Sirdar
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Commander-in-Chief of the Royal Egyptian Army | |
---|---|
Sirdar | |
Longest serving Sir Reginald Wingate 1899 – 1916 | |
Residence | Sirdaria |
Formation | 1883 |
First holder | Sir Evelyn Wood |
Final holder | Sir Charlton Spinks |
Abolished | 12 January 1937 |
Superseded by | Chief of the General Staff |
Military ranks of Egypt | ||
---|---|---|
Turco-Egyptian ranks (until 1958) |
Modern Egyptian ranks |
Western equivalents |
Officers | ||
Mushir مشير |
General of the army/ Field Marshal | |
Sirdar سردار |
Fariq awwal فريق أول |
Colonel general |
Fariq فريق |
Lieutenant general | |
Liwa لواء |
Major general | |
Amiralay أمير آلاي |
Amid عميد |
Brigadier |
Qaimaqam قائم مقام |
Aqid عقيد |
Colonel |
Bimbashi بكباشي |
Muqaddam مقدم |
Lieutenant colonel |
Sagh الصاغ |
Raid رائد |
Major |
Yuzbashi يوزباشي |
Naqib نقيب |
Captain |
Mulazim awwal ملازم أول |
First lieutenant | |
Mulazim thani ملازم ثاني |
Mulazim ملازم |
Second lieutenant |
Non-commissioned officers | ||
Shawish شاويش |
Raqib رقيب |
Sergeant |
Ombashi أومباشي |
Arif عريف |
Corporal |
Soldiers | ||
Askari عسكري |
Jundi جندي |
Private |
The rank of Sirdar (Arabic: سردار) – a variant of Sardar – was assigned to the British Commander-in-Chief of the British-controlled Egyptian Army in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.[1] The Sirdar resided at the Sirdaria, a three-block-long property in Zamalek which was also the home of British military intelligence in Egypt.[2]
List of officeholders[]
No. | Portrait | Sirdar | Took office | Left office | Time in office | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Evelyn Wood (1838–1919) | Sir 1883 | 1885 | 1–2 years | – | |
2 | Lord Grenfell (1841–1925) | 1885 | 1892 | 6–7 years | – | |
3 | Lord Kitchener (1850–1916) | 1892 | 1899 | 6–7 years | – | |
4 | Reginald Wingate (1861–1953) | Sir 1899 | 1916 | 16–17 years | – | |
5 | Lee Stack (1868–1924) | Sir 1916 | 20 November 1924 † | 7–8 years | – | |
6 | Charlton Spinks (1868–1959) | Sir November 1924 | 12 January 1937 | 12 years, 2 months | – |
References[]
- ^ "Sirdar". Merriam Webster. Retrieved 2012-07-02.
- ^ Raafat, Samir (2001-02-15). "The Sirdaria". Cairo Times. Retrieved 2012-07-02.
Categories:
- Military ranks of Egypt
- Military history of Egypt
- Military history of the British Empire
- Egypt stubs
- Military rank stubs