Misplaced Pages

Hungarian Ground Forces

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

The Hungarian Ground Forces ( Hungarian : Magyar Szárazföldi Haderő , Hungarian pronunciation: [ˈmɒɟɒr ˈsaːrɒzføldi ˈhɒdɛrøː] ) constitute the land branch of the Hungarian Defence Forces , responsible for ground activities and troops, including artillery , tanks, Armoured Personnel Carriers (APCs), Infantry Fighting Vehicles (IFVs), and ground support . The ground forces have a history of service in Iraq and are currently engaged in the KFOR (Kosovo Force) operation.

#994005

60-1062: The predecessors of the Hungarian ground forces include the Royal Hungarian Landwehr , the Royal Hungarian Army , and the ground force components of the Hungarian People's Army . During the Cold War , Hungary was aligned with the Soviet Union and was a member of the Warsaw Pact . However, following the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, Hungary significantly reduced the number of tanks and troops and closed several garrisons. The Hungarian Army now focuses on national security, peacekeeping, and international conflicts. Notably, Hungary became

120-494: A Private of the same rank to necessarily obey his/her orders. In practice, chain of command (CoC) determines practical seniority by appointed charge. It is not uncommon for a Private (Trained) to be appointed in charge (IC) of his peers, including Acting Lacking Corporals, for a particular task/shift/event/exercise. Therefore, a Private (Recruit) with 5 or more years of seniority, for example (which often occurs, e.g., having entered through an NCM-SEP Archived 24 December 2013 at

180-786: A member of NATO in 1999. In 1963, the Ground Forces of Hungary comprised the 5th Army , established in 1961 at Székesfehérvár . This formation included the 7th Motor Rifle Division in Kiskunfélegyháza , the 8th Motor Rifle Division in Zalaegerszeg , the 9th Motor Rifle Division in Kaposvár , and the 11th Tank Division in Tata . Additionally, the 34th Special Reconnaissance Battalion in Székesfehérvár operated as

240-601: A soldier of private rank wears no insignia. Like its British Army counterpart, the Australian Army rank of private (PTE) has other titles, depending on the corps and specification of that service member. The following alternative ranks are available for privates in the Australian Army: In the New Zealand Army , a soldier of private rank wears no insignia. Like its British Army counterpart,

300-843: A special display cabinet in Hall V (the Franz Joseph Hall) of the museum, several uniforms of the Imperial Royal Landwehr are displayed, a relief on the rear of the cabinet shows the territories from which the Hungarian Landwehr and the Imperial Royal Landwehr recruited. Private (rank) A private is a soldier , usually with the lowest rank in many armies. Soldiers with the rank of private may be conscripts or they may be professional (career) soldiers. The term derives from

360-865: A sub-unit of the 5th Army. Another significant combat formation was the 3rd Army Corps in Cegléd , which comprised the 4th Motor Rifle Division in Gyöngyös and the 15th Motor Rifle Division in Nyíregyháza . According to Michael Holm, the 3rd Army Corps stationed at Cegléd, designated as Military Unit Number 6639, was established on 1 November 1966. It maintained the same organizational structure in 1970 and 1980. However, by 1988, it underwent restructuring, now comprising four mechanized infantry brigades, one tank brigade, one artillery brigade, and three artillery regiments (AA Missile, Anti-Aircraft Artillery, and Anti-Tank Artillery), alongside other smaller units. Following

420-565: A substantive Corporal). Once the last prerequisite has been met, substantive promotion occurs (usually, only on paper, without a second ceremony to commemorate the promotion). While still an Acting Lacking Corporal Private (Trained) (AL/Cpl Pte(T)) (or, simply, Acting Lacking Corporal (AL/Cpl) , or, informally, Corporal (Cpl) ), the Private does not hold any authoritative or legal powers of Corporal rank. Newly granted Acting Lacking Corporals may often erroneously, by virtue of this grant, demand

480-538: A waiver. A person who has earned the Eagle Scout award or the Gold Award or has completed at least two years of JROTC may enlist at any time at the rank of PV2. The third rank is private first class or "PFC", which is designated by an arc or "rocker" under the chevron. The term of address "Private" may be properly applied to any Army soldier E-1 (PV1) to E-3 (PFC). The abbreviation "Pvt" may be used whenever

