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===Junior Commissioned Officers===
 
===Junior Commissioned Officers===
 
[[File:Fleet_Junior_Officer_2.jpg|thumb|150px|An Imperial Navy Flag-Lieutenant]]
 
[[File:Fleet_Junior_Officer_2.jpg|thumb|150px|An Imperial Navy Flag-Lieutenant]]
*'''Flag Lieutenant or Lord-Lieutenant''' - In some Segmentae, a Flag Lieutenant (or Lord-Lieutenant) serves as an executive officer aboard a ship of the line. Those First Lieutenants who show their resourcefulness may eventually rise to the rank of Flag or Lord-Lieutenant, the second in command aboard a capital ship. If he can prove himself to be a resourceful and competent officer, he may eventually be promoted to Commander, and given the chance to take command of his own vessel.
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*'''Flag Lieutenant or Lord-Lieutenant''' - In some Segmentae, a Flag Lieutenant (or Lord-Lieutenant) serves as an executive officer aboard a ship of the line. Those First Lieutenants who show their resourcefulness may eventually rise to the rank of Flag or Lord-Lieutenant, the second in command aboard a capital ship. Though a Lord-Captain's power is absolute, his time and energy are finite. Someone must stand at his right hand, acting as his voice and serving as an instrument of his will. The First Officer speaks and acts with the full authority of his Lord-Captain, ever prepared to assume the mantle of leadership should his Lord become indisposed. If a Flag Lieutenant can prove himself to be a resourceful and competent officer, he may eventually be promoted to Commander, and given the chance to take command of his own vessel.
 
*'''Lieutenant (First, Second or Third)''' - A lieutenant is a junior commissioned officer who is usually placed in direct command of system defence ships and monitors. Many officers in the Navy rise no higher than Lieutenant. System-defence ships and monitors occasionally fall under the direct command of a lieutenant. It is more common for them to be found acting as second-in-command aboard Escort-class ships, as part of the vast bridge crew found on a capital vessel, or in an attack craft squadron acting as flight leader. A Lieutenant is regarded as having true potential and the opportunity for greatness. Some of the most renowned Lord-Captains first began to forge their reputation by taking over the helm of the ship when their commander was killed or injured. If they succeed, a lieutenant can expect to advance through the ranks as a Third, second, and finally First Lieutenant, steadily gaining more responsibilities as he does so. However, many lieutenants never make that leap, and spend their days serving as valued junior officers on a voidship's bridge.
 
*'''Lieutenant (First, Second or Third)''' - A lieutenant is a junior commissioned officer who is usually placed in direct command of system defence ships and monitors. Many officers in the Navy rise no higher than Lieutenant. System-defence ships and monitors occasionally fall under the direct command of a lieutenant. It is more common for them to be found acting as second-in-command aboard Escort-class ships, as part of the vast bridge crew found on a capital vessel, or in an attack craft squadron acting as flight leader. A Lieutenant is regarded as having true potential and the opportunity for greatness. Some of the most renowned Lord-Captains first began to forge their reputation by taking over the helm of the ship when their commander was killed or injured. If they succeed, a lieutenant can expect to advance through the ranks as a Third, second, and finally First Lieutenant, steadily gaining more responsibilities as he does so. However, many lieutenants never make that leap, and spend their days serving as valued junior officers on a voidship's bridge.
 
*'''Sub-Lieutenant or Ensign''' - These are junior-grade lieutenants who have recently been promoted from Midshapman. An Ensign is often given minor responsibilities such as commanding small craft, boarding parties, or press gangs. They are often paired with a senior warrant officer to provide valuable guidance, and in the eyes of their superiors and the crew they're treated with respect for their rank, and caution due to their lack of skill and experience.
 
