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Posts posted by Christian1962
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@Tony:
Please mind following, if you would construct a medal bar:
1. the "Jubiläumskreuz 1908" would have a wrong ribbon. For an officer it would be white with a red stripe on both sides. Same for the "Jubiläumsmedaille 1898" - the military version would have a full red ribbon.
2. "Tapferkeitsmedaille" would be wrong too. An officer owning a peacetime "Signum Laudis" from Franz Joseph could not earn a "Bronzene" oder "Kleine silberne Tapferkeitsmedaille" in WW1, because they were just for enlisted men, NCOs and ensigns.
3. With the "Kriegserinnerungsmedaille" (instituted in 1933) and the "Tiroler Landesdenkmünze" (instituted in 1928) it would be a interwar medal bar.
4. Referring the Karl-Signum-Laudis: I would think that there were no issued medals with a red ribbon. I have been reading through all Verlautbarungsblätter from WW1 and can´t remember any awards with a red ribbon. There were just few from Franz Joseph which are documented. But you never know... it would have been a very rare exeption.
Regards
Christian
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I would assume he received his Verw.Abzeichen for this injury:
It reads: "Am 22.11.14 verwundet, Alexandrow,
But I can´t decipher the abbreviations within the brackets: (G. G. b or l. U.-Arm) - they are typical medical abbreviations I think.
Regards
Christian
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10 hours ago, Rich said:
Thank you, Tony - I usually buy British medals but I do like the ephemera that comes with other nations' WW1 awards because, with their medals being unnamed, it is the only tangible link to these men. I saw this set for sale and so just had to buy it.
I think you might be right, Christian thank you. I could not see the wood for the trees - I think I got swept up with the Austrian medal application angle and neglected the obvious - the front of his Militarpass does indeed look German!
I've also got his discharge letter but I cannot decipher much of it; does this provide any more information about his wartime service?
Cheers
Richard
This paper is just a discharge certificate from the Reserve-Lazarett in Burg and says that Semrau is sent back to his Ersatz-Truppenteil. He is fit for garrison service and two times vaccinated. No entry about any military service.
Regards
Christian
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As far as I can see and read, there is no connection to the WW1 Austro-Hungarian Army. No part of the former k.(u.)k. Army had an IR 175 or 343.
Therefore no entry for an Austrian decoration.
Regards
Christian
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I had opportunity to talk with Georg Ludwigstorff yesterday. He told me that he examined hundreds of MMTO crosses for his and Christian Ortner´s book. There wasn't one piece produced by Gebrüder Resch. In his eyes it is most probably that they sold a piece of other origin and engraved their own companies name.
Regards
Christian
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Here some pics of different Rothe collectors copies from the Fattovich collections. Some of them are shwon in Mericka´s book from 1974.
Regards
Christian
Großkreuz mit Kriegsdekoration:
Eiserne Krone 2. Kl. mit Kriegsdekoration und Schwertern
zum 2. Mal verliehen:
Here a 1st class set with "Kriegsdekoration niederen Grades".
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Dear Glenn,
I tried to contact you via the contact sheet here, but my message was denied. I hope you still have my email and would contact me there. My yahoo.de and my office account are still in use.
Kindest regards
Christian
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8 hours ago, StefanK. said:
Hello Christian, do yu have pictures of how the Fattovich-pieces looked like?
Hello Stefan,
I own just Fattovich-pieces of other orders (espc. Order of Leopold), no MMTO - sorry.
Regards
Christian
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I am not an expert for MMTO. In my opinon the cross looks very nice, but the ribbon is definitly a new one.
The crosses were produced by Rothe until year 2000. I don´t know which hallmarks they used after 1922. I own some collectors copies which were made for the Fattovich collection in the 1960ties. As far as I remember these are not hallmarked in spite they are gold.
But I remember the words of a collector friend who always said "we have all hallmarks on stock..." when he had doubts regarding an expensive piece.
That is the most reason for me never purchasing a MMTO.
Regards
Christian
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Gentlemen,
I am not a collector of british items, but I enjoyed this thread as far. I enjoyed the pics and the memories of the men, who served with the RMP. Thank you all!
Christian
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I would say, it is not Model.
Regards
Christian
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I will start displaying different examples for issues of the federal states.
Burgendland
Until 1971 the medal was bestowed with the 1949 - 1951 eagle. Then they changed to the state eagle.
left: fontside
right: backside
The ribbon was changed in 2008 from single yellow to red-yellow (half and half).
