroyer during the Battle of Hoth in 3 ABY.
In any discussion of the evidence for rank
insignia, it ought also to be borne in mind that it is not strictly necessary
for the badges to follow any fully mathematical or logical pattern, or for
officers of corresponding ranks in different arms of the military to bear the
same badges. This is not to say that elements of logic and cross-service
synchronization never existed; but the most basic requirement is merely that
particular insignia are sufficiently distinct for personnel to recognize them
rapidly as indicating the particular status of the wearer. Simplicity or
synchronization cannot be used as justifications to override primary evidence
when that evidence does not fit a theory.
Lastly, there are specific questions
concerning the quality of source material, which will be discussed as they are
encountered in the course of this analysis.
IntroductionEdit
Standard Imperial rank insignia consisted
of one or more horizontal rows of colored rank squares carried on a metal
plaque on the left breast of the tunic, normally combined with pen-like metal
code cylinders worn in narrow pockets at either shoulder. Rank distinctions
were indicated by variation in the number, color, and arrangement of squares
and the number, style and arrangement of cylinders. Epaulets were also
occasionally worn, although with the exception of Grand Admirals, these were
almost exclusively confined to dress uniform and rare formal occasions.
Moff Tarkin
The uniforms and insignia of the Imperial
military evolved directly from those worn by the forces of the Old Republic
during the Clone Wars. During the conflict, gray/green uniforms superseded the
blue ones that had been widely worn by Judicial Department personnel in
previous decades, and where previously rank insignia had been worn only rarely,
a system of rank badges now became widespread, still poorly documented, but
clearly the precursor of that used under the Empire.
Three Moffs, wearing the insignia of their
rank as established in the earliest days of the New Order
There is no explicit evidence either way to
say whether any specific revision of rank insignia accompanied the
transformation of the Republic into the Empire at the end of the conflict; but
in first weeks of the New Order, we have evidence for officers at all levels of
the hierarchy, beginning with the newly-appointed military proconsuls, the
Moffs.
Moff Wilhuff Tarkin of Seswenna sector had
a rank badge with five blue squares above three red and two gold, with two code
cylinders in either shoulder pocket; the metal backing plate of his rank badge
had raised rectangular bosses separating the individual colored squares, a
detail which was probably standard at this time. Marcellin Wessel, another
member of the first group of regional governors, also had a rank badge with two
rows of five squares, again with blue in the top row, and a combination of red
and gold below; but he wore one red and four gold tabs in place of Tarkin's
three and two, and it is not clear how many code cylinders he carried.
It is likely that the difference between
Tarkin and Wessel's insignia indicates a slight variation in rank, but it is
unclear precisely what that distinction was. Also, it must be added that Tarkin
wore a different insignia when he assumed command of the Death Star project,
very soon afterward: a badge six squares wide, worn with four rank cylinders.
Unfortunately, lighting glare on available images makes it difficult to
identify the colors of his pips, but it is not impossible that this was already
the same insignia that he would later wear as Grand Moff, with blue squares
over three red and three gold.
The next group in the hierarchy for whom we
have evidence at this stage are the commanding officers of capital ships. When
the Captains in the Imperial Navy were summoned to a personal briefing from
Palpatine and Darth Vader, they wore a rank plaques with three red squares over
three blue, with a single code cylinder in the left-hand shoulder pocket—and
while some exceptions are known, this would remain the most common sort of
Captain's insignia for decades to come. It is still possible that this
combination of badge and code-cylinder had already been established as the
standard insignia of a ship's captain during the last years of the Old
Republic, but this precise insignia is not recorded in any surviving images or
descriptions dating from the Clone Wars.
A Lieutenant in the first days of the New
Order.
Finally, the earliest days of the Empire
offer the first clear evidence for the badges of rank worn by junior officers.
Under the Old Republic, lower-ranking officers aboard Judicial vessels had
generally worn no rank insignia at all, and surviving representations of Navy
subalterns in the Clone Wars are essentially nonexistent, but immediately after
the establishment of the New Order, visual records preserve the insignia of a
Navy Lieutenant serving as a controller in one of the crew pits of a Star Destroyer:
four blue squares, worn with no code cylinders, but placed between rectangular
raised bosses in the metal of the plaque in the same manner as on Moff Tarkin's
badge.
From this evidence, it is clear that from
the earliest years of the Imperial regime, a variety of rank insignia were used
across the spectrum of the Imperial military, worn by junior officers,
commanders, and senior officials alike—in sharp contrast to the lack of
insignia on the uniforms of most Judicial personnel under the Old Republic. Some
of these insignia would remain in use throughout the history of the New Order,
although certain elements would soon disappear, such as the metal bosses on the
rank plaque. In the present state of knowledge, however, we can do little more
than to note specific examples of insignia associated with specific ranks at
this date: it is not possible to present a more wide-ranging survey of Imperial
rank insignia until the last years of the Empire, and it is to that timeframe
that this discussion must now turn.
Tabulation in the Imperial SourcebookEdit
It is generally agreed that the most
reliable and accurate body of evidence for events in the Imperial period
consists of surviving visual footage, and priority will accordingly be given to
that material here; but while this offers useful examples of rank insignia, it
contains no explicit guide to the overall structure of the system, and it is
not by any means clear that one system is being consistently used in all the
footage.
A tabulation of Imperial rank insignia
exists in the Imperial Sourcebook, a guide released by the Alliance in the
years between the Battles of Yavin and Hoth. The rank badges shown there are
described as "interim insignias until the reorganization prompted by the
Battle of Yavin is concluded", and they are outlined in the table below.
Rank Insignia
Priority Sector
High Commander
Admiral
General
Colonel
Major
Commander
Captain
Lieutenant
The first thing to note about this system
is that higher grades are indicated not simply by an increase in the number of
code cylinders and rank squares, but also by an increase in the size of the
rank plaque, with three distinct widths being used for junior officers, field
officers, and command officers. As a result, the only distinction between the badges
of a Major and a General is the width of the metal backing behind their rank
pips; both ranks bear four red squares above four blue, with a single cylinder
in the left-hand pocket, but the General's insignia are spaced wider on a
broader plaque.
Even if we take this element of the system
into account, other features of the table still require explanation: the
examples given includes an odd miscellany of Army and Navy ranks, while the
insignia for Captain, shown as the second lowest on the list, is the same as
that worn by the officers who commanded the Empire's mightiest Star Destroyers.
A partial answer to these problems seems to
be that a Lieutenant, Captain and Commander were indicated by the same rank
badges in the Imperial Army and the Imperial Navy, in spite of the difference
in grade and responsibilities that these titles indicated in differing arms of
the military. A Captain in the Army led a company, a Captain in the Navy
commanded a capital ship, but multiple specific examples show both of them
wearing three red pips over three blue, with a single code-cylinder on the
left. We might expect the same to hold true for officers in Starfighter
Command, where a Captain was the leader of a starfighter squadron, but the
evidence here is less clear, and will be discussed more fully below.
Nevertheless, the tabulation in the
Imperial Sourcebook can be seen as a unified expression of rank insignia across
the two main arms of the Imperial military: in the Army, the hierarchy above
Commander continued through Major, Colonel and General, while in the Navy,
Commanders advanced to Admiral. All the individual insignia are attested
adequately in other sources, and while they by no means represent the totality
of all known Imperial insignia, the fact that these specific insignia could be
worn by officers of the relevant ranks as identified here is not in doubt: it
is known that the Captain's insignia had already been in use in the earliest
days of the New Order, and in spite of the caution expressed in The Imperial
Sourcebook that this system might simply be "interim", most or all of
the insignia shown here remained in use for many years.
Nevertheless, a number of insignia are
known that are not part of this pattern. Many of these, especially in the years
after 0 BBY, can be interpreted as nothing more than subtle extensions to the
basic system outlined above, and will be discussed in depth below; but a
radically different system was in use in the events surrounding the Battle of
Yavin itself, and it is to this system that we must now turn.