*'''Sub-Lieutenant or Ensign''' - These are junior-grade lieutenants who have recently been promoted from Midshapman. An Ensign is often given minor responsibilities such as commanding small craft, boarding parties, or press gangs. They are often paired with a senior warrant officer to provide valuable guidance, and in the eyes of their superiors and the crew they're treated with respect for their rank, and caution due to their lack of skill and experience.

Revision as of 04:04, 22 September 2016

Ork In Progress

ATTENTION! CONTENT FOR THIS ARTICLE IS STILL BEING CREATED BY ITS AUTHOR: ALGRIM WHITEFANG. PLEASE DO NOT MAKE ANY ADDITIONAL CHANGES OR EDITS! BY ORDER OF THE INQUISITION!!!

The Imperial Navy utilises a rigid command structure, seemingly unified across this entire military branch, unlike their Imperial Guard counterparts, who have no standard organisation. The Imperial Navy is an institution with millennia of dusty tradition behind it and regulations so lengthy that they fill moon-sized scriptoria and data-vaults to bursting. Attempts to modernise the fleet and update its protocols have always been doomed by the sheer size and inertia of an organisation spread across 100,000 light years of space and potentially centuries of time. On top of this, each Segmentae Majoris Battlefleet is so riven with its own traditions and precedents that it is hard to be definitive about even something so fundamental as rank below the very highest echelons.

In all cases, the constant risks attendant to fighting ships mean that the Navy chain of command has to be robust enough to survive shocking casualties in battle and still keep functioning. A great deal of ink has been spilled codifying responsibilities and duties such that each will know their place, although in practice these become guidelines at best, useless bureaucratic nonsense at worst. Incessant training still drums the same message into every shipman's head–keep doing your duty even when the world turns to flame and death and the frozen void yawns just inches away.

What follows is a breakdown of commonly held ranks and responsibilities within the Imperial Navy. Even within this broad structure many variations occur at the sector level that are unique to the needs and necessities of that locale; commodores may command fleets, admirals may command squadrons and warrant officers may command ships according to necessity.

Commissioned Officers

Commissioned officers represent the highest ranks of the Imperial Navy's personnel and their commissions usually can only be granted by the Battlefleet Administratum. In some Segmentae, a certain number of officers are generated by the "commissions" issued to planetary governors and Schola Progenium worlds each year to fulfill. Each commission is for a single child of 'good character' to attend Port Wrath, there to become a midshipman in the Holy Imperial Navy. Commissions issued to planetary governors are commonly sold to noble families or bestowed in a politically expedient fashion to reward a trusted noble or remove a troublesome sibling. A career in the Imperial Navy is viewed as a glorious, honourable and very probably fatal enterprise by noble houses, a sacrifice that enhances the family’s prestige immeasurably.

The Schola Progenium, on the other hand, sends their best charges to serve, especially those with naval heritage. The rivalry between the arrogant offspring of nobility and the earnest young orphans of the Scholas is legendary. A good portion of midshipman join the Imperial Navy through a more informal system of patronage. It is not uncommon for a Naval captain to take on a noble's son or daughter as a midshipman at their family’s request. This may be a favour to an old friend, or a means to repay an ancestral debt. However, even in this case, most noble children find the Navy a harsh and uncompromising environment, where most must excel on their merits, or likely perish.

Presented below are the senior flag officer ranks within the Imperial Navy:

Lord High-Admiral of the Navy

A Lord High Admiral (also referred to as a Lord Militant Commander or Lord Commander) is the senior-most command rank within the Imperial Navy. Most of these senior commanders are selected from the office of the Lord High-Admiral of the Segmentum Solar. The Lord High-Admiral of the Navy oversees the Imperial Navy's interests on the Senatorum Imperialis on Terra, while the five Segmentum Lord High-Admirals managed fleet affairs.

