Decorations, Decorations of Honor Öffentlichkeit Deposited

Definition
  • Decorations, Decorations of Honor.  An elite class of medals, usually those of exceptional design, shape, composition and embellishment – including suspension by ribbons, chains or sashes – bestowed for exceptional service or tenure, and sometimes granting the recipient special privileges. All decorations are intended to be worn. Thus a variety of suspension systems have been created to attach a medallic item to clothing, uniform, hung around the neck, oe about the body. Color has been added by the wide use of enamel and enameling; color and exclusivity has been further added, particularly in the higher classes, with gemstones.

                Considerable attention is given to the design of a decoration with extensive use of heraldry and symbolism. Every aspect of a decoration’s design is employed to make it as distinctive as possible – with unusual shape and openwork – in addition to color in its design. It should be obvious for inspection and identity revealed even from a distance. It is an attempt to make the decoration unlike any other, and yet it is often designed to have several classes with its highest class often reserved only for royalty. Thus the design of a decoration must be distinctive from all other decorations, and with different classes within that decoration, distinctive from each other.

                Decorations are widely employed in countries that are monarchies. Even in countries that are not monarchies, as is the United States, decorations are widely used

    by the government as awards for military achievements, called war decorations. Since Americans do not emphasize class distinction it seldom has different classes of any decoration (but do have rank and order, see below). Hereditary societies and fraternal organizations have created nonmilitary decorations for their members.

            Decoration Characteristics      

                                             

      1)  Image (Honor, Award, Membership). 

      2)  Beauty (Artisticness).            

      3)  Shape (Distinctiveness).          

      4)  Cost (Precious metals).           

      5)  Ornamentation (Jewels, Enamels).  

      6)  Display (Wearability).            

      7)  Longevity (Long lasting).         

      8)  Permanence (Hard Form).           

      9)  Bilateral (Two-sidedness).        

                10)  Exclusiveness (restricted membership)                                  

    Decoration Terms

    This field is commonly orders, decorations and medals or orders,

    medals and decorations bringing together three somewhat similar items based on the

    fact they are awarded by a government or some honorable society or organization and intended to be worn. The three terms are related by the metallic insignia or badges created for the recipients or members.

                The terms differ in the following aspects: Decorations are the finest medallic insignia of a highly select group of recipients that form some honored class. Orders are not only the name of the insignia but also the name of the body of persons bound together for some religious, chivalrous, or more recently, some fraternal nature. Medals are the insignia for an honored group usually with the medal suspended from a cloth drape in color so it can be worn (called ribbon drape, these medals have a pinback to attach it to a uniform).

                Decorations often have many components, as the insignia suspended from a chain to be worn around the neck, or a breast star, often with a sash to be worn across the body hung over one shoulder and attached to the opposite side of the body. Design of each of these elements is distinctive to that decoration.

                The elaborate shapes of decorations adds greatly to that distinctiveness as well.            

                The insignia part of many decorations is called a badge, particularly those that have the attachment on the back for affixing to clothing or uniform. Some components of uniforms or headgear are the badge alone, also considered part of the field of military medals, as the unit badge, cap badge and such (but these are not classed as decorations).

     

                The Orders and Medals Society in America, and their publication, The Medal Collector, is mostly concerned with collecting decorations. They do include, however, other medallic items mentioned here.

    Decorations Relation To Other Medals

                Closely related to this collecting field are military medals, sometimes called

    war medals, the most select are valor medals or bravery medals awarded for distinction in action (as a Congressional Medal of Honor), or wound medals (as the Purple Heart). The largest group of military medals – campaign medals or service medals – are those bestowed to military personal who participated in specific military or naval campaigns.

                Medals have distinctive colored ribbons, sometimes with stars, or bars indicating some supplemental action. When multiple medals are worn in a group, they

    are placed together on a broach. Multiple ribbons without the pendant medals are placed on a ribbon bar; uniforms are often seen with multiple rows of ribbon bars for personnel who have served in many campaigns.

                When all these are worn at one time, as for a formal occasion or ceremony, there has been established a rank and order of which is worn above or to a more honored position to the left than another (listed in a precedence chart). Valor medals rank higher, obviously, than campaign or service medals.