Insignia and ranks at the time of the
Battle of YavinEdit
Around 0 BBY, a body of visual footage
recorded during the brief operational career of the first Death Star depicts a
number of officers ranging across the rank hierarchy. These men's insignia are
notable firstly for being on the whole different from those observed in the New
Order's later years, and secondly, for lacking any explicit schematization such
as that outlined above. The situation is further complicated by the second-tier
evidence of the Rebel training guide known as the Death Star Technical
Companion. While the nature of the material means that conclusions cannot
always be stated with confidence, this section will outline the evidence as it
currently stands.
Line OfficersEdit
Officer Insignia
Grand Moff Tarkin
General Tagge
General Bast
Admiral Motti
Officer Cass
Captain Khurgee
Grand Moff Wilhuff Tarkin, the Governor of
the Outland Regions, wore a rank plaque with a row of six blue tabs over three
red and three gold, with two cylinders in either shoulder pocket. The plaque
corresponds exactly to the insignia that the post-Yavin tabulation (discussed
above) assigned to a Priority Sector High Commander–a title that probably
denotes a Grand Moff in his military capacity as High Admiral and/or Surface
Marshal of his Oversector; the four code cylinders may indicate high rank even
within the hierarchy of Grand Moffs.
It can also be noted that Tarkin's insignia
was differentiated from the badge which he had worn as a Moff two decades
earlier by the addition of an extra square at the outer end of each row on his
rank plaque: thus, the insignia of a Grand Moff was almost certainly based on
an earlier badge for a Moff, but while it might be presumed that an ordinary
Moff's insignia may still have retained its former appearance at this date,
this is not known for certain.
One additional uniform detail
distinguishing Tarkin from his subordinates was the absence of metal
cartridge-boxes from his belt: these were worn by all the remaining senior
personnel aboard the battle station, with the sole exception of Imperial
Security Bureau representative Colonel Wullf Yularen.
Admiral Conan Antonio Motti and General
Cassio Tagge, the senior Navy and Army officers aboard the Death Star, wore
similar insignia, with six squares in a single row, and a distinctive
code-cylinder arrangement. In their left-hand pockets, both men carried a pair
of code cylinders of an unusual design with ribbed tops, and on the right, a
single cylinder of the standard design. The only distinction in their insignia
was the color of the squares on their plaques: Motti, the junior of the two,
wore two blue and four red squares, while Tagge had a row of six red squares.
General Moradmin Bast, Tarkin's senior
adjutant, wore an insignia of four gold and two red pips, with a single code
cylinder at either shoulder; Bast was lower-ranking than Tagge, but
higher-ranking than Motti. Imperial Officer Cass, who reported the return of
the scout ships from Dantooine, wore the same insignia, but apparently with no
code cylinders at either shoulder. However, while they were probably senior
personnel within the hierarchy aboard the Death Star, it is not certain what
specific rank either of these men held.
Captain Khurgee, the hangar security
officer in charge of inspecting the captured Millennium Falcon, wore a row of
six gold squares, with a single rank insignia at either shoulder. It is
unclear, however, whether his rank of Captain was held in the Navy, Army or Starfighter
command hierarchy, and in the absence of clear evidence, it is impossible to
say for sure whether his insignia were appropriate for the commander of a
Company of soldiers, a Squadron of TIEs, or even a Star Destroyer. Six gold
pips are also worn by one of two unidentified officers present at the briefing
where Tarkin announced the dissolution of the Imperial Senate, though this time
worn without code cylinders.
It should be noted that the above seven men
are the only personnel shown in the Death Star footage as wearing what is
generally considered to have been standard dress for Imperial line officers,
namely lancer uniforms in green, khaki or field-gray. All wear six pips across
the width of their rank plaque. All except Tarkin have only a single tier of
rank squares on their badge, and cartridge boxes on their belt, while the
number and style of code cylinders varies considerably. Most appear to be
senior officers, and while it is eminently possible that other, more junior
officers clad in khaki, green or gray served aboard Death Star, the only other
personnel shown in these colors in extant footage wear single-breasted coatees
and long trousers, with uniform caps but no rank badges.
Extant footage from the Death Star does,
however, show a number of other officers wearing tunics of different colors
than the norm. The senior Intelligence personnel, Colonel Yularen and Officer
Evax wore white tunics, and will be discussed more fully below, while mention
should be made of two unidentified officers in bluish tunics. The first of
these is glimpsed briefly in the background of footage of the command briefing
mentioned above, apparently with a row of five red squares on his insignia, but
no rank cylinders. This man's breeches are concealed by the table in the extant
footage, and he is bare-headed, but a second officer in the same color of tunic
wears black breeches, and a black forage cap. This man's rank plaque carries
three red squares followed by three gold, again worn without code cylinders. It
is unknown what the rank or posting of these men was, although further scrutiny
of the footage may reveal further details or their uniforms, or perhaps
additional examples of similar dress.
Black-uniformed personnelEdit
Lastly, some mention must be made of the rank
insignia associated with the all-black uniforms which in 0 BBY were widely worn
by elite officers, including commissioned personnel in stormtrooper
detachments, starfighter units, and security details. In contrast to the other
officers discussed above, blue squares predominated on these men's rank
plaques, with two code cylinders being worn, one at either shoulder.
Rank Insignia
Commander
Lieutenant
The insignia of Commander Nahdonnis Praji,
apparently the most senior black-uniformed officer in the extent footage,
consisted of a plaque with four blue squares followed by two red ones. More
common than this was an insignia of four blue squares, worn by blackshirt
Lieutenants, such as Tanbris, Shann Childsen, and Pol Treidum, but some
officers with this insignia could evidently be styled ‘Commander’, such as
Daine Jir. This may have been an informal title accorded to a Lieutenant
holding some sort of low-level unit command, but alternatively, Daine Jir may
have held the rank of Commander in an Army-style system, while the
'Lieutenants' with the same insignia may be Navy officers: as mentioned above,
four blue pips had been the insignia of a Lieutenant serving as a deck officer
on a Star Destroyer in the earliest days of the Empire, though then worn
without code cylinders
Lieutenant Treidum's deputy in Docking Bay
327 seem to have worn an insignia with red squares, although this is only shown
briefly in motion-blurred footage, and it has not yet proved possible to verify
whether his rank-plaque had one or two tabs.
ConclusionsEdit
From the surviving footage alone, a number
of particular rank insignia can be associated with specific individuals in the
hierarchy of the Death Star, but in many cases, we do not have a specific rank
to associate with an insignia, and it is not possible to infer more than the
broad outline of the system from the evidence of the footage alone. It can be
noted that higher rank was, in general terms, indicated by increased numbers of
rank squares and code cylinders, but it is not clear what precise role was
played by the color of the squares, and there is no firm evidence as to whether
insignia were synchronized in any way across different arms of the military.
Four variations of code cylinder are
observed: none; one in either pocket; one normal one on the left and two of
unusual design on the right; and two of normal type in either pocket. The
relative hierarchy of the different combinations seems obvious, although it is
not clear whether these served as modifiers to the rank plaque, or indicated
command privileges in a way not directly connected to it.
It may be significant that, on the tunics
of line officers, gold and blue squares are never combined in a single line:
Khurgee wears gold, Cass and Bast wear gold followed by red, Tagge wears red
only, and Motti wears blue and red. Lastly, Governor Tarkin's insignia has in
its upper row a complete row of blue squares, below which occurs a second row
with its own combination of red and gold. However, it must be noted that any
putative system inferred from these observations cannot be extended to the
blackshirt insignia, as Commander Praji wears four blue tabs followed by two
gold.
To say more, further evidence would be
required, and for this, we must turn to the Death Star Technical Companion.
The Death Star Technical CompanionEdit
After the Battle of Yavin, Rebel Alliance
sources released a Death Star Technical Companion, consisting of Imperial
documents edited and added to by Alliance personnel. Amongst its contents, this
dossier contained a series of illustrations purporting to show officers of
various ranks aboard the battlestation.
