In the Dutch honours system, most orders are the responsibility of ministers of the Netherlands Government. The house orders, however, are awarded at the discretion of the Dutch monarch alone.
Over the centuries, hundreds of medals, decorations for merit or valour and orders of knighthood have been instituted by the successive governments of the Netherlands. The oldest were founded by the counts of Holland. Their successors, the House of Burgundy, founded the famous Order of the Golden Fleece. This order still exists in Spain and in the Austrian imperial House.
The Republic of the Seven United Netherlands did not possess an order of knighthood. Instead so called "Beloningspenningen", golden medals on golden chains, were given as gifts to ambassadors and successful admirals.
In 1781 a medal called the "Doggersbank medaille" was awarded to the officers who took part in the Battle of the Dogger Bank against the British fleet. It was the first modern Dutch decoration.
The Batavian Republic, founded after the French invasion of 1795, did not institute any orders or medals.
The Kingdom of Holland was founded in 1805 to provide a throne for Napoleon's younger brother Lodewijk Napoleon Bonaparte. The "King of Holland" founded an "Orde van de Unie", (English: Order of the Union, later dubbed "Order of Holland" then "Royal Order of Holland").
The first king of the Netherlands, William I, founded the Military Order of William and a civilian order, the Order of the Netherlands Lion.
His successors founded several orders of merit and some two hundred medals, stars and crosses. The Netherlands never established a colonial order for the Dutch East Indies.
The order of wear of Dutch Honours is published in the Official Gazette of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. The orders, decorations and medals are listed in that order below.[1]
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Transcription
Orders of chivalry and similar distinctions
House orders
State awards
Awards for bravery
Awards for merit
Commemorative awards for military operations
Awards for faithful service
Commemorative medals and awards for skill
Other officially recognised knightly orders
The Dutch government allows the following orders of chivalry[2] to be worn on military uniforms:
Decorations instituted by H.R.H. Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands
Awards from Dutch private organizations
Awards from international organizations
- United Nations Medal
- North Atlantic Treaty Organization Medal
- Western European Union Medal
- Multinational Force and Observers Medal
- European Community Monitor Mission Medal
- CSDP Medal
- Baltic Air Policing Medal
References
- ^ "Besluit draagvolgorde onderscheidingen". Staatscourant van het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden (in Dutch). Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en Koninkrijksrelaties. 18 October 2017. Retrieved 10 February 2022.
- ^ "The Dutch Honours System" (PDF). lintjes.nl/. Chancellor of the Dutch Orders. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
Literature and sources
- W.F. Bax, "Ridderorden, eereteekenen, draagteekens en penningen, betreffende de Weermacht van Nederland en Koloniën (1813-heden)", 1973
- H.G. Meijer, C.P. Mulder en B.W. Wagenaar, "Orders and Decorations of the Netherlands", 1984
- C.H. Evers, "Onderscheidingen", 2001
- J.H. van Zelm van Eldik, "Moed en Trouw", 2003
- O Schutte, De Orde van de Unie", 1985
External links
- Dutch Honours (in Dutch)
- Orders and Medals of the Netherlands (in Dutch)
- Ribbons of Dutch Orders and Medals (in Dutch)