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    Lukasz Gaszewski

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    Everything posted by Lukasz Gaszewski

    1. A slightly better photo of the Order of Kim Il Sung:
    2. Darrell, I really appreciate and admire your collection. I do not know why folks tend to focus on US military awards only and disregard civilian ones. Do post more, please! And here is a small addition from myself - the Secretary of Defense Meritorious Civilian Service Medal. Merry Christmas, Lukasz
    3. Hi Hendrik, It was VM for sure! I've consulted sources for details. Verdun was awarded the Virtuti Militari on February 6, 1921, personally by Marshal Pilsudski during his visit to France. Most probably the name of the order was incorrectly registered as Croix de Guerre. Glad being able to correct the mistake. Merry Christmas! Lukasz
    4. I do not have much hope, but perhaps someone will be able to assist. I have recently been asked to help identify these three Polish badges: 1. A pre-WWII railway badge, probably of a railway engineers' organization. The abbreviation on it reads "ZPIK". 2. A pre-WWII badge, probably related to an automobile (military?) organization. The abbreviation reads "SKIZAK". 3. A contemporary legal badge. The scroll reads "PRAWO : OJCZYZNA : HONOR" (law, country, honor). Any help will be greatly appreciated. Lukasz
    5. Places awarded with the Polish order Virtuti Militari: 1. Lw?w (Germ. Lemberg, Ukr. Lviv) - November 11, 1920 2. Verdun - ? 3. Warsaw - December 23, 1940 4. Polish War Cementery at Katyn - 1976 (initially the award of the Polish Gvt. in Exile went to the Katyn Monument in London, after 1991 transferred to the cementery itself).
    6. Just to complete the excellent description by haynau: there also existed the Large Gold Milit?rverdienstmedaille, established by emperor Franz-Joseph on April 1, 1916. Unlike the silver and bronze ones, the gold medal was intended to general officers only. It was larger (38 mm) and the surmounting crown was surrounded by a laurel wreath. A laurel wreath also surrounded the obverse of the medal. It was worn on the war ribbon and could be conferred up to four times, the subsequent ones being denoted by gold bars. It was a very high decoration, ranking right under the Order of the Iron Crown 1st Class and the Commander of St. Stephen and before the Grand Cross of the Order of Franz-Joseph. In 1917 the effigy of Franz-Joseph was replaced by that of emperor Karl. The medal was one of the rarest Austro-Hungarian awards. It was bestowed upon only 30 persons, most of which three-star generals or higher, out of which four persons received it twice. The only two known instances of the medal being awarded to a non-general were Oberstleutnant Pokorny from the Austrian General Staff Corps and linienschiffsleutnant Freiherr von Banfield (1890-1986), an eminent pilot and recipient of the Order of Maria Theresia. Lukasz
    7. Lt. Gen. Wladyslaw Anders, commanding general of the 2nd Polish Army Corps in the Middle East, later C-in-C of the Polish Armed Fores in the West, proudly wearing his Wound Badge with stars for eight (!) wounds he obtained. (source: http://www.videofact.com/polska/gotowe/a/anders/anders.html) Lukasz
    8. I guess many Bulgarian orders were manufactured by Firma Rothe in Vienna. Some pieces were also made by Johann Schwerdtner, also in Vienna. Lukasz
    9. I am glad there has been so much response And here's some clarification regarding the order. First, it may not be clearly seen on the photos, but the enamel is actually very dark blue, not black. And although the order is indeed much inspired by the Virtuti Militari, much effort has been put to make the insignia as unique as possible, without any earlier ancestors. Also it is probably the only order in the world with the commander class in silver instead of gold. As for the crown, it has rightly been said here, it is the symbol of sovereignity rather than royalty. The one surmounting the cross is the crown of King Boleslaus the Valiant (Chrobry), the first crowned ruler of Poland. His crowned effigy can be found on one of Polish banknotes. Lukasz
    10. Here are the photos of the actual Order of the Military Cross. Probably the first photos of this order ever. Enjoy!
    11. Hi All, I am sorry I could not join the discussion earlier. I am just back from London where I had a pleasure to participate in the launch of Burke's World Orders of Knighthood and Merit. The idea of the project sounds fascinating indeed. I have been thinking of publishing a book like this myself. I will be glad to lend a hand with the project. I have been doing medal research for over twenty years now and I have collected a nice library of not only books on the subject, but of official bulletins of different countries with regulations regarding awards as well. I can read a few Eastern Bloc languages, including Bulgarian, Czech, German, Hungarian (!), Polish, Romanian, Russian and Serbo-Croat, which I think can be an asset. The problem with me can be that I am not very much a collector (although I have a small collection of selected items), so I will not be able to provide many items for illustration. I can write the Polish section and possibly also some other sections which will be not covered by other authors (I recently wrote articles about the medals of Bulgaria and Romania). I will also be glad to help coordinate the project, or may even consider coordinating it myself, oprovided I can share my duties with another individual. I can also try arranging publication of the book in Poland which may help reduce costs. I agree that the most essential for the start is to select the time frames covered by the book and the countries to be included. I have made a list of the countries which at one point of their history used the "people's" or "socialist" adjective in their names (I am still not sure if I have included all): EUROPE Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Soviet Union, Yugoslavia. ASIA Afghanistan, Burma (Myanmar), Cambodia, China, Laos, Mongolia, North Korea, Vietnam, Yemen. AFRICA Angola, Ethiopia. NORTH AMERICA Cuba The next thing will be to determine the scope of content for each contry and each entry. Anyway I am glad Eric has put forward this excellent idea I will be more than happy to assist. Lukasz
    12. On the website of the Mongolian General Staff I found this photo of a Mongolian MG with his Turkish colleague. Have a look at the last row of his ribbon bars. They are strikingly similar to those of the Soviet long service medals and may serve the same purpose. They are also similar to the colors of the badges posted by Ed. I cannot recognize the third ribbon in the upper row, next to that of the Combat Merit Medal. If it is the Order of the Polar Star, the precedence would be incorrect.