Some of these images were recognizable
depictions of specific officers aboard the Death Star, and the combinations of
rank and insignia depicted form an implicit hierarchy; but these illustrations
are not without their problems. Firstly, they are black-and-white, so
rank-square colors are not shown; also, and more importantly, the insignia
shown do not correspond in every detail with surviving footage from the Death
Star. Some combinations can be shown to be at variance with the primary
material; others are simply not seen there at all.
Several other elements of the material in
this dossier are now regarded with wide skepticism as to their accuracy, so
these inconsistencies may simply be a matter of error. Nevertheless, it is
possible to reconcile the material with the primary footage, and absence of
evidence is not in itself evidence of absence. While these images must,
therefore, be treated with caution, it may be that the non-matching insignia
were indeed in use aboard the battlestation, and simply do not appear in the
limited quantity of surviving footage.
The following survey is presented as an
analysis of this evidence, with particular regard to the question of how it
might be reconciled with the primary footage. There is at present no certain
way to know whether any of this additional material is accurate or not: we can
merely note the nature of the evidence itself, and consider its potential for
harmonization with the information from in the footage, discussed above.
AnalysisEdit
The hierarchy of ranks shown here is
essentially the same as that in the Imperial Sourcebook, discussed above, but
the badges are for the most part different.
Rank Insignia
Grand Moff (Tarkin)
Admiral (Motti)
General (Tagge)
Colonel
Major
Commander
Captain
Lieutenant
At the top of the hierarchy, Grand Moff
Tarkin's insignia is correct within the limitations of the black-and-white
format, as is that given for Admiral Motti. In contrast with the primary
footage, however, General Tagge is shown here with just two standard code
cylinders, but this combination, which we would expect to denote a slightly
lower level of authority, may simply indicate his insignia at an earlier stage
in the project.
The illustrations would also imply that tab
color alone was sufficient to distinguish between a Colonel and a General, if
both ranks used a badge six tabs wide, with two normal code cylinders. This
also corresponds to Captain Khurgee's insignia, which would fit if he was a
naval Captain, equivalent in rank to a Colonel. True, Khurgee's badge is very
different than the standard badge of a naval Captain, attested throughout the
history of the New Order from 19 BBY until well after the Battle of Endor; but
the widespread prevalence of the classic Captain's badge does not mean that it
was worn by all Captains in the Navy, in all parts of the Empire at all times.
It may be significant that Khurgee, while a Captain by rank, was not serving as
the captain of a capital ship.
The rank insignia shown here for
lower-ranking personnel are more problematic, as nothing quite like them is
recorded in any other source. Since the ranks shown rise through Major to
Colonel, they would seem to represent Army-style insignia, but unlike the
insignia in the Imperial Sourcebook, there is no evidence that the insignia of
company officers were shared by the Navy. The badge shown here for a Captain
matches neither the standard insignia of a Navy Captain nor that of Captain
Khurgee, and perhaps more seriously, the badge shown for a Lieutenant is not
that worn by the various black-uniformed Lieutenants aboard the Death Star;
instead, this corresponds to the insignia assigned here to a Commander.
However, given the lack of surviving
footage depicting lower-ranking line officers aboard the Death Star, it is
still possible to reconcile these insignia with those seen in the footage. If
we were to accept the Death Star Technical Companion's connection of six-square
plaques with the ranks of Colonel and upward, then we could infer that all the
personnel seen in the Death Star footage, except those in black uniforms, were
of relatively high rank; the Death Star Technical Companion itself would then
provide us with a series of otherwise unrecorded insignia for lower-ranking
Army personnel aboard the battlestation. The differences in the insignia of
black-uniformed officers could be explained by supposing that they all used
Navy-style ranks, except perhaps "Commander" Daine Jir, whose
insignia is correct for an Army commander according to this system, and who
appears to have been a stormtrooper officer.
However, several speculative
interpretations of the significance of color and code cylinder combinations are
possible even if we adopt these constraints, and we must also bear in mind the
secondary status of the Technical Companion, and the possibility that Khurgee
held the lower Army-style rank of Captain. Ultimately, it may never be possible
to define the exact significance of the rank insignia used aboard the Death
Star with any certainty; what can be said, however, is that the insignia
recorded here almost never appear subsequent to the Battle of Yavin.
Even before the destruction of the Death
Star, the problematic evidence from the Ralltiir garrison may indicate that
rank insignia were in a state of flux, and as has already been mentioned above,
the Imperial Sourcebook implies that Tarkin's defeat prompted a major revision
and reorganization of Imperial rank insignia.
Insignia and ranks from the Battle of Hoth
onwardsEdit
Rank insignia shown in surviving footage
from the Battle of Hoth in 3 ABY and the Battle of Endor in 4 ABY are
substantially different from those seen at the time of the Battle of Yavin.
While the basic insignia were still colored squares on the tunic breast and
code cylinders in shoulder pockets, most plaques now normally consisted of
superimposed rows of red and blue squares, with equal numbers in each. These
insignia correspond precisely in overall grammar, and very closely in specific
usage, to the "interim" insignia in the table of c. 1-3 ABY,
discussed above.
Battle of HothEdit
Rank Insignia
Admiral Ozzel
Admiral Piett
General Veers
Captain Piett
Captain Needa
Captain Lennox
Commander Desanne
Lieutenant-Commander Ardan
Captain Bewil
Lieutenants
As commander of Death Squadron, Admiral
Kendal Ozzel wore an insignia with six red pips over six blue ones, with two
code cylinders in his left-hand shoulder pocket, and one on the right.
Following Ozzel's execution by Vader during the opening stages of the Battle of
Hoth, Firmus Piett was promoted to replace him, and quickly adopted the same
insignia. Apart from the addition of a second code cylinder at the left
shoulder, this insignia corresponds to that which the Imperial Sourcebook
tabulation defines for an Admiral; the difference may indicate a minor
distinction of grade between flag ranks.
The rank-badge of General Maximilian Veers'
service uniform had four red pips over four blue, with a single code cylinder
in the left-hand pocket; this corresponds with the insignia of a General as
shown in the Imperial Sourcebook tabulation: while it is not clear that his
rank plaque is as wide as those worn by the Admirals, it is certainly wider
than those of Navy Captains. His battle armor chest plate however, which he
wears during the assault on Hoth, is equipped with a more standard looking rank
insignia. This one is not wider than necessary, and does not appear to have any
unnecessary spacing between the colored squares.
An insignia with three red pips over three
blue, with a single code cylinder at the left shoulder, would appear to have
been the insignia of most Navy Captains, being worn by Firmus Piett of the
Executor, Lorth Needa of the Avenger, and Captain Xamuel Lennox of the Tyrant.
This insignia was also worn by a crew-pit supervisor aboard Executor, named in
other sources as Lieutenant-Commander Ardan, and by an officer on Bespin, who
other sources identify as Commander Desanne.
An insignia with two red squares over two
blue ones, again with a single code cylinder at the left shoulder, was widely
worn by junior officers during the Hoth Campaign. It was the insignia of
Lieutenants Suba, Venka and Cecius aboard Executor, Lieutenant Cabbel on the
Tyrant, and Captain Bewil and Lieutenant Sheckil on Bespin. Without visible
rank cylinders, the same plaque was carried by an officer in snowtrooper armor
in the cockpit of General Veers' AT-AT on Hoth.
Most of the insignia seen at the Battle of
Hoth and during the Bespin occupation thus correspond to what the rank
tabulation would lead us to expect: the problematic insignia are those of
Ardan, Desanne, and Bewil. It should be noted that the presumed ranks of these
three men derive from secondary records, and they could simply be in error, or
else their names may have been matched to pictures of other men; but we cannot
simply assume that this was the case: there is little that would lead us to
distrust the evidence, beyond the fact that their rank-badges do not match
their ranks according to necessarily somewhat hypothetical reconstruction of
the insignia scheme–although it can be noted that some images transpose Ardan's
insignia to the wrong shoulder.
