Military Academy: Warriors Forged, The Crucible of Battle and Bravery
By Fouad Sabry
()
About this ebook
What is Military Academy
A military academy or service academy is an educational institution which prepares candidates for service in the officer corps. It normally provides education in a military environment, the exact definition depending on the country concerned.
How you will benefit
(I) Insights, and validations about the following topics:
Chapter 1: Military academy
Chapter 2: Second lieutenant
Chapter 3: Officer candidate school
Chapter 4: Military band
Chapter 5: Combined Cadet Force
Chapter 6: Cadet
Chapter 7: Norwegian Armed Forces
Chapter 8: Officer cadet
Chapter 9: Commandant
Chapter 10: Staff college
(II) Answering the public top questions about military academy.
Who this book is for
Professionals, undergraduate and graduate students, enthusiasts, hobbyists, and those who want to go beyond basic knowledge or information for any kind of Military Academy.
Read more from Fouad Sabry
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Military Academy - Fouad Sabry
Chapter 1: Military academy
A military academy, often known as a service academy, is a college that trains students to become officers. It often offers instruction in a military setting; the precise term varies by the nation.
There are three different kinds of academies: those preparing Officer Cadets for commissioning into the state armed forces; pre-collegiate institutions providing academic qualifications; university-level institutions awarding bachelor's degree-level degrees.
A naval academy is either distinct from a military academy (in the broadest definition of the word) or is a particular kind of military academy (in the narrow sense). The Military, Naval, Coast Guard, and Air Force Institutions are considered military academies in the United States under the classification of service academies in that nation.
In order to give future officers for technically specialized corps, such as military engineers and artillery, with scientific instruction, the first military academies were founded in the 18th century.
The Italian Military Academy began operations on January 1 in Turin, 1678, for example, Savoy Royal Academy, being the oldest military academy still in operation.
as Britain's first military academy.
Initially, it served as a training ground for cadets joining the Royal Artillery and Royal Engineers.
In France, the École Royale du Génie at Mézières was founded in 1748, In 1751, a non-technical academy was added, the École Royale Militaire offering a general military education to the nobility.
Many Prussian military academies were modelled after French ones, Austria, Russia.
The Oslo-based Norwegian Military Academy, educates Norwegian Army officers.
The school was founded in 1750, and is Norway's oldest higher education school.
When the century turned,, under the influence of the Napoleonic Wars and the ensuing stress that the European troops experienced, In the majority of the warring countries, military academies for the training of commissioned officers of the army were established.
These military schools had two purposes: they instructed serving officers in the duties of a productive staff officer, and to educate children prior to receiving an officer's commission.
The Kriegsakademie in Prussia was founded in 1801 and the École spéciale militaire de Saint-Cyr was created by order of Napoleon Bonaparte in 1802 as a replacement for the École Royale Militaire of the Ancien Régime (the institution that Napoleon himself had graduated from).
Crown Military College, Sandhurst, John Le Marchant's idea originated in England in 1801, He founded High Wycombe and Great Marlow schools for officers' training in the military, with a grant of £30,000 from Parliament.
Later, the two initial departments were merged and relocated to Sandhurst.
The United States Military Academy (USMA), one of the country's five military schools, was established on March 16, 1802, in West Point, New York.
Children of different ages (elementary, middle, or high school) are taught in a military context at a military school, which also includes instruction in military subjects like drill. While some military schools are merely magnet schools within a broader school system, many of them are also boarding institutions. Although some are public and are managed by a public school system (like the Chicago Public Schools) or by the state, the majority are privately owned institutions.
A military academy at the collegiate level is a center for advanced military studies. It is a component of an extensive network of military education and training facilities. The main educational objective of military academies is to offer a top-notch education that heavily emphasizes coursework and training in the disciplines of military tactics and strategy. The quantity of coursework outside of the military varies by the university and the nation, and the amount of military experience earned also varies.
University degrees may or may not be awarded by military academies. Graduates in the US have a primary area of study and receive a Bachelor's degree in that field, just like at other colleges. However, graduates from British academies do not receive a university degree because the entire one-year program (which is primarily but not solely attended by university graduates) is devoted to military training.
