Don't confuse being the Master of a vessel with the rank of Captain, or with the rank of the actual person in mind. The commander of a modern aircraft carrier, for example, may be an Admiral in Navy rank, but will be considered the "Captain" of the vessel. Of course, this varies by country too. And this being a long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away, none of that may even apply.
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Yeah, you should never confuse rank with role. I saw a documentary on a US Nimitz-class carrier that actually had at least two captains on board. One was the 'Captain' of the ship with the rank of captain and the other was the Commander of the Air Group, also with the rank of captain. Although they were the same rank, the ship's captain was the guy ultimately in charge of the ship and ship's company.
Admirals are generally not in command of a single ship. Their role is normally to command a squadron (not fighters) or fleet.
Star Wars seems to have replaced the role of Rear Admirals with Captains of the Line who command 5-20 smaller vessels.
A ship's captain can rise to the rank of admiral which will usually change his role within the chain of command.
Darth Vader : " Captain Piett. "
Firmus Piett : " Yes, my Lord. "
Darth Vader : " Make ready to land our troops beyond their energy shield and deploy the fleet so that nothing gets off the system. You are in command now, Admiral Piett. "
Firmus Piett : " Thank you, Lord Vader. "
Edited by Parravon