The issues surrounding Ardan's rank are
somewhat complex: this officer's stated rank of "Lieutenant
Commander" is otherwise very rare in surviving records of the Imperial
military, and raises the wider question of the precise structure and
development of Imperial Navy ranks. During the last years of the Old Republic, the
ranks above Lieutenant ran through Lieutenant Commander, Commander, Captain,
and probably Commodore. At some stage, however, the Imperial Navy revised its
terminology so that a Commander outranked a Captain. Direct evidence for lower
ranks is lacking, but the title and insignia of Captain were born by the
commanders of even the smallest Imperial capital ships, while men with the rank
and badge of Lieutenant could be the executive officers of ships as large as
Star Destroyers, and there is very little clear evidence for other junior ranks
within the line hierarchy of the Navy.
Several possible options are available to
explain Ardan's rank. It is not impossible that the rank of Lieutenant
Commander remained in use in the Imperial service as late as the Battle of Hoth,
or it may be that the second-level source that provides Ardan's rank has styled
him with an equivalent title that was not in fact current in the Imperial fleet
at that time. Alternatively, Ardan may have held his commission in a section of
the military that did not use standard Army or Navy titles, a speculation that
gains some weight because the two other known Imperial officers who shared the
same rank were both members of the security apparatus (although one of them
used a Lieutenant's insignia).
As to Ardan's rank badge, the one known
image of him occurs in sequence prior to the execution of Admiral Ozzel and the
promotion of Captain Piett, which suggests that Ardan was junior to Captain
Piett, but shared the same insignia, a fact that sets him apart from most other
bridge officers aboard Star Destroyers at this time. However, given that some
footage has been used out of sequence–most clearly, a brief shot of the
starboard crew pit on the bridge of the Star Destroyer Avenger has been cut
into a sequence on the bridge of the Executor–it cannot be ruled out that this
shot is also misplaced in the record; in other words, Ardan may wear a
Captain's insignia because he was the officer promoted to Captain when Piett
became Admiral.
In some respects, the situation with
Desanne and Bewil is simpler: they are titled "Commander" and
"Captain" when going by their rank badges, we might expect them to be
a Captain and a Lieutenant respectively. They could, of course, owe their
titles to being the commander of a detachment and captain of a small ship like
a shuttlecraft (as "Captain" is also an honorific, and is used when
referring to the commanderof any ship, no matter how small), or by comparison
with Ardan, Desanne might be a navy officer ranking between him and the Star
Destroyer captains and bearing the same insignia as all of them. Another
alternative is that one or both of these men might represent an anomalous arm
of the military where Captains use a badge two squares wide like Lieutenants,
and a badge three squares wide was only assigned to the higher rank of
Commander. As will be shown below, there is slight evidence that just such an
anomaly may have been found among TIE pilots.
Problematic Insignia at EndorEdit
Footage recorded during the construction
and destruction of the second Death Star at Endor unsurprisingly shows a number
of Imperial officers. But while most wearing insignia that can be explained by
reference to the sources and parameters already discussed, some prominent
commanders wear what seem to be highly anomalous rank-badges.
Rank Insignia
Moff Jerjerrod
Commander Igar
Admiral Piett
Admiral Chiraneau
Commander Gherant
Unnamed Officers
Unnamed Officers
The classic Captain's insignia was worn by
Commander Gherant, who appears to have been Piett's senior subordinate on the
bridge of the Executor, and by a number of officers aboard the Death Star. The
insignia that usually indicates Lieutenants is not so widely seen in the Endor
records, but it was worn by at least one officer in a hangar-bay side detail on
the Death Star.
For the first time in extant footage, the
Endor records also show a badge bearing three red pips over three blue, with
one code cylinder at either shoulder. This was the insignia of the
"Commander", Igar, who handed over Luke Skywalker to Darth Vader on
the Sanctuary Moon shortly before the Battle of Endor, concurring with the
implication of the Imperial Sourcebook tabulation that it would be appropriate
for a mid-level Army field officer.
However, two badges widely seen in the
Endor footage are highly problematic: Moff Tiaan Jerjerrod of Moddell sector
wore the same insignia as the Endor Commander, while Firmus Piett had reverted
to the insignia he wore previously as Captain of the Executor, and the same
insignia are also borne by an officer identified as Admiral Chiraneau. It is
possible that these badges indicate that a radical–but otherwise essentially
unrecorded–revision of rank insignia had taken place, but all can also be
rationalized according to established principles. For instance, Jerjerrod may
have attained the rank of Commander during a military career, and preferred to
wear the insignia he had thus earned. Piett's field promotion may not have been
confirmed, or else due to the high number of senior officers present at the
battle, he may have reverted temporarily to the post of Captain of Executor,
and adopted a Captain's insignia accordingly: he is certainly not addressed as
"Admiral" in the audio track of the surviving footage. Chiraneau,
similarly, may have similarly reverted to a Captain's insignia due to the
situation, or else he may have received his flag promotion immediately before
the battle, subsequent to the footage showing him with a Captain's badge;
alternatively, he might have been one of those officers who held a title such
as Systems Admiral or Fleet Admiral, but did not hold a substantive flag rank.
It is also possible that due to the fact that Piett failed to capture the
Millennium Falcon that he was demoted back to the rank of captain, although it
does not explain why the others have rank problems.
Blackshirt personnel, conspicuously absent
at Hoth, reappear at Endor, but while some of these men may have been officers,
none now carry any rank insignia whatsoever; unlike line officers, they still carry
metal boxes on their belts, now in pairs on either hip.
Conclusions and QuestionsEdit
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Additional to the evidence discussed above,
Imperial rank insignia are described or illustrated in a variety of additional
sources. The following sections represent an attempt to catalog and analyze all
known insignia variants, being organized broadly by rank.
Senior OfficersEdit
Senior officers within the military of the
Galactic Empire can be divided into three broad groups: Moffs, the regional
governors of sectors; Admirals commanding significant battlegroups and fleets
in the Navy; and Generals, the high-ranking officers of the Imperial Army.
Additional to these, there are some anomalous high-ranking officers, and some
whose branch of the military is not known.
MoffsEdit
Over the course of Imperial history, Moffs
and Grand Moffs are shown with a confusing variety of insignia. Mention has
already been made of the badges of the original Moffs in 19 BBY, of Grand Moff
Tarkin in 0 BBY and of Moff Jerjerrod in 4 ABY. A gray-wash drawing of Moff
Harlov Jarnek of Tandon sector, predating the Battle of Endor, shows two rows
of six pips and at least three code cylinders, although the colors are not
indicated. At around the same time, the insignia of Moff Abran Balfour of
Parmic sector included two rows of six pips, with the upper row consisting of
darker squares (probably red above blue), and three if not four code cylinders.
The same insignia was worn by Moff Vilim Disra of Braxant sector as late as 19
ABY.
Leonia Tavira, who seized power as Moff on
Ettiau following her husband's death after Endor, is shown wearing a number of
different insignia in surviving images. On balance, it seems likely that she
wore the insignia of a Grand Moff, with four code cylinders, which is how she
normally appears an illustrated record of the liberation of Ettiau from
Imperial rule. In one brief sequence, her normal insignia swap with a badge
carrying only five blue squares above three red and two gold, as borne by the
Empire's first Moffs twenty-five years earlier, but this is perhaps most likely
to reflect artistic shorthand than any real discrepancy. Perhaps of somewhat
more interest is a painted portrait, which portrays her with six blue pips
above six red, and no rank cylinders.
Moff Par Lankin, governor of the Imperial
redoubt in Lambda sector, similarly seems to have worn the insignia of a Grand
Moff in the years after the Battle of Endor, whether rightfully or not. A
surviving sketch shows him with two code cylinders on the right shoulder (from
which we can infer two on the left), and a rank plaque where the first three
squares of the lower row were shaded darker than the row above, and the
remainder lighter.
Although the rank badges of the first Moffs
were only five pips wide, images dating from the later years of the Empire
rarely show less than two rows of six squares. The footage of Jerjerrod at
Endor is of course a notable exception, and mention should also be made of a sketch
of Grand Moff Lynch Hauser in 0 ABY, which shows him with two code cylinders at
either shoulder and two rows of five pips. This image, it should be noted, is
dated rather earlier than many surviving representations; but the small scale
of the image, in which the pips appear only as dots, may have mitigated against
accurate portrayal of this Grand Moff's insignia–as seems also to have been the
case with Tavira's five-pip badge, discussed above.
