Jump to content
News Ticker
  • I am now accepting the following payment methods: Card Payments, Apple Pay, Google Pay and PayPal
  • Latest News

    jshorter

    For Deletion
    • Posts

      351
    • Joined

    • Last visited

    Posts posted by jshorter

    1. When you get it, please say how the Albert Order is attached to the bar. Is it a clip under the ribbon? I can see the other three are tied down, so likely the SAOX is tied down. The reason I ask is, is this an 1870 version of the Albert? I know the Saxon Civil Merit had different versions identifiable as 19th Century and WWI, but does the F-P war SAOX have any differences from the WWI SAOX?

      Will do! This will have to do for now though...

    2. The second medal is the Baden "Commemorative Medal for 1849":

      "The medal was instituted by Grand Duke Leopold on 9 August 1849 and awarded to ‘all those who participated reproachlessly in the recent 1849 campaign against the insurgents (‘für alle diejenigen, welche den letzten Feldzug 1849 gegen die Rebellen in Baden tadellos mitgemacht’). Baden, though increasingly prosperous, was not immune to the revolutionary fervour that swept Europe in 1848-1849. Armed insurrection broke out in both years, made more serious by the sympathy of much of the army to the insurgent cause. Matters came to a head in May and June of 1849, the Grand Duke and his government being obliged to flee the capital, Karlsruhe. At this point, Leopold requested the intervention of Prussia whose forces routed the rebels at Waghausel on 20 June. Leopold returned to Karlsruhe on 10 August and Prussian forces remained in Baden until order had been restored."

      And the third is the Prussian "Commemorative Cross for 1866":

      "The medal was instituted by King Wilhelm I on 20 September 1866 following the victorious war against Austria and its German allies. There were four versions: for those present at the battle of Königgrätz, for the Army of the Main, for ‘Trueue Kriegern’ (for those combatant troops not present at Königgrätz nor part of the Army of the Main) and for non-combatants. The medal was cast from the bronze of captured Austrian cannon."

      Jason

    3. Hi everyone!

      I happened upon this Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach General Honor Decoration with Clasp and Swords, and was a little concerned with it upon further review.

      1. I find it interesting that even though it has Clasp and Swords, they were not joined together on the bar as one.

      2. The Clasp seems to have been manufactured without the ring to attach to the medal.

      3. The hilt of the Swords has a different appearance than other medals I have seen.

      What do you all think? Could the recipient have received the Clasp and Swords later on during the war, and then combined them together on this mount? Did they manufacture Clasps without the ring to attach the medal to? Are there variations in the Sword hilts? Any reason why the Swords are mounted upside-down?

      Thanks for any information you can provide!

      Best regards,

      Jason

    ×
    ×
    • Create New...

    Important Information

    We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.