Miralay
Appearance
Military ranks of the Ottoman Empire |
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Officers |
Non-commissioned officers |
Historical military ranks of Egypt |
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Officers |
Others |
Miralay or Mîr-i alay (Gendarmerie: Alaybeyi) was a military rank of the Ottoman Army and Navy. The modern Turkish equivalent is Albay, meaning Colonel.[1] Miralay is a compound word composed of Mir (commander) and Alay (regiment).
Miralay was equal to colonel in the Ottoman Army and the pre-1935 Turkish Army. It was junior to the rank Mirliva (Brigadier General) and senior to the rank Kaymakam (Lieutenant Colonel). The collar mark (later shoulder mark) and cap (until 1933) of a Miralay had two stripes and three stars during the early years of the Turkish Republic.
The rank of Miralay was renamed to Albay in 1935 with the "Turkification" of the rank names.[2]
Sources
[edit]- ^ miralay, Turkish Language Association
- ^ "Ordu Dahili Hizmet Kanunu" (PDF) (in Turkish). tbmm.gov.tr. Retrieved 20 Dec 2023.