Colonel-in-chief
Colonel-in-chief is a ceremonial position in an army regiment. It is in common use in several Commonwealth armies, where it is held by the regiment's patron, usually a member of the royal family.
Some armed forces take a light-hearted approach to the position, appointing animals or characters as colonel-in-chief. The Norwegian Army, for example, appointed a king penguin named Sir Nils Olav as a colonel-in-chief.
History
Historically a colonel-in-chief was the ceremonial head of a regiment, usually a member of a European country's royal family. The practice extends at least back to 1740 in Prussia when Frederick II held that position in the newly created Garde du Corps, an elite heavy cavalry regiment.By the late 19th century the designation could be given to the children of royalty; there are pictures of the daughters of Russian Czar Nicholas II in the uniforms of their regiments. The German Kaiser Wilhelm II carried the title to an extreme, holding it in dozens of German and Austro-Hungarian, British, Russian, and Portuguese regiments. His mother, wife, son, and daughters were also full or deputy colonels-in-chief of various units.
Role
In modern usage, the colonel-in-chief of a regiment is its patron, who has a ceremonial role in the life of the regiment. They do not have any operational role, or the right to issue orders, but are kept informed of all important activities of the regiment and pay occasional visits to its units. The chief purpose of the colonel-in-chief is to maintain a direct link between the regiment and the royal family. Some artillery regiments have a captain-general instead of a colonel-in-chief, but the posts are essentially the same.The position of colonel-in-chief is distinct from the other ceremonial regimental posts of colonel of the regiment and honorary colonel, which are usually retired military officers or public figures with ties to the regiment.
Colonels-in-chief are appointed at the invitation of the regiment. While it is traditional for a royal personage to hold the position, it is at the discretion of each regiment whom they invite.
, most colonels-in-chief in the British Army are members of the British royal family. However, one foreign monarch holds the position: King Abdullah II of Jordan, who is colonel-in-chief The Light Dragoons. King Abdullah served in the British Army as a troop commander in the 13th/18th Royal Hussars, which is now The Light Dragoons.
In the past non-royal persons have held, or been invited to hold, the post of colonel-in-chief. The Duke of Wellington was colonel-in-chief of the regiment that bore his name. The Governor General of Canada Adrienne Clarkson was invited to be colonel-in-chief of Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry, while the Royal Australian Army Medical Corps has appointed every Governor-General of Australia since 2007 to serve as its colonel-in-chief.
The role has spread to other armies in the Commonwealth of Nations, at least in countries which have royal families.
List of colonels-in-chief
United Kingdom
Royal Navy (styled Commodore-in-Chief)
- Plymouth, Royal Naval Command – King Charles III
- Aircraft Carriers – King Charles III
- Royal Navy Medical Service – Queen Camilla
- Royal Navy Chaplaincy Service – Queen Camilla
- Scotland – William, Prince of Wales
- Submarines – William, Prince of Wales
- Fleet Air Arm – Catherine, Princess of Wales
- Royal Fleet Auxiliary – Prince Edward, Duke of Edinburgh
- Portsmouth – Anne, Princess Royal
- Maritime Reserves – Prince Michael of Kent
- Small Ships and Diving – vacant
- Royal Marines – King Charles III
- Women in the Royal Navy – Anne, Princess Royal
British Army
Household Cavalry and Royal Armoured Corps
Household Cavalry
- The Life Guards – King Charles III
- *Sir Edward Smyth-Osbourne
- The Blues and Royals – King Charles III
- *Anne, Princess Royal
Line Cavalry
- 1st The Queen's Dragoon Guards – Catherine, Princess of Wales
- The Royal Scots Dragoon Guards – King Charles III
- *Prince Edward, Duke of Kent
- The Royal Dragoon Guards – Prince Edward, Duke of Edinburgh
- *Katharine, Duchess of Kent
- The Queen's Royal Hussars – Prince Edward, Duke of Edinburgh
- The Royal Lancers – Queen Camilla
- The King's Royal Hussars – Anne, Princess Royal
- The Light Dragoons – King Abdullah II of Jordan
Royal Tank Regiment
- The Royal Tank Regiment – King Charles III
Yeomanry
- The Royal Yeomanry – vacant
- *Princess Alexandra, The Honourable Lady Ogilvy
- The Royal Wessex Yeomanry – vacant
- *Prince Edward, Duke of Edinburgh
- The Queen's Own Yeomanry – vacant
- *Sophie, Duchess of Edinburgh
- The Scottish and North Irish Yeomanry – ''vacant''
Infantry
Foot Guards
- Grenadier Guards – King Charles III
- *Queen Camilla
- Coldstream Guards – King Charles III
- *Sir James Bucknall
- Scots Guards – King Charles III
- *Prince Edward, Duke of Edinburgh
- Irish Guards – King Charles III
- *Catherine, Princess of Wales
- Welsh Guards – King Charles III
- *William, Prince of Wales
- London Guards – vacant
