Field marshal (United Kingdom)


Field marshal has been the highest rank in the British Army since 1736. A five-star rank with NATO code OF-10, it is equivalent to an Admiral of the Fleet in the Royal Navy or a Marshal of the Royal Air Force in the Royal Air Force. A Field Marshal's insignia consists of two crossed batons surrounded by yellow leaves below the Tudor Crown. Like Marshals of the Royal Air Force and Admirals of the Fleet, Field Marshals traditionally remain officers for life, though on half-pay when not in an appointment or retired. The rank has been used sporadically throughout its history, and was vacant during parts of the 18th and 19th centuries. After the Second World War, it became standard practice to appoint the Chief of the Imperial General Staff to the rank on his last day in the post. Army officers occupying the post of Chief of the Defence Staff, the professional head of all the British Armed Forces, were usually promoted to the rank upon their appointment.
In total, 143 men have held the rank of field marshal. The majority led careers in the British Army or the colonial British Indian Army, rising through the ranks to eventually become a field marshal. Some members of the British royal family, most recently Prince Edward, Duke of Kent and Charles III, were promoted to the rank after shorter periods of service. Three British monarchs assumed the rank on their accessions to the throne, while Edward VII and Charles III were already field marshals, and two British consorts, Albert, Prince Consort and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, were appointed by their respective queens. Other ceremonial appointments were made as diplomatic gestures. Twelve foreign monarchs have held the honour, though three were stripped of it when their countries became enemies of Britain and its allies in the two world wars. Also awarded the rank were one Frenchman and one Australian, honoured for their contributions in World War I and World War II respectively, and one South African statesman.
A report commissioned by the Ministry of Defence in 1995 made a number of recommendations for financial savings in the armed forces' budget, one of which was the abolition of all five-star ranks. Part of the rationale was that these ranks were disproportionate to the size of the forces commanded by these officers, and that none of the United Kingdom's close allies, such as the United States, used such ranks. The recommendation was not taken up in full, but the practice of promoting service chiefs to five-star ranks was stopped, and the ranks are now reserved for special circumstances. Sir Peter Inge was, in 1994, the last active officer to be promoted to the rank. Inge relinquished the post of Chief of the Defence Staff in 1997, and his successor, Sir Charles Guthrie, was the first officer not to be promoted upon appointment as CDS, although he was promoted to the honorary rank of field marshal in June 2012.
More promotions to field marshal came in 2012, eighteen years after the moratorium on routine promotions to the rank, when Queen Elizabeth II promoted Prince Charles, her son and heir, to the five-star ranks in all three services, in recognition of support provided for her in her capacity as Head of the British Armed Forces. At the same time, Guthrie, who relinquished the post of CDS and retired from active service in 2001, was promoted to honorary field marshal. In June 2014, former Chief of the Defence Staff Lord Walker of Aldringham was also promoted to honorary field marshal. The most recent promotions to the rank came in June 2025, when former Chiefs of the Defence Staff Lord Richards of Herstmonceux and Lord Houghton of Richmond were also promoted to the rank.
Although the rank of field marshal is not used in the Royal Marines, the insignia is used on the uniform of the Captain General, the ceremonial head of the corps.

Insignia of rank

The rank insignia of a field marshal in the British Army comprises two crossed batons in a wreath of laurel leaves, with a crown above. In some other countries, historically under the sphere of British influence, an adapted version of the insignia is used for field marshals, often with the crown being replaced with an alternative cultural or national emblem. On appointment, British field marshals are awarded a gold-tipped baton which they may carry on formal occasions.

