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    GM1

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    Posts posted by GM1

    1. 18 hours ago, Great Dane said:

      I can see the contours of a separate edge stripe on that medal's ribbon, so maybe the blue color is simply prone to heavy fading on those ribbons? Could be a period thing (lower quality materials used during a specific period)...?

       
       

      These miniatures are in my collection and I’ve taken some additional pictures. No faded colores, but the ribbon doesn’t seem to match with the silver medal of the Order of Orange-Nassau, lacking the blue borders.

       

      Still a mystery…

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      36EE73EF-4E2B-472B-918F-036971220199.jpeg

    2. On 21/10/2021 at 11:10, GM1 said:

      Another from my collection: 

       

      A high Belgian civil servant or diplomat with the commander cross of the Polar Star among others. 

       

      Especially the 7th in row is a mistery: the medal of the Belgian Royal Household (under king Albert) - Medal for servants of Foreign Courts or Foreign Heads of State, for services rendered during official visits (instituted, on 21 July 1889, in three classes (bronze, silver and silver gilt)), although the ribbon is from the King Albert Medal.

       

      Cheers

      Belgium_1.jpg

      Belgium_2.jpg

      Thank to @JohanH and the combination of the Polar Star and White Rose Order I finally managed to identify this miniature chain.  It belonged to Leo van Puyvelde, curator of the Belgian museums of fine arts and one of the monument men during world war II.

       

      More information:

      https://www.monumentsmenfoundation.org/van-puyvelde-col-leo

       

      Cheers,

       

      GF1

      I have confirmation of the following orders by the different Chancelleries:

       

      Grand Officer Order of Leopold (Belgium)

      Grand Officer Order of the Crown (Belgium)

      Commander of the Order of Orange-Nassau (Netherlands)

      Commander of the Legion  (France)

      Commander Order of the Polar Star (Sweden)

      Commander Order of the White Rose (Finland)

       

      tbc: Dannebrog and Order of the Italian Crown. Doubt about the first one, not sewed... and the ribbon is larger than the rest.

       

      On his Obituary confirmed:

       

      Commemorative medal of the war 1914-1918

      Interallied Victory MEdal

      Commemorative medal of the 100 years of Belgium's independence.

       

       

      Cheers,

       

      GM1

       

       

    3. On 24/10/2021 at 13:23, 1812 Overture said:

      Sure enough, it was made by the Spaniards themselves, and looked like a "loser" from the back. The solder joints are all leaking on the surface

      PS:I have been confused about the difference between the Charles III order and the Isabella order and the Spanish civil order? Are these three orders not all civil? Was the reason for the decline of the Kingdom of Spain because of the establishment of too many orders, which ran out of the silver robbed from the Inca Empire. .

      Three civil orders of three different centuries, each king wanting to leave his mark...

      • Order Charles III: The Royal and Distinguished Spanish Order of Carlos III was established by the King of Spain Carlos III, by Royal Decree of September 19, 1771 to bestow hose people who have stood out especially for their good actions for the benefit of Spain and the Crown. Since its creation, it is the most distinguished civil decoration that can be awarded in Spain. Although it is within the category of Military Orders since its creation, it formally became a civil order in 1847.
      • Order Isaballa the Catholic: The Royal and American Order of Isabella the Catholic was created by the King Fernando VII on March 14, 1815, in order to «To reward the proven loyalty to Spain and the merits of Spanish and foreign citizens for the good of the Nation and especially in those exceptional services rendered in favor of prosperity of the American and overseas territories ”. By Royal Decree of 26 July 1847 this Order was reorganized, taking the name of the Royal Order of Isabella the Chatholic.
      • Civil Merit order: The Order of Civil Merit was established by King Alfonso XIII of Spain in 1926. The order recognizes "the civic virtue of officers in the service of the Nation, as well as extraordinary service by Spanish and foreign citizens for the benefit of Spain.

       

      On 16/08/2021 at 15:59, Graf said:

       Order of Charles III-- French Made Star by Kretly

      P1030184.JPG

      P1030180.JPG

       

      On 24/10/2021 at 12:38, 1812 Overture said:

      psc.thumb.jpg.4fbb4a5d5034f231f2e2fe386d8b8bb1.jpg1595632410_psc(1).thumb.jpg.e1017e5138f6f738524b64a7b7612d23.jpg

      Please help me find out where my order comes from? Native Spain? 130.73 kB · 0 downloads

      I feel that my order-making time should be earlier than Mr. Graf's.

