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AdmiralAdmiral is a word from either the Arabic language term ''amir-al-bahr'', or the Irish term ''Ard muirfhear'' or ''Ardmurar'' , both meaning "commander of the seas." Crusaders learned the term during their encounters with the Arabs, perhaps as early as the 11th century. The Sicily and later Genoa took the first two parts of the term and used them as one word, ''amiral''. The France and Spain gave their sea commanders similar titles. As the word was used by people speaking Latin or Latin-based languages it gained the "d" and endured a series of different endings and spellings leading to the English spelling "admyrall" in the 14th century and to "admiral" by the 16th century. The word Admiral has today come to be almost exclusively associated with the highest Naval officer ranks in most of the world's navies. The rank of Admiral has also been subdivided into various grades, several of which are historically extinct while others are used by most present day navies. ==Admiral ranks by seniority== The following are the various grades of Admiral, listed by seniority. {| style="border:1px solid #8888aa; background-color:#f7f8ff; padding:5px; font-size:95%; margin: 0px 12px 12px 0px;" |align="center"| Admiral of the Navy | Flag Admiral |- | |- |align="center"| Admiral of the Fleet | Fleet Admiral | Grand Admiral |- | |- |align="center"| General Admiral |- | |- |align="center"| Admiral |- | |- |align="center"| Lieutenant Admiral |- | |- |align="center"| Vice Admiral |- | |- |align="center"| Rear Admiral | Counter Admiral |- | |- |align="center"| Commodore Admiral | Flotilla Admiral |- | |- |align="center"| Port Admiral |- |} Several science fiction sources also give mention of the additional Admiral ranks of Sector Admiral, High Admiral, and Branch Admiral. None of these fictional Admiral ranks have ever been used, however, in an actual real world Navy. The rank of Fleet Admiral (SCIFI) is also common in science fiction sources. ==Admiral ranks by country== ===Royal Navy=== King Edward I of England appointed the first English Admiral in 1297 when he named William de Leyburn "Admiral of the sea of the King of England". The rank of Admiral should not be confused with the office of ''Admiral of England'' or Admiralty, which was an office held by the person with overall responsibility for the Navy. The Royal Navy has had Vice and Rear Admirals since at least the 16th century. When in command of the fleet, the Admiral would either be in the lead or the middle portion of the fleet. When the Admiral commanded from the middle portion of the fleet his deputy, the Vice Admiral, would be in the leading portion or van. Below him was another admiral at the rear of the fleet, called Rear Admiral. In Elizabethan times the fleet grew large enough to be organized into squadrons. The admiral's squadron wore a red ensign, the vice admiral's white, and the rear admiral's blue. As the squadrons grew, each was eventually commanded by an Admiral (with Vice Admirals and Rear Admirals commanding sections) and the official titles became Admiral of the White, etc. The squadrons ranked in order Red, White and Blue, and admirals ranked according to their squadron: # Admiral of the Fleet # Admiral of the White # Admiral of the Blue # Vice Admiral of the Red # Vice Admiral of the White # Vice Admiral of the Blue # Rear Admiral of the Red # Rear Admiral of the White # Rear Admiral of the Blue Promotion up the ladder was in accordance with seniority in the rank of Post-Captain, and rank was held for life, so the only way to get promoted was for the person above you on the list to die or resign. Horatio Nelson when he died was only Vice Admiral of the White. Another way was to promote unsuccessful captains to the rank of admiral ''without distinction of squadron'' (a practice known as ''yellowing'' – the unfortunate became known as a ''yellow admiral''). In the 18th century, the original nine ranks began to be filled by more than one person per rank, although the rank of Admiral of the Red was always filled by only one person and was known as Admiral of