                Decorations are always worn intact (there are no miniature versions). However, for other medals there are miniature medals to be worn on formal and ceremonial occasions. The miniature medals are the same design as awarded medals in smaller size, usually one-half the size of the regular medals; their ribbons are half width as well.

                Some countries, England is an example, have the recipient’s name and rank engraved on the edge of military medals bestowed for bravery or wounds. Infrequently there is a number (M number) engraved on the edge as well indicating a serial of medals of this type awarded. This aids greatly in cataloging, where all the edge lettering is recorded along with the recipient’s achievements.

                Any medal awarded by a government, organization or society not intended to be worn is called a table medal – that is to “lie on a table.” By extension a table medal could be any medal, awarded or not, that has no suspension and cannot be worn (this could include many kinds of medals – historical, commemorative, commercial, even art medals – so table medal is not a precise term).

    History of Decorations

                The manufacture of early decorations predate milled coinage (1553) and were created by goldsmiths. As the creation of decorations became more exotic – and often jewel encrusted – they were made by jewelers and ultimately this privilege was granted to jewelers who became know as court jewelers or royal jewelers. 

                The equipment used by the goldsmiths, these jewelers and early medallists were all similar. The development ran parallel as the technology of one was applied to another with the technology used by the court jewelers the most advanced of all because they were required to produce the most exotic medallic items of differing designs, shapes, color, attachments and suspension.

    Cataloging Decorations

                Reverses of decorations are considered of less importance, perhaps because they are seldom shown when worn. Early books on decorations did not illustrate the reverses. But the reverse is important enough to show

     

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    Word List #13 

    Some Famous Decorations

     

     

     

     

     

    Word List #14 

    Terms in Describing Decorations

    angles

    awarded

    appurtenance

    badge

    ball loop

    ball-tip

    bar

    barrette

    battle star

    bob loop

    breast star

    brooch

    brooch bar

    cabochon

    Campaign bar

    campaign medal

    canton

    cap badge

    cased

    center emblem

    chain

    champlevé

    Citation

    civil award

    clamshell hanger

    clasp

    class

    cloisonné

    cluster

    coat of arms

    collar

    component

    concealed bar

    cordon

    coronation medal

    costume jewelry medal

    cotter pin mount

    commendation

    court mounted

    cravat

    crimped clasp hanger

    crimp marks

    cross

    crowned

    current issue

    custom copy

    decoration

    decoration of honor

    deluxe copy

    denazified

    device

    drop

    early issue

    edge lettering

    edge numbering

    emblem

    enamel

    engagement bar

    erased

    faceted

    fixed suspender

    fob loop

    formée

    french pin

    gallantry medal

    garter

    gemstone

    grand cordon

    grand prix

    group

    hallmark

    hanger

    header, header bar

    identification bar

    institute of heraldry

    jeweled

    jeweler’s copy

    jump ring

    knob type

    loop

    M number

    maker’s mark

    miniature medal

    mounted

    named

    neck decoration

    neck ribbon

    numbered

    oak leaf

    oak-leaf cluster

    obliterated

    obsolete

    order

    original ribbon

    palm

    pendant

    pierced

    pierced for suspension

    pinback

    points

    precedence chart

    prefix number

    rays

    reissue

    renamed

    replacement medal

    replacement ribbon

    reproduction

    riband circlet

    ribbon

    ribbon bank

    ribbon bar

    ribbon drape

    ribbon fastener

    ring type

    rosette

    sash

    soldered loop

    specimen

    standard issue

    star

    stem and clasp

    supporter

    suspension bar

    sweetheart pin

    swivel suspension

    table medal

    triangle fold ribbon

    unawarded

    unit badge

    unnamed

    unnumbered

    unofficial decoration

    valor

    veteran’s medal

    VICTORY MEDAL

    war m edal

    with swords

    wound medal

    year bar

     

    excerpted with permission from

    An Encyclopedia of Coin and Medal Technology

    For Artists, Makers, Collectors and Curators

    COMPILED AND WRITTEN BY D. WAYNE JOHNSON

    Roger W. Burdette, Editor

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