cthia wrote:I seem to remember passage stating that she reverted back to her RMN rank back on Manticore. Iirc, Manticore didn't recognize her Admiral status. I never quite understood that. If she made Admiral in another Navy, then an Admiral she is. Isn't she?
cthia wrote:Weird Harold wrote:It's related to the same concept that Steadholder Harrington and Captain Countess Harrington are "two distinct personages inhabiting one body."
When in acting the Grayson chain of command, Honor was an Admiral; if she was given command of a mixed squadron in a slot allocated to the GSN, she would take command as a GSN Admiral. If the slot was allocated to the RMN, she would (at the time of FiE) take command as a RMN Commodore.
In some ways, it is the same concept as "rank" in an internet forum: Here I'm a "Commodore", at my other home-on-the-web, I'm just an "Opinionated Old Fart," or on another Forum, I'm a "Hero of the Horn."
Don't worry Harold; we accept the transfer of all your other cyberspace credit hours. You're an "Opinionated Old Fart" here as well.
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But she wasn't, isn't, acting as a Steadholder persona while in the GSN, only while on Grayson dressed as a Steadholder. She made Admiral as a naval officer, not as a Steadholder. It just seems too complicated when it shouldn't be.
During the 19th century, many British officers on half-pay served in other nation's (or revolutionary) navies and attained high rank. An example would be Lord Cochrane (Thomas Cochrane, the 10th Earl of Dundonald) who commanded the Greek, Chilean, and Brazilian navies. He was a bit different from some of the others because he had been dismissed the navy, rather than placed on half-pay, because of the accusation he'd been involved in a stock fraud. (The evidence that he actually was is much less than overwhelming and he was a man who made political enemies by the boatload. Just saying.


The situations aren't an exact parallel to Honor's case, but it would be illegal for Elizabeth to promote her to a higher rank in the GSN or for Benjamin to promote her to a higher rank in the RMN. They are two separate navies, and her seniority depends upon which navy has currently placed her on active duty. On Cerberus, she placed herself on active Grayson duty, which permitted her her flag rank and settled the seniority question, but remember how well that went over with her blustering Manticoran colleague. He, of course, had been captured early enough in the war not to recognized the GSN as a peer of the RMN and regarded her claim to be a flag officer as being about as well grounded as a US admiral might consider a claim to being a flag officer in the Czech Navy, since, after all, the Czech Republic has no coastline.
Honor had been placed on half-pay, in disgrace, when she was promoted to admiral in the GSN. If serving as a GSN officer, the RMN would have recognized her admiral's rank just as it would have recognized any allied navy's ranks and seniority. If serving as an RMN officer, she reverted to her Manticoran rank and ought --- ought, I say --- to have been recognized as a mere captain by any Grayson she encountered while so serving. She could legally have resigned her RMN commission and become solely a GSN officer with rank granted by Grayson, but she truly is (and regards herself) as two people who happen to live in the same body: Captain the Countess (Now Admiral the Duchess) Harrington and Admiral Steadholder Harrington. She owes service to bother her star-nations, which doesn't even consider the fact that she wanted the Silesian mission badly as a way to "clear her name" in the professional world to which she had dedicated both her life and her personal honor.