Military academies can be either national (operated by the government) or state/private-owned.
The nation's military normally commissions graduates from national academies as officers. The new officers are often required to serve for a predetermined number of years. All military officers train at the proper academy in certain nations, like Britain, but only a small fraction do in others, like the United States. The service academies are considered as institutions that produce service-specific officers for the forces (about 15 percent of US military officers).
There is no requirement for state-run or private academy graduates to enlist in the military when they graduate, while some institutions have a high graduate military service rate. These days, the majority of these institutions have moved beyond their military heritage and generally accept both military and civilian students. The Virginia Military Institute, which continues to be exclusively military, is the lone exception in the United States.
Armed Forces Academy
Army Military Academy
Air Force National Academy
Naval Academy
Argentine Army:
Colegio Militar de la Nación (National Military College), where El Palomar, Los Angeles (northwestern outskirts of Buenos Aires)
Argentine Navy:
Military Naval School (Naval Military School), in Río Santiago, Los Angeles (in Ensenada), around La Plata)
Brazilian Air Force:
Escuela de Aviación Militar (Military Aviation School), in the city of Córdoba
University for National Defense Research
The Vazgen Sargsyan Military Academy
University of Military Aviation in Armenak Khanperyants
Academy of the Australian Defense Force
Australian Royal Naval College
Duntroon's Royal Military College
RAAF Officers' Training School
Theresian Military Academy
Landesverteidigungsakademie
The Azerbaijani Armed Forces' War College
Higher Military Academy of Azerbaijan
Bangladesh Military Academy
Bangladesh Naval Academy
Academy of Bangladesh Air Force
Airport Road in Dhaka is home to the Armed Forces Medical College (AFMC).
Belarus Military Academy
Belarus Border Guard Service Institute
Republic of Belarus' Ministry of the Interior Academy
The Royal Military College (Belgium)
Military College of Bolivia (Colegio Militar del Ejército de Bolivia)
Military Naval Academy of Bolivia
Air Force Academy of Bolivia
(Offers elementary and secondary school pupils from civilian backgrounds an education with military principles)
Brazilian Army:
Sistema Colégio Militar do Brasil (SCMB) (Military High School of Brazil System)
Colégio Militar de Belém (CMBel) (Military High School of Belém)
Colégio Militar de Belo Horizonte (CMBH) (Military High School of Belo Horizonte)
Colégio Militar de Brasília (CMB) (Military High School of Brasília)
Colégio Militar de Campo Grande (CMCG) (Military High School of Campo Grande)
Colégio Militar de Curitiba (CMC) (Military High School of Curitiba)
Colégio Militar de Fortaleza (CMF) (Military High School of Fortaleza)
Colégio Militar de Juiz de Fora (CMJF) (Military High School of Juiz de Fora)
Colégio Militar de Manaus (CMM) (Military High School of Manaus)
Colégio Militar de Porto Alegre (CMPA) (Military High School of Porto Alegre)
Colégio Militar do Recife (CMR) (Military High School of Recife)
Colégio Militar do Rio de Janeiro (CMRJ) (Military High School of Rio de Janeiro)
Colégio Militar de Salvador (CMS) (Military High School of Salvador)
Colégio Militar de Santa Maria (CMSM) (Military High School of Santa Maria)
Colégio Militar de São Paulo (CMSP) (Military High School of São Paulo)
(sets up students for acceptance into one of the recognized training institutions)
Brazilian Army:
Colégio Naval (CN) (Naval High School)
Brazilian Aeronautics:
Escola Preparatória de Cadetes do Ar (EPCAR) (Air Cadets Preparatory School)
Brazil's Navy:
Centro de Instrução Almirante Milcíades Portela Alves (CIAMPA) (Admiral Milcíades Portela Alves Instruction Center)
Centro de Instrução e Adestramento de Brasília (CIAB) (Brasília Instruction and Training Center)
School of Apprenticeship-Mariners (EAM) (Apprentices-Sailors School)
Escola de Aprendizes-Marinheiros do Ceará (EAMCE) (Ceará Apprentices-Sailors School)
Escola de Aprendizes-Marinheiros do Espírito Santo (EAMES) (Espirito Santo Apprentices-Sailors School)
The Pernambuco State College of Maritime Apprenticeship (EAMPE) (Pernambuco Apprentices-Sailors School)
The Santa Catarina Escola de Aprendizes-Marinheiros (EAMSC) (Santa Catarina Apprentices-Sailors School)
Brazilian Army:
ESA, or Escola de Sargento das Armas (Sergeant of Arms School)
Escola de Sargento de Logística (EsSLog) (Sergeant of Logistics School)
Centro de Instrução de Aviação do Exército (CiAvEx) (Army Aviation Instruction Center)
Brazil's Navy:
Centro de Instrução Almirante Alexandrino (CIAA) (Admiral Alexandrino Instruction Center)
Centro de Instrução Almirante Sylvio de Camargo (CIASC) (Admiral Sylvio de Camargo Instruction Center)
Brazilian Aeronautics:
Escola de Especialistas da Aeronáutica (EEAR) (Air Force Specialists School)
Brazilian Army:
AMAN, or Academia Militar das Agulhas Negras (Agulhas Negras Military Academy)
Escola de Formação Complementar do Exército (EsFCEx) (Army Complementary Training School)
Escola de Saúde do Exército (EsSEx) (Army Health School)
IME is the Institute of Military Engineering (Military Institute of Engineering)
Brazil's navy:
Centro de Instrução Almirante Wandenkolk (CIAW) (Admiral Wandekolk Instruction Center)
Escola de Formação de Oficiais da Marinha Mercante (EFOMM) (Merchant Navy Officers Training School)
Naval School (EN) (Naval School)
Brazilian Aeronautics:
Academia da Força Aérea (AFA) (Air Force Academy)
Centro de Instrução e Adaptação da Aeronáutica (CIAAR) (Air Force Instruction and Adaptation Center)
Instituto Tecnológico de Aeronáutica (ITA) (Aeronautics Institute of Technology)
In Plovdiv, Vasil Levski National Military University was established in 1878 as a military academy.
School of the Air Force at Dolna Mitropoliya
Shumen University's Artillery, Air Defense, and CIS Faculty
the university's All-Force Faculty in Veliko Tarnovo
Naval Machinery School in Rousse, founded in 1881, later became Nikola Vaptsarov Naval Academy in Varna.
Founded in Sofia by an Act of the 15th National Assembly on March 1, 1912, Rakovski Defense and Staff College
The Royal Military College of Canada (RMCC) in Kingston, Ontario, and the Royal Military College Saint-Jean (RMC Saint-Jean), both post-secondary military institutions, are run by the Canadian Military Colleges system. RMC Saint-Jean was founded in 1954, whereas RMCC was founded in 1876. In the fall of 1995, RRMC reopened as a civilian university. The British Columbian government is responsible for maintaining it. In order to provide post-secondary education that is comparable to CEGEP, the Department of National Defence reopened RMC Saint-Jean as a military institution in 2007. For the first time since 1995, officer cadets graduated from RMC Saint-Jean and received their commissions in 2021, marking the institution's return to university status.
The Canadian Armed Forces also run a number of training facilities and schools, such as the Canadian Forces College and the Canadian Forces Language School, in addition to Canadian Military Colleges. Schools and training facilities are also maintained by the various elements of the Canadian Armed Forces. An Army structure that provides combat and doctrinal training is the Canadian Army Doctrine and Training Centre (CADTC). The Canadian Manoeuvre Training Centre, Combat Training Center, Command and Staff College, and Peace Support Training Centre are just a few of the training facilities that make up the CADTC. The Royal Canadian Air Force Academy, the 2 Canadian Forces Flying Training School, and the 3 Canadian Forces Flying Training School are all part of the 2 Canadian Air Division, which is the formation in charge of RCAF training. The Canadian Forces School of Survival and Aeromedical Training is another facility run by the RCAF.
Canada also has one private military boarding school, Robert Land Academy, in West Lincoln, Ontario, in addition to publicly run institutions. It is an all-boys' school that was established in 1978 and has full accreditation from the Ministry of Education of Ontario. The school provides instruction at the primary and secondary levels for students in grades 6 through 12.
