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    slava1stclass

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    Posts posted by slava1stclass

    1. Gents,

      Let me preface this post by stating this is not my area of expertise. Forum veterans know that my interest rests with Soviet Full Cavaliers/Knights of the Order of Glory.

      I came across this bar on the well-known auction site and thought I would post it here for your review/discussion. It was listed as described in this thread's title and recently sold for $1,760.85.

      Bar's description follows: "Here is a superb 8 piece Imperial German Saxon Military Order of St. Henry, and Military Order of St. Henry Medal Court Mounted Valor Group. The group consists of the following: Prussian 1914 Iron Cross 2nd class (magnetic center), Saxon Military Order of St. Henry Knight (silver/gilt and enamel), Saxon Military Order of St. Henry Medal (silver), Saxon Order of Albert the Brave Knight second class with swords (silver/gilt and enamel), Duchy of Anhalt 1914 Friedrich War Cross (bronze), 1914-1918 Hindenburg Cross with swords (magnetic), German 18 Year Long Service Cross (magnetic), German 4 Year Long Service Medal (magnetic). Medals are nicely toned and in excellent overall condition, St. Henry Knight with only slight enamel loss from contact. Ribbons and backing felt are also in excellent overall condition with slight fading and some wear to the ribbon of the Iron Cross. This combination of the award of the Order of St. Henry and the St. Henry Medal is quite scarce. This group could have been awarded to a German Aviator."

      Regards,

      slava1stclass

    2. Gents,

      Add Guards Sergeant V. S. Ippolitova to the list. She was a combat medic. Five, that's right, five Medals for Valor. She is on the left in the wartime image.

      She is truly a soldier's soldier as embodied in her decision to wear nothing but her five For Valor medals on her medal bar. None of those fluff anniversary medals for her. I like it.

      Regards,

      slava1stclass

    3. I have always wanted one of these sets back in the 90s.... I should have got one when they could be had for 3k... but it was too expensive then... Dohh!

      Senior Chief,

      This is what $3,500.00 would have gotten you on January 9th, 1998. This is one heck of a primo, in-your-face combat Full Cavalier group. Suffice it to say Full Cavaliers who came from the ranks of Guards airborne units are far and few between.

      Regards,

      slava1stclass

      "Group of 4, to Guards Sergeant Major Grigory Shekera, reconnaissance scout in 6th Independent Guards Airborne Reconnaissance Company (2nd Guards Airborne Division), recipient of all three classes of the Order of Glory: 1. Order of Glory, 1st cl., #407, perfect condition, issued on 03/24/1945 for courageous conduct during a reconnaissance raid on Hungarian territory. He led a group of 4 scouts that ambushed and dispersed a group of 60 enemy soldiers. Senior Sergeant Shekera killed six of them at point-blank range and captured a prisoner for interrogation that was later delivered to the headquarters and gave valuable information. 2. Order of Glory, 2nd cl., #1986, faded gilt in the center, perfect otherwise, issued on 07/18/1944. The award was given for 06/24/1944 fight on the enemy territory, when his decisive actions saved the reconnaissance group surrounded by the enemy. 3. Order of the Red Star, #683246, issued on 08/08/1944. The award was given for Grigory Shekera's daring action in reconnaissance raids. On 05/05/1944 he killed an enemy soldier guarding a bridge thus allowing Soviet strike team to blow up the bridge. On the way back he destroyed a Nazi machine-gun emplacement with hand grenades and captured a prisoner for interrogation. Included is also unresearched Order of Glory, 3rd cl., #9715 (!) to the same recipient (listed in the award record card). Missing: Order of the Patriotic War, 1st cl., WW 2; Order of the Red Banner. Included: Xerox copies and translation of the commendations for the Order of Glory, 1st cl., Order of Glory, 2nd cl., Order of the Red Star; copy and translation of the award record card; photo of the recipient taken immediately after the Victory Parade in which he participated (shows him wearing all decorations); Xerox copy and translation of the story about Grigory Shekera's feats in the catalog "Soldier's Glory" (contains his photo); brief history of the division."

