The rank evolved from the ancient sailing days and the
admiral distinctions then used by the
Royal Navy. The British fleet was divided into three divisions and each designated a
colour, that of red, white, or blue. Each coloured division was assigned an
admiral, who in turn had command over a
vice admiral and a
rear admiral. In the 18th century, the original nine ranks began to be filled by more than one person per rank. The admiral of the fleet commanded the admirals of the various divisions and thus, the entirety of the British fleet. The organisation of the British fleet into coloured squadrons was abandoned in 1864, with the Royal Navy keeping the
White Ensign. By this time, the position admiral of the fleet had already become an honorary promotion; when the position of professional head of the Royal Navy was given the name of
First Naval Lord in 1828 (renamed First Sea Lord in 1904), admiral of the fleet became an honorary promotion for retiring First Naval Lords. This allowed multiple honorary admirals of the fleet to co-exist throughout the history of the rank. With the establishment of the
Royal Australian Navy in 1911, the navy inherited the same ranks as its Royal Navy predecessor. However, with the highest ranks remaining the traditional reserve as a wartime rank and did not take on the regular honorary appointments that its British counterpart did until 1996. ==Admirals of the Fleet (Royal Australian Navy)==