Socialist Orders of Merit
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
After the October Revolution, in which the Bolsheviks seized power in Russia, the first Socialist Orders of Merit were founded. After World War II, communists came to power in many other countries and this type of order spread all over the world. In many new African nations this type of decoration was instituted, probably because they were so different from the Orders of Knighthood of the former colonial masters.[1]
Socialist Orders differ from the old European Orders in having just one grade where the old orders had Grand-Crosses , commanders and Knights. This scheme was ill at place in the egalitarian nations that would be the promised result of socialism. Because there were no grades, swords on the cross or crowns in silver or gold to differentiate between grades of merit or position in society the communist states chose to create dozens of orders of merit.
Having abolished the orders of the Czar, the first order of the Soviet Union, called "the Order of the Red Flag" (Russian:" Orden Krasnoe Znamja"), was founded on 16 September 1918. In 1940, there were relatively few orders, but in 1941, after the German invasion, the Soviet authorities quickly established dozens of new orders and medals.
There are three types of decorations:
- Small stars that are worn on either or both sides of the chest.
- Small golden stars on small square ribbons with clasps.
- Stars, often embellished with red flags , detached from pentagon shaped ribbons..
The Russian Order of Lenin and the Golden Medal of the Hamer and Sickle gave the recipients the titles of "Hero of the Soviet Union" en "Hero of Socialist Labour". These titles were copied in many other countries in the communist bloc.
Yugoslavia always had a mind of its own and chose to follow its own policy in creating decorations. Poland and Czechoslovakia sticked to elements of the traditional orders like grand-crosses, commanders and knights but countries like Angola, occupied Afghanistan and North-Korea dutifully copied all the models and names of Soviet decorations.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union many of the former socialist nations of eastern Europe and some of the newly independent Soviet republics (re)established orders of knighthood in the European fashion.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Václav Měřička
[edit] Literature
- Václav Měřička, "The book of orders and decorations", Londen 1975
- Paul Hieronymussen: "Europaeiske ordner i farver", Kopenhagen 1967