No one Posted March 14 Posted March 14 Dear Gentlemen, Seen on Ebay, so what's wrong with this picture? Yours sincerely, No one 1
TracA Posted March 14 Posted March 14 Hello No One, Off the cuff: the Great East Asia War did not occur during the Taisho Era. It occurred during the Showa Era. Also, I don't think the order of wear precedence mentioned the Great East Asia War (fourth ribbon from the top left), so I don't know where that would fit on the ribbon bar. Wasn't that medal a unofficial commemorative medal struck well after the war was over? Tracy 2
No one Posted March 14 Author Posted March 14 Dear TracA, Yes, you are right. This bar should be identified as Showa Era, and the 4th ribbon is for the unofficial commemorative medal. Of the "China Incident War Medal" and "Great East Asia War" only one could be awarded. Yours sincerely, No one 1
TracA Posted March 15 Posted March 15 No One, At very first glance I thought that the Order of the Rising Sun should be before the Sacred Treasure, but after refreshing myself of such thing's on JapanX's Medals of Asia website, I was reminded of the rule that if the Rising Sun and Sacred Treasure were of different ranks, then the highest rank is worn first. Excellent point about the China Incident and Great East Asia War medals. All the best, Tracy
No one Posted March 15 Author Posted March 15 Dear TracA, "if the Rising Sun and Sacred Treasure were of different ranks, then the highest rank is worn first." It's not uncommon for the Order of the Sacred Treasure to take precedence over the Order of the Rising Sun. Yours sincerely, No one 1
JapanX Posted March 20 Posted March 20 On 15/03/2024 at 02:33, No one said: Of the "China Incident War Medal" and "Great East Asia War" only one could be awarded. Perfectly possible combination for a post-war veteran medal bar/ribbon bar. Another example (from my personal collection). 1
TracA Posted March 22 Posted March 22 Nick, Nice. Would these be examples that would fit on your "Rules on the Wearing of Japanese Imperial Awards and Their Violators" page? Tracy
JapanX Posted March 22 Posted March 22 Indeed a perfect fit. This veteran obviously didn`t care much about any rules ) Manchukuo National Foundation Merit Medal stands before all Japanese medals.
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