540-548: Is because Hungarian military traditions are strictly defensive, despite the Hungarian army participating in offensives on foreign soil in both world wars. The word honvéd has been in use since the Hungarian Revolution of 1848 . The term is not used for soldiers of foreign armies: a foreign soldier with no rank is called közlegény , literally "common lad" or "common man". Private (Pte) ( saighdiúr singil in Irish),

600-532: Is filling a position on an establishment for which a rank higher than the member's substantive or temporary rank is authorized. However, this QR&O acting rank has been superseded by CFAO's provisional status , i.e., A/Cpl (P) and not the separate acting while so employed rank, i.e., AWSE Cpl or Cpl (AWSE) or A/Cpl (WSE), mentioned in the CFAO and never mentioned in the QR&;O. Going by CFAO policy, none of

660-477: Is given the rank of soldaat (Dutch) or soldat (French), whether one wishes to be a volunteer, non-commissioned officer or officer. Subsequent rank depends on the branch of the service: for example, at the Royal Military Academy (for officer training) one is soon promoted to the rank of korporaal (Dutch) or caporal (French) i.e. "corporal". The insignia is a simple black mark or

SECTION 10

#1732779488995

720-475: Is the last of the subtypes of acting promotions. They are known as theatre promotions , as they can necessarily only occur in-theatre, as they are "limited to designated commanders of operational theatres". However, AWSE promotions are unheard of in the regular junior ranks, as these exclusively exist in the realm of higher officers (usually Major and above) using the grieving process in order to be granted higher pay on top of what they are already making, as well as

780-648: Is the lowest enlisted rank in the Irish Army . Soldiers enlist as recruits then undergo a basic course of instruction. There are three grades of private in the army. After basic training the soldier is upgraded (rather than promoted) from recruit to private 2 star (Pte 2*) ( saighdiúr singil, 2 réalta ). After more corps-specific training (usually lasting eight weeks) the soldier is upgraded to private 3 star (Pte 3*) ( saighdiúr singil, 3 réalta ). All are usually just addressed as "private", although before being upgraded, recruits may be addressed as "recruit". In corps units,

840-504: Is under the umbrella terminology of promotion ) of the Private rank: Private (Recruit) , Private (Basic) , and Private (Trained) , which could arguably unofficially be considered equivalent to NATO codes OR-1, OR-2, and OR-3, respectively. The two main subtypes of acting promotions are acting/lacking (AL/) qualification and provisional status (A/ (P)) (rare). Acting lacking qualification has pay "promotion" (or, bonus) and seniority reasons only (once promoted substantively, seniority in

900-759: The Honvéd ( lit.   ' Defender of the Homeland ' ; collectively , the Honvédség ), was one of the four armed forces (German: Bewaffnete Macht or Wehrmacht ) of Austria-Hungary from 1867 to 1918, along with the Austrian Landwehr , the Common Army and the Imperial and Royal Navy . The term honvéd was used to refer to all members of the Hungarian land forces in 1848-49, but it

960-811: The Corps of Royal Marines , the rank structure follows that of British infantry regiments with the exception that the Royal Marines equivalent of private is Marine (Mne). During the course of the First World War, some Royal Marines also took the rank of Sapper , this was usually found as part of the Royal Marine Divisional Engineers of the Royal Naval Division . Upon enlistment to the Belgian army , one

1020-515: The Italian Army soldato is the lowest military rank. This rank is also referred to as recluta (meaning recruit ). Soldato is the generic term for private. But in many specialized corps this term is never used, as a more specific, corp related, term is preferred. For instance the lowest rank in Alpine troops is alpino , and the lowest rank in the artillery is artigliere . In

1080-715: The Philippine Marine Corps . It stands below the rank of Private first class . It is equivalent to the Airman of the Air Force and the Apprentice Seaman of the Navy and Coast Guard. Once recruits complete their Basic Military Training (BMT) or Basic Rescue Training (BRT) , they attain the rank of private (PTE). Privates do not wear ranks on their rank holder. PTEs who performed well are promoted to

1140-807: The Prime Minister of Hungary . In peacetime the officers of the Hungarian Honvéd either transferred from regular Hungarian regiments of the Common Army (K.u.K.) or graduated from the Ludovika Military Academy (a cadet school opened in 1872 specifically for the training of Honvéd officers ) in Budapest. From 1869 onward the rank and file soldiers of the Honvéd were recruited as part of the general conscription process of