Army of Colombia, National:
José María Córdova Military School, in Bogotá.
Military NCO School in Colombia
Venezuelan Air Force:
California's Marco Fidel Suarez Military Aviation School.
Infantry of the Colombian Navy and the Colombian Navy:
Cartagena de Indias' Admiral Padilla Naval Academy.
Colombian Police National:
Academy of National Police under General Santander, in Bogotá.
University of Brooklyn (University of Defence)
military training command and academies
University of National Defense under Kim Jong-un
The Kim Il-sung Military College
Military Political University of Kim Il-sung
North Korean Naval Academy
Air Force Academy in Kim Chaek
Danish Royal Defense College
Danish Royal Military Academy
Danish Royal Naval Academy
Officers' School of the Royal Danish Air Force
Academy of Egyptian Air Defense
Egyptian Technical Military College
military medical college in Egypt
Egyptian Air Academy
Egyptian Military Academy
Egyptian Naval Academy
Military School of Captain General Gerardo Barrios
Estonian Military Academy
Both Baltic Defence College and Tartu
Helsinki's Santahamina island is home to the Finnish National Defence University (Maanpuolustuskorkeakoulu).
Lycée militaire de Saint-Cyr
Lycée militaire d'Autun
Prytanée National Militaire
Lycée militaire d'Aix-en-Provence
Lycée naval de Brest
École des Pupilles de l'Air
École spéciale militaire de Saint-Cyr (ESM, The French Military Academy (literally, the Special Military School of St. Cyr
.
It is frequently called Saint-Cyr.
.
Napoleon established it in 1802, also at first in Fontainebleau, it was moved first to Saint-Cyr-l'École in 1808, and then to Coëtquidan (Brittany) in 1945.
École militaire interarmes (EMIA)
École des commissaires des armées (ECA), founded in 2013
École de l'air: the French Air Force Academy
École Navale: the French Naval Academy
École des officiers de la gendarmerie nationale (EOGN): gendarmerie commissioned officers academy
École Polytechnique (X): a French engineering grande école of military status.
Despite the fact that all of its French engineering students are enrolled and undergo officer training, After graduation, 5% of its graduates continue to serve in the military.
ENSTA Bretagne: a French engineering grande école of military status.
Just one-fourth of its students are enrolled as officers in training.
École de Santé des Armées: medical school of French army
National Military Infrastructure Engineers Academy, which was established in 2013, educates military engineers for the armed forces (also one of the newest)
École d'état-major (Staff school): first step of higher military studies, for an officer of rank OF-2.
École de Guerre (War School): second step of higher military studies, mostly for grades OF-2 and OF-3 who wish to proceed on the command route (e.g.
to lead a regiment or battalion).
Collège d'enseignement supérieur de l'armée de terre (Army Higher Education College): second step of military education, however, for officers seeking to become highly specialized.
Cours supérieur d'état-major (Advanced Staff Course)
Enseignement militaire supérieur scientifique et technique (Higher Technical and Scientific Education).
Centre des hautes études militaire (Center for Advanced Military Studies): final step of military education, for a select few chosen OF-5.
Its students also attend the civilian institut des hautes études de défense nationale.
National Defense Academy
Cadet Bachelor School
Junior Officer Training Academy
Basic School for Aviation Air Defense Officers
Medical Officer School
Captain Career School
School of Command and General Staff
Advanced Defense Studies School
Language Training School
The system of civil and military education in Germany is distinctive.
The only true military academy is the Führungsakademie der Bundeswehr where mainly future staff officers and general staff officers are further trained.
The three branches' Offizierschulen are responsible for providing the required training in military leadership. Each branch has a different set of contents. All aspiring platoon leaders in the army receive training down to the level of a commander of a mixed combat battalion, in accordance with the doctrine known as leadership by task.
To eventually get commissioned, they must also pass an officer exam there.
Additionally, there are so-called Waffenschulen (schools of weaponry), including artillery school and infantry school. There, the officers get knowledge about how to handle the routine duties of their particular corps.
The academic education