Lord High-Admiral

Lord Admiral 1

An Imperial Navy Lord High-Admiral

Also called a Battlefleet Commander, Lord High-Admiral is the highest rank of the Imperial Navy. Only five of these august individuals exist, one for each of the Segmentae Majoris. Each is responsible for the Imperial Navy's fighting forces across thousands of sectors in their allotted portion of the galaxy, or in the case of the Lord High-Admiral Solar, the substantial volumes of space around Holy Terra itself. Although all five Lord High-Admirals hold equivalent rank, traditionally the commander of the Segmentum Solar is considered the most prestigious office. The attention demanded by the dizzying array of plans, schedules and staffs under the auspices of a lord high-admiral mean they are seldom seen outside their towering fleet headquarters at the Segmentum fortress.

Lord Admiral

A Lord-Admiral, or Sector Commander, is responsible for all naval operations in a given sector and has direct command of units of the Segmentum warfleet allocated to that sector. Nominally a Lord-Admiral is based at the Segmentum Fortress with other sector-level administratum officials, but most choose to base themselves at the foremost naval facility of the sector under their charge. A Lord-Admiral answers not only to his superiors in the fleet but to the Adeptus Terra as well. Deploying ships and men to patrols, permanent stations and reserve fleets in a way that satisfies both military and civilian needs is a headache most naval officers dread.

Admiral

  • Solar Admiral - Solar Admirals are often prospective sector commanders waiting for assignment to a sector. As such opportunities are rare, it is far more common for Solar Admirals to be despatched to warzones in command of a reinforcing fleet or kept busy on "special duties" with their own independent flotilla.
  • Admiral - An Admiral is allocated command of a portion of a sector's fleet and responsibility for the security of a handful of star systems and the vast tracts of wilderness space that lies in-between. It's rare for an admiral to amass his ships in one place as they are generally busy patrolling Imperium worlds and trade routes light years apart. Perhaps twice a century the fleet might be mustered for a punitive strike or to defend against a sector-wide incursion.
  • Vice-Admiral - By long tradition, a Vice-Admiral commands the leading division of a fleet, the part that would equate to the vanguard of a terrestrial force. In later times this has come to mean commanding a force of Light Cruisers and Destroyers charged with scouting for the enemy, charting navigational hazards and long-range patrolling. It's common for a Vice Admiral to choose a light cruiser as his flagship to better keep pace with his far-flung squadrons.
  • Rear-Admiral - In ancient times when an entire Battlefleet might be massed together, the thousands of starships present would be divided into three commands, each under the command of their own Admiral. The Rear-Admiral was the youngest and least experienced flag officer in the fleet and so would be given charge of the rearmost division as the one least likely to see combat. Over time this flag rank has evolved into a largely administrative post charged with coordinating repair facilities, refuelling voidships, forming convoys and other rear echelon activities. Time spent as a Rear-Admiral is seen as essential for a flag officer who aspires to higher ranks to demonstrate their facility with logistics and high-level planning.