1200-686: The South African Army the lowest enlisted rank is Private. Privates do not wear insignia on their uniforms. In the different corps it is known with different titles. In the British Army , a private (Pte) equates to both OR-1 and OR-2 on the NATO scale, although there is no difference in rank. Privates wear no insignia. Many regiments and corps use other distinctive and descriptive names instead of private, some of these ranks have been used for centuries; others are less than 100 years old. In

1260-627: The United States Army , private is used for the two lowest enlisted ranks , just below private first class (E-3) or PFC. The lowest rank is "private (E-1)" or PV1 , sometimes referred to as "recruit" , but this rank can also be held by some soldiers after punishment through the Uniform Code of Military Justice , or by soldiers punished under the UCMJ as a demotion until they are discharged . A PV1 wears no uniform rank insignia; since

SECTION 20

#1732779488995

1320-591: The Wayback Machine , completes college before attending basic training, then becomes permanently injured during basic training, works out his/her obligatory service (OS) and is considered for release and, subsequently, waits for said release), holds higher seniority than an Acting Lacking Corporal with 4 years seniority. In this case, the Private (Recruit), without appointment from the chain would theoretically become IC by default, over an Acting Lacking Corporal. A Private (Recruit) who has served for 2 years receives

1380-441: The Common Army with individual Hungarian conscripts being allocated to specific K.u.K. or Honvéd regiments according to the numbers required. Entry to the Honvéd contingent or to the Common Army was decided by drawing lots. Enlisted at the age of 21 the Honvéd soldier usually undertook 24 months of active service before passing into the reserve. The commitment for compulsory service ended at the age of 36. The Royal Hungarian Honvéd

1440-913: The Croatian-Slavonian Landwehr). The Croatian–Hungarian Settlement of 1868 granted the Croats the right to introduce Croatian as their working and command language within their units. In addition, the Croatian-Slavonian Honvéd units were subordinated to the Ban in Agram and not to the National Defence Minister in Budapest . However, both Ban and the Defence Minister were subordinated to

1500-545: The Defence Administrative Orders and Directives (DAODs) going on three decades now but have not yet made any new policy on rank structural organization, which make the CFAOs the current de facto ratified policy on promotion). The QR&Os mention a former type of rank labelled acting , which refers to a granting of rank: ( a ) for an indefinite period; or ( b ) for the period during which the member

1560-582: The Defence Staff (CDS), in acting as the Final Authority (FA), quotes the incorrect policy, directing that the Queen's Regulations & Orders (QR&Os) be followed, even though QR&Os have long been superseded/amplified by Canadian Forces Administrative Orders (CFAOs) (in the areas by which they are superseded) (which, in turn, has claimed to have been in the process of being superseded by

1620-895: The English rank titles "DO NOT REFLECT A MODERN AND INCLUSIVE SERVICE" [ sic ]. The rank equivalent for Private (Recruit) and Private (Basic) is now Sailor Third Class (S3); and, for Private (Trained), Sailor Second Class (S2). The French equivalent for "Sailor" is matelot . The French-language equivalent for private is soldat . The French-language equivalent for Aviator is aviateur . The rank advancements are useful, as they allow comparability with other militaries and are associated with DAOD 5031-8, Canadian Forces Professional Development's Developmental Periods (DPs), an approximate measure for blocks of career timeframe. Canadian Army Privates (Trained) may be known by other titles, depending on their personnel branch and their regiment's tradition: Other, according to QR&Os, updated 28 Jun, 2019: In

1680-463: The French army, soldat de seconde classe is the lowest military rank. This rank is also referred to as recrue ("recruit"). The name of the lowest rank in the Hungarian army ( Magyar Honvédség ) is the honvéd which means "homeland defender". The word is also used informally for a soldier in general of any rank (i.e. "our honvéds " or an officer referred as a honvédtiszt , honvéd officer). This

1740-531: The Hungarian government. The monarch became the supreme warlord, holding all authority over the structure, organization, and administration of the army. He appointed the senior officials, had the right to declare war, and was the commander-in-chief of the army. On 21 May 1893 the Honvéd Memorial was unveiled in Budapest in commemoration of the deeds of the Hungarian national army during the Hungarian Revolution of 1848 -49. From 1919 to 1945, Honvédség

