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Colonel is a Military Rank of a Commissioned Officer , with the corresponding ranks existing in nearly every country in the world. The rank of Colonel is one of the oldest in existence, dating as far back to the time of the Roman Empire .

The odd pronunciation of the word comes from the British adaptation of the rank; when it was incorporated into their military in the mid-1800s, the spelling was taken from the French military rank Colonel while the pronunciation was a Spanish Loan Word , '''Coronel'''. Gradually, slurring of the word lead to '''Coronel''' to become '''''', which is still used today despite the spelling.

In the modern age, a Colonel is usually a military title rated as the highest field rank below the General grades.


Origins


Ancient uses of the word ''colonel'' date back to Roman regiments, where a colonel was the officer in charge of a column of soldiers. The term then reappeared in the Middle Ages, as a nobleman in command of a large number of soldiers, forming early units similar to battalions and regiments. The head colonel of the battlefield would usually become the Colonel General , and command all other colonels and their troops.

The modern usage of the word ''colonel'' began in the late sixteenth century, when companies were first formed into larger regiments or columns (''colonne'' in Italian) under the leadership of a ''colonnello''. (In modern English, the word is pronounced similarly to ''kernel'' as a result of having entered the language from Middle French in two competing forms, ''coronel'' and ''colonel''. The more etymological ''colonel'' was favored in literary works and eventually became the standard spelling despite losing the pronunciation war to the Dissimilated ''coronel''.)

After the shift from primarily mercenary to national armies, but prior to the professionalization of the armed services of European nations subsequent to the French Revolution , a Colonel became a nobleman who purchased the right to head a regiment from the previous holder of that right. He would in turn receive money from another nobleman to serve as his lieutenant, literally ''lieutenant colonel.'' The funding to provide for the troops came from the monarch or his government; the Colonel had to be responsible for it. If he were not, or were otherwise court-martialed, he was dismissed ("cashiered"), and the monarch would receive money from another nobleman to command the regiment. Otherwise, the only pension for the Colonel was selling the right to another nobleman when he was ready to retire.

In England, supporters of the practice said that the country had been ill-served by the professional army created by Cromwell (ultimately Charles I was executed) and that the country could only be "safe" from the army if it was officered by men "with a stake in the country", that is, men who could afford to purchase a commission.

By the time of the late 19th Century , Colonel was a professional military rank and typically held by an officer in command of a Regiment . As European military influence expanded throughout the world, the rank of Colonel became adopted by nearly every nation in existence under a variety of names.

With the rise of Communism , some of the large Communist militaries saw fit to expand the Colonel rank into several grades, resulting in the unique Senior Colonel rank which was found in countries such as the Soviet Union and is still used in such nations as China and North Korea .


Colonel ranks by country


The following articles deal with the rank of Colonel as it is used in various national militaries.



Eastern European equivalents


In the 16th Century , in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth , the officer commanding a regiment of Polish Cavalry (usually a Rotmistrz or Captain ) started to be referred to either [as a ''regimentary'' or ''regimentarz''. The term became polonised to ''pułkownik'' (''pułk'' being the Polish word for Regiment ) and the rank was adopted by several armies of Central and Eastern Europe, most notably the forces of Cossack s and then Muscovy .

  • pъlk'' meaning regiment, and include the following:




Colonel equivalent ranks




Other Colonel ranks




See also



References

Keegan, John; & Wheatcroft, Andrew (1996). Who's Who in Military History: From 1453 to the Present Day. London: Routledge.