You mean that having left the IN, they kept promoting him anyway? Well, that's possible, I suppose, but I never even considered it. Which is why, when I did a writeup of Norris for "A Festive Occasion", I mentioned that as a subsector duke he ranked ex officio as a fleet admiral.I've always thought Norris kept a reserve status (with commisions promptly arriving mostly because his civil status) and was reserve aldmiral at the start of the war (and off course CiC of the Regina Planetary Navy). If so, at the declaration of Martial Law, he is reactivated from reserve with a high rank enough to take the command of the 1st fleet.
EDIT: Missed this the first time around: Norris wouldn't be CiC of the Regina Planetary Navy. The planetary forces belong to Regina, and Norris has nothing whatsoever to do with the government of Regina. But he would be in charge of the Duchy of Regina Navy (assuming for purposes of argument that it exists). But then, if that's the source of his naval rank, all the other high dukes will likewise be in charge of their respective ducal navies and thus likewise in possession of naval rank. Ex officio, as it were.
There's historical precedence for that. Royal governors gave orders to generals and admirals stationed in their provinces in their capacity as direct representative of the king. (Of course, over a period of several centuries and between half a dozen or more European powers there were considerable variation. In some cases a governor would be his own captain-general, which would, of course, give him a military rank as well as his civil rank.)This is my how I've always seen it, but I have no hard proof in canon to support it. Just makes me more sense than seing him, just as a noble (albeit a high one) to override teh IN Chain of Command, and the local Aldmiral bowing to that.
Norris isn't "just a noble". He's the local duke, the direct representative of the Emperor, exercising the Imperial Mandate (according to Nobles) in all matters pertaining to his duchy. Even the sector duchess can only give him orders that pertain to sector-wide matters; when it comes to his own duchy she is merely his peer and her Imperial Mandate does not overlap his in such matters. I really don't see anything incongruent in him being able to tell a fleet admiral "go", and have him going. (And do note that he does NOT outrank sector admirals).
The question is, if Sector Admiral Santanocheev at Mora tells Commodore d'Example to take his squadron to Regina and report to the Fleet Admiral commanding the 193rd Fleet and d'Example calls at Rhylanor on his way to Regina, can the fleet admiral commanding the 212th Fleet say "Hey, I could use an extra squadron; d'Example, you're with me!"? The boardgame implies that he can, but I doubt it, and I very much doubt he would even if he could. And if he did, I think he'd need a very good excuse to avoid being broken.AFAIK (I repeat I'm not in the military), when military units are out of communications to higher command, the seniorest officier takes command and a loal Chain of Command is organized.
In TU, due to the delay in communications, this is the usual state of affairs, and so I think is quite logical any Aldmiral accepts orders form a Senior Aldmiral, if not totally contadictory with his own orders (or those given to him by an even Seniorest Aldmiral).
Hans
Last edited: