Admiral of the Fleet of the Soviet Union should not be confused with Admiral of the fleet (Soviet Union).
Admiral of the fleet of the Soviet Union | |
Native Name: | Russian: Адмирал Флота Советского Союза |
Image Size2: | 90px |
Rank: | General officer |
Formation: | March 1955 |
Abolished: | 1991 |
Higher Rank: | None |
Lower Rank: | Admiral of the fleet |
Equivalents: | Marshal of the Soviet Union |
An Admiral of the Fleet of the Soviet Union (Russian: Адмирал Флота Советского Союза|Admiral Flota Sovietskogo Soyuza) was the highest naval rank of the Soviet Union.
The rank was largely honorary and could be considered equivalent to admiral of the fleet in other nations. It was formally established by the Council of Ministers of the Soviet Union on March 3, 1955, and replaced a similarly named rank, Fleet Admiral/Admiral of the Fleet (адмирал флота) that had been equivalent to marshal of the Soviet Union since 1945. The holders were entitled to a marshal's star.
Upon its creation, the only two admirals of the fleet, Nikolai Kuznetsov and Ivan Isakov, were "promoted" to this rank. Less than a year later Kuznetsov was demoted to vice admiral for political reasons in 1956 and Isakov remained the only admiral of the fleet of the Soviet Union until his death in 1967. Then, in October 1967, Fleet Admiral Sergei Gorshkov became the third and final admiral of the fleet of the Soviet Union. Gorshkov died in 1988 and no further appointments were made before the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991 and the elimination of the rank.
From 1962 onwards, it was one grade higher than Fleet Admiral, which was recreated as an intermediate rank, equivalent to Army General.
Portrait | Name | Promoted | Retired | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ivan Isakov | 3 March 1955 | ||||
Nikolai Kuznetsov | 3 March 1955 | February 1956 | |||
Sergey Gorshkov | 28 October 1967 | December 1985 | [1] |