Captain general of the Navy
Captain general of the Navy (capitán general de la Armada in Spanish) is a five-star naval officer rank and the highest rank of the Spanish Navy (Armada Española). The five-star NATO rank code is OF-10, the routine honorary appointments formally ceased in 1999. The rank of captain general of the Navy is equivalent to an admiral of the fleet in many nations such as the United Kingdom or the United States, a captain general of the Spanish Army (Ejército de Tierra Español) or an Air captain general in the Spanish Air Force (Ejército del Aire).
Captain general of the Navy | |
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Navy service uniform sleeve lace with the rank of Captain general of the Spanish Navy. | |
Country | Spain |
Abbreviation | CGN |
Rank | Five-star |
NATO rank code | OF-10 |
Non-NATO rank | O-11 |
Formation | c. 1750 |
Next lower rank | Admiral general |
Equivalent ranks | Captain general (Army) Captain general (Air Force) |
A peculiar usage of the term captain general arose in the Spanish Navy of the 16th century. A capitán-general was appointed by the king as the leader of a fleet (although the term 'squadron' is more appropriate, as most galleon fleets rarely consisted of more than a dozen vessels, not counting escorted merchantmen), with full jurisdictional powers. The fleet second-in-command was the 'almirante' (admiral), an officer appointed by the capitan-general and responsible for the seaworthiness of the squadron.[1] One captain-general that sailed under the Spanish flag that is now well known was Ferdinand Magellan, leader of the first fleet to sail around the world.
Since King Amadeo's reign (1871–1873), the monarchs used captain general of the Navy rank and insignia as Commander-in-chief. Briefly abolished by the Second Spanish Republic, it was restored in 1938 during the regime of Francisco Franco, an Army general. Since 19th century honorary promotions of retired admirals to this rank were also made, such as the prime ministers Juan Bautista Aznar-Cabañas (1928) and Luis Carrero Blanco (1973), the only posthumous promotion. Infante Juan, Count of Barcelona, claimant to the Spanish throne (1941–1977) and father of King Juan Carlos, was also made honorary captain general of the Spanish Navy in 1992.
List
Date of promotion | Image | Name | Dead/Annulled | Notes |
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1750 | Juan José Navarro de Viana y Búfalo | † 5 February 1772 | 1st general captain of the Navy | |
1783 | Luis de Córdova y Córdova[2] | † 29 September 1796 | 2nd general captain of the Navy | |
1789 | Pedro Fitz-James Stuart y Colón de Portugal | † 23 July 1791 | 3rd general captain of the Navy | |
1792 | Antonio Valdés y Fernández Bazán[3][4] | † 4 April 1816 |
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1794 | Francisco Javier Everardo y Tilly[5][6] | † 11 December 1795 | 5th general captain of the Navy | |
1796 | Antonio González de Arce y Ulloa[7] | † 23 February 1798 | 6th general captain of the Navy | |
1798 | Manuel Antonio Flórez y Maldonado[8][9] | † 23 March 1798 | 7th general captain of the Navy | |
1798 | Juan Cayetano de Lángara y Huarte[10] | † 18 January 1806 | 8th general captain of the Navy | |
1802 | José Solano y Bote[11][12] | † 24 April 1806 | 9th general captain of the Navy | |
1805 | Francisco de Borja y Poyo[13] | † 10 June 1808 | 10th general captain of the Navy | |
1805 | Francisco Gil de Taboada y Lemos[14] | † 1809 | 11th general captain of the Navy | |
9 November 1805 | Federico Carlos Gravina y Nápoles[15] | † 9 March 1806 | 12th general captain of the Navy | |
3 November 1808 | Félix Ignacio de Tejada y Suárez de Lara[16] | † 20 February 1817 | 13th general captain of the Navy | |
24 February 1817 | Ignacio Maria de Álava y Sáenz de Navarrete[17] | † 26 May 1817 | 14th general captain of the Navy | |
6 June 1817 | Juan María de Villavicencio y de la Serna[18] | † 25 April 1830 | 15th general captain of the Navy | |
1 May 1830 | Juan Ruiz de Apodaca y Eliza[19] | † 11 January 1835 | 16th general captain of the Navy | |
25 January 1835[20] | Cayetano Valdés y Flores[21] | † 16 February 1835 | 17th general captain of the Navy | |
16 January 1836 | Francisco Javier de Uriarte y Borja[22][23][24][25] | † 29 November 1843 | 18th general captain of the Navy | |
12 February 1843 | José Sartorio y Terol[26] | † 30 December 1843 | 19th general captain of the Navy | |