       

      If I'm not mistaken, both breast stars are from the category called "Numbered Commander":

      It is granted to citizens who, having provided notable services to Spain, had the Commandar for more  than three years, or meet the requirements for the Grand Cross but do not hold or have held any of the  positions to receive it. Their clear connection to the Grand Cross means that their number is also limited to two hundred.

       

      Cheers

       

      GM1

    4. On 21/10/2021 at 11:10, GM1 said:

      Another from my collection: 

       

      A high Belgian civil servant or diplomat with the commander cross of the Polar Star among others. 

       

      Especially the 7th in row is a mistery: the medal of the Belgian Royal Household (under king Albert) - Medal for servants of Foreign Courts or Foreign Heads of State, for services rendered during official visits (instituted, on 21 July 1889, in three classes (bronze, silver and silver gilt)), although the ribbon is from the King Albert Medal.

       

      Cheers

      Belgium_1.jpg

      Belgium_2.jpg

       

      A picture of the reverse side...

      Belgium_3.jpg

    5. Another from my collection: 

       

      A high Belgian civil servant or diplomat with the commander cross of the Polar Star among others. 

       

      Especially the 7th in row is a mistery: the medal of the Belgian Royal Household (under king Albert) - Medal for servants of Foreign Courts or Foreign Heads of State, for services rendered during official visits (instituted, on 21 July 1889, in three classes (bronze, silver and silver gilt)), although the ribbon is from the King Albert Medal.

       

      Cheers

      Belgium_1.jpg

      Belgium_2.jpg

    6. On 18/10/2021 at 11:49, GM1 said:

      Here are some of mine, with the  Royal Order of the Polar Star (in gold),  Commemorative Stockholm Summer Olympics 1912, Swedish Landsturm medal, among others.

       

      Sadly no attributed.

       

      Bert regards,

       

      GM1

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      iP2rhK.jpg

      L37aU7.jpg

      nyp79B.jpg

       

      On 18/10/2021 at 13:50, JohanH said:

       

      Nice miniature chain!

       

      And now it is attributed too... :)

       

      Generallöjtnant Thomas Georg Nyström 

      Born: 1865-06-20 in Karlskrona

      Died: 1942-11-01 in Stockholm 

      image.png.8dcc76637bea5d6e01b549ca9fd65f56.png

       

      Thank to JohanH:

       

      The orders are as following:

      Order of the Sword - grand cross (not mentioned in the list because his entry is on the page showing grand crosses)
      RCXIII:sO = Knight of the Order or Carl XIII (Freemasons)
      RNO ( Knight of the Order of the North Star)
      PersLSO2kl (Persian Lion and Sun Order 2nd class)
      KÖFrJO m kr (Commander of the Austrian Frans Josef Order with breast star)
      KBKrO (Commander of the Belgian order of the Crown)
      KDDO2gr (Commander of the Danish Dannebrog order 2nd grade)
      KItS:tMLO (Commander of the Italian Order of S:t Maurice & Lazarus)
      JHSO3kl (Japanese Order of the Sacred Treasure 3rd class)
      KNedONO m sv (Commander of the order of Orange-Nassau with swords)
      KNS:tOO (Commander of the Norwegian Order of S:t Olav)
      RPrRÖO2kl (Knight of the Prussian Red Eagle Order 2nd class)
      OffFrHL (Officier of the French Legion of Honour)
      OffFrdel'Ip (Officier de l'Instruction Publique)

      f. 65 means he was born in 1865 and the last date (30 6/6) is the date he received the grand cross of the order of the Sword.


       

      Nyström.jpg

    7. Thanks for the replies! Indeed it seems that it is a police commissioner (head of police) uniform, from the beginning of the 1900.

      the back of the frame shows that it was framed in Gent (Gand).

       

      The frame with its medals

      44A22B05-79DF-4E5E-A4FD-B83F828AE29D.jpeg

      FBFF3CF7-B2F1-4E97-A4B5-11AC6D17368C.jpeg

      The order of Leopold II has swords under the crown, which is an unofficial version (only allowed with the Order of Leopold). 
      The Military Decoration 1st Class is from the Leopold II period.

      There is the bronze medal of the Civil Decoration for Bravery.

      Four silver front stripes on the Commemorative Medal for the war 1914-18

      A bronze palm on the War Cross. 
       

      269FF0DB-6E72-4F08-B4BC-770115C63616.jpeg

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    8. On 20/11/2020 at 22:34, numis said:

      Would anyone know anything about the following  medal of the ." Nat.Verbond der Koninkl.Mijen van Gedecoreerden voor Daden van Moed en Zelfopoffering "  ( on Rev)

      ( National Association of Royal Societies of/for Persons Decorated for Deeds / Acts of Courage and Selfsacrifice ) .

