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Posts posted by Utgardloki
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I personally would also prefer to wear the EK2 in the buttonhole and not on the medalbar. That underlines its high symbolic value.
What do you guys think, was wearing it in the buttonhole only a transition period thing, until the medal bar was updated, or did some guys prefer to wear it that way without the intention to add it to the bar later?
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Nice picture, is this a british CVO around his neck?
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Who is the guy in the last pic?
I found this highly interesting old thread, with picture of Zar Ferdinand wearing a black eagle Kleindekoration
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Terrific pictures, thanks!
Yeah, Wilhelm seems to have worn it a lot, but I don't remember having ever seen someone else wear it.
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If you know pictures of the Kleindekoration des Schwarzen Adlerordens in wear feel free to post them. There are some of Kaiser Wilhelm II wearing it:
(I wonder who wrote that on the postcard)
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Side question:
Is he wearing the Kleindekoration des Schwarzen Adlerordens? (rarely seen)
Also very interesting how he is wearing the trifolds under his ribbon bar
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I also have a set in a comparable condition. Is there a number how many of these G.A. Scheid pieces were made?
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On 03/01/2020 at 21:26, Ian said:
In the photo he is wearing the uniform of a Fähnrich
So he really was a Panierherr
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Did he fall at Badonviller?
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Very interesting
That bar is beautiful. It is a NCO/enlisted bar, am I right? The Militär-Ehrenzeichen 2.Klasse was the equivalent to the Iron Cross 2nd class in wars were there was no EK?
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I would flip it, but You can document it was the other way when You got it.
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I've seen lots of documents with this signature
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Fantastic, I love family reunions!
Kind regards
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As we all know the prussian orders in the late years of the first world war were made out of gilded silver, instead of gold to save material and money. Looking through some old auction catalogs i read it wasn't planned to reintroduce decorations made of gold after the war - is that true? If true, does it only mean there shouldn't be replacement pieces for the silver-gilded ones or that also all new ones should only be made out of gilded silver?
The austrian silver-gilded decorations were often marked with an asterisk and I think I read somewhere it was planned that they could be replaced with a gold one after the war (I neither know for sure that this is correct, I only remember I have heard it somewhere)
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You have a pretty nice picture archive. Stunning photos
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1st: METZ or maybe WÖRTH??
3rd one: SEDAN
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They have been preserved excellently - absolutely breathtaking pieces!
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I tried to find a picture of Duke Carl Eduard of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha wearing Claudios ribbon bar. Unfortunately I couldn't find one. I am still confident there has to be a picture of him wearing that bar (but maybe not on in internet)...
Nevertheless I saw a grandcross-badge-around-neck-picture of him, so i thought it would be a nice addition to this thread:
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15 hours ago, Bayern said:
Its the Uniform of a Knight of the Order of Saint George. uniform because the order was a Miltary Order
How do You come to the conclusion it was a military order. I understand that one can say every traditional knights-order is a military order as they have there tradition in knighthood.
What I consider a military order is e.g. the military-order of Maria Therese or the military-order of Max-Joseph. These were also open to commoners (with them lifted into nobility). The Bavarian Order of St. George was only open to nobility with the candidates having to pass an Ahnenprobe (check of birth) The order still exists today, but I doubt the Ahnenprobe is still the same as many (or even most) nobles today marry unequal.
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Ah yes, now I remember, it is that little room in the corner. When I saw them I had the feeling these were all made by the same manufacturer... could that be true?
You're right. I prefer table showcases, where you can get really close to the objects. In those "modern" installations the objects are often so far away you can hardly see them. In addition (maybe I'm wrong) it seems like, that in modern displays less objects are displayed. The "normal" visitor might prefer these, but for those who like to look at every object in detail (and look for the differences in similar objects) this is unfavorable.
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27 minutes ago, Chris Boonzaier said:
That is him... I think in the knights get up was just for fancydress ?
I think that is the vestment of a knight of of the Hausritterorden vom Heiligen Georg. I remember those shields hanging around in the Münchner Schatzkammer.
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Johanniter Order
in Germany: Imperial: The Orders, Decorations and Medals of The Imperial German States
Posted · Edited by Utgardloki
@RWS
Thanks for this very intersting insights - in Austria we have both Malta and Johanniter ambulances driving around
@1812 Overture
Yes, it seems to be the same person on each picture