    4. Gentlemen,

      The best I can offer - Gds. Sr. Sgt. Pytor Nickoliavitch Bareebin who ultimately became a Cavalier of the Order of Glory - four wound stripes.

      Wild Card,

      Here is a wartime image of Guards Airborne Sergeant Major and Full Cavalier of the Order of Glory P.N. Barybin in his army uniform. After reviewing his various award recommendations on the Russian MinDef site, I can confirm there is no reference to naval service. I can also confirm three light wounds as received on 12.1.43, 3.8.43 and 5.5.44 respectively.

      Regards,

      slava1stclass

    5. QUOTE (Wild Card @ Dec 3 2008, 21:31 ) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
      speechless.gif I think that a good part of the answer to much of this has been in front of us all along; and I apologize for not having recognized it before blush.gif .

      In the naval uniform photo, Bareebin has two Orders of Glory and a Victory in Europe medal. This would indicate that the picture was taken sometime between May of 1945 (Victory) and May of 1946 (award of Glory 1st class). So, he was most likely straight army/infantry during the course of the war and then, for an indefinite time served in an unknown capacity that called for a naval uniform. This would also explain the army guards badge on the naval uniform, as pointed out by Rick.

      Make sense?

      Wild Card,

      Possibly. As noted above, however, the Navy switched to the standard Guards badge during the war. Since Barybin left active duty in September 1945 and returned to civilian life (his bio entry makes no reference to continued/subsequent military service), there would have been only four-five months for him to serve in the Navy. This seems very improbable to me - especially if he went from the most senior Army NCO rank to that of a basic seaman.

      You might also consider contacting one of the researchers to see if they can access the Navy archives to get a definitive answer on Barybin's potential naval service.

      Regards,

      slava1stclass

      Wild Card,

      Were you ever able to confirm Barybin did in fact serve in the navy?

      Regards,

      slava1strclass

    6. Gents,

      This is the Category 4 Full Cavalier set that is referenced in post #91 this thread. It was offered by the same dealer at his January 8th, 2009 auction. Opening bid was $20,000.00. Unlike the other Full Cavalier set he offered that day (see post #87 this thread) which sold for $50,000.00 (opening bid was $30,000.00), this set went unsold.

      Regards,

      slava1stclass

    7. That doesn't really explain the baked look on the ring, I've seen a lot of patina on other pieces but none that have the semi burnt look on it and just the top section, for an un-issued peace the condition is still pretty odd if you compare with the previous 1sts on this thread.

      Rogi,

      While unusual, it is not uncommon to see this darker coloration in isolated locations of a given specimen. The Glory 1st in the attached images is within 200 serial numbers of s/n 2174 and exhibits this same dark blotching around the eyelet (both sides). For me, this patina is less of a concern as to s/n 2174's originality.

      Again, just because s/n 2174 was an unissued piece doesn't mean it was handled with kid gloves once it left the mint's door.

      Regards,

      slava1stclass

    8. Hi,

      How do you explain all the scratches ? Intent to make it attributed and worn ?

      Last point for the experts: is it a real one ? Or a fake ?

      Cheers.

      Ch.

      Christophe,

      Hard to say. While an unissued example, it appears legit. If it found its way out of the mint in the chaotic days after the Soviet Union's collapse over 20 years ago, it's been in circulation and changing hands for quite some time now. As I've commented previously, these Glory 1s were often viewed as pure cash commodities in the former Soyuz and not necessarily handled with the respect orders and medals collectors would show them. Scratches and gold check gouges on this and other Glory 1st specimens I've handled over the years (to include those I examined over 20 years ago) are very common.

      Regards,

      slava1stclass

    9. Gents,

      Currently available on the well-known auction site for a BIN asking price of $11,000.00. Before you rush off to log on to your PayPal account, however, note that like the Glory 1st in post #212 above, this is an unissued example. How it got out of the mint is an entirely different matter...

      Regards,

      slava1stclass

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