Finally, mention can be made of Moff Harsh
of Otunia. Shortly after the Battle of Endor, this Moff wore a non-standard
tunic with what appears to have been a row of red above a row of gold on the
plaque; the number of pips in each row is unclear however, as is the
significance of the Moff's uniform, which may have been that of some
paramilitary organization or privately-raised force.
AdmiralsEdit
On more than one occasion, the rank of
Admiral in the Imperial Navy has been explicitly associated with a badge
showing six red squares above six blue–the insignia implied by both the
Imperial Sourcebook table, and the Hoth footage. The number of code cylinders
varies, however, and occasionally Admirals are shown with less than six pips
across the plaque.
As noted above, the Sourcebook table shows
one code cylinder in either pocket, an insignia recorded as having been worn by
Admiral Jeratai during his tenure on the Imperial Ruling Council. Ozzel and
Piett boasted an extra cylinder at the left shoulder, while Leonia Tavira,
subsequent to her loss of Ettiau, affected an Admiral's badge with two code
cylinders in either pocket. Then there are the Admirals with less pips than the
norm. During his mission to Axxila and his interview with Ysanne Isard before
his departure for Ciutric IV, Admiral Delak Krennel wore an insignia of only
four red squares above four blue, but after his arrival on Ciutric, he wore
five red squares over five blue. Admiral Trommer, the father of TIE Pilot
Ranulf Trommer, similarly wore an insignia with five red squares above five
blue, while a grayscale image of Rear-Admiral Michael Unther shows him with
four squares of one color above four squares of another.
From Unther's combination of rank and
insignia, it can be hypothesized that a rank plaque four squares wide indicates
a Rear-Admiral, five a Vice-Admiral, and six a full Admiral. The number of code
cylinders may indicate seniority within each rank-grade, but it is also
possible that they denote the level of force that an officer commanded, with
one cylinder being worn by an Admiral commanding a local squadron, two by a
Systems Admiral, three by a Fleet Admiral, and four by a High Admiral. Such a
separation of rank and posting is essentially speculative, but it could also
explain how Michael Unther could had served as the "Admiral" of a
full Sector Fleet (presumably Fleet Admiral or High Admiral) even before his
promotion to Rear-Admiral.
A case that differs from those mentioned
above is that of Admiral Amise Griff, who affected an insignia of two rows of
six red squares each and two code cylinders. It is unknown what this particular
badge signified.
Finally, two additional insignia observed
in the later years of the Empire should be mentioned, both associated with
Admiral Daala. It is known that through her assignment to the Maw Installation
until at least 11 ABY, Admiral Daala wore the normal Admiral's insignia, six
red squares over six blue; but portraits also survive showing her with two
different and distinctive badges. In one picture, for which no context can be
offered, she wears the same insignia that Grand Moff Tarkin had once worn: six
blue squares above three red and three gold, perhaps appropriate to the High
Admiral of an Oversector, although Daala is nowhere said to have held or
claimed such a rank.
A second portrait gives Daala six blue pips
above four red and two gold, a badge not previously recorded, but which is also
seen in a portrait of Admiral Pellaeon, worn by him with two code cylinders,
one in either pocket. Given that Daala handed over her rank badge to Pellaeon
following her failed attack on Yavin 4 and the loss of the Knight Hammer, it is
likely that this was the insignia that she and then he wore in command of the
forces of the former Warlords. How official this badge was, or what precise
rank it may have symbolized, is unknown, although it is not inconceivable that
it was the formal insignia of the Imperial Navy's Supreme Commander.
GeneralsEdit
By and large, Generals are shown wearing
four red squares above four blue; as discussed above, they seem to have carried
their insignia on rather broader plaques than those of Colonels and Majors, who
carried the same basic arrangement of squares. This is true even of Generals
serving on the Imperial Ruling Council, although a small number of exceptions
are known.
Shortly after seizing power on Coruscant in
4 ABY as the leader of the Tribunal, General Paltr Carvin swapped his standard
General's insignia for a rank plaque six squares wide, with the usual
red-over-blue pattern. Two other Generals are shown with a red-over-blue rank
tab five squares wide. The first of these is General Mak, seen aboard the Star
Destroyer Crucible in 0 ABY; the second is General Rom Mohc, head of the Dark
Trooper project. During the assault on Talay, he wore the normal General's
badge, with four pips across the plaque, but very soon afterward, he bore an
expanded insignia; at both stages, however, he wore four code cylinders.
It seems that in most circumstances,
Generals wore a rank insignia only four pips wide, even in very senior
positions, although a varying numbers of code cylinders are recorded–Mohc's
cylinders have already been discussed, and, for instance, General Redd Wessel
wore a code cylinder at either shoulder. It may be that under normal
circumstances, the highest attainable General rank was the equivalent of
Rear-Admiral–and further evidence on starfighter ranks that may corroborate
this conjecture will be discussed below; but some important Generals, such as
Mohc, Mak and Carvin, bore badges five or six pips wide. Given that Mak may
have been a Moff, while Carvin was the head of the Imperial government, it is
possible that these badges were borne by virtue of the specific postings that
their wearers held, and lapsed with the end of those particular commissions.
In passing, we can also note that General
Mohc retained four code cylinders while his rank badge changed; this may add
further weight to the hypothesis that the number of code cylinders and the
significance of the rank plaque were not directly linked.
Other senior officersEdit
A number of senior officers are known who
are not styled as "General" or "Admiral" in surviving
sources, but who may have held senior ranks; conversely, it appears that within
some Sector Groups, officers could be accorded titles like "Systems
Admiral" and "Fleet Admiral" while holding lower substantive
ranks.
First, we can consider two officers who
bore a rank plaque with four red insignia above four blue while commanding
individual ships: the Captain of the Grand Vizier's yacht in 4 ABY and
Commander Vivant of the Star Destroyer Steadfast in 11 ABY. Given that both
these officers reported directly to the men who were regents of the Empire at
those dates, Sate Pestage and Lord Carnor Jax respectively, it is conceivable
that they held senior ranks, with "Commander" and "Captain"
simply being used as generic titles–although other explanations are of course
possible: for example, both men could conceivably have been Colonels in
Starfighter Command.
Additionally, we must consider the officers
within the hierarchies of Moffs' Sector Groups who bore the titles of Admiral,
Systems Admiral (or "Commodore"), Fleet Admiral and High Admirals.
These would seem to have been separate from the substantive flag ranks of Rear
Admiral, Vice Admiral, Admiral and Grand Admiral, and it is known that in at
least one instance, the commanding Admiral of an Imperial Sector Fleet was
subsequently promoted to Rear Admiral, while no Admirals are known to have
served in either Tapani sector or Elrood sector: the implication is that senior
Sector Group officers, perhaps even nominal "Fleet Admirals" could
hold lower substantive ranks such as Captain and Commander.
Navy OfficersEdit
The second-line evidence supplies a more or
less consistent hierarchy of ranks and insignia for more junior officers serving
in the Imperial Navy, consisting of senior Commanders, ships' Captains, and
junior officers normally holding the rank of Lieutenant. The main question to
be resolved is whether the insignia indicated substantive ranks, or relative
positions within a command hierarchy.
CommandersEdit
Ait Convarion, the blackshirt commanding
officer of the Star Destroyer Corrupter, is described as wearing three red
squares above three blue on the plaque, with two code cylinders: it is stated
explicitly that this insignia identified him as a Commander, holding a rank
senior to a "mere Captain". While Convarion wore a black uniform
indicating some sort of elite status, several other men with the same title and
insignia were clearly line officers in the Navy, including Pter Thanas, the
senior officer of the small Imperial squadron based at Bakura, and Kratas, the
commanding officer of Admiral Daala's flagship, and apparently the senior
subordinate officer within her squadron. Eight months after Yavin, we find
Commander Demmings, with the correct insignia for his rank, serving briefly as
Imperial liaison to Tiss'sharl in succession to Moff Giiedt, and then as
commander of Lord Vader's Star Destroyer Reprisal, with Captain Sankaran as his
executive officer.