1800-898: The New Zealand Army rank of private (PTE) has other titles, depending on the corps and specification of that service member. The following alternative ranks are available for privates in the New Zealand Army: In the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) , Private is the lowest rank for members who wear the army uniform. It is equivalent to an aggregate of NATO codes OR-1 to OR-3, as opposed to any one specific NATO code. Canadian Forces policy dictates three types of promotions in this rank: promotion (substantive), advancement , and granting of acting rank . There are three rank advancements (fr: échelons ) (not to be confused with substantive promotion, though advancement

1860-675: The Royal Hungarian Honvéd was restored for Hungary, and the Imperial-Royal Landwehr was created for Austria, but both states had to continue to finance the Austro-Hungarian Common Army , much larger than both. A common Austro-Hungarian War Ministry was formed immediately for the large Common Army, but it had no right to command directly the smaller Austrian Landwehr and the Hungarian Honvéd armies, which were respectively placed under

Hungarian Ground Forces - Misplaced Pages Continue

1920-698: The War Ministry. Thereafter units were designated only by their numerical designation, but the practice of honoric titles remained in the Honvéd. All details relate to the year 1914: The history of Austro-Hungarian forces is documented in detail in the Military History Museum in Vienna, which was founded by Emperor Franz Joseph I as the Imperial-Royal Court Armaments Museum ( k.k. Hofwaffenmuseum ). In

1980-579: The advent of the Army Combat Uniform (ACU), the slang term "fuzzy" has come into vogue, referring to the blank velcro patch area on the ACU where the rank would normally be placed. The second rank, "private (E-2)" or PV2, wears a single chevron, known colloquially as " mosquito wings". In pay tables, the rank is listed as "private second class." Advancement to PV2 is automatic after six months' time in service, but may be shortened to four months by

2040-657: The air force this is ranked as aviere and in the navy as marinaio . In the Royal Netherlands Army, the Landmacht , the equivalent ranks are soldaat (soldier), similar to the original French, with different classes: Depending on where the soldaat serves, he may be deemed a kanonnier (gunner in the artillery), huzaar (hussar in the cavalry) or fuselier (rifleman in the rifles) as well as commando , jager (hunter) or rijder (rider). A soldaat can be promoted to korporaal ( corporal ). In

2100-484: The basic rank is lentosotamies ("airman"). In the Finnish Navy , the basic rank is matruusi ("seaman") or tykkimies ("artilleryman") in the marine infantry. Special corps troopers may be referred by their function or unit, such as kaartinjääkäri (Guards jaeger), panssarijääkäri (armored jaeger), laskuvarjojääkäri (paratroop jaeger), rajajääkäri (border jaeger) or rannikkojääkäri (coastal jaeger). In

2160-482: The bulk of the fighting was against the Empire of Austria , whereupon a number of regular imperial regiments went over to the Hungarian side. Some volunteers were attached to these existing regiments and some joined new regular regiments. Consequently, the term honvéd was used to refer to all members of the Hungarian land forces in 1848-49. The Honvéd was finally defeated by Austria with Russian assistance. Around 40% of

2220-700: The contemporary British Armed Forces , the army rank of private is broadly equivalent to able seaman in the Royal Navy , aircraftman , leading aircraftman and senior aircraftman in the Royal Air Force , and marine (Mne) or bandsman, as appropriate equivalent rank in the Royal Marines . In the Boys' Brigade the rank of private is used when a boy moves from the junior section to the company section. Distinctive equivalents for private include: In

2280-415: The direct control of the separate Austrian and Hungarian Ministries of Defence. The Austrian and Hungarian Ministers of Defence were not placed under the command and jurisdiction of the Common War Ministry; they were subordinated only to their own prime ministers and the respective parliaments in Vienna and Budapest. The Hungarian Honvéd army could join the imperial army only with the explicit authorization of

2340-549: The dissolution of the Warsaw Pact in 1991, both the 5th Army and the 3rd Mechanized Corps were disbanded. The Hungarian Defense Forces inherited the assets and personnel of the Hungarian People's Army. However, owing to the altered geopolitical landscape and economic constraints, the Army underwent substantial force reduction and asset adjustments. After Hungary's accession to NATO, the procurement of newer and more modern multi-purpose equipment began. This included various vehicles, communication equipment, unmanned aerial vehicles, and

