Mérite agricole

Mérite agricole

The chevalier, officier, and commandeur of the ordre Mérite agricole
Awarded by  France Ministère de l'Agriculture
Type Order with 3 degrees:
Commandeur (commander)
Officier (officer)
Chevalier (knight)
Awarded for Special distinction in services to agriculture
Status Active
Statistics
Established 7 July 1883
First awarded 17 July 1883
Total awarded >400,000
Distinct
recipients
~30,000 living
Precedence
Next (higher) Ordre des Palmes académiques
Next (lower) Ordre du Mérite Maritime
Since 1999

Commandeur

Officier

Chevalier

1883 - 1999

Commandeur

Officier

Chevalier

The Ordre National du Mérite Agricole (National Order of Agricultural Merit) is an order of merit established in France on 7 July 1883 by Minister of Agriculture Jules Méline to reward services to agriculture. Its ribbon is Moiré pattern green (holders are said to "avoir le poireau", or "have a leek", in reference to its colour) with a red-orange stripe down each side - the stripes symbolise the prestigious institution of the ordre national de la Légion d’honneur. The Order has the ranks of knight (about 340,000 to date, of which about 23,000 are alive at present, including all living former ministers of agriculture), officer (about 60,000 to date, about 5,000 living) and commander (about 4800 to date, 400 living).[1]

Canada has an equivalent order, whose recipients include Onésiphore Ernest Talbot.

Contents

Members

Commandeur

Officier

Chevalier

4th class or rank

Unknown rank

References

External links