Some confusion results from the fact that
other usages of "Commander" were also current during the Clone Wars
and Galactic Civil War. In other arms of the Imperial military, the same title
and insignia seem to have indicated a somewhat lower rank, while a Commander in
the fleets of the Old Republic and New Republic ranked below Captain, not
above; and to make matters more confusing, "Commander" could also be
a generic title for any officer with command responsibilities.
CaptainsEdit
As already mentioned, the standard insignia
for a Captain in the Imperial Navy consisted of a rank-plaque with three red
tabs above three blue, and one code cylinder in the left-hand pocket. This
standard insignia was born by the commanding officers of vessels ranging in
size from the Executor to the small freighter Nuna's Twins.
Of course, just as "Commander"
could be a generic title as well as a rank, so "Captain" could be
applied to the commander of any ship; but there are very few examples of men
addressed as Captain and serving as ships' captains who did not wear the
classic Captain's insignia. Ait Convarion, already mentioned, could be
addressed as "Captain" while holding the more senior status of
Commander, by virtue of his command of Corrupter, but almost the only other
exception to this rule is Captain Gilad Pellaeon of the Chimaera, who appears
to have also worn a second code cylinder in his right pocket. This may indicate
that Pellaeon also bore the same more senior rank, but preferred to be styled
"Captain", or else it might reflect some parallel position of extra
responsibility as the commanding officer of Grand Admiral Thrawn's flagship.
Finally, mention should be made of Marl
Semtin, who was generally addressed as "Captain", but who seems to
have carried four rank cylinders, and whose badge tabs are depicted in varying
ways in different representations. He is shown in a portrait with a Captain's
plaque, three red pips over three blue, but another illustration depicts him
with four red pips over four blue, although the combination of penciller and
inker responsible for this latter image are notable for the inconsistency in
their depiction of rank insignia, for instance in representations of Ysanne
Isard, Leonia Tavira and Turr Phennir, discussed elsewhere in this article.
Semtin was clearly the commanding officer
of a Star Destroyer, and thus entitled to be addressed as "Captain",
but it is possible that the depictions of his insignia are simply inaccurate,
and even if we do place some weight on the visual evidence, several
interpretations of his rank are possible: his four code cylinders hint that he
may have held a relatively senior commander, perhaps even Moff, within a
relatively small local Sector Group, and while he may have held no higher
substantive rank than Captain or Commander, we cannot exclude the possibility
that he was really a Rear Admiral, General or Colonel, as speculated above for
Commander Vivant and the Captain of the Grand Vizier's yacht.
OthersEdit
Most junior Navy officers wore a badge with
two red squares above two blue, which as we have seen, is widely identified as
the insignia of a Lieutenant. Normally, this was worn with one code cylinder,
and this combination, with the title of Lieutenant, could be borne by even the
executive officers of Star Destroyers, like Jav Remlyn, who served as First
Officer of the Eradicator, commanded by Captain Thulian Merast in Kathol sector
under Moff Kentor Sarne.
Some illustrations are also extant showing
deck officers wearing a badge two pips wide with more than one code cylinder:
in particular, in 0 ABY, pencil-and-ink depictions of junior officers aboard
the Star Destroyer Reprisal shown them wearing badges of this sort with two or
in one case apparently even four code cylinders. However, if these served as a
means of denoting gradations of rank among Navy line officers, the later
instances of even executive officers aboard comparable ships with just one code
cylinder suggest that they did not remain in use for long. Alternatively, these
could be generalizing depictions of rank insignia that should not be taken too
literally, or else the additional cylinders could serve to distinguish the
different Army-style ranks used by specialists such as Fighter Operations and
Gunnery officers.
Also in 0 ABY, there is evidence that some
Lieutenants could wear a badge of two red and two blue tabs without any code
cylinders: this was the insignia adopted by Luke Skywalker and Deena Shan when disguised
as Imperial officers aboard the captured freighter Nuna's Twins. Unlike
Lieutenants' insignia using more than one cylinder, this would not be directly
incompatible with the later evidence, but there seems to be no specific
evidence that it was retained, either.
Finally, mention must be made of an
insignia with just one red square above one blue. This is worn by a
black-uniformed console operator on the bridge of Reprisal, in the same image
as the Lieutenant who seems to have four code cylinders, and it recurs in
several other pictures by the same artist, also representing scenes in 0 ABY.
If these depictions are accurate, these insignia may have been a short-lived
experiment, or else they were perhaps those of warrant officers or petty
officers. Either way, a wide range of code-cylinders combinations is recorded
with these insignia, presumably distinguishing different rank grades: the man
aboard Reprisal has three, while of two men seen in the hangar bay of the Star
Destroyer Crucible, one has a cylinder in either pocket, and the other is shown
with two on the left, presumably matched with at least one on the right. The
same insignia, this time with no code cylinders, was also borne at around the
same time by a uniformed female officer presenting a public newsfeed report.
DiscussionEdit
By and large, three levels of authority can
be discerned in the sources for Navy officers below flag ranks: Commanders wore
three red pips over three blue on the rank plaque, and two code cylinder;
Captains had the same rank plaque and only one code cylinder; and Lieutenants
had two red pips over two blue, and again usually one code cylinder or none at
all. It is possible that more code cylinders were at one stage used to denote
senior grades of Lieutenant, but if so, this seems to have been abandoned
relatively rapidly. In the months after the Battle of Yavin, a few men and
women are also shown with an insignia of just one red pip above one blue,
perhaps warrant officers and/or petty officers, although little is known for
sure about these personnel, or how long these insignia were retained.
The most typical anomalies were Captains
with too many code cylinders, but these can be explained in terms of a
combination of two factors: the courtesy use of "Captain" for any officer
assigned to command a particular ship, and the possibility that in some
circumstances, officers could be placed in a position of higher authority,
denoted by additional code cylinders, without a formal promotion.
One thing that is unclear is whether the
three titles of Commander, Captain and Lieutenant were the only ones used in
the formal rank hierarchy of the Imperial Navy. In the naval forces of the Old
Republic, Rebel Alliance and New Republic, several ranks were interposed
between Lieutenant and Captain, and it is known that the Empire made a
distinction between the rank of Captain of the Line, the typical rank of a Star
Destroyer's commanding officer, and the position of Captain of a capital ship,
which could be borne by officers of lower ranks than this; but except aboard
the mighty Executor, it seems that Captain's insignia were used to denote the
commanding officer, with all subordinate officers being styled and badged as
Lieutenants.
Considering that the responsibilities of a
Star Destroyer's executive officers were much greater in many respects than
those of the commander of a customs frigate, it is possible that the titles and
insignia of Commander, Captain and Lieutenant were at least in part indicative
of position rather than specific rank, and were thus separate from any
hierarchical system of substantive ranks operated by the Imperial Navy; but of
such a putative system of grades, almost nothing is known for sure. It is
important to bear in mind that at different times in the Empire's history, the
criteria entitling an officer to wear Captain's insignia may have changed, and
the rank titles may have also changed over time: systems using various grades
of Captain and Lieutenant may have alternated with revivals the Captain -
Commander - Lieutenant Commander - Lieutenant rank-structure that had been used
in the Clone Wars.
Starfighter OfficersEdit
Some confusion has entailed from the fact
that Starfighter Command ranks do not correspond to the familiar military and
naval patterns used, for instance by the Old Republic and Galactic Alliance.
The fullest list of grades available is as follows:
Grand Admiral
Admiral
Vice Admiral
Rear Admiral
Colonel
Major
Commander
Captain
Flight Lieutenant
Flight Officer
In fact, up to the rank of General, this
series of ranks corresponds very closely to the standard Army system already
alluded to; the switch to Navy ranks above General can be explained by the
difference between the insignia patterns of Generals and Admirals, discussed
above: whereas almost all Army Generals wore an insignia equivalent to Rear
Admirals, fighter pilots in the Navy could presumably be promoted upward into
the line hierarchy as Vice Admirals, Admirals and even Grand Admirals.