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In 1949 the medals for 25 and 40 years service were re-established again with a different eagle. In 1951 the Austrian constitutional court abolished this law. From there on the federal states could establish medals with their own heraldic shields. Some did immedately - others later. So there are nine different features of this medal now.
Here the 1949 - 1951 issue:
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7 hours ago, Farkas said:
Always nice to know something of the recipient.Overture,
Do you know if he received it post 1922?
He might look a bit happier if he knew he would survive the war… 😁
tony 🍻
He could not have received it after the war because in 1922 the medal was re-established and showing the heraldic eagle of the Austrian seal of state instead of the Kaiser.
You can see two different examples here. The medal with the one-headed eagle was in use from 1922 until 1934 and the double-headed eagle from 1934 until 1938.
Both medals are silver for 40-years-service.
Regards
Christian
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HMA should mean "Hauptmünzamt".
Regards
Christian
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Yes, it´s an award for a DANCON march in Kosovo, which is awarded to everyone who takes part.
There are many variants of them since the first were awarded in 1972 in Cyprus.
Regards
Christian
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On 13/04/2023 at 08:52, Elmar Lang said:
A nice case, where the Militärverdienstmedaille was stored at retailers, thus, without ribbon.
The buyer, entitled to wear the medal, had then the choice of the proper ribbon.
In fact, the reverse of the case opening this thread, shows the handwritten note (probably by hand of the original seller):
5,40 Ohne
Band
70
_____
6,10
Explaining the price of the medal without ribbon and of the ribbon itself: interesting data anyway.
All the best,
Enzo
Compared with the year 1900 6,10 Kronen were at about 50 € in 2023,
compared with 1914 it would be 40 € in 2023.
Source: https://www.eurologisch.at/docroot/waehrungsrechner/#/
Regards
Christian
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Oberst Julius Nimmerrichter (1880-1951):
He absolved the "Militär-Aeronautikkurs" and received the "Beobachter-Abzeichen" with 02.09.1916 (while being in Russian captivity - which is strange).
He also absolved the "Feldpiloten-Ausbildung" and after WW1 on 09.12.1919 he received the "Feldpilotenabzeichen" nachträglich.
From 00.11.1918 until 08.10.1920 he did duty as "Truppenkommandant der deutsch-österreichischen Fliegertruppe".
Source:
Frech Chr., Pichler M., Steiner P., Vlachos I.: "Österreichs Generäle 1919 - 1955", Vol. 3., Vienna 2021,
Verlag Militaria: https://militaria.at/Book.aspx?book=7756560&Language=de
Regards
Christian
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I would think that this kind of ribbon is quite rare. I have not seen any for years "live" or in an auction.
Congratulations for owning it.
Regards
Christian
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On 25/12/2022 at 13:51, 1812 Overture said:
Hi, my friend, Merry Christmas! I would like to ask you if the Carl 1 level bravery medal can be awarded to Germans? I have only seen the example of level 2 or copper in German medals @Christian1962
Happy New Year!
Sorry for my late reply but I had to check my literature first.
I can confirm that the "Silberne Tapferkeitsmedaille 1. Klasse" was available for Germans. This was an equivalent to Iron Cross 1st class. "Silberne Tapferkeitsmedaille 2. Klasse" was equivalent to Iron Cross 2nd class.
Source: Jörg Steiner, Heldenwerk 1914 - 1918, p. 14
Regards
Christian
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I don´t know were you are living. But I would try to contact the french embassy in your country. Most of them have a divison for "cultural affairs" which could be very helpful for your research.
Regards
Christian
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Yes, you are right. The union was called "Bundesvereinigung der Tapferkeitsmedaillenbesitzer". Mostly the decoration was bestowed to members but sometimes for active soldiers too and could be worn on the uniform. The union was closed in 2010 or so.
https://www.buchfreund.de/de/d/p/76535363/der-held-organ-bundesvereinigung
Regards
Christian
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Covid 19 Medals of the World
in Modern Campaigns and Conflicts
Posted · Edited by Christian1962
Sorry, I have to correct: the upper medal is the official COVID-19-medal bestowed by the federal Austrian ministry of defense.
Here you can see some more drafts for the medal:
Here is the COVID-19-medal established by the Lower Austrian red cross organisation:
Approx. 8.000 pieces were produced and bestowed.
Regards
Christian