the Fleet, but the organisation of the fleet into coloured squadrons was abandoned in 1864. The Red Ensign was allocated to the Merchant Marine, the White Ensign became the flag of the Royal Navy, and the Blue Ensign was allocated to the naval reserve and naval auxiliary vessels. The 19th century British Navy also maintained a positional rank known as Port Admiral. A Port Admiral was typically a veteran Captain who served as a the shore commander of a British Naval Port and was in charge of supplying, refitting, and maintaining the ships docked at harbor. The most powerful Port Admiral position was the Port Admiral of Portsmouth, considered the leading harbor of the Royal Navy. The current ranks are Rear Admiral, Vice Admiral, Admiral and Admiral of the Fleet, also known as flag ranks because admirals, known as Flag Officers, are entitled to fly a personal Maritime flags. An Admiral of the Fleet flies a Union Flag at the masthead, while an Admiral flies a St George's cross (red cross on white). Vice Admirals and Rear Admirals fly a St George's cross differenced with one and two red balls in the hoist respectively. The rank of Commodore (rank) in the Royal Navy is not considered a flag rank, and Commodores fly swallow-tailed pennants bearing the cross of St George and a single red ball in the upper hoist. Instead of being referred to as flying their flag, Commodores fly their broad pennant. In 1996, the rank of Admiral of the Fleet was put in abeyance in peacetime, except for members of the Royal family. However, Admirals of the Fleet promoted before 1996 continue to hold their rank on the active list for life. See also: British ensigns External link: [http://www.royalnavalmuseum.org/library/factsheets/squadronal_colours.htm Squadronal Colours factsheet from the Royal Naval museum] ===United States Navy=== The United States Navy did not have any Admirals until 1862 because many people felt the title too reminiscent of royalty to be used in the country's navy. Others saw the need for ranks above Captain, among them John Paul Jones, who pointed out that the Navy had to have officers who "ranked" with Army Generals. He also felt there must be ranks above Captain to avoid disputes among senior Captains. The various Secretary of the Navy repeatedly recommended to United States Congress that Admiral ranks be created because the other navies of the world used them and American senior officers were "often subjected to serious difficulties and embarrassments in the interchange of civilities with those of other nations." Congress finally authorized nine Rear Admirals on July 16, 1862, although that was probably more for the needs of the rapidly expanding Navy during the American Civil War than any international considerations. Two years later Congress authorized the appointment of a Vice Admiral from among the nine Rear Admirals: David Farragut. Another bill allowed the President of the United States to appoint Farragut to full Admiral on July 25, 1866, and David Dixon Porter to Vice Admiral. When Farragut died in 1870 Porter became Admiral and Stephen C. Rowan Vice Admiral. Even after they died, Congress did not allow the promotion of any of the Rear Admirals to succeed them, so there were no more Admirals or Vice Admirals by promotion until 1915 when Congress authorized an Admiral and a Vice Admiral each for the Atlantic, Pacific and Asiatic fleets. There was one Admiral in the interim, however. In 1899, Congress recognized George Dewey's accomplishments during the Spanish-American War by authorizing the President to appoint him Admiral of the Navy (U.S.). He held that rank until he died in 1917. Nobody has since held that title. In 1944, Congress approved the five-star Fleet Admiral (US) rank. The first to hold it were Ernest J. King, William D. Leahy, and Chester Nimitz. The Senate confirmed their appointments December 15, 1944. The fourth Fleet Admiral, William F. Halsey, got his fifth star in December 1945. None have been appointed since. The sleeve stripes now used by Admirals and Vice Admirals in the United States date from March 11, 1869, when the Secretary of the Navy's