2400-423: The end of two years, conscripts may be demobilized or, if they volunteer, they may be selected to become NCOs. They can also attend a military academy to become officers after passing a test. In effect, the two-year conscription period is a probation period. " In the Armed Forces of the Philippines , the rank of Private is the lowest enlisted personnel rank. It is currently being used by the Philippine Army and

2460-407: The grievers were eligible to be granted AWSE status or pay. In contrast to higher officers, it is quite common for lower ranks to perform duties of ranks one or two ranks above their rank. However, they do not make complaints nor seek compensation for their time in service. They understand and accept that there are already set limits to the number of members in each rank (and trade). AWSE is a mechanism

Hungarian Ground Forces - Misplaced Pages Continue

2520-432: The leaders of the CAF organization take advantage of to secure pay they would otherwise not have been able to receive. It is an increasing contentious issue among the lower ranks that the leader of a professional force continues to approve AWSE promotions, as the CDS admitted himself. He claimed that a "new global CF promotion policy" would be in place "soon". This was stated in 2009. The air force rank of Aviator (Avr)

2580-512: The modernization of existing assets such as radar locators and anti-aircraft missile complexes. However, the lack of resources in the armed forces limited significant improvements until the mid-2010s. In 2021, the Hungarian Ground Forces completed their mission in Afghanistan and announced the conclusion of evacuations on August 26, 2021. Airlift operations successfully evacuated 540 people, including Hungarian citizens, Afghans, and their families who had previously worked for Hungarian forces. Before

2640-402: The new rank of Corporal is the date of promotion to substantive rank, with simultaneous adjustment to the date of granting of (or "promotion to") the acting rank). As long as all other administrative prerequisites are met and the member has 48 months of qualifying service, one gains acting lacking qualification (literally, lacking the prerequisite QL5 qualification to be considered and respected as

2700-440: The next promotion is to Corporal . In the People's Liberation Army of the People's Republic of China , Privates and Privates First Class are typically conscripted soldiers serving for a two year period; conscripts who volunteer to continue beyond this period may become professional soldiers: " After the end of induction training, conscripts are awarded the rank of private; in their second year they become privates first class. At

2760-437: The private soldiers in the Hungarian Revolutionary Volunteer Army consisted of ethnic minorities of the country. During the Hungarian revolution, around half of the officers and generals of the Hungarian Honvéd Army had foreign origin. There were at least as many ethnic Hungarian professional officers in the Imperial Habsburg army as in the Hungarian revolutionary Honvéd army. Following the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867 ,

2820-463: The rank advancements into independent hierarchical ranks. All persons holding the rank of Private, without holding a simultaneous granting of acting rank, are referred to as such and the qualifier shown in parentheses is used on all official records. Contemporary practice for medical and other administrative records write Acting Lacking ranks as if they were substantive, for shorthand purposes. Granting of acting rank while so employed (AWSE or A/WSE)

2880-399: The rank designation changes. In the artillery, the rank is known as gunner (Gnr), but usually only after the completion of a gunners' course, and in the cavalry it is known as trooper (Tpr). Communications and Information Services privates are known as signalman or signalwoman . Medical orderlies are sometimes referred to as medic, although this can apply to privates and corporals . In

2940-400: The rank of Lance Corporal (LCP). The PFC rank is rarely awarded today by the Singapore Armed Forces. All private enlistees can be promoted directly to lance corporal should they meet the minimum qualifying requirements, conduct appraisal and work performance. Recruits who did not complete BMT but completed two years of National Service will be promoted to private. In the Australian Army ,

3000-435: The realm of precedence after precedence of grievance decisions without ratification into official military policy. Contemporary grievance matters have shifted away from theatre-only matters, as outlined in the career policy, and towards attempting to secure an AWSE temporary rank where the commissioned officer's work period in question, during which there was claimed higher-rank duties, did not occur in-theatre. The Chief of

3060-490: The same pay as a Private (Trained) and a Private (Basic) who has served for 2 years, as pay increments are maxed out after 2 years, ever since the CAF eliminated the Basic and Recruit pay columns for the Private rank from fiscal year 1992 to 1998. Because of the complicated and outdated organizational rank structure of the CAF, the majority of members across the ranks are not aware of the rules and, consequently, do not follow them. No published discussion has been made on separating

