Royal Marine privates are called 'Marine' rather than 'Private'
or 'Trooper' or 'Fuserlier' or whatever; and the highest Marine rank
has always been General, rather than Field Marshal (which the army has
now also phased-out).
Apart from these two minor differences, the Marines use the exact same
rank structure as most of the Army (the artilery and the Guards have
slightly different rank structres, in case you didn't know)
--
Daniel Titley
http://users.aber.ac.uk/sdt8
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Ivan the Bear
=Nothing per-r-rsonal, just business=
Daniel Titley <d_ti...@hotmail.com> сообщил в новостях
следующее:934fnr$c7r$1...@nnrp1.deja.com...
Aren't there any Lance Corporals in the marines?
All the Best,
Ian Kelly
PO Box 289, Barnsley, S74 9YT, England
Original British and Commonwealth Military and Police Insignia Bought and
Sold Worldwide
E-mail - I...@KellyBadge.co.uk
Web Site - http://www.KellyBadge.co.uk/
"Grant Collins" <col...@clara.co.uk> wrote in message
news:5op76.29766$0d.25...@nnrp4.clara.net...
Not wishing to split hairs, but they only "assume" the seniority of the next
rank up in comparison to Army pers on board, without actually becoming a Maj
(in this example). Apologies if I have misread yr post and this is what you
meant anyway - which I probably have.
I believe it is to reflect/distinguish the fact that Marines are actually
part of the RN and, as such, the senior service. They are roled to be on
board a ship and are therefore on their "patch", whereas the squaddies are
effectively only passengers en-route.
ARNJ