General Order Number 90 specified that for their "undress" uniforms Admirals would wear a two-inch stripe with three half-inch stripes above it and Vice Admirals the two-inch stripe with two half-inch stripes above it. The Rear Admiral got his two-inch stripe and one half-inch stripe in 1866. The sleeve stripes had been more elaborate. When the Rear Admiral rank started in 1862 the sleeve arrangement was three stripes of three-quarter-inch lace alternating with three stripes of quarter-inch lace. It was some ten inches from top to bottom. The Vice Admiral, of course, had even more stripes and when Farragut became Admiral in 1866 he had so many stripes they reached from his cuffs almost to his elbow. On their dress uniforms the admirals wore bands of gold embroidery of live oak leaves and acorns. The admirals of the 1860s wore the same number of stars on their shoulders as admirals of corresponding grades do today. In 1899, the Navy's one Admiral (Dewey) and 18 Rear Admirals put on the new shoulder marks, as did the other officers when wearing their white uniforms, but kept their stars instead of repeating the sleeve cuff stripes. During the 20th century, the ranks of the modern U.S. Admiralty were firmly established. An oddity that did exist was that the U.S. Navy did not have a one star rank except briefly during the Second World War and then not permanently until 1986. (See Commodore (rank)) The 21st century United States Navy Admiral ranks are as follows. # Admiral # Vice Admiral # Rear Admiral (upper half) # Rear Admiral (lower half) The rank of Fleet Admiral (US) is still listed on U.S. Navy precedence charts but is not considered an active rank. See also: U.S._Navy_officer_rank_insignia ===German Navy=== The German Navy of the early 20th century was greatly expanded and enlarged as part of a build-up and mobilization in preparation for the World War I with additional enlargement during the Second World War. There were many famous German Admirals during these formative years of German naval power, among them Alfred von Tirpitz and Karl Dönitz. The ranks of the German Admiralty were based on those from other European Powers, with some modifications in the titles and pronunciation. The German Navy also never considered Commodore (rank) a rank of the Admiralty, as this rank has always been considered more of a senior Captain. In 1944, the ranks of the German Kriegsmarine were in order of seniority as follows: # Großadmiral (Grand Admiral) # Generaladmiral (General Admiral) # Admiral (Admiral) # Vizeadmiral (Vice Admiral) # Konteradmiral (Rear Admiral) In the modern age, the German Navy no longer uses the ranks of General Admiral and Grand Admiral. A junior admiral rank, known as ''Flottillenadmiral'' rates below Konteradmiral and is generally considered the equivalent of a Rear Admiral (Lower Half). ===Netherlands Navy=== In the Royal Netherlands navy (''Koninklijke Marine''), the rank of Admiral (''admiraal'') can be held by either an Naval officer appointed by the government or a member of the royal family. The nobility connection to the rank of Admiral possibly originated in 1830 when King William I promoted his son prince Frederik (who was already the Secretary of State for War and Navy) to the rank of Admiral and Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces. The next promotion to Admiral took place in 1879 when King William III made his brother, Prince Hendrik, Admiral to honor him for a long career in the Navy. In the modern Netherlands Navy, the rank of Admiral is still an offical position but at present is not used as an active rank. The seniority of all Netherlands Admiral ranks is as follows: # Admiraal (Admiral) # Luitenant-admiraal (Lieutenant Admiral) # Vice-admiraal (Vice Admiral) # Schout bij Nacht (Rear Admiral) # Commandeur (Commodore) == Related articles == * Comparative military ranks Military ranks Admirals Arabic words Admiral==Commodore== Can someone who knows something about these things explain the disappearance of Commodore from among US naval ranks and the "Lower half" and "Upper half" designations? User:RickK 01:16 7 Jul 2003 (UTC) It's