Battlefleet Ranks

Senior Commissioned Officers

Commodore Teodor Naremmus

An Imperial Navy Commodore

Cpt

An Imperial Navy Lord-Captain

  • Commodore - Also sometimes called a Group Commander, the rank of Commodore was originally only a temporary one given to a senior Captain placed in charge of a squadron of starships. Over time the rank of Commodore has found its way into permanent usage as what were once temporary squadrons stabilised into regular patrol routes and areas of responsibility. On rare and terrible occasions when capital ships join together in squadrons, the senior Captain is still promoted to Commodore for the duration of the engagement.
  • Lord-Captain - Sometimes also referred to as Flag-Captain, Lord-Captain is an honourific rank normally applied to Captains who command vessels on detached duty. A Lord-Captain speaks backed by the full authority of the Battlefleet. This is an important distinction when dealing with arrogant planetary governors or petty Administratum officials that might be inclined to dismiss the words of a "mere" Navy Captain. For this very reason, many Rogue Traders have adopted the title of 'Lord-Captain'. The Lord-Captain is the ultimate decision-maker on matters of strategy, void-law, and negotiation, responsible for the lives and souls of all who pledge to his banner. The fate of thousands hangs upon his decisions, though a wise Lord-Captain takes council with his advisors and bridge crew, and listens well to their wisdom before giving his orders.
  • Captain - Imperial Navy Captains are the masters of all that they survey. The Emperor is the Master of Mankind, but aboard a ship the Captain's very word is His law. Aloof and uncompromising, these figures are unbowed by the awesome responsibility entrusted to them. They may be a tyrant, martinet, swashbuckler, strategist or saint but a captain will always be an exceptional individual to hold full command of an Imperial Navy warship and all the souls that reside within it.
  • Commander - A Commander is a subordinate officer rank who is in charge of individual Escort-class vessels, with a Captain or Commodore holding overall command of an Escort squadron. However, an officer with the rank of Commander might also be found as the commanding officer of a squadron of system vessels, wing commander of the Attack Craft onboard a carrier ship, or placed in charge of an orbital station. Many Navy officers aspire to nothing more than becoming the commander of a frigate with its frequent opportunities for action and glory.
  • Lieutenant Commander -

Junior Commissioned Officers

Fleet Junior Officer 2

An Imperial Navy Flag-Lieutenant

  • Flag Lieutenant or Lord-Lieutenant - In some Segmentae, a Flag Lieutenant (or Lord-Lieutenant) serves as an executive officer aboard a ship of the line. Those First Lieutenants who show their resourcefulness may eventually rise to the rank of Flag or Lord-Lieutenant, the second in command aboard a capital ship. Though a Lord-Captain's power is absolute, his time and energy are finite. Someone must stand at his right hand, acting as his voice and serving as an instrument of his will. The First Officer speaks and acts with the full authority of his Lord-Captain, ever prepared to assume the mantle of leadership should his Lord become indisposed. If a Flag Lieutenant can prove himself to be a resourceful and competent officer, he may eventually be promoted to Commander, and given the chance to take command of his own vessel.
  • Lieutenant (First, Second or Third) - A lieutenant is a junior commissioned officer who is usually placed in direct command of system defence ships and monitors. Many officers in the Navy rise no higher than Lieutenant. System-defence ships and monitors occasionally fall under the direct command of a lieutenant. It is more common for them to be found acting as second-in-command aboard Escort-class ships, as part of the vast bridge crew found on a capital vessel, or in an attack craft squadron acting as flight leader. A Lieutenant is regarded as having true potential and the opportunity for greatness. Some of the most renowned Lord-Captains first began to forge their reputation by taking over the helm of the ship when their commander was killed or injured. If they succeed, a lieutenant can expect to advance through the ranks as a Third, second, and finally First Lieutenant, steadily gaining more responsibilities as he does so. However, many lieutenants never make that leap, and spend their days serving as valued junior officers on a voidship's bridge.
  • Sub-Lieutenant or Ensign - These are junior-grade lieutenants who have recently been promoted from Midshapman. An Ensign is often given minor responsibilities such as commanding small craft, boarding parties, or press gangs. They are often paired with a senior warrant officer to provide valuable guidance, and in the eyes of their superiors and the crew they're treated with respect for their rank, and caution due to their lack of skill and experience.
  • Midshipman - A Midshipman is the junior-most officer rank in the Imperial Navy. Midshipmen are actually better described as students with an officer's rank. Technically afforded an officer's respect, they are nevertheless still in demanding training to become true officers, and many of their duties are "hands-on" opportunities to learn. Midshipmen are so-called because they traditionally have quarters somewhere in a warship's midsection, far from the command bridge. Not quite trusted with true responsibility, they remain under constant scrutiny as they complete their training. Should they prove successful, Segmentae command often adheres to the tradition of requiring them to pass difficult examinations to become lieutenants, though some have been known to receive "void promotions" for particularly impressive actions.