2 June 1843[note 1] | Ramón Lorenzo Romay y Jiménez-Cisneros[27] | † 23 May 1849 |
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15 September 1847[note 2][28] | José Rodríguez-Arias y Alvárez-Campana[29] | † 26 January 1852 | 21st general captain of the Navy | |
17 February 1852 | Francisco Javier de Ulloa y Ramírez de Laredo[30] | † 24 November 1855 |
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28 November 1855 | Dionisio Capaz y Rendón[31] | † 27 December 1855 |
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13 February 1856 | Francisco Armero y Fernández de Peñaranda[32] | † 1 July 1856 |
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24 November 1858[note 3] | Casimiro Vigodet y Garnica[33][34][35] | † 2 January 1872 |
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16 November 1870 | Amadeo de Saboya | 11 February 1873 (First Spanish Republic established) |
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5 September 1872[note 4] | Juan José Martínez de Espinosa y Tacón[36] | † 14 October 1875 | ||
29 December 1874 | Alfonso de Borbón y Borbón | † 25 November 1885 |
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24 August 1875[note 4] | Joaquín Gutiérrez de Rubalcaba y Casal[37] | † 3 April 1881 |
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18 April 1881[note 4] | Luis Hernández-Pinzón y Álvarez de Vides[39] | † 22 February 1891 | Ad honorem | |
27 February 1891[note 4] | Guillermo Chacón y Maldonado[40] | † 28 March 1899 |
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15 April 1899[note 4] | Carlos Valcárcel y Ussel de Gimbarda[41] | † 23 April 1903 |
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17 May 1902 | Alfonso de Borbón y Habsburgo-Lorena | 14 April 1931 (Second Spanish Republic established)[note 6] |
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30 April 1903[note 4] | José María Beranger y Ruiz de Apodaca[42] | † 23 January 1907 |
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21 February 1910[note 7] | Juan Bautista Viniegra y Mendoza[43] | † 21 February 1918 |
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17 March 1918[44] | José Pidal y Rebollo[45] | † 4 May 1920 |
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11 May 1920[46] | José María Chacón y Pery[47][48] | † 13 April 1922 |
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22 April 1922 | Ricardo Fernández de la Puente y Patrón[49] | † 23 October 1928 |
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30 October 1928 | Juan Bautista Aznar y Cabañas[50] | † 19 February 1933[51] |
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18 July 1938 | Francisco Franco y Bahamonde | † 20 November 1975 |
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21 December 1973 | Luis Carrero y Blanco[52] | Posthumous promotion
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20 November 1975[53][note 10] | Juan Carlos de Borbón y Borbón | Active until 19 June 2014 (Abdication) |
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5 December 1992 | Juan de Borbón y Battenberg[54] | † 1 April 1993 |
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19 June 2014 | Felipe de Borbón y Grecia | Present |
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See also
Notes
- Supernumerary captain general of the Navy until 30 December 1843.
- Supernumerary captain general of the Navy until 23 May 1849.
- Supernumerary captain general of the Navy until 1866. Rank replaced by Admiral of the Spanish Navy in 1869.
- Promoted as Admiral of the Spanish Royal Navy
- Vide Rubalcava.
- On 14 April 1931 Alfonso XIII renounced as head of state but did not formally abdicate.
- Admiral of the Spanish Royal Navy until 10 January 1912, when the traditional rank of Captain General of the Navy was recovered.
- Named himself.
- At Civil War until 1 April 1939.
- Monarch since 22 November 1975.
References
- Juan y Ferragut, Mariano. La Marina en 1808, Cuadernos monográficos del IHCN. Spanish Navy (In Spanish).
- "Spanish Galleon: 1530–1690" by Angus Konstam, copyright 2004 Osprey Publishing, Ltd.
- Hattendorf, John (2000): Naval policy and strategy in the Mediterranean: past, present, and future. Taylor & Francis, p. 37. ISBN 0-7146-8054-0
- González de Canales, Fernando (2000). Catálogo de Pinturas del Museo Naval. Tomo II. Madrid: Ministerio de Defensa.
- Martínez-Valverde y Martínez, Carlos. Enciclopedia General del Mar. Garriga, Madrid, 1957.