all actually very well explained in the Commodore (rank) article. --User:Ray Trygstad 22:10, 13 Dec 2004 (UTC) ==British Navy== Does anyone else think it's out of place to have a complete table of British officer ranks on the page for every military and Naval rank? Shouldn't it have it's own entry, perhaps? --User:Ray Trygstad 22:41, 13 Dec 2004 (UTC) Vis-a-vis the comments in the table: navy.mil clearly shows all-uppercase abbrevations for ranks. Not sure about Midshipman, though; I'm not sure it's an actual rank. I'll edit the table appropriately. --User:Ewk 05:29, 23 Feb 2005 (UTC) ...or perhaps not. Anyway, the use of all caps in rank abbreviations is standard throughout the US Armed Forces. --User:Ewk 05:31, 23 Feb 2005 (UTC) ==Dutch Navy== This phrase about the Dutch navy is not correct: "The Dutch navy is unique in that there is only one Admiral in the navy and it is the reigning sovereign. As a result, the highest rank one can achieve in the Dutch navy is Lieutenant Admiral. Also, the Dutch have only two ranks with the title of Admiral, excluding the sovereign." The rank of admiral doesn't exist anymore officially since 1956 and it was only given twice in the 19th century: first in 1839 by King William I who made his son, allready Secretary of State for War and Navy and commander-in-chief, admiral; and the second time somewhere in the 1880's of 1890's when prince Henry was appointed admiral 6 days before his dead by his brother, king William III. There is no law or rule that the rank can only be held by the sovereign, in fact the only two time the rank was used, it was not the king. :I rewrote the whole Dutch section due to heavy POV and bad grammer. Im not at all sure of the info contianed within, though, and am trusting that to those who put it in the article. BTW- What is the translation of "Schout bij Nacht"? That doesnt seem to me to look like any kind of Admiral rank. Also Nacht means night? "Night Admiral"? We need a Dutch Speaker to tell us. -User:Husnock 02:43, 30 Mar 2005 (UTC) ::Schout bij Nacht originates from the 16th century (or even before). Schout is often translated with "bailiff" or "sheriff". There is a link with the (old) verb "schouwen" wich means "to watch" or "to look after". So, the "Schout-bij-nacht" (''Sheriff-at-Night'' / ''Watch-at-Night'') was the person who supervised the ship by night when the captain was asleep. Later he became the commanding officer of the fleet or a squadron at night when the (vice-) admiral was asleep. And somewhere in the 17th century he was associated with the rear squadron of a battle fleet (comparable to the English rear-admiral). It is an Admiral rank, he uses the same insignia (with 2 stars) as vice-admiral (3 stars) and lieutenant-admiral (4 stars). ::The rank of admiraal (not 5 stars, but crossed batons) does not exist anymore. It can still be found in navy flag-protocols (tradition ?), but not in goverment decrees since 1956 (but tradition still says that the rank can only be given to a prince of the royal family). ::Besides two royal princes with the rank in the 19th century there is another royal link: in the 18th century it was ruled that the stadhouder (''viceroy'' or ''substitute-ruler''), a remarkable function in the Dutch Republic, was appointed admiraal-generaal of the navy and kapitein-generaal (''captain-general'') of the army. But most laws and rules regarding institutions of the Dutch Republic were abolished in the French era (1795-1813) and after the establishment of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (1813). ::Found some remarks in English here: ::http://flagspot.net/flags/nl~rank.html ::See also here, NATO codes for grades of military personnel, there is no Dutch equivalent (anymore) for OF-10 (Fleet-Admiral, Marshal, General-of-the-Army) ::http://www.mindef.nl:30280/mpbundels/20_serie/dp_20_10/20_10_bijlage_h.htm == Admiral ranks by seniority == I don't see the point of this section. Its authors seem to have gathered as many variations on the rank of admiral from different navies as they can find (plus at least one rank that never actually existed), then tried to put them