Warrant Officers

ImperialNavyArmsmen

Imperial Navy Sergeant-at-Arms and Armsmen

Warrant Officers (also known in some quarters by the archaic term "Petty Officers") act as the equivalent of non-commissioned officers like Sergeants and Corporals in planet-bound Imperial Guard regiments. They disseminate orders from higher authority, ensure that those orders are carried out by the rank and file of enlisted ratings and maintain discipline with regular floggings. They are called Warrant Officers because their rank is created through the issue of a written warrant from either fleet administration or the captain of their warship. Warrant Officers occupy positions of trust on the ship and a Captain with even the most mutinous of crews can keep the ship running as long as he can rely on his Warrant Officers. It is common practice in the Imperial Navy to promote Warrant Officers from among the ratings already on board a warship, but large numbers of warrants are also issued to Civilised Worlds as part of their Imperial tithe of experienced personnel for the Emperor's military, often with a promise of reward to entice skilled individuals.

  • Ship's Master - The Ship's Master is generally the senior-most Warrant Officer and most experienced voidsman on board a given starship. Often the master is tasked with critical responsibilities, such as stellar navigation and the keeping of the starship's log. In addition, he or she might oversee the keeping of the ship's attitude jets, hangar decks, and stores and supplies.
  • Gun Captain - A Gun Captain is a highly respected non-commissioned officer who has the great responsibility of commanding a single gun crew on an Imperial warship. The Gun Captain is the foremost expert on performing all the duties of the subordinate ratings in his or her command and often achieves the post only after decades of working his or her way up through all the different enlisted ratings.

Non-Commissioned Officers

  • Master Chief Petty Officer -
  • Senior Chief Petty Officer -
  • Chief Petty Officer -
  • Sergeant-at-Arms or Senior Armsman - A Sergeant-at-Arms is placed in charge of a squad of Armsmen anywhere between six and twenty-strong with responsibility for close action in naval combat (such as hit-and-run attacks and boarding actions). A Sergeant-at-Arms' greatest responsiblity is the keys entrusted to him for the weapons lockers found on every deck of a warship. When battle commences the Master-at-Arms signals the Sergeants to clear the decks and prepare for action, indicating at that time whether to arm the crew. Sergeants-at-Arms are often recruited via warrant or planets from among former Imperial Guardsmen to ensure they do not have prior associations with the current crew of their warship.
  • Bosun (Boatswain) - A starship's Bosuns are disciplinarians and taskmasters in a crew, assigned to oversee the common enlisted ratings and indentured workers, determine their duties and ensure that they are carried out efficiently. This often means that Bosuns are responsible for enforcing discipline on recalcitrant crewmembers, and are likely to handle that task personally. This makes them unpopular figures, and aboard many warships they find themselves naturally allied with a ship's Sergeant-at-Arms, as their duties are similar.
  • Crewboss -

Ratings

Fleet Crew2

Imperial Navy Enlisted Crewmen

Ratings are the basic enlisted voidsmen aboard an Imperial warship that take care of the menial tasks; hauling shells and missiles, re-routing cables, clearing debris and conducting basic maintenance. Men and women in this class typically have a myriad of sub-classifications (ratings) that specify their role further, e.g. Gun-Layer Third Class, Fuse-Changer Second Class and so on. Ratings make up the great bulk of the starship's crew and will be the ones doing most of the fighting during boarding actions. Contrary to popular belief, many Imperial Navy ratings are volunteers, for the pay is good and the conditions are better than those on many Imperial worlds. If there are not enough volunteers to fulfill a Captain's requirements he or she always has the right to send Press Gangs to tithe more crew directly from any planet along the ship's course, which may include penal colonies or hab-blocks. In practice, this is often achieved through collusion with the local Planetary Governor, but an Imperial Navy Captain does not need civilian permission to take crew from any world. As stated previously, there are multitudes of different types of ratings, but they can often be divided into two broad classifications, armsmen and voidsmen.