- Biografía del Marqués de Casa-Tilly. Portal TodoAvante.es. In Spanish
- Biografía del Marqués de Casa-Tilly. Portal Todo a Babor. In Spanish
- http://www.todoababor.es/articulos/bio_arce.htm Biografía de Antonio González de Arce. Portal Todo a Babor. In Spanish
- Real Academia de la historia: Diccionario Bibliográfico español – Manuel Antonio Flórez
- "Flores, Manuel Antonio (1987)." Enciclopedia de México, v. 5. Mexico City
- "Flores, Manuel Antonio (1987). " Enciclopedia de México, v. 5. Mexico City
- José Luis Santalo Rodríguez de Viguri (1973). Don Jose Solano y Bote, Primer Marqués del Socorro Capitán General de la Armada. Madrid: Instituto Histórico de Marina. I.S.B.N. 84-00-03891-6
- Colección de Opusculos del Excmo. Sr. D. Martín Fernández de Navarrete, Madrid. 1848
- Borja y Poyo. Portal TodoAvante.es. In Spanish
- Gil de Lemos. Portal TodoAvante.es. In Spanish
- Federico Gravina. Portal TodoAvante.es. In Spanish
- Tejada y Suárez de Lara. Portal TodoAvante.es. In Spanish
- Ignacio María de Álava y Navarrete. Portal TodoAvante.es. In Spanish
- Villavicencio de la Serna. Portal TodoAvante.es. In Spanish.
- Ruiz de Apodaca. Portal TodoAvante.es. In Spanish
- Madrid Gazette no. 26, de 26/01/1835, pp. 103 a 104.. In Spanish
- Cayetano Valdés y Flores. Portal TodoAvante.es. In Spanish
- Cervera Pery, José (2004). El Panteón de Marinos Ilustres. Trayectoria Histórica, reseña biográfica. Madrid: Ministerio de Defensa.
- Fernández Duro, Cesáreo (1973). La Armada Española, desde la unión de los reinos de Castilla y Aragón. Madrid: Museo Naval.
- González de Canales, Fernando (2000). Catálogo de Pinturas del Museo Naval. Volume II.
- Marliani, Manuel (1850). Combate de Trafalgar. Vindicación de la Armada Española. Madrid: Impreso de Orden Superior.
- Sartorio y Terol. Portal TodoAvante.es. In Spanish
- Romay y Jiménez-Cisneros en el portal TodoAvante.es
- XXI Capitán General de la Armada. Contando historias antiguas... de militares.
- Francisco Javier de Ulloa en el portal TodoAvante.es
- Francisco Javier de Ulloa. Portal TodoAvante.es. In Spanish
- Capaz Rendón. Portal TodoAvante.es. In Spanish
- "Francisco Armero Peñaranda en el portal TodoAvante.es". Archived from the original on 17 September 2017. Retrieved 21 May 2017.
- Cervera y Jácome, Juan (1926). El Panteón de Marinos Ilustres. Madrid: Ministerio de Marina.
- Martínez-Valverde y Martínez, Carlos (1957). Enciclopedia General del Mar. Garriga.
- González de Canales, Fernando (2000). Catálogo de Pinturas del Museo Naval. Volume II. Madrid: Ministerio de Defensa.
- Juan José Martínez de Espinosa y Tacón. Portal TodoAvante.es. In Spanish
- Joaquín Gutiérrez de Rubalcaba y Casal. Portal TodoAvante.es. In Spanish
- compactgen.com. In Spanish
- Luis Hernández-Pinzón Álvarez. Portal TodoAvante.es. In Spanish
- Guillermo Chacón y Maldonado. Portal TodoAvante.es. In Spanish
- Carlos Valcárcel. Portal TodoAvante.es In Spanish
- Rodríguez González, Agustín Ramón (1993). Isaac Peral: Historia de una Frustración. Cartagena: Ayuntamiento de Cartagena. ISBN 84-87529-21-6.
- Biografía de Juan Bautista Viniegra y Mendoza. Portal TodoAvante.es. In Spanish
- Gaceta de Madrid núm. 76, de 17/03/1918.
- Biografía de Ricardo Fernández de la Puente. Portal TodoAvante.es
- Madrid Gazette (11 May 1920). In Spanish
- Silva Suárez, Manuel (2007). "Chacón y Orta, Francisco" (PDF). El Ochocientos: De las Profundidades a las Alturas. II: 395. ISBN 978-84-7820-814-2.
- Urquijo y Goitia, José Ramón de (2008). Gobiernos y ministros españoles en la edad contemporánea. Madrid: CSIC. ISBN 978-84-00-08737-1.
- Biografía de Ricardo Fernández de la Puente en el portal TodoAvante.es (In Spanish)
- Madrid Gazette (30 October 1928)
- Hemeroteca Periódico ABC (21/02/33). Acceded 14 February 2017 (In Spanish).
- Decree 3204/1973, 20 December, approving the State funeral for HE Admiral Carrero Blanco, the President of the Government. Spanish Official Journal (21/12/73)
- Law-Decree 16/1975, 20 November, promoting HRH the Prince of Spain to honorary captain general of the Armies. Spanish Official Journal. In Spanish
- Royal Decree 1477/1992, 4 December, promoting HRH don Juan de Borbón y Battenberg, Navy Admiral, to honorary captain general of the Navy. Spanish Official Journal (05/12/1992). In Spanish