in the order they would rank in a hypothetical navy that had the lot. Even if one accepts the validity of the exercise (which is undermined by the fact that rank titles have had different meanings in different times and places: e.g., Admiral in the Royal Netherlands Navy corresponds to Fleet Admiral in the United States Navy , while a ''Kriegsmarine'' Admiral is Comparative military ranks of World War II to have ranked with a USN Vice Admiral), some of the placings are problematic at best. * Admiral of the Fleet is the equivalent of the USN Fleet Admiral in the Royal Navy (and other navies), and belongs on the same line. * Flag Admiral never existed. It was proposed in 1945 as a rank in the USN above Fleet Admiral; however, it was never adopted. If it is to be included, it should be on the same line as Admiral of the Navy, to which it is considered an equivalent. * Lieutenant Admiral is not just a variation on Vice Admiral; it is a separate rank in the Royal Netherlands Navy, between Admiral and Vice Admiral. * Counter Admiral is an alternative rendering of Ger. ''Konteradmiral'', Fr. ''Contre-amiral'', etc., which are usually translated as Rear Admiral; Counter Admiral and Rear Admiral should thus be on the same line. * Commodore Admiral was a short-lived USN rank immediately below Rear Admiral; it is thus the equivalent of Flotilla Admiral (Ger. ''Flotillenadmiral''), and belongs on the same line. So, if we have to have the table, it should more like this: {| style="border:1px solid #8888aa; background-color:#f7f8ff; padding:5px; font-size:95%; margin: 0px 12px 12px 0px;" |align="center"| Admiral of the Navy | Flag Admiral |- | |- |align="center"| Admiral of the Fleet | Fleet Admiral | Grand Admiral |- | |- |align="center"| General Admiral |- | |- |align="center"| Admiral |- | |- |align="center"| Lieutenant Admiral |- | |- |align="center"| Vice Admiral |- | |- |align="center"| Rear Admiral | Counter Admiral |- | |- |align="center"| Commodore Admiral | Flotilla Admiral |- | |- |align="center"| Port Admiral |- |} This is still less than satisfactory, for the following reasons: * General Admiral was a ''Kriegsmarine'' rank, between Grand Admiral and Admiral; there is some dispute over whether this should be treated as ranking between the USN Fleet Admiral and Admiral, or whether it should be treated as the equivalent of a USN Admiral (making a KM Admiral = USN Vice Admiral, KM Vice Admiral = USN Rear Admiral Upper Half, & KM Rear/Counter Admiral = USN Rear Admiral Lower Half). * Admiral in the Royal Netherlands Navy equates to a USN Fleet Admiral, & Lieutenant Admiral to a USN Admiral. * Rear Admiral in the USN has since 1985 been split into two separate ranks, Rear Admiral Upper Half and Rear Admiral Lower Half; the former corresponds to Rear Admiral in most other navies, the latter to Flotilla Admiral (or Commodore (rank)). * Port Admirals appear not to have been admirals at all, but senior captains. This would give us a table like this: {| style="border:1px solid #8888aa; background-color:#f7f8ff; padding:5px; font-size:95%; margin: 0px 12px 12px 0px;" |align="center"| Admiral of the Navy | Flag Admiral |- | |- |align="center"| Fleet Admiral | Admiral of the Fleet | Grand Admiral | Admiral (Royal Netherlands Navy) |- | |- |align="center"| General Admiral [1] |- | |- |align="center"| Admiral | Lieutenant Admiral | General Admiral [2] |- | |- |align="center"| Vice Admiral | Admiral (''Kriegsmarine'') [2] |- | |- |align="center"| Rear Admiral | Rear Admiral Upper Half | Counter Admiral | Vice Admiral (''Kriegsmarine'') [2] |- | |- |align="center"| Rear Admiral Lower Half | Commodore Admiral | Flotilla Admiral | Rear Admiral /Counter Admiral (''Kriegsmarine'') [2] |- |} [1] applies if a ''Kriegsmarine'' General Admiral is considered to outrank a USN Admiral; [2] applies if they are considered to be of equivalent rank. Shouldn't we just scrap the whole section, and point people at Comparative military ranks? — User:Franey 13:27, 22 Apr 2005 (UTC) :I am not at all for scraping the section. I think it is highly informative. The first table you mentioned though might be a good