      Obv shows a man carrying a Victim.Surrounding are depictions of (i) sinking ship (ii) burning building (iii) industrial plant with smokestacks 

      A bronze hexagonal medal with Crown suspension above 

       

      It is definitely a Belgian society that still existed in 2000 (https://www.senate.be/www/?MIval=/publications/viewTBlokDoc&DATUM='11/07/2000'&ID=33558367&TYP=combull&LANG=nl), although no web site nor information about medals for members.

    9. On 16/2/2018 at 17:54, 922F said:

      I am not convinced that the miniature award under discussion represents a Syrian Order of Civil Merit nor that the ribbon is a replacement.   Given the provenance and eclectic decoration range seen here, I cannot suggest an alternative honor  --  although the Syrian Order of Devotion [project from 1940?, definitely active 1953] may be the closest design match, ribbon and planchet detail notwithstanding.  I am well aware, nonetheless, that finding a mini corresponding to an award on the proper ribbon may well be rather difficult!    

      Consideration of the 1953 Syrian Order of Civil Merit founding date may be immaterial as a precursor existed.   Henry de Jouvenel, French High Commissioner in Syria & Lebanon, established the Honor Medal of Syrian Merit on 10 April 1926 with an overall ‘6 arrow’ design illustrated below.   A decree of 1 August 1927 renamed the decoration as the Order of Civil Merit.  Legislative Decree No. 153 of 25 June 1953 instituted a change in design [‘5 arrow’ type, 2nd image below] but retained the name Order of Civil Merit. 

      Miniatures of this award on correct ribbon of either type were obtainable & remain widely available from inception, as do 1953 design Syrian Order of Devotion reductions, making me believe that this is not a one off mini.    This piece appears to be very well executed:  Does it have any manufacturer’s marks?

      civilmerit3old.jpg

      civilmerit4.jpg

      Thank you very much for your reply! Don't know if there is a manufacture's mark on the top point of the star at the back, in the ball suspension? Details of the green graving on the anvers is very nice.

       

      Best regards,

       

      GM1

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    10. Dear Owain,

      Thank you very much for your information! The chain has medals going from 1936 to 1960's, There is no evidence that confirms it as Syrian, just by design and the drawing on the star. I haven't found any other medal that seems similar, so the local (Spanish) manufacture can be the explanation why it is so different.

      The Syrian Order of Merit was founded in 1953, correct? (I'm not an expert) This means it couldn't be awared by the Vichy, right?

       

      Best regards,

       

      GM1 

       

       

    11. On 31/7/2017 at 15:58, Guy said:

      Thanks friends.

      But what is the diffent between those 2 (with arrows)

       

      _DSC0802_01a.jpg

      Hi Guy,

       

      I suppose that one is the European Community Monitoring Medal (This medal was awarded for 21 days service between July 27th 1991 and June 30th 1993 in and around the Former Yugoslavia, http://www.servicecomm.co.uk/catalogue.php?product=609&productID=european-community-monitoring-mission-medal), while the other one is the mentioned ICFY medal. Both have the same ribbon and appearance.

       

      Best regards,

       

      GM1 

       

    12. Here are some interesting papers on a Belgian soldier that died in Corea. There is a letter from the Corps Commander to the parents (with picture), a diploma awarding posthumous the Commemorative Medal for Foreign Theatres with Coree-Korea bar, a diploma awarding the War Volunteer Medal and a diploma awarding posthumous the Knight Cross of the Leopold II Order with Palm, the War Cross 1940 with Palm and the Medal for War Volunteer-Fighter.

       

      Best regards,

       

      GM1 

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    13. Interesting!  Thanks!  If I understand correctly, same book, just multiple editions with supplements up to 1940.  So there are 3 editions more complete than mine.  Still, incredible reference.

      There are a few abbreviations I can't figure out that aren't in the table of abbreviations at the end of the book, maybe you can shed some light on them?

      They usually appear immediately after the soldiers rank, for example:

      Soldat 8 ch. fr.   or 4 ch. fr.  or 7 ch. fr.    

      What does ch. fr. stand for?

      Ch. fr. means Chevrons de Front, the frontlines earned by the soldiers during the war. (first frontline after 1 year service, then 1 per six months). Maximum of frontlines is 8.

       

      Best regards,

       

      GM1

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