Stuart Pearce will manage England in their friendly international against the Netherlands on 29 February, English FA chairman David Bernstein confirmed.
Pearce, the England Under-21 manager, was given control of the senior side for the match against the Dutch at Wembley following Fabio Capello's resignation on Wednesday.
Capello quit just four months before the start of Euro 2012 following the FA's decision to strip John Terry of the England captaincy ahead of the Chelsea defender's trial on charges of racially abusing QPR's Anton Ferdinand, which is due to take place after the tournament in Poland and Ukraine.
Former England defender Pearce, who was Capello's assistant, will take charge of the Great Britain's men's Olympic team at the 2012 Games in London.
"I can announce that Stuart Pearce will manage the England team against Holland," said Bernstein at a Wembley news conference.
"He has huge experience outside and inside the organisation. He has been working with the under-21 team and has been working with Fabio for some time. I have got great confidence in Stuart, we will be in good hands.
"Our priority then will be to appoint a new England manager."
Tottenham manager Harry Redknapp, cleared of tax evasion charges on Wednesday, remains the overwhelming favourite to succeed Capello on a long-term basis.
Bernstein said the next England manager will ideally be English or British but must above all be "the best person" available.
The confirmation that the FA will consider overseas candidates, or Scottish, or Welsh candidates, may be seen as surprising, given it was widely expected that they would train the focus on finding the best English candidate available.
"Clearly there's a preference for an Englishman. The position hasn't changed, Bernstein said.
"There's a preference for an English person or a British person but in the end we want the best person. So I'm not prepared to rule out anything at this stage.
"Clearly an English or British person would have a good start on the matter."