substitute, though. The second seemed a bit complicated. -User:Husnock 13:42, 22 Apr 2005 (UTC) ::Yes, it is complicated, but the first table can be very misleading. For example, take this section: :::{| style="border:1px solid #8888aa; background-color:#f7f8ff; padding:5px; font-size:95%; margin: 0px 12px 12px 0px;" |align="center"| General Admiral |- | |- |align="center"| Admiral |- | |- |align="center"| Lieutenant Admiral |- |} :: This leads us to assume that a General Admiral outranks an Admiral, who outranks a Lieutenant Admiral. But: ::* as far as I know, no single navy has or had all three of these ranks; ::* it is not safe to make this assumption across different navies. For example, a Lieutenant Admiral in the Royal Netherlands Navy ranked with a ''Kriegsmarine'' General Admiral (under one accepted scheme of equivalencies, anyway), not two grades below. (And a Dutch Admiral would actually ''outrank'' the German General Admiral.) :: So the only point of the table would seem to be: ::* a quick and dirty guide for remembering the relative order of ranks in any one of the USN, RN, Royal Netherlands Navy, ''Deutsche Marine'', or ''Kriegsmarine''; ::* an answer to the question, "If you wanted to invent a navy with as many grades of admiral as possible, what order should you put them in?" — User:Franey 15:49, 22 Apr 2005 (UTC) ---- I guess if the Admirals from the different countries were all in the same room at the same time, it would matter who saluted who. It also comes to play in joint-international military operations with who has tactical control of a group fo ships from more than one country. I've served in task forces with U.S., Japanese, and South Korean ships. That was an issue as to which Admiral would have taccon of the whole group. Also, in World War II, the matter came up during surrender ceremonies where General Admiral von Friedeburg went to British HQ and back then the two sides were saluting enemy officers (try that today with Iraqi POWs!). In any event, the British actually ''said'' General Admiral was senior to Admiral. Some U.S. text books list it as "a rank between a full Admiral and Fleet Admiral". I like the suggestions on these tables and I would say just go for it and make the changes in the article. I think the table should say, without a soubt, since this is an article about all Admiral ranks and a comparative table is something that the article needs. -User:Husnock 16:34, 22 Apr 2005 (UTC) :I take your point about the importance of precedence between officers of different navies, whether in determining the chain of command or for matters of ceremony or protocol. But as I pointed out, the table as it stands is not reliable. It implies (correctly, according to the information you've supplied), that a ''Kriegsmarine'' General Admiral outranked a USN or RN Admiral; however, it also implies that the same German General Admiral would outrank an Royal Netherlands Navy Admiral, when the opposite is in fact true. The table could be expanded to take these kinds of things into account, but as you've said, it would make it significantly more complicated. Furthermore, it woud duplicate a number of the articles listed at Comparative military ranks — in particular Comparative military ranks of World War I and Comparative military ranks of World War II , British and US military ranks compared, and Ranks and insignia of NATO. :I liked your info about the Allies' perception of the relative rank of a General Admiral: this goes against the table at Comparative military ranks of World War II , but you seem to have a better source. :I also notice that you started the articles on the U.S. "super-ranks" of Admiral of the Navy (United States) and General of the Armies. [https://www.perscom.army.mil/tagd/tioh/rank/goa.htm This page] states that at least in 1944–1945, General of the Armies was considered a separate rank above General of the Army; I can't find a reference anywhere, but I can accept that similarly Admiral of the Navy was considered a superior rank to Fleet Admiral at the time of the creation of the latter rank (though this would not have been such a