JapanX Posted July 5, 2014 Author Posted July 5, 2014 Now this is really interesting With Mozaffareddin Shah
JapanX Posted July 5, 2014 Author Posted July 5, 2014 Shah looks pretty ascetic Obviously this photo was made before 1907
Mathomhaus Posted July 5, 2014 Posted July 5, 2014 Thank you. It is quite difficult to find photos of Nicholas II wearing his medal bar after he added the anniversary medals to it. Most photos of him seen in history books printed in the U.S., even in the chapters dealing with World War One, are frequently older pre-war pictures showing him wearing his “basic” set of five medals. This is probably not as big a sin as the American television networks showing photos of George V and saying it was Nicholas. (The stupidest such error I’ve ever seen was when the evening news once billed a portrait of Edward VII as the tsar back at the time of the reburials of the royal family!) About twenty-five years ago, a collector friend decided to reproduce the Tsar’s more common medal mounting when he realized that he already owned all of the individual pieces he needed. (Apparently, the deciding factor for him was the monarch’s monogram on the Danish order; since it changes with each new reign, it was pure luck that he owned the same style cross that Nicholas had been awarded…) The final mounting would never fool a collector and was probably a silly thing to do but it does look cool hanging on a wall next to a large chromolith of the tsar. Regards
TacHel Posted July 8, 2014 Posted July 8, 2014 The pic in post #6 darn near made me fall out of my chair... The tsar in a German uniform and the kayser in a Russian uniform... Dang!
Mathomhaus Posted July 8, 2014 Posted July 8, 2014 The pic in post #6 darn near made me fall out of my chair... The tsar in a German uniform and the kayser in a Russian uniform... Dang! A very cool and unusual photo. The two of them seemed to get together on naval occasions much more frequently than for military events or maneuvers. I've been taking note of photos of the two of them in uniforms, both together and singly, for fifty years and I've not seen the photo in post #6 before. It's never been hard to find pix of them playing sailors, but soldiers? There are of course some train platform "Hello Cousin" full dress pictures, but not this one until now. Bravo for showing it. Regards
Lukasz Gaszewski Posted July 12, 2014 Posted July 12, 2014 Now this is really interesting With Mozaffareddin Shah 1.JPG 2.JPG No offence, but IMHO the gentleman on the right is King George V of Britain. He is wearing a British naval uniform and only British stars on his chest.
JapanX Posted July 13, 2014 Author Posted July 13, 2014 No offence, but IMHO the gentleman on the right is King George V of Britain. 100% it is George
freiherr Posted July 28, 2014 Posted July 28, 2014 What superb pics you are showing! I am especially interested in the Tsar's decoration in 1913 in Berlin with King George V. The Tsar was Chef and in the uniform of Kaiserlich HR 8. There were 4 breast decorations here. #1 (NW) was unfortunately blurry. #2 (NE) was either St Andrew or Greek Erlöser (maternal uncle was George I of Greece). #3 (S) was definitely Order of the Garter. What was #4? I see this same award on the internet. Of course, the coloring doesn't have to be correct. The other German decorations in the 1913 pic were standard fare: SAO with Collane, RAO neck order and Hohenzollern Hausorden neck decoration For comparison, I attach Nicolas II in naval uniform with Order of the Garter, St Andrew and Greek Erlöser. Then another wonderful pic of him with Order of the Garter during very formal occassion when the Collane was worn with "Big George" the pendant, here presumably he was in British Hussar uniform. Last but not least, for risk for being a bit off topic, King George with the Shah was wearing for bruststern Order of the Garter (N), Order of the Thistle (W), Royal Victorian Order (S). Not sure about E. In the first post, as I am no expert in Russian medals, can someone tell me what the 7 medals were between the St Valdimir and the Dannebrog were? Cheers Freiherr
freiherr Posted July 28, 2014 Posted July 28, 2014 This is slightly better resolution. What were the 2 bruststerne above the St Andrew now? Over the sash/belt, we see both the St Andrew and the Weißer Adler Cheers Freiherr
Trooper_D Posted July 28, 2014 Posted July 28, 2014 Then another wonderful pic of him with Order of the Garter during very formal occassion when the Collane was worn with "Big George" the pendant, here presumably he was in British Hussar uniform. Freiherr Not a British hussar uniform, which always had six rows of lace for the regiments in the regular army. I think it is the uniform of one of the (Russian) Guard Hussar regiments. Here is a picture of Prince Jaime de Borbon who served in one of them, the Grodno Hussars, for comparison.
JapanX Posted July 29, 2014 Author Posted July 29, 2014 Better qualilty photo of N-II with british awards Closer
JapanX Posted July 29, 2014 Author Posted July 29, 2014 He got his Royal Victorian Order Chain in 1904
JapanX Posted July 29, 2014 Author Posted July 29, 2014 In the first post, as I am no expert in Russian medals, can someone tell me what the 7 medals were between the St Valdimir and the Dannebrog were? 2 French Croix de guerre 1914–1918 3 Alexander III Coronation (1883) 4 Alexander III Reign Commemorative (1896) 5 200th Anniversary of the Battle of Poltava (1909) 6 100th Anniversary of the Patriotic War (1912) 7 300th Anniversary of the House of Romanoff (1913) 8 200th Anniversary of the See Battle of Gangut (1914) Best, Nick
freiherr Posted July 29, 2014 Posted July 29, 2014 (edited) Thank you all. The one remainig bit of mystery... this steckkreuz. Almost looks like a Hochzeit Erinnerungszeichen. Nicolas's maternal Grandparents Christian IX and Luise's 1892 Golden Weddinng medal was a ribbon decoration though. And it had the cypher C interwined with L. The Baden Wedding Anniversary was on the other hand a steckkreuz. Cheers Elwyn Edited July 29, 2014 by freiherr
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now