Rank and Responsibility
Wehrmacht - Heer
The following table outlines the basic ranks one
would find in an infantry battalion. Colonels and General Officers have been omitted
from the discussion below for the sake of brevity, as have civilian administrators,
officials, etc., which may have been attached to the various military forces.
The discussion of responsibility is in general
terms and refers to textbook practices; in reality, field units of any army rarely saw
action at full strength, and junior ranking soldiers and officers were often placed in
positions not normally permitted in peacetime or normal circumstances.
The table, then, is merely a guide to intended
practice, but may still serve to illuminate basic questions of command and how the various
ranks related to each other, and by extension, to ranks in other armies.
Rank Table
German
Army Table of Ranks 1941 - 45
(Ranks shown in descending order, highest at the top) |
Private
Soldiers |
Non-Commisioned
Officers |
Officers |
Mannschaften
(Men) |
Unteroffiziere
mit Portepee
(Senior NCOs) |
Stabsoffiziere
(Field Grade Officers) |
Stabsgefreiter
(1) |
Worn on left sleeve |
Stabsfeldwebel |
|
Oberstleutnant |
|
Obergefreiter |
Worn on left sleeve |
Oberfeldwebel |
|
Major |
|
Gefreiter |
Worn on left sleeve |
Unteroffiziere
ohne Portepee
(Junior NCOs) |
Hauptleute
(Captains) |
Feldwebel |
|
Hauptmann |
|
Oberschütze
Obergrenadier
etc. |
Worn on left sleeve |
Unterfeldwebel |
|
Leutnant
(Lieutenants) |
Oberleutnant |
|
Schütze
Grenadier
Kanonier
etc. |
(2) |
Unteroffizier |
|
Leutnant |
|
Notes
to Table |
(1) |
Until 1942/43, an Obergefreiter
with more than 6 years service wore a single chevron with a pip added. |
|
(2) |
Schützen etc. wore no special
rank insignia. |
|
Responsibility Table
In the German Army, all Mannschaften were
considered private soldiers, not non-commissioned officers, and as such had no command
responsibilities, generally speaking. Promotion to Gefreiter or Obergefreiter was
based on time served and not associated with appointment to leadership duties, though
merit did still play a role. Promotion to Oberschützen appears to have been tied to
service also, and usually was awarded to soldiers who prospects of a career in the
military were dim - the time requirement for promotion to Gefreiter was less than that for
Oberschütze. Those who showed merit became Gefreiten, those who did not,
apparently, were promoted to "ober-"
The rank title for a private in the infantry was
Schütze; in late 1942 this was changed to Grenadier by order of Hitler, who wanted to
associate the Army with the forces commanded by Frederick the Great, a personal hero of
his. Other rank titles included Kanonier (artillery), Reiter (cavalryman), etc.
In general, German infantry squads were led by
an Unteroffizier.
The rank of Oberfeldwebel was usually associated
with support trades, and the highest appointment in a German infantry company for an NCO
was that of Hauptfeldwebel. The Hauptfeldwebel was the equivalent of a British
Company Sergeant Major or American Company First Sergeant, and handled the administrative
workings of the company. He was also expected to take over leadership of one of the
infantry platoons when necessary due to enemy action.
The rank of Stabsfeldwebel was reserved as a
reward for regular army NCOs who had signed on for long enlistments prior to WW II.
Size of
Unit |
Required leadership |
Typically led by |
Squad
(10 men)
|
Unteroffizier
|
All ranks from Unteroffizier down
to Schütze could be found leading squads, depending on casualties suffered previously. |
Platoon
(50 men)
|
One platoon per
company was led by an officer
(usually Leutnant)
The other two platoons by a Feldwebel or Oberfeldwebel
|
It was not unusual in action to
see all three platoons led by NCOs - sometimes by the Hauptfeldwebel (see above) |
Company
(201 men)
|
Generally
commanded by an Oberleutnant or Hauptmann.
An officer holding the requisite training and
time in rank to command a company was called a "Kompanie Chef" (Company Chief). |
An officer in temporary command
of a company was known as a "Kompanie Führer." Men ranked Leutnant often
commanded companies in the absence of "qualified" leadership. |
Battalion
(861 men)
|
Major or
Oberstleutnant
|
Generally a Major or
Oberstleutnant. In badly shattered units
even a Leutnant might be found commanding the remnants of a battalion, or battalion-sized
battlegroup. |