Apart from this oddity, which seems to in
fact stem from a fidelity to Army practice, the only discrepancy between
fighter and Army ranks in this tabulation is the replacement of "First
Lieutenant" and "Second Lieutenant" by "Flight
Lieutenant" and "Flight Officer"–although even this was not so
marked a change as it appears, as officers holding the rank of Flight Officer
could be regularly addressed as Lieutenants. Similarly, it seems that the
Captain and Commander ranks at least could be referred to more fully as
"Flight Captain" and "Flight Commander".
One further oddity is the rank of Air
Marshal, borne by two legendary Imperial fighter pilots later known as renowned
Academy instructors, Von Asch and Cargeloch. Cargeloch, who was also the
commander of the TIE wing guarding the Imperial Palace, is specifically said to
have earned his rank as Air Marshal by destroying a hostile metropolis with
only a single flight of TIE Bombers. Several possibilities are open to explain
this rank: it could derive from an alternative system of fighter pilot ranks
used at a different stage in the Empire's history; it might be an honorific
title of high seniority, broadly comparable to High Admiral and Surface
Marshal; or it could perhaps indicate a position between Colonel and Major
General, corresponding to an Army High Colonel.
Given the parallels in rank, it might be
supposed that the Insignia of Starfighter Command officers conformed in broad
terms to those used by other arms of the Imperial military, but in practice
almost all the known evidence for the rank insignia of Imperial fighter pilots
relates to the career of Baron Fel during his service with the 37th and 181st
Imperial Fighter Wings, and will be discussed below. Almost the only known
exceptions are senior fighter operations officer Commander Dorin Millavec and
his subordinate Resjin Resjic, aboard the Star Destroyer Crucible in 0 ABY.
While Millavec bears the insignia of a Commander, Resjic appears to have a
third code cylinder at the left shoulder: in no other instance does the number
of code cylinders decrease with rank. It is possible to rationalize this
discrepancy: Millavec might be a Navy Commander, and Resjic could be a
Commander in the Starfighter Corps, several grades lower in comparable rank but
particularly senior within his grade; but in this instance, it is perhaps more
likely that Resjic's insignia, at least, are simply in error.
Officers of the 37th and 181st Wings
As a junior officer out of Carida, Soontir
Fel was appointed to the Sixth Squadron of the 37th Imperial Fighter Wing:
Fel's own insignia at this stage in his career are unknown, but Captain Lun
Tessra, commanding the 6/37th, wore two red squares over two blue on his
plaque, with a single code cylinder at the right shoulder. Images of Fel's own
subsequent promotion to Captain show him being presented with either a new rank
plaque, or perhaps a code cylinder–although no code cylinders are subsequently
observed on his uniform. His promotion was issued by a more senior officer with
the insignia of a Commander, perhaps or the commanding officer of the
Dreadnaught Cruiser Abrogator, aboard which Fel was stationed, or of the
two-squadron element of the 37th that was most likely assigned to her.
Subsequently to a second tour with the
6/37th, Fel was transferred to the line Navy, and appointed Captain of the
Dreadnaught Pride of the Senate; then, rather than receiving the Star Destroyer
command anticipated by some of his subordinates, he was transferred as an
instructor to the Naval Academy Prefsbelt IV. His insignia during his command
of the Pride of the Senate are unknown, but at the Academy, earlier depictions
show him still wearing two red pips over two blue; subsequently, by 0 ABY, he
has three red over three blue.
Latterly, Fel was assigned back to
front-line combat with the 181st Fighter Wing, as commander of the 2/181st
squadron: still with the rank of Captain, and still with an insignia displaying
three red squares over three blue, with no visible code cylinders. He was
subsequently, in 0 ABY, promoted to Major, and henceforth wore the expected insignia:
four red over four blue, and a single code cylinder in the left-hand pocket.
Turr Phennir, as a Captain serving under
Fel, bore two red squares over two blue, with no cylinders shown. However, at
the promotion ceremony where he was raised to the rank of Commander, Phennir
wore the expected insignia of that rank, while inexplicably, Fel, now Colonel
and commander of the 181st, is illustrated wearing what seems to be the
insignia of a Navy Captain.
It is not clear exactly what to make of all
this material, but it is perhaps significant that Captains in both units seem
to have often borne two red squares over two blue, at least sometimes worn with
a code cylinder in the right-hand pocket; this was, of course, the insignia
worn by the problematic Captain Bewil on Bespin, discussed above.
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Army OfficersEdit
ColonelsEdit
OthersEdit
Ralltiir garrisonEdit
At this point, mention must be made of
illustrations depicting the pacification forces on Ralltiir three weeks before
the Battle of Yavin, which show personnel with insignia that are different from
those seen in the footage from the Death Star, and which, for the most part,
are not seen again in any subsequent images. The leader of the pacification,
Lord Tion, is depicted in a standard line officer's uniform with four red tabs
above four blue on the rank plaque, with one code cylinder at either shoulder,
but most officers shown in these illustrations wear badges in which colored
tabs repeat at irregular intervals across multiple rows—a pattern that here
must be deliberate, but is almost unparalleled elsewhere. Moreover, most rank
badges are shown in the double-level format, otherwise rarely seen before
Yavin.
An aide to Lord Tion, addressed as "Commander",
is depicted with a plaque three tabs wide, with one blue, one gold and one red
in the top row, one gold, one blue and one gold below, again with one code
cylinder at either shoulder, while a junior officer seated at a monitoring
console in the base control-room has a single strip of three tabs, of
indeterminate color, and apparently with no code cylinders.
When Darth Vader subsequently dispatched a
Sentinel-class landing craft from the Ralltiir garrison to Kattada in pursuit
of Princess Leia, Commander Karg, apparently the mission leader, wore two blue
pips and one and red above one blue, one gold and one red, with a code-cylinder
at either shoulder. Lieutenant Spilik, an officer who had not attended the
Imperial Academy but who may have had more active-duty experience, wore an
insignia four tabs wide, with three blue and one red above one gold, one red
and two gold, again with two cylinders. A third Imperial in tunic and breeches
seems to be shown with two cylinders but no rank insignia, while the junior
officer who eventually surrendered the survivors of the unit had three red tabs
above two blue and one gold, with no visible code cylinders.
Given the contrast of these insignia with
all other evidence, and the dearth of additional information for the period
predating Yavin, it is hard to know what to make of these badges. Given the
unusual nature of the insignia shown, there is a possibility that insignia have
been miscolored, or even depicted erroneously. Only the insignia of the console
operator at the Ralltiir headquarters corresponds in any way with the single
strips of tabs shown in the Yavin footage and the Death Star Technical
Companion, and this is particularly strange because the Devastator, aboard
which Nahdonnis Praji and Daine Jir were serving, would have been Lord Tion's
own command ship in this timeframe.
In terms of the standard post-Yavin system,
however, Tion's insignia can be interpreted as indicating a rank of Colonel or
General, and if we discard the coloring, then both his aide and Karg have the
insignia of Commanders, while the junior officer on Kattada could be a Captain;
Lieutenant Spilik's insignia and rank are more problematic, but he is perhaps
most plausibly interpreted as a senior Lieutenant of the Imperial Navy, commanding
the transport while Karg led the mission's primary military component. Even if
the badges can be rationalized, however, that does not mean that the
"corrected" insignia are necessarily accurate for the timeframe in
which the events illustrated actually occurred; but on the other hand, is not
impossible that these badges represent the almost unknown variety of insignia
in use before Yavin.
StormtroopersEdit
The insignia of the black-uniformed
officers seen commanding stormtroopers at around the time of the Battle of
Yavin have been discussed above. Over the months immediately after Yavin,
however, extensive documentation survives concerning officers from the
stormtrooper units with which Janek Sunber served. Stormtrooper officers now
seem to have usually worn khaki–in contrast to the Army gray of General Ziering
in Sunber's first assignment to the garrison on Maridun, and the Imperial
Intelligence officers on Kalist VI, who still wore black.
