The Inter-Allied Victory Medal (Greek: Διασυμμαχικόν Μετάλλιον της Νίκης) is a campaign medal issued by Greece, commemorating the Allied victory in the First World War.[1]
Greek award
editThe medal is the Greek version of a common design used among all Allied nations, following a proposal made by Marshal Ferdinand Foch, who was supreme commander of the Allied Forces during the war.[1] In Greece, the medal was instituted by Law 2481 on 22 September 1920 (O.S.).[1]
Each medal, in bronze, has the same diameter (36 mm) and ribbon (double rainbow), but with a national design representing a winged Victory. The Greek version of the medal was designed by Henry-Eugène Nocq.
It features an ancient Greek-style Victory on the obverse, and on the reverse the circular inscription Ο ΜΕΓΑΣ ΥΠΕΡ ΤΟΥ ΠΟΛΙΤΙΣΜΟΥ ΠΟΛΕΜΟΣ 1914—1918 ('The Great War for Civilisation, 1914–1918') around the edge, and in the centre a list of the Allied nations, under the title ΣΥΜΜΑΧΟΙ ΚΑΙ ΕΤΑΙΡΟΙ ('Allies and Partners').[1] It was widely awarded to Greek military personnel that fought for at least three months, or was wounded in action, not only in the First World War, but also in the Allies' Southern Russia intervention, and the Greco-Turkish War of 1919–1922.[1]
International award
editCountry | Designer | Manufacturer | Number issued | Obverse | Reverse | Established by |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Belgium | Paul Du Bois (1859–1938) | ----- | 300,000–350,000 | Royal Decree from 15 July 1919 | ||
Brazil | Jorge Soubre (1890–1934) | approximately 2,500 | Decree nr. 16074 from 22 June 1923 | |||
Cuba | Charles Charles |
|
6,000–7,000 | Decree nr. 905 from 10 June 1922 | ||
Czechoslovakia | Otakar Španiel (1881–1955) |
|
approximately 89,500 | Decree from 27 July 1920 | ||
France | Pierre-Alexandre Morlon (1878–1951) | approximately 2,000,000 | Law from 20 July 1922 | |||
Charles Charles[Note 1] |
|
----- | ||||
M. Pautot and Louis Octave Mattei[Note 1] |
----- | ----- | ||||
Greece | Henry-Eugène Nocq (1868–1944) |
|
approximately 200,000 | Law from 22 September 1920 | ||
Italy | Gaetano Orsolini (1884–1954) |
|
approximately 2,000,000 | Royal Decree nr. 1918 from 16 December 1920 | ||
Japan[Note 2] | Shokichi Hata | approximately 700,000 | Imperial Edict nr 406 from 17 September 1920 | |||
Poland[Note 3] | .... Vlaitov |
|
----- | |||
Portugal | João Da Silva (1880–1960) |
|
approximately 100,000 | Decree from 15 July 1919 | ||
Romania | Constantin Kristescu (1871–1928) |
|
approximately 300,000 | Royal Decree nr 3390 from 20 July 1921 | ||
Siam (Thailand) | Itthithepsan Kritakara (1890–1935) | ----- | approximately 1,500 | |||
South Africa[Note 4] | William McMillan (1887–1977) |
|
approximately 75,000 | Decree from 1 September 1919 | ||
United Kingdom[Note 5] | William McMillan (1887–1977) |
|
6,334,522 plus | Decree from 1 September 1919 | ||
United States | James Earle Fraser (1876–1953) |
|
approximately 2,500,000 | General Order nr 48 from 9 April 1919 of the Department of War | ||
Source unless otherwise indicated: Alexander J. Laslo (1986). The Interallied Victory Medals of World War I. Albuquerque: Dorado Publishing. ISBN 0961732008.
|
References
edit- ^ a b c d e Papadakis 1934, p. 244.
- ^ Katiușa Pârvan, Angela Mihalea (1998). "Câteva date privind opera medalistică a sculptorului Constantin Kristescu" [Information regarding the medals created by sculptor Constantin Kristescu] (PDF). Acta Moldaviae Meridionalis (in Romanian). XV-XX-II: 294–295.
Sources
edit- George J. Beldecos, "Hellenic Orders, Decorations and Medals", pub. Hellenic War Museum, Athens 1991, ISBN 960-85054-0-2.
- Papadakis, V. P. (1934). "Παράσημα" [Decorations]. Μεγάλη Ἐλληνικὴ Ἐγκυκλοπαιδεῖα, Τόμος Δέκατος. Ἑλλάς – Ἑλληνισμὸς (in Greek). Athens: Pyrsos Co. Ltd. pp. 243–244.