Precedence Within The Territorial Army
- The Royal Monmouthshire Royal Engineers (Militia)
- The Honourable Artillery Company
- Royal Armoured Corps
- The Royal Yeomanry
- The Royal Wessex Yeomanry
- The Royal Mercian and Lancastrian Yeomanry
- The Queen's Own Yeomanry
- Royal Regiment of Artillery (Volunteers)
- Corps of Royal Engineer (Volunteers)
- Royal Corps of Signals (Volunteers)
- Infantry
- 52nd Lowland, 6th Battalion The Royal Regiment of Scotland
- 51st Highland, 7th Battalion The Royal Regiment of Scotland
- 3rd Battalion, The Princess of Wales’s Royal Regiment (Queen’s and Royal Hampshires)
- The London Regiment
- 4th Battalion, The Duke of Lancaster's Regiment (King's, Lancashire and Border)
- 5th Battalion, The Royal Regiment of Fusiliers
- 3rd Battalion, The Royal Anglian Regiment
- 4th Battalion, The Yorkshire Regiment (14th/15th, 19th & 33rd/76th Foot)
- 4th Battalion, The Mercian Regiment
- 3rd Battalion, The Royal Welsh
- 2nd Battalion, The Royal Irish Regiment (27th Inniskilling), 83rd, 87th & Ulster Defence Regiment
- 4th Battalion, The Parachute Regiment
- 6th Battalion, The Rifles
- 7th Battalion, The Rifles
- Special Air Service
- 21st Special Air Service Regiment (Artists Rifles)
- 23rd Special Air Service Regiment
- Army Air Corps (Volunteers)
- The Royal Logistic Corps (Volunteers)
- Royal Army Medical Corps (Volunteers)
- Corps of Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers (Volunteers)
- Adjutant General’s Corps (Volunteers)
- Intelligence Corps (Volunteers)
- The Royal Gibraltar Regiment (As a Colonial Force The Royal Gibraltar Regiment comes after the TA)
- The Bermuda Regiment
Read more about this topic: British Army Order Of Precedence
Famous quotes containing the words precedence, territorial and/or army:
“It is difficult to separate the tapestry
From the room or loom which takes precedence over it.”
—John Ashbery (b. 1927)
“All the territorial possessions of all the political establishments in the earthincluding America, of courseconsist of pilferings from other peoples wash.”
—Mark Twain [Samuel Langhorne Clemens] (18351910)
“To make an Army work you have to have every man in it fitted into a fear ladder.... The Army functions best when youre frightened of the man above you, and contemptuous of your subordinates.”
—Norman Mailer (b. 1923)