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    Mike Dwyer

    Old Contemptible
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    Posts posted by Mike Dwyer

    1. One more question, a bit off the topic of the thread. What are the implications of an order being listed as a dynastic order by the International Commission on Orders of Chivalry? ICOC lists the Romanian Order of Michael the Brave as a dynastic order of the Romanian Hohenzollern House. At the same time, the same order has been reinstituted in 2000/2003 as the highest military order of Romania, its traditional position in the national system of orders up until 1947. Furthermore, the Romanian government considers the surviving knights of the order from WWII as full members of the new order, King Michael included among them.

      I'm no expert, but I would guess a "purist" would consider these to be two separate orders with the same name and insignia. I believe the Republic of Portugal awards some order (I don't recall which one) that is still awarded by the royal house too.

    2. The only thing I know about it is the International Commission on Orders of Chivalry lists this as a house order of the Royal House of Bulgaria, so the former king, Simeon II, can still award this order if he so wishes (depending on how the Bulgarian law works).

      Successor governments often pass laws forbidding the awarding of former ruling houses orders, but it is generally accepted among chivalric scholars that the successor governments actually have no authority to regulate house orders. They may forbid them and make them illegal, but that doesn't stop the head of the former ruling house from disobeying the law and awarding them anyway. The head of the house may suffer legal consequences for disobeying the law, but his awarding of the orders is still valid, just not recognized by the successor government.

    3. how SMALL he was. Elfin, even.

      Several years ago there was a travelling exhibit called "Nicholas and Alexandra" crossing the USA and my family and I stopped to see it in New Orleans. They has quite a few of Czar Nicholas' uniforms in the display. I'd say an average 10-12 year old boy of today would easily have fit into his uniforms. He was fairly short and very, very slender.

    4. That's a pre-war style Litewka updated with the M1916 Bavarian "Abzeichenborte" in Glenn's wartime portrait.

      Rick,

      I'm probably wrong, but I don't think so. I've seen a colorized copy of that photo somewhere before (I realize that the colors could have been wrong) and in that photo the coat, if I remember correctly, was dark green, the collar was black and the braid edging was gold. If you'll look very carefully at the braid, I don't think it has the checkered pattern of the Abzeichenborte. Gebsattel is much, much older in that photo than in mine. I believe that photo was taken well after the war and I think he's wearing some type of civil uniform, or perhaps of some type of organization.

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