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    Ulsterman

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    Posts posted by Ulsterman

    1. Very nice and interresting bar, but with the Silesian Eagle, I don't think he's a Homestayer who got a black and white EK ...

      Why not? Many navy men who stayed loyal during the Spartikist revolts and further chaos were considered hard core men and fought with the freikorps. They never were under allied fire, but fought in Berlin etc. etc.. This could easily be, say, a navy cadet's bar who got the EK for "later service". It would tie in nicely with the Italian order too (as awarded-perhaps in 1935/43). Given the length of service he could be Reichsmarine.

      What colour is the backing? I'll bet it's blue or black.

    2. My inclination is Bulgarian. The lack of a Centenary means he probably wasn't very senior before the war started, so an Austrian Merit Cross on the statute ribbon is less likely. A wartime award would more likely have been on the war ribbon, as on the bar haynau shows. A St. Alexander would be on its red statute ribbon, and a Bulgarian merit medal could be given to almost any rank (it came in several grades) on the red ribbon, before or during the war.

      I agree-it is in place before the Austrian medal. A subtle distinction-but perhaps aesthetic.

    3. Officer Long Service medal-25 years-Landwehr if military, non-medical (unlikely) or as below, REO, Eagle medal for teachers, a state award as a Doctor (or even a noncom EK2 (1870) or even 1914 version-most of the latter went to civvys anyway-Burermeisters, bureaucrats, private MDs working at war hospitals, and even some Chaplains, etc.

      OR LS medal (NCO) or AEZ .

      I can not find my notes, but if memory serves a noncom 1871 medal on a noncom ribbon indicates noncom service in a noncom unit/occupation. This man could well have been a stretcher bearer at the front. Note the lack of bars though. He could also have been a medical officer/nurse sitting in Berlin treating wounded soldiers from Sedan. Many of these noncom medals went to medicals, but some went to Chaplain types too. I think I have seen one to a bandsman somewhere.

      What ever he was, we know he was born at least in 1853 and was still kicking about in 1916-18 to get a war aid cross at age 63-or above.

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