The rank of Rotmistr is an 'ensign' rank, used by both branches in the Czech Army. It is ranked OR-5 within the NATO rank structure. The immediate senior rank is called Nadrotmistr (lit.'senior rittmaster') and is ranked OR-6.[4]
The Norwegian rank, Norwegian: rittmester/rittmeister, is the rank of officers in the armoured and mechanized infantry units of the Norwegian Army. The spelling ritmester was used in Norwegian until 1907.
Historical use
In the Polish army (from the 15th century to the mid-20th century) a rotmistrz commanded a formation called a rota. However, a rotmistrz of hussars was a commander of between 100 and 180 hussars, with a lieutenant of hussars as his second-in-command. The Lithuanian term was rotmistras.[citation needed] In earlier times, the rotmistrz served as the commander of an infantry or cavalrycompany, though sometimes he would temporarily be assigned field rank tasks e.g. commanding an entire regiment or even a larger formation. In the cavalry, the rank continued until 1945 as a company level title. Applied to the commander of a troop, it was equivalent of a modern-day captain.
The rank was also adopted by RussianNew Regiments as rotmistr (ротмистр) and later formalized in Table of Ranks as the cavalry post; until 1798, and between 1883 and 1918, a lower-ranking shtabs-rotmistr (штабс-ротмистр) also existed, representing the ranks of Senior Captain and Junior Captain in the Russian Imperial Guards Cavalry, Army Cavalry, Gendarmerie and Border Guards by 1914.
In British and Commonwealth military forces, a Riding Master is not a rank. In the Household Cavalry Regiment a suitable Warrant Officer with the rank of Riding Instructors is appointed Riding Master. The duration of this appointment is determined by the commanding Lieutenant-Colonel and, once appointed, the Riding Master is the person in the lead of training of recruits and horses of the Household Cavalry Regiment.[6]
NATO code
While the rank is used in some of NATO countries, it is ranked differently depending on the country.
↑"Militære grader". forsvaret.no (in Norwegian). Norwegian Armed Forces. 4 February 2021. Retrieved 26 May 2021.
↑Littlejohn, David (1985). Foreign Legions Of The Third Reich. San Jose: Bender Publishing. pp.24–29. ISBN9780912138220.
↑Václavíček, Ivo (2010). "Nový rok – nové hodnosti"(PDF). A Report: čtrnáctideník Ministerstva obrany ČR (in Czech). Vol.3. Ministry of Defense of the Czech Republic. p.41. ISSN1211-801X. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
↑Henner, Sigurd; Böhler, Wolfgang (2013). Die deutsche Wehrmacht: Dienstgrade und Waffenfarben des Heeres 1939-1945[The German Wehrmacht: ranks and weapon colors of the army 1939-1945] (in German). Czech Republic: Motorbuch. ISBN978-3613036017.
↑Mollo, Andrew (2001). The Armed Forces of World War II: Uniforms, Insignia & Organisation. Leicester: Silverdale books. p.23. ISBN1-85605-603-1.