  • Armsman - Armsmen are crewmembers trusted to carry weapons at all times on board the warship and maintain the contents of the weapons lockers. They keep discipline among the lower ranks and protect the crew as needed. Unlike most ratings, Armsmen get to move around different decks of the warship in the course of their duties and their loyalties are carefully scrutinised. Armsmen are essentially the Imperial Navy's equivalent of marines in the most ancient sense of that term.
  • Trusted Crewman, Voidsman of Shipman (Archaic) - Voidsmen (also referred to by the more archaic "Shipmen" on some Imperial Navy vessels) are a warship's enlisted crewmen who possess some training and skill, and are the ratings most likely to be entrusted with tasks such as conduit-maintenance, bulwark repairs, cog polishing, or other menial jobs that might require some skill and autonomy. Hive Worlders are favoured as Voidsmen due to their familiarity with advanced technology and the fact that they are inured to the worst of the noise and claustrophobic conditions found on Imperial warships.

Indentured Workers

Slave Gang Loading Nova Cannon Ammo

Indentured Deck Gang loading munitions into a Macrocannon

Indentured or slave workers are those unfortunate individuals who rank even below enlisted personnel on an Imperial warship and are press-ganged from a world's slums or taken en masse from penal colonies for their ability to perform unskilled hard labour. They are given duties such as hauling guns into position, turning flywheels, and carrying supplies, heavy equipment, and Macrocannon shells. Most warships must replenish their crews of indentured workers every so often, as a steady stream die to malnutrition, accidents and disciplinary actions.

Attack Craft Ranks

  • Wing Commander -
  • Squadron Commander -
  • Flight Marshal - A Flight Marshal is an elite pilot who is a breed apart from his fellow elite pilots. Within the Imperial Navy's powerful planes and among a company of other talented flyers, the true warriors emerge -- those who can not only out fly but out think their opponent while issuing commands and protecting their comrades. A Flight Marshal possesses not only the flying skills to humble their charges, but also the leadership skills to make a group of daredevil individuals into a cohesive combat force. Whether in the cockpit, the briefing room, or the tavern, they have to be better than the best to ensure the continued loyalty and respect of their men. That continued drive for constant excellence sets the Flight Marshal apart. Often, the pilots under a Flight Marshal's command constantly seek to challenge him. Their leader may not be the finest technical pilot, but must be smarter and sharper, using superior experience and knowledge to demonstrate he can still out fly anyone. He must also be as inspirational as any Ministorum Missionary, motivating his pilots with fiery speeches of death and glory. Knowing what will maintain esprit de corps and keep his flyers the deadliest group in the void is another of the arts a Flight Marshal must learn in order to lead effectively.
  • Wing Captain -

Honourific & Specialist Ranks

The following titles and positions are acknowledged in Navy regulations aboard ships. Many of these political niceties exist as necessities to slot the diverse specialists necessary to a ship’s functioning into the framework of Navy command.