    13. Thanx Ed... Yep, very likely although there should be a dove on the ribbon. The other one is rather the Medal of 90th Birthday Anniversary of Dimitrov.
    14. Thank you Bob and Ed, your words always help me keep my head up high . As of Bob's question: the photo is not very clear but it is likely to be the German Peace Prize Medal. It is easier for me to identifiy the one next to it (on the red bar) which I think to be the medal of the Dimitrov Prize. L.
    15. And here are my findings. I am not sure of all his awards, but I think I could identify most of the ribbons. A. Tsedenbal as a General of the Army: 1. Order of Sukhbaatar 2. Order of Sukhbaatar (x4) 3. Order of Lenin (x2), Order of the October Revolution, Order of Kutuzov - 1st Class 4. Order of the Red Banner (x2) (Mongolia), Order of the Red Banner of Labor Valor, Medal "50 Years of the Mongolian People's Revolution" 5. Order of Karl Marx (GDR), Order of Georgi Dimitrov (x2) (Bulgaria), Order of the Flag - 1st class w. Diamonds (Hungary) 6. Order of the National Flag - 1st Class (N. Korea), Order of Polonia Restituta - Grand Cross (Poland), Order of Merit - Grand Cross (Poland) 7. Order of the White Lion (Czechoslovakia - ?? wrong ribbon but corresponds with the star he is wearing), Order of Jose Marti (Cuba - the pre-1979 type), Star of Friendship of Nations (GDR) 8. Lenin Centenary Medal (USSR), Order of the Grand Star (Yugoslavia), Medal of Friendship (Mongolia), Medal of Khalkhin Gol (??) 9. Medal for the Victory over Germany, Medal of 20th Anniversary of of Great Patriotic War Victory, Medal of 30th Anniversary of of Great Patriotic War Victory, Medal for the Victory over Japan 10. Medal "30th Anniversary of the Victory at Khalkhin Gol", Medal "We Won", Medal "30th Anniversary of the Victory over the Militaristic Japan, Medal "25 Years of the MPR" 11. Medal "40 Years of the MPR", Medal "50 Years of the Mongolian People's Army", Medal "50 Years of the State Security of the MPR", Medal 50 Years of the Police of the MPR" B. and after his promotion to Marshal of Mongolia in 1979: 1. Order of Sukhbaatar (x4) 2. Order of Sukhbaatar, Order of Lenin (x2), Order of the October Revolution 3. Order of Kutuzov - 1st Class, Order of the Red Banner (x2) (Mongolia), Order of the Red Banner of Labor Valor 4. Order of Karl Marx (GDR), Order of Georgi Dimitrov (x2) (Bulgaria), Order of the Flag - 1st class w. Diamonds (Hungary) 5. Order of the National Flag - 1st Class (N. Korea), Order of Polonia Restituta - Grand Cross (Poland), Order of Merit - Grand Cross (Poland) 6. Order of the White Lion (Czechoslovakia - ??), Order of Jose Marti (Cuba), Order of Friendship of Nations (GDR) 7. Order of the Grand Star (Yugoslavia), Medal of Friendship (Mongolia), Medal "50 Years of the Mongolian People's Revolution", Medal "50 Years of the Mongolian People's Army" 8. Lenin Centenary Medal (USSR), Medal for the Victory over Germany, Medal of 20th Anniversary of of Great Patriotic War Victory, Medal of 30th Anniversary of of Great Patriotic War Victory 9. Medal for the Victory over Japan, Medal "60th Anniversary of the Soviet Army" (??), Medal "30th Anniversary of the Victory at Khalkhin Gol", Medal "30th Anniversary of the Victory over the Militaristic Japan 10. Medal of Khalkhin Gol (??), Medal "We Won", Medal "25 Years of the MPR", Medal "40 Years of the MPR" 11. Medal "50 Years of the State Security of the MPR", Medal "40th Anniversary of the Victory at Khalkhin Gol", Medal 50 Years of the Police of the MPR", Medal "30 Years of the German Democratic Republic" (GDR ??) The two awards above are of course the Gold Star of the Hero of MPR and the Gold Soyombo of the Hero of Labor. The cravat decoration is the star of the Marshal of Mongolia, closely modeled on the stars of Soviet Marshals.
    16. OK, let me try. First I allowed myself to copy the photos of comrade Yumjaagiyn Tsedenbal from another thread. Particularly helpful were these two photos of his in full glory, wearing all his gongs:
    17. Dear Eric, Dear All, I am glad to inform that the Albanian section has been added to medals.lava . Please have a look at http://www.medals.lava.pl/al/al2.htm. Thank you Eric once again for the assistance. The page would not be possible without your excellent work. Lukasz
    18. Mmmm... excellent hunting!!! I wonder if it is possible to get a copy of this magazine. Does the Kazakh Mint have a website? There are not too many good sites about contemporary awards of Kazakhstan. Here is one I found. I guess it may be known to some of you, but just in case you don't know it... http://www.kazakhstan.orexca.com/awards_kazakhstan.shtml Best regards, Lukasz PS: Do you know the width of the ribbons of Kazakh medals?
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