Sold
| |
Marking: | 90995 |
Country: | Russian Empire |
Dating: | the beginning of the twentieth century |
The original. |
56 gold, guilloche, enamel. The original order is in excellent collector's condition. The personal stamp of the master is "VD". The manufacturer is the Eduard company. The weight is 11.1 grams. In the original case with a ribbon. Guarantee of authenticity.
The Imperial and Royal Order of St. Stanislaus was an order of the Russian Empire from 1831 to 1917. The youngest in the hierarchy of the orders of the Russian Empire, mainly for the distinction of officials. It was established on May 7, 1765 by the King of Poland and the Grand Duke of Lithuania Stanislaw August Poniatowski. He was awarded the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, the Duchy of Warsaw, and the Kingdom of Poland. See the history of the Order in the Polish period in the article The Order of St. Stanislaus (Poland).
In 1831, after the suppression of the Polish uprising of 1830-1831, along with the Polish Order of the White Eagle, he was ranked among the Orders of the Russian Empire. The management of the order and the issues of awarding were transferred from Warsaw to St. Petersburg. In 1832, the image of St. Nicholas was removed from it. Stanislaus, replacing it with the monograms SS, and the single-headed Polish eagles on the Order's cross were replaced by the double-headed eagles of the Russian Empire. In 1839, Nicholas I issued a new Statute of the order, according to which it was now divided into three degrees, and "any citizen of the Russian Empire and the Kingdom of Poland" could be awarded both for military and civil distinctions, and for private services, such as charity. The badge of the Order of the second degree was divided into two types: a cross decorated with an imperial crown, and a cross without a crown (the division was abolished in 1874).
Since 1844, on the badges of the order, complained to persons of non-Christian faith, the image of the monogram name of St. Stanislav began to be replaced by the black imperial Russian eagle.
The Order of St. Stanislav of the 3rd degree became the youngest in the order of precedence of Russian orders and was awarded more often than others. It was received by many military and civil servants who served the established terms and had ranks not lower than the 12th grade. At the time of its establishment, the order of any degree granted the rights of hereditary nobility, but among the nobility there was discontent from too many new nobles from among merchants and small employees. In 1845, the awarding of the 2nd and 3rd degrees was suspended by the supreme command. Awards resumed only on June 28, 1855, but from that time on, only the 1st degree of the Order of St. Stanislaus granted the right of hereditary nobility. Since 1855, two crossed swords have been attached to the badges of the Order of Military Distinction. In the case of awarding the same order of a higher degree for non-military merit, swords were placed at the top of the cross and star. Since 1874, the decoration of the badge of the order with the imperial crown has been abolished, but those who received such orders previously retained the right to wear them with a crown.
After the February Revolution, the order was not abolished. The provisional government of Russia retained the Order of St. Stanislaus, changing its appearance: the imperial eagles were replaced by republican ones. Since 1917, the awarding of this order in Soviet Russia has been discontinued. At the same time, the heads of the Russian Imperial House in exile continued to award the Imperial and Royal Order of St. Nicholas. Stanislav. About the awards of the Imperial and Royal Order of St. Stanislav after 1917, see the article Awarding titles and orders of the Russian Empire after 1917. The visible difference between the Order of the Russian Imperial House as a dynastic property and an award from the so-called "international public awards" with a similar name is the prefix "Imperial and Royal", which follows before the term "Order of St. Nicholas. Stanislav."
Degrees of the order and rules of wearing:
I degree — a silver star and a large gold cross on a ribbon at the left hip.
II degree — a smaller gold cross on a neck band.
III degree — a small gold cross on the chest, in the buttonhole.
IV degree (before 1839).
Thanks for your feedback!
Your feedback will be published after administrator check.
Be attended, we will not show the feedbacks, which:
Please note that by posting a feedback you take some responsibility to the readers.