Rank Insignia
Commander Frickett
Captain Gage
Captain Roshuir
Lieutenant Sunber (2nd badge)
(Lieutenant)
Lieutenants Sunber, Clynn, etc.
In his assignment on Maridun, Lieutenant
Sunber wore two red squares over two blue, although he lacked any code
cylinders; Captain Gage wore three red squares over three blue with a single
code cylinder on the left, while Commander Frickett had a second code cylinder
on the right. Subsequently, on receiving a field promotion to Captain, Sunber
himself adopted the same insignia as Gage, and while he understandably did not
add a second code cylinder when the dying General Ziering named him Commander
during the heat of battle, he did wear two code cylinders for the hearing on
Carida at which he attempted unsuccessfully to have his field promotion
confirmed. With the exception of Lieutenant Sunber's lack of a code cylinder,
these are precisely the insignia tabulated in The Imperial Sourcebook,
discussed above. The same insignia for Commander would later be worn by a
Stormtrooper officer serving with the Endor garrison in 4 ABY.
In the garrison on Kalist VI, to which
Sunber's platoon was assigned following heavy losses in the campaign on Jabiim,
all officers, including General Noils seem to have worn khaki; in Sunber's new
company, most or all of the Lieutenants apparently lacked code cylinders, as
did company commander Captain Kale Roshuir. In contrast to Ziering, who had
carried four code cylinders, even Noils wore only one.
Lieutenant Sunber with a code cylinder at
either shoulder.
On a subsequent campaign, Sunber, still
serving as a Lieutenant with a stormtrooper unit, wore two code cylinders with
his badge, one at either shoulder; a single image suggests that he may
subsequently have reverted to one cylinder at the left-hand shoulder on his
next assignment, but it is not clear how much weight we can put on this one,
somewhat stylized representation.
It could be hypothesized that a
Lieutenant's plaque without a code cylinder was the insignia of a Second
Lieutenant, and that First Lieutenants wore a cylinder, with a second cylinder
indicating some sort of additional command brevet or seniority; alternatively,
given the lack of any clear evidence for Lieutenants with a single code
cylinder, and Captain Roshuir's apparent lack of any cylinders with his badge,
it may be that the use of code cylinders among lower-ranking stormtrooper
officers were at least partially an indicator of specific command privileges,
rather than exact rank, with a separate meaning from the main rank badge
indicating rank. Either way, however, it is likely that Commanders always
displayed two cylinders.
When wearing armor, Stormtrooper officers
rarely wore any type of outward insignia, apparently relying instead on
built-in IFF signals and HUDs in their helmets for identification. A system of
colored shoulder pads was used in some contexts, and although the exact
significance of these is unknown, some references suggest that a black pauldron
indicated a commissioned officer.
Occasional examples are, however, known of
stormtrooper personnel in non-standard armor with rank plaques, perhaps worn
for the benefit of non-stormtrooper personnel serving alongside them. A
Blizzard Force officer in the cockpit of General Veers' AT-AT at the Battle of
Hoth wore two red squares over two blue, with no visible code cylinders, and
the same insignia was used shortly after Endor by SpecNav commander Sixtus
Quin. Quin's second in command Septaas is normally shown with the same
insignia, although on his first appearance, he displays one red pip over one
blue; but it is not clear how much weight can be placed on this depiction,
considering that the illustration is from an (otherwise excellent) pencil and
ink team whose depiction of rank insignia is often inconsistent.
Grand AdmiralsEdit
The Grand Admirals wore distinctive white
uniforms, sometimes with no further code cylinders or rank insignia whatsoever.
When Grand Admirals did wear insignia, they usually displayed three blue and
three gold squares over three blue and three red, without code cylinders, but
with bullion epaulets on the shoulders.
However, on at least one occasion, a more
ornate version of the white uniform is recorded. When Grand Admiral Thrawn
returned briefly to Coruscant in 4 ABY, his uniform bore a number of additional
gold details: as well as epaulets and a rank plaque, this version of the Grand
Admiral's uniform was distinguished by gold detailing on the collar and cuffs,
and a row of gold buttons up the right-hand side of the tunic front; it is
unclear if a matching row of buttons appeared on the left.
It is not certain, however, what these
distinctions imply: this may simply be a further variant of the Grand Admiral's
uniform, but it may also be significant that Thrawn at some point earned the
additional title of Warlord. In, contrast references to Thrawn in this
timeframe as a Vice Admiral are unlikely to be relevant to the differences in
uniform detail: these seem instead to reflect the fact that his promotion to
Grand Admiral was at that point secret from the general public.
Intelligence and Security servicesEdit
By 0 ABY, members of both Imperial
Intelligence and the Imperial Security Bureau wore white tunics with black caps
and breeches, although it is unclear when this distinctive uniform was
introduced, or whether it was retained subsequently.
Rank Insignia
Colonel Yularen
Officer Evax
Colonel Wullf Yularen, the senior ISB operative
aboard the Death Star, wore a rank insignia of three red tabs followed by three
blue tabs, with no code cylinders, and he was the only senior officer except
Tarkin to lack cartridge-boxes on his belt.
Yularen's Imperial Intelligence colleague,
Officer Evax, wore three blue tabs followed by three red on his tunic plaque,
and likewise had no code cylinders, but he did wear belt-boxes. It is
impossible to be sure of the two officers' relative ranks, but Yularen's place
in command-level briefings, and his lack of belt-boxes, suggests that he may
have been the senior of the two men.
It is not known how widespread the white
tunic or these rank insignia were. Eight months after the Battle of Yavin,
however, a Captain and Lieutenant from Imperial Intelligence assigned to the
base on Kalist VI wore black uniforms with rank insignia corresponding to those
of their Army and Navy counterparts–three red squares over three blue for the
Captain, two over two for the Lieutenant. Code cylinders are not visible in the
surviving illustrations. The Imperial Security Bureau may have also switched to
black uniforms at this time, although the only direct evidence appears to be
the uniform of Corporal Vandolay, a junior ISB agent aboard the Executor; what
can be said with more confidence is that, although the generic term
"agent" was commonplace, ISB employed Army-style non-commissioned and
officer ranks up to General.
Throughout the history of the Empire, the
Director of Intelligence often wore a highly distinctive uniform, indicative of
senior status in the command hierarchy. At the end of the Clone Wars–both
before and after the Declaration of a New Order–Director Armand Isard wore an
ornate officer's dress uniform, with a double-breasted tunic that fastened up
the left-hand side rather than the right: a row of rectangular fittings running
up the seam appear to have been clasps or buttons, but the lapel, rather than
continuing up to the shoulder, cut back inwards across the sternum to the
middle of the collar. A single row of six rank tabs appeared in the usual place
on the left breast, but due to the design of the tunic, this sat above the
lapel fastening.
It is unknown what color Armand Isard's
tunic or insignia were, but after she succeeded her father in post, Ysanne
Isard would wear a red officer's uniform, sometimes with the insignia of an
Admiral, sometimes with no insignia in the manner of a Grand Admiral.
Lastly, mention must be made of the rank of
Lieutenant Commander, which was apparently borne by some officers within the
security apparatus, although their exact place within the hierarchy is unclear:
Alliance spy Pike Angeles masqueraded as Nim of Imperial Intelligence, while
Janna Tammok was head of security for the Imperial Consul General on Bothawui,
wearing a line officer's uniform with a Lieutenant's insignia.
Enlisted ranksEdit
Imperial enlisted personnel are very rarely
shown in surviving evidence with any type of insignia, but ordinary soldiers
and technicians seem to have been often distinguished from supervising NCOs and
Warrant Officers by their differing types of uniforms. Mention has already been
made of personnel with a narrow rank plaque carrying one red square above one
blue, and the possibility that these insignia indicated warrant or petty
officer ranks; if this was so, then rank grade may have been indicated by use
of increasing numbers of code cylinders, as with commissioned officers.
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