  • Tech-Priest Majoris (Enginseer Prime) - The Tech-priest Majoris is the Adeptus Mechanicus representative on a warship's bridge crew and is responsible for communicating the needs of the Mechanicus to the Captain and his officers.
  • Principle Navigator (Warp Guide) - The Principle Navigator is the senior-most Navigator on a warship who has the terrible responsibility of charting a passage through the Warp and bringing the starship through unharmed.
  • Chief Astropath - A Chief Astropath is the senior Astropath aboard a warship and has direct dealings with the Captain. He or she is responsible for ensuring that the warship's Astropathic Choirs are able to maintain adequate long-range communications.
  • Master Gunner - The Master Gunner is a high-ranking Warrant Officer given responsibility for the maintenance and performance of the warship's Macrobatteries and Lances. He or she is also responsible for ammunition storage and power linkages.
  • Master of Ordnance - A Master of Ordnance is responsible for managing torpedoes and Attack Craft such as huge starbombers, lumbering assault boats and agile fighters carried within a warship's vast launch bays. The Master of Ordnance coordinates the efforts of the deck crews to ensure everything is fuelled, armed and ready to launch at a moment's notice.
  • Master of Arms - The Master of Arms, also called the Master-at-Arms, is charged with ensuring that all weaponry on board a warship is serviceable and ready for action, from the greatest Macrocannon to the meanest Stub Pistol. The Sergeants-at-Arms report directly to the Master of Arms, and by extension all Armsmen are under his or her control, and so they also perform a role akin to that of a chief of police aboard ship. The Master of Arms is normally appointed from among the commissioned officers on a ship but more rarely a senior Warrant Officer may hold this position.
  • Ship's Surgeon - Also called the Chief Chirurgeon or unofficially, "Sawbones," the Ship's Surgeon is charged with administrating and maintaining the medicae facilities aboard the vessel. A Ship's Surgeon's duties include combating disease and malnutrition among the crew as well as suturing flesh and setting bones.
  • Officer of the Watch - The Officer of the Watch draws up duty rosters, assigns watches and attends the warship's chronometers. On most Imperial Navy starships, the title of Officer of the Watch is rotated through the ranking commissioned officers. On older vessels it tends to become a permanent position assigned to the officer who has served the longest time aboard a vessel.
  • Fleet Commissar - Like their Imperial Guard counterparts, Commissars are appointed to the fleets of the Imperial Navy. Working closely with the ship's Master of Arms, the Fleet Commissar ensures a warship is kept battle-ready at all times and that the crew remains focused on their duty to the Emperor. A Fleet Commissar has the authority to declare a Captain or even an entire crew unfit for service if he or she is sufficiently concerned about their actions or the state of their ship. At least one Fleet Commissar will normally be aboard any capital ship. In the case of Escort squadrons a Fleet Commissar will divide his time between the different vessels in the squadron in a series of snap inspections and drills.
  • Ship's Confessor - A Ship's Confessor is a vessel's Ecclesiarchy representative who works tirelessly to promote the Imperial Creed among the crew and weed out potential Heretics. In these duties the Confessor is usually assigned by lay-preachers chosen from the most faithful on the lower decks. This is particularly essential on large warships as it allows the Confessor to concentrate his or her efforts on the warship's officers, shriving and chastising them as required, reminding them of their duties to the God-Emperor, usually loudly and often.

Sources

  • Battlefleet Gothic: Armada (RPG), pg. 18
  • Battlefleet Gothic: Rulebook (RPG), pg. 86
  • Deathwatch - The Achilus Assault (RPG) pg. 142
  • Warhammer 40,000: Rulebook (5th Edition), pg. 124
  • White Dwarf Magazine #139 (UK), "Space Fleet" by Jervic Johnson & Andy Jones, pp. 8-25
  • White Dwarf Magazine #119 (US), "Battlefleet Gothic: Concept Art," by Jes Goodwin, pp. 29-31
  • Rogue Trader: Battlefleet Koronus (RPG), pp. 57, 60, 66-70
  • Rogue Trader: Hostile Acquisitions, pg. 91
  • Rogue Trader: Into the Storm, pp. 80, 242
  • Rogue Trader: Lure of the Expanse, pg. 27
  • Rogue Trader: The Frozen Reaches, pg. 21
  • Eye of Terror (Novel) by Barrington J. Bayley, pp. 21, 91
  • First and Only (Novel) by Dan Abnett
  • Execution Hour (Novel) by Gordon Rennie
  • Shadow Point (Novel) by Gordon Rennie
  • I Am Slaughter (Novel) by Dan Abnett, Chapter 3
  • The Emperor Expects - The Beast Arises, Book 3 (Novel), by Gav Thorpe
  • Inquisitor (Film) by Andy Jones & Tom Lauten
  • Dark Heresy Timeline pp. 1-3

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