pressing issue, as George Dewey was long dead, unlike the very much alive John J. Pershing ). However, was this accepted by other countries? By the time of his death in 1948, Pershing would have been senior (by time in rank, at least) to any British Field Marshal; but when he was promoted to General of the Armies in 1919, would the British have considered senior to, e.g. Douglas Haig, 1st Earl Haig, promoted to Field Marshal two years previously? Similarly, would they consider Dewey superior to an Admiral of the Fleet? — User:Franey 11:57, 25 Apr 2005 (UTC) See other meanings of words starting from letter: AAB | AC | AD | AE | AF | AG | AH | AI | AJ | AK | AL | AM | AN | AO | AP | AR | AS | AT | AU | AW | AX | AY | AZ |Words begining with Admiral: Admiral Admiral Admiralblur Admiraljustin Admirals Admirals Admirals Admiralsrevolt.ogg Admirals_Mast Admirals_of_Germany Admiralties Admiralty Admiralty,_Hong_Kong Admiralty_(disambiguation) Admiralty_(HK) Admiralty_(MTR) Admiralty_actions Admiralty_Arch Admiralty_Bay Admiralty_Bay Admiralty_Board Admiralty_Charts Admiralty_court Admiralty_courts Admiralty_Head_Lighthouse Admiralty_House Admiralty_Inlet Admiralty_Island Admiralty_Islands Admiralty_Islands Admiralty_Islands_languages Admiralty_Islands_lowland_rain_forests Admiralty_law Admiralty_law Admiralty_Mountains Admiralty_Mountains Admiralty_MTR_station Admiralty_Range Admiral_Abu_Bakar Admiral_Ackbar Admiral_Ackbar Admiral_Akbar Admiral_Black Admiral_Bobbery Admiral_Byng Admiral_Byrd Admiral_Canaris Admiral_Cartwright Admiral_Cervera Admiral_Cesar_Guzzetti Admiral_Chamrajnagar Admiral_class_battleship Admiral_class_battleship Admiral_class_battleships Admiral_Collingwood Admiral_Cunningham Admiral_Daala Admiral_Daala Admiral_David_Glasgow_Farragut Admiral_Dewey Admiral_de_Coligny Admiral_de_Grasse Admiral_de_grasse Admiral_de_Winter Admiral_de_Witt Admiral_Doenitz Admiral_Donitz Admiral_donitz Admiral_DuGalle Admiral_DuGalle Admiral_Duncan Admiral_Duncan_pub Admiral_Durham Admiral_Farragut Admiral_fisher Admiral_Flote Admiral_Forrest Admiral_Forrest Admiral_Gardner Admiral_Graf_Spee Admiral_grant Admiral_Griff Admiral_Halsey Admiral_Harrsk Admiral_Harssk Admiral_Hood Admiral_Hopper Admiral_Horatio_Nelson Admiral_Hotham Admiral_Isoroku_Yamamoto Admiral_James_Sandecker Admiral_John_Byng Admiral_Karel_Doorman Admiral_Kimmel Admiral_King Admiral_Kolchak Admiral_Komack Admiral_Kuznetsov Admiral_Lord_Nelson Admiral_Lutjens Admiral_Maarten_Tromp Admiral_Makarov Admiral_Michael_Colley Admiral_Motti Admiral_Nakhimov Admiral_Nakhimov_(ship) Admiral_Nelson Admiral_Nimitz Admiral_of_the_Blue Admiral_of_the_Fleet Admiral_of_the_fleet Admiral_of_the_Fleet_(Royal_Navy) Admiral_of_the_Fleet_of_the_Soviet_Union Admiral_of_the_Navy Admiral_of_the_Navy_(U.S.) Admiral_of_the_Navy_(United_States) Admiral_of_the_Navy_(United_States) Admiral_of_the_Navy_(US) Admiral_of_the_Navy_(US) Admiral_of_the_Ocean_Sea Admiral_of_the_Red Admiral_of_the_Western_Seas Admiral_of_the_White Admiral_Online Admiral_online Admiral_Owen_Paris Admiral_Ozzel Admiral_Ozzel Admiral_Pellaeon Admiral_Piett Admiral_Piett Admiral_Radford Admiral_Raymond_A._Spruance Admiral_Razorbeard Admiral_Robert_Blake Admiral_Roo Admiral_Roo Admiral_Roo Admiral_Roo/Charts Admiral_Roo/History Admiral_Roo/History Admiral_Roo/Meta Admiral_Roo/My_Lyrics Admiral_Roo/My_Lyrics/You_Turn_My_World_Upside_Down Admiral_Roo/My_Lyrics/You_Turn_My_World_Upside_Down/You_Turn_My_World_Upside_Down Admiral_Roo/My_personal_pages_creation_database Admiral_Roo/sandbox Admiral_Sarn Admiral_Scheer Admiral_Sir_Barry_Domvile Admiral_Sir_Charles_Brisbane Admiral_Sir_James_Saumarez Admiral_Sir_John_Fisher Admiral_Sir_Michael_Seymour Admiral_Sir_William_Penn Admiral_Somerville Admiral_Tan_Sri_Dato'_Seri_Abu_Bakar_bin_Abdul_Jamal Admiral_Tianem Admiral_Tirpitz Admiral_Togo Admiral_Ushakov Admiral_Ushakov_(ship) Admiral_Valdemar Admiral_Vernon Admiral_Villeneuve Admiral_Vitgeft Admiral_Walter_Doran Admiral_Watkins Admiral_William_J._Fallon Admiral_William_Standley_State_Recreation_Area Admiral_Yamamoto Admiral_Yi
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