List of field marshals

The vast majority of officers to hold the rank of field marshal were professional soldiers in the British Army, though eleven served as officers in the British Indian Army. At least fifty-seven field marshals were wounded in battle earlier in their careers, of whom 24 were wounded more than once, and eight had been prisoners of war. Fifteen future field marshals were present at the Battle of Vitoria, where the Duke of Wellington earned the rank, and ten others served under Wellington at the Battle of Waterloo. However, only thirty-eight held independent commands in the field, and just twelve served as Commander-in-Chief of the Forces or Chief of the Imperial General Staff during a major war.
Four field marshals had previously received the Victoria Cross, the United Kingdom's highest and most prestigious award for gallantry 'in the face of the enemy'. Wood, a famously injury-prone officer, was awarded the VC for two actions in 1858, in which he first attacked a group of rebels in India, and later rescued an informant from another group of rebels. White, a cavalry officer, led two charges on enemy guns in Afghanistan in 1879, while Gort, of the Grenadier Guards, commanded a series of attacks while severely wounded during the First World War in 1918. Roberts received his VC for actions during the Indian Mutiny.
Wellington, 44 at the time of his promotion, was the youngest non-royal officer to earn the rank of field marshal. The 1st Marquess of Drogheda was the oldest, promoted at the age of 91, while a further twenty-three officers were promoted to field marshal in their eighties. Wellington was also the only field marshal to become Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.
No officer whose career was spent in the British Army has ever reached the rank of field marshal without having served in the cavalry, infantry, Royal Armoured Corps, Royal Artillery, or Royal Engineers. One non-British officer has been appointed field marshal in the British Army; Ferdinand Foch of France, in recognition of his contributions in the First World War, while one, Sir William Robertson, held every rank in the British Army, from private soldier to field marshal.
Name and styleRegimentImageBornPromotion dateDied
Royal Regiment of Foot16661737
Earl of Argyll's Regiment of Foot16801743
Horse Guards Regiment16741740
16721739
26th (Cameronian) Regiment of Foot16731747
6th Regiment of Foot16691749
Earl of Bath's Regiment16731748
Grenadier Guards 16851768
Royal Scots16801758
10th Regiment of Foot16801770
39th (Dorsetshire) Regiment of Foot16901773
5th Royal Irish Lancers17211794
13th Regiment of Foot17431805
24th Regiment of Foot17201796
Grenadier Guards17631827
Royal Scots Fusiliers17231806
Grenadier Guards17171797
Scots Guards17191797
Grenadier Guards17081798
7th Queen's Own Hussars17241807
Coldstream Guards17291803
Coldstream Guards17351806
Royal Fusiliers17671820
33rd Regiment of Foot17691852
17711851
Hanoverian Guards17741850
Scots Guards17761834
17901865
12th Dragoons17301821
Grenadier Guards17431830
50th (Queen's Own) Regiment of Foot17451832
Grenadier Guards1747 or 17481837
18191861
William II17921849
39th (Dorsetshire) Regiment of Foot17571849
Grenadier Guards17641851
80th Regiment of Foot (Staffordshire Volunteers)17681854
4th Light Dragoons17881855
23rd Regiment of Foot17731865
33rd Regiment of Foot17721860
Queen's Rangers17851856
East Devonshire Regiment17791863
99th Regiment of Foot17781868
Seaforth Highlanders17791869
12th Royal Lancers18191904
9th (East Norfolk) Regiment of Foot17921863
9th (East Norfolk) Regiment of Foot17821870
9th (East Norfolk) Regiment of Foot17841875
Royal Artillery17791868
Royal Engineers17821871
Bengal Artillery17861872
17851877
Grenadier Guards17871876
King Edward VII18411910
52nd (Oxfordshire) Regiment of Foot17891879
35th (Royal Sussex) Regiment of Foot17901880
93rd (Sutherland Highlanders) Regiment of Foot18011885
Bengal Engineer Group18101890
11th Bengal Native Infantry18041895
64th (2nd Staffordshire) Regiment of Foot18041886
Royal Artillery17991886
85th Regiment of Foot (Bucks Volunteers)18041893
6th Regiment of Foot18001888
Royal Engineers18211903
4th Regiment of Foot18181909
9th Bengal Native Infantry18241900
12th Regiment of Foot18331913
Bengal Artillery18321914
67th (South Hampshire) Regiment of Foot18231902
55th Bengal Native Infantry18201902
Wilhelm II, German Emperor18591941
1st Bengal Native Infantry18261904
Royal Engineers18501942
13th Light Dragoons18381919
27th (Inniskilling) Regiment of Foot18351912
Franz Joseph I of Austria18301916
King's Royal Rifle Corps18411925
51st Sikhs (Frontier Force)18311916
Royal Engineers18501916
King George VRoyal Welsh Fusiliers
Ex officio
18651936
Scots Guards18451932
Royal Engineers18451918
8th King's Royal Irish Hussars18521925
Nicholas II of Russia18681918
7th Queen's Own Hussars18611928
31st (Huntingdonshire) Regiment of Foot18481921
18791926
35th Artillery Regiment18511929
York and Lancaster Regiment18571932
6th (Inniskilling) Dragoons18611936
Rifle Brigade (Prince Consort's Own)18641922
3rd Dragoon Guards18601933
5th Royal Gurkha Rifles (Frontier Force)18571926
Albert I of Belgium18751934
Royal Scots Fusiliers18651951
Worcestershire Regiment18631948
Royal Artillery18661948
Alfonso XIII of Spain18861941
Hirohito 19011989
King's Royal Rifle Corps18611935
Grenadier Guards18651946
Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry18691950
Royal Artillery18711947
King Edward VIIIEx officio18941972
West Yorkshire Regiment18741947
King George VIEx officio18951952
Royal Artillery18801959
18701950
Prince of Wales's Leinster Regiment18811944
Grenadier Guards18861946
Black Watch18831950
Royal Artillery18831963
Irish Guards18911969
Royal Warwickshire Regiment18871976
Rifle Brigade (Prince Consort's Own)18811964
62nd Punjabis 18841981
Royal Warwickshire Regiment18911970
18841951
Royal Navy19212021
Somerset Light Infantry18961989
King's Royal Rifle Corps19001974
Royal Irish Fusiliers18981979
Rifle Brigade (The Prince Consort's Own)19021976
19201972
Haile Selassie18921975
17th/21st Lancers19071989
Seaforth Highlanders19071996
Royal Artillery19121980
Royal Tank Corps19152001
King's Royal Rifle Corps19212004
19452001
King's Royal Rifle Corps19232019
7th Queen's Own Hussars19252007
Green Howards19272002
Royal Artillery19312018
2nd King Edward VII's Own Gurkha Rifles (The Sirmoor Rifles)19312022
Royal Scots Greys1935living
Green Howards19352022
Welsh Guards, Royal Navy, and Royal Air Force
Ex officio
1948living
Welsh Guards19382025
Royal Anglian Regiment1944living
Royal Artillery195214 June 2025living
Green Howards195414 June 2025living