Brigadegeneral

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Brigadier general (Danish: Brigadegeneral; German: Brigadegeneral) is the Germanic variant of Brigadier general.

Belgium

The rank of Brigadegeneral (

Flemish: Brigadegeneraal; French: Général de Brigade) is used by the Belgian Land Component, Air Component and Medical Component
.

Denmark

Brigadegeneral is the lowest general officer rank in the Royal Danish Army and Royal Danish Air Force, placed above the rank Oberst and below the rank of Generalmajor. The rank was introduced in 1983, following the adaptation of the STANAG 2116.[1] It is ranked OF-6 within NATO and has a paygrade of M403, it is equivalent to Flotilleadmiral.[2][3] The rank is either given to commanders of 1st and 2nd Brigade, or to Oberst on extended international missions, as a temporary rank.[4]

  • Rank insignia
  • Army
    Army
  • Air Force
    Air Force

Germany

Brigadier general
Brigadegeneral
Flottillenadmiral

Brigadegeneral, short BrigGen, is the lowest general officer rank in the German Army (Heer), German Air Force (Luftwaffe).

The rank is rated

Zentraler Sanitätsdienst der Bundeswehr
.

Rank insignia

On the shoulder straps (Heer, Luftwaffe) there is one golden pip (star) in golden oak leaves.

Heer Luftwaffe ... to service uniform
  • Brigadegeneral (field suit)
    Brigadegeneral
    (field suit)
  • Brigadegeneral (retired)
    Brigadegeneral
    (retired)
  • Brigadegeneral (field suit)
    Brigadegeneral
    (field suit)
  • Generalarzt (human medicine)
    Generalarzt
    (human medicine)
  • Generalarzt (dental medicine)
    Generalarzt
    (dental medicine)

See also

  • Comparative military ranks of World War I
  • Comparative military ranks of World War II

References

Bibliography
  • Hedegaard, Ole A. (1 January 1986). "Nyt militært gradstegn - en ny/gammel tradition!". Krigsvidenskab.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 28 August 2018.
  • Marrup, Karsten (1 May 2017). "Stop galskaben med midlertidige tillagte grader!". OLFI (in Danish). Retrieved 13 September 2018.
  • Ministry of Defence (9 January 2017). "Historik". forpers.dk (in Danish). Forsvarsministeriets Personalestyrelse. Archived from the original on 22 February 2019. Retrieved 8 April 2021.
  • Military Committee Land Standardization Board (13 January 2021). STANAG 2116 (7th ed.). NATO Standardization Agency.