Order of Merit, Type I, Civil Division, Gold Medal (1826-1876 version)

CATEGORY: Version

SKU: 01.SXK.0105.111.01.001

Estimated market value:

$3,850 USD

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Estimated market value:

$3,850 USD

Attributes

  • Country
    Germany
  • Composition
    Gold
  • Inscription
    Obv: FRIEDRICH AUGUST KOENIG V. SACHSEN DEN 7. JUN. 1815 Rev: FÜR VERDIENST UND TREUE
  • Size
    35mm

Physical Description and Item Details


A smooth circular medal with a raised edge, constructed of gold. The obverse features the right-facing portrait of an older Friedrich August I with bound long hair, with the circular inscription ‘FRIEDRICH AUGUST KOENIG VON SACHSEN DEN 7. JUNI 1815’. At the bottom is the stamp cutter’s signature ‘F. ULBRICHT F.’. The reverse features a wreath of oak leaves, cross-tied at the top and tied by a ribbon at the bottom, with the inscription ‘FÜR VERDIENST UND TREUE’ (‘for merit and loyalty’) in the centre. On a loop for suspension, on a white ribbon with green side stripes. 28 grams.

History


The Order of Merit was founded by King Friedrich August after his release from imprisonment in 1815. The order was conferred upon citizens of Saxony and foreign citizens in recognition of merit and virtue within distinguished civil services. The allowance of foreigners into the order was unofficially added in 1828, and was accompanied by a specific inscription.

At the conception, the order consisted of a Grand Cross, Commander, and Knight. A civil medal was indirectly counted as the 4th class. The council for the order consisted of four committees and one order secretary, all of whom were appointed by the king. It was the order council who proposed new members.

The order was originally called the "Order of Civil Merit", but the name was changed in 1849 to the "Order of Merit". On June 7, 1849, the Commander was divided into two classes. The I Class Commander is worn with a four-pointed breast star, increasing the total number of classes to five. Shortly after, in 1858, the small cross was renamed the “Cross of Honour”.
In 1866, the order grades were also awarded with crossed swords to recognise recipients for military merit and service. On December 9, 1870, King Johann decreed that if the order was awarded to persons who had already received the same class without war decoration, the swords were placed below the award's ring. When a higher class without swords was awarded to a holder of a lower class with war decoration, swords were placed above the award's ring on the higher class.

In 1876, the statutes were amended once again. The Knight’s Cross was split into the I Class and II Class Knight. Owners of the Cross of Honour could exchange their decoration for the II Class Knight. The Cross of Merit was introduced as the 6th class of the order, and could also be awarded with swords. The owners of the Golden Merit Medal could exchange it for a Cross of Merit at this time.

Type I decorations are identified by the features stated above. They do not have a surmounting crown, and the central medallions are painted. For residents, the inscription translates to “FOR LOYALTY AND MERIT” while decorations to foreigners state “FOR MERIT”.

Type II decorations are identified as those awarded from 1891 until 1918. In 1891, the order saw the addition of the royal golden crown to the Grand Cross and the Commander. The latter decoration was further split into the first and second class as well. Medallions were also applied instead of painted.

In 1905, the China expedition gave cause to the conferral of more decorations. While the statutes prescribed the order be awarded with swords, in the majority of cases however, the higher decoration without swords was awarded. Examples of swords on ring are quite uncommon.

The obverse presents the name and title of the founder and the date of creation “Friedrich August K.(önig) V. (on) Saxony D. 7 June 1815” and the reverse inscription translates to “For Merit and Loyalty”.

In March 1910, the jeweller G. A. Scharffenberg was commissioned to make simplified versions of the decorations, to lower the overall production cost. This includes gold plating and one-piece embossed medallions. The following month, the king accepted the altered manufacturing method, which consisted of the centre shield being made of one piece for all classes. Decorations prior to 1911 that are marked 'S' refer to silver used as material, not Scharffenberg.

For medals between 1815 and 1825, a total of 94 Gold Medals were minted from eight ducats of gold. The first 24 medals were struck by the court jeweller Rossbach in Dresden, and the Dresden Mint struck the remaining 70. The only known specimen of the Gold Medal is in the Münzkabinett, Dresden.

Gold Medals from 1826 to 1876 were made by Ulbricht at the Royal Mint in Dresden, and a total of 628 were awarded. The medal was used for the 1870-71 campaign, for those who the Military Order of St. Henry was not sufficient. In 1876, these awards were stopped, and the existing inventory and returned stock were melted down.

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