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    Ed_Haynes

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    Posts posted by Ed_Haynes

    1. 4436391 Havildar Bachittar Singh, Sikh Light Infantry

      1- The General Service Medal, 1947 - NEFA 1962 - 4436391 SEP. BACHITTAR SINGH, SIKH L. I.

      2- Samar Seva Star, 1965 - 4436391 SEP. BACHITTAR SINGH, SIKH L. I.

      Raksha Medal, 1965 - missing, obviously - :(

      3- Sangram Medal, 1971 - 4436391 HAV. BACHITTAR SINGH SIKH L I

      4- Sainya Seva Medal - Jammu Kashmir - 4436391 SEP. BACHITTAR SINGH, S. L. I.

      5- Videsh Seva Medal - United Arab Republic - 4436391 SEP. BACHITTAR SINGH, SIKH L. I.

      6- Nine Years Long Service Medal - 4436391 SEP. BACHITTAR SINGH, S. L. I.

      7- United Nations: UNEF Medal - unnamed

      A true shame it is missing one medal. :( :( :( :(

    2. While there may not be much interest in these here, and while some have (I think) be posted elsewhere, I thought I might add a few Videsh Seva Medal groups.

      1097408 Sweeper Asa Ram, Armoured Corps

      1- The General Service Medal, 1947 - NAGA HILLS - 1097408 SWPR. ASA RAM, A. C.

      2- Sainya Seva Medal - Bangal-Assam - 1097408 SWPR ASA RAM, A. C.

      3- Videsh Seva Medal - Congo - 1097408 SWPR. ASA RAM, A. C.

      4- United Nations: Operation des Nations Units au Congo (ONUC) Medal - unnamed

      Videsh Seva kind of "chewed", but still nice.

    3. While the medal itself may be a legitimate PRC medal (will have to exchavate and consult the books), it has been subjected to the malovelent attentions of the contemporary manufacturers of fake, fantasy, and fraudulent Chinese awards. The suspension and ribbon is garbage. There is so much poison out there (much of it spread through e$cam) that the serious stusy and collecting of PRC medals may be permanently destroyed.

    4. The naming is, of course, the chief difference: Is it named to a Canadian or whatever. Beyond the styles of naming (especially the WWII presence of absence of naming), the commonwealth-specific WWII medals, the Canadian WWII silver medals, and the South African WWI Victory Medal, I'm not sure what differences you are asking about. I could go on (and on) about Indian (and Pakistani) patterns, but that wasn't part of your question.

    5. The recent San Giorgio auction had some intersting Mongolian lots. See:

      http://www.sangiorgioaste.com/eng-site/auc...egoria=MONGOLIA

      And most of these lots went unsold. Sold:

      1078 - Hero of Mongolia - EUR 14000 (around $17528)

      1079 - Hero of Labor - EUR 3500 (around $4382)

      1080 - Order of Sukhbaatar - EUR 1700 (around $2129)

      1081 - A nice three Red Banner of Military Valor documented group - EUR 2000 (around $2504)

      1103 - Medal 'Friendship' (B A44) EUR 70 (around $88)

      1104 - Honorary Chekist (B D03) - EUR 800 (around $1002)

      All prices exclusive of fees.

      While catalogue details are sparse, these may be some interesting results?

    6. Dead on target, Rick (no pun intended), it isn't about value in National Currency Units, but about our ability to feed our habits, getting a phaleristic fix, by having more (and more and more and more and . . .) goodies to research and understand and to which to restore humanity and history. The Economics-Babble merely speaks to supply (limited) and demand (great) not to nastier capitalist stuff.

      As you know, things have changed: Red Stars aren't sold by the kilo any more.

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