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    Lukasz Gaszewski

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    Posts posted by Lukasz Gaszewski

    1. Dear Christian,

      I think it is possible. Furthermore, I figure it was likely for a member of the k.u.k. Erzhaus to be an honorary member of it. The extended badge looks like the Matrikelzeichen too. I was trying to find a photo of this decoration on the Net, but I wasn't able to find any. I will make a scan and will post it on the forum.

      I think that a member of the imperial house that the Archduke was must have had a variety of foreign orders. Notice, however, that he is not wearing any other ones on his tunic. He may have chosen to wear only his Austrian decorations. Well, as I said the photo is not clear, so I am not insisting.

      Best regards,

      Lukasz :beer:

    2. Dear Lukasz,

      you can also see a miniature of the "Golden Fleece" at his tunic.

      The No. 4 at his left chest might be a miniature of a high ranking foreign order :unsure: .

      Maybe from the Kingdom of Bulgaria :unsure: ?

      Best regards :beer:

      Christian

      The photo is small, so I shall not insist, but I think due to its placement that #4 can be the Tirol Gentry Decoration (Matrikelabzeichen des landst?ndischen Tiroler Adels).

      Lukasz

    3. This is a medal, commemorating the 25th anniversary of the Volunteer Labor Units (Доброволните Отряди на Трудещите се) - a paramilitary labor organization. Such organizations were another "all bloc" invention, present in practically all communist countries (I believe some ot these organizations still exist, but their role is marginal). This is most probably a local Plovdiv type of the medal (there is also a "national" type of a different design), probably limited in scope and therefore quite rare. It is difficult to say if the ribbon is correct - the "national" type was suspended from a plain red ribbon bar.

      Lukasz

    4. Well, it seems that each service has its own set of ribbons and they do not overlap at all. Army ROTC and Army Junior ROTC have developed ribbon patterns in several categories to cover different types of achievement. The significance of many of these ribbons though has been left to regional commanders' decision.

      I have tried to prepare a possibly complete rackbuilder for ROTC and other cadet corps awards. You wil find it at the http://www.medals.lava.pl site. Unfortunately the server is down for maintenance at the moment and it will probably be so throughout Easter.

      Best regards,

      Lukasz

    5. Yep, from what I know the Azerbaijan Medal was awarded for the suppression of the 1945-46 secession. The medal was also worn by Shah Reza Pahlavi himself. I thought that the blue of the ribbon was more purplish.

      As far as the Rastakhiz Medal is concerned, you are probably right, but I cannot tell - the information is too scarce.

      Beautiful medals anyway, both of them. Thank you, Ed :D

      Lukasz

    6. Uwe is right! The badges are of the 4th Zaniemenski Lancers Rgt. and 66th Kaszubski Infantry Rgt. of J?zef Pilsudski.

      It is dangerous to judge just from the photos, but to me the VM looks like a modern copy of the pre-WWII type, too. The ribbon doesn't look genuine, either. Could you post the photo of the reverse and the dimensions of both the cross and ribbon? There should be a number on the lower arm.

      As of the regimental badges, the photos of the reverses would be nice too. The 4th Lancers badge is the officer type (the NCO type had no enamel). The "U4" on the lower arm is slimmer than usually found. On the reverse there was usually the number and recipient's name, but that was not always the case.

      Lukasz

    7. A peculiarity about National Guard items is that you are NOT authorized to wear them while on active duty, and when you are on state duty, you may wear them not only after ALL federal decorations and service medals and ribbons, but also after all foreign medals! Many of these NG pieces are just longevity awards, but the criteria for some top National Guard decorations are really high.

      Lukasz

    8. An awesome piece indeed! It is genuine I think.

      The ribbons I have been able to identify are:

      1. Order of Combat Merit

      2. "60 Years of the Mongolian People's Revolution" Medal

      3. "70 Years of the Mongolian People's Revolution" Medal

      4. "80 Years of the Mongolian People's Revolution" Medal

      5. "60 Years of the Armed Forces of the MPR"

      6. ?? (possibly Mongolian Armed Forces LSM - 20 years)

      ...

      12. USSR: Jubilee Medal "70 Years of the Armed Forces of the USSR"

      It is possible that the other ribbons are Mongolian too. It seems that Mongolia has many more ribbons for their decorations than we know.

      #8 seems to be a civil defense decoration. I have no idea what it is, I'm guessing from the symbol.

      Best,

      Lukasz

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