- *Prince Edward, Duke of Edinburgh
Line Infantry and Rifles
- The Royal Regiment of Scotland – King Charles III
- *Anne, Princess Royal
- *Black Watch, 3rd Battalion, Royal Regiment of Scotland – King Charles III
- *52nd Lowland, 6th Battalion, The Royal Regiment of Scotland – Anne, Princess Royal
- *51st Highland, 7th Battalion The Royal Regiment of Scotland – King Charles III
- The Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment – vacant
- The Duke of Lancaster's Regiment – King Charles III
- The Royal Regiment of Fusiliers – Prince Edward, Duke of Kent
- The Royal Anglian Regiment – Prince Richard, Duke of Gloucester
- The Royal Yorkshire Regiment – vacant
- The Royal Welsh – King Charles III
- The Mercian Regiment – William, Prince of Wales
- Royal Irish Regiment – Sophie, Duchess of Edinburgh
- The Royal Gurkha Rifles – King Charles III
- The Rifles – Queen Camilla
- *1st Battalion – Prince Edward, Duke of Kent
- *2nd Battalion – Prince Edward, Duke of Edinburgh
- *3rd Battalion – Princess Alexandra, The Honourable Lady Ogilvy
- *5th Battalion – Sophie, Duchess of Edinburgh
- *6th Battalion – Prince Richard, Duke of Gloucester
- *7th Battalion – Birgitte, Duchess of Gloucester
Airborne Infantry
- The Parachute Regiment – King Charles III
Special Operations
- Ranger Regiment – vacant
- *1st Battalion – Anne, Princess Royal
- *4th Battalion – Queen Camilla
Special Forces
- Special Air Service – vacant
- Special Reconnaissance Regiment – Queen Camilla
Combat Support and Army Air Corps
- Army Air Corps – William, Prince of Wales
- Royal Regiment of Artillery – King Charles III
- Corps of Royal Engineers – King Charles III
- Royal Corps of Signals – Anne, Princess Royal
- *Queen's Gurkha Signals – Anne, Princess Royal
- Intelligence Corps – Anne, Princess Royal
- Honourable Artillery Company – King Charles III
- *Prince Michael of Kent
- Royal Monmouthshire Royal Engineers – vacant
- *Prince Richard, Duke of Gloucester
Combat Service Support
- Royal Logistic Corps – Anne, Princess Royal
- *Katharine, Duchess of Kent
- *Prince Richard, Duke of Gloucester
- *10 The Queen's Own Gurkha Logistic Regiment – Anne, Princess Royal
- Corps of Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers – Sophie, Duchess of Edinburgh
- Adjutant General's Corps – Birgitte, Duchess of Gloucester
- *Katharine, Duchess of Kent
- *Staff and Personnel Support – vacant
- *Educational and Training Services – vacant
- *Army Legal Services – vacant
- *Provost Branch – vacant
- **Royal Military Police – King Charles III
- **Military Provost Staff – vacant
- **Military Provost Guard Service – vacant
- Royal Corps of Army Music – Sophie, Duchess of Edinburgh
- Royal Army Chaplains' Department vacant
- Small Arms School Corps – vacant
- Royal Army Physical Training Corps – vacant
- General Service Corps – ''vacant''
Army Medical Services
- Royal Army Medical Service – Prince Richard, Duke of Gloucester
- Royal Army Veterinary Corps – Anne, Princess Royal
Overseas Regiments
- The Royal Gibraltar Regiment – Governor of Gibraltar
- The Royal Bermuda Regiment – Birgitte, Duchess of Gloucester
- Royal Montserrat Defence Force – vacant
- Cayman Islands Regiment – vacant
- Turks and Caicos Islands Regiment – vacant
- Falkland Islands Defence Force – ''vacant''
Royal Air Force (styled Honorary Air Commodore)
- Royal Air Force – King Charles III
- RAF Regiment – King Charles III
- RAF Regiment – Sir Stephen Dalton
- Royal Auxiliary Air Force – Prince Richard, Duke of Gloucester
- Royal Air Force Air Cadets – Catherine, Princess of Wales
- Princess Mary's Royal Air Force Nursing Service – Princess Alexandra, The Honourable Lady Ogilvy
- RAF Ascension Island – vacant
- RAF Akrotiri – vacant
- RAF Benson – Prince Michael of Kent
- RAF Boulmer – vacant
- RAF Brize Norton – Anne, Princess Royal
- RAF Coningsby – Catherine, Princess of Wales
- RAF Cosford – vacant
- RAF Cranwell – vacant
- RAF Digby – vacant
- RAF Gibraltar – vacant
- RAF Halton – Queen Camilla
- RAF Henlow – vacant
- RAF High Wycombe – vacant
- RAF Honington – vacant
- RAF Leeming – Queen Camilla
- RAF Lossiemouth – vacant
- RAF Marham – King Charles III
- RAF Northolt – vacant
- RAF Odiham – Prince Richard, Duke of Gloucester
- RAF Shawbury – vacant
- RAF Spadeadam – vacant
- RAF St Mawgan – vacant
- RAF Syerston – vacant
- RAF Valley – William, Prince of Wales
- RAF Waddington – Prince Edward, Duke of Edinburgh
- RAF Wittering – Sophie, Duchess of Edinburgh
- RAF Woodvale – vacant
- RAF Wyton – vacant
- University of London Air Squadron – Anne, Princess Royal
- 501 Squadron, Royal Auxiliary Air Force – Prince Richard, Duke of Gloucester
- 600 Squadron, Royal Auxiliary Air Force – Hugh Trenchard, 3rd Viscount Trenchard
- 612 Squadron, Royal Auxiliary Air Force – Simon Arthur, 4th Baron Glenarthur
- 4626 Squadron, Royal Auxiliary Air Force – Maxwell Aitken, 3rd Baron Beaverbrook
- 7006 Squadron, Royal Auxiliary Air Force – Christopher Andrew
- 7630 Squadron, Royal Auxiliary Air Force – David Cousins