SECTION 50

#1732779488995

3120-418: The simplified version of the Royal Military Academy's coat of arms for candidate officers. The Finnish equivalent rank is sotamies (literally "war man"), although since 1973 this has been purely a paper term as all infantry troopers were renamed as jääkäri troops, previously reserved only to mobile light infantry. As in the British army, the various branches use different names: In the Finnish Air Force ,

3180-480: The specific grade of private is immaterial (such as in tables of organization and equipment ). In the United States Marine Corps , private (Pvt) refers only to the lowest enlisted rank , also known as a "boot", just below private first class . A Marine Corps private wears no uniform insignia and is sometimes described as having a "slick sleeve" for this reason. Most new, non-officer marines (a.k.a. "boots" or "non-rates") begin their military career as privates. In

3240-429: The term Landwehr implies units of limited fighting power. This was not the case in the Hungarian Honvéd. Although weaker in numbers - there were only three battalions per infantry regiment instead of the usual four in the Common Army - the troops were regular combat soldiers and were highly trained. The Royal Hungarian Honvéd was divided into the Hungarian Honvéd and the Royal Croatian Home Guard (also called

3300-584: The term "private soldier". "Private" comes from the Latin word privus or perhaps privo that meant an individual person and later an individual without an office . In Indonesia , this rank is referred to as Tamtama (specifically Prajurit which means soldier), which is the lowest rank in the Indonesian National Armed Forces . In the Indonesian Army , Indonesian Marine Corps , and Indonesian Air Force , "Private" has three levels, which are: Private ( Prajurit Dua ), Private First Class ( Prajurit Satu ), and Chief Private ( Prajurit Kepala ). After this rank,

3360-406: The withdrawal, the number of Hungarian troops present in Afghanistan had already been reduced to ten. As of 2020, the main combat formations of the HDF Land Command are as follows: Royal Hungarian Landwehr The Royal Hungarian Honvéd ( Hungarian : Magyar Királyi Honvédség ) or Royal Hungarian Landwehr ( German : königlich ungarische Landwehr ), commonly known as

3420-614: Was also a name given to the Royal Hungarian Army . The Hungarian Landwehr consisted of territorial units from the Hungarian half (called Transleithania or the Lands of the Crown of Saint Stephen ) of Austria-Hungary , the historical territory of the Kingdom of Hungary : These territories included what is present-day Hungary , Slovakia (so-called Upper Hungary) and parts of the present-day countries of Austria ( Burgenland ), Croatia , Romania ( Banat , Crișana , Maramureș , Transylvania ), Serbia ( Banat , Vojvodina ), Slovenia ( Prekmurje ) and Ukraine ( Transcarpathia ). Usually

3480-411: Was also used to refer to enlisted private soldiers without a rank. The word honvéd in Hungarian (sometimes "honved" in English sources ) means "defender of the homeland" and first appeared during the 1848 revolutions . At that time it was the name given to volunteers who were engaged for several weeks or a gyözelemig (i.e. "until victory") and sent to fight the Serbs and Croats . Subsequently,

3540-668: Was formerly called "Private", but this changed in the fiscal year of 2015, when the traditional air force rank insignia and title were replaced in favour of a new rank title the Minister of National Defence introduced back in September 2014, as part of the Government of Canada's efforts in delineating "distinctive service cultures". Up to 2020, the navy equivalent for Private (Recruit) was Ordinary Seaman (Recruit) (OS (R)); for Private (Basic), Ordinary Seaman (Basic) (OS (B)); and, for Private (Trained), Able Seaman (AB). On 4 September 2020, Commander, Royal Canadian Navy (RCN) announced new English rank designations for its junior ranks, claiming that

3600-472: Was the standing army of Hungary. A part of the Honvéd was the Royal Croatian Home Guard ( Kraljevsko hrvatsko domobranstvo ), which consisted of 1 infantry division (out of 7 in the Honvéd) and 1 cavalry regiment (out of 10 in the Honvéd). Its order of battle at the outbreak of the First World War in 1914 was as follows (Hungarian designations listed in singular form): In 1915, units of the whole Army that had nicknames or honorific titles lost them by order of

#994005