Black Eagle Order
The High Order of the Black Eagle was the highest Prussian order . It was founded by Elector Friedrich III. von Brandenburg on January 17, 1701, the day before his self-coronation as king in Prussia in Königsberg on January 18, 1701.
history
The statutes of the order dated January 18, 1701. The Black Eagle Order was not an order of merit like the Order Pour le Mérite , but initially a house order with a limited number of members. The motto of the order was " Suum cuique ". Originally, the number of Prussian medal winners, not counting the royal princes, was only supposed to be 30. Until 1848, people of non-imperial birth who were to receive the award had to prove their descent from eight noble ancestors and had reached the age of 30. With the republication of the statutes by Friedrich Wilhelm IV. On February 20, 1848, non-aristocratic knights received a coat of arms with the receipt of the insignia, which raised them to the hereditary nobility. The Prussian princes received the medal when they were born, but only put on the insignia after their confirmation and after it was republished by Friedrich Wilhelm IV. Together with their first officer's uniform at the age of ten. Women could also receive the medal, e.g. B. the Queen of Prussia and German Empress Victoria .
insignia
Gem
The sign of the one-class order is a blue enameled Maltese cross with black crowned eagles in the corners of the cross. In the middle is the intertwined monogram of the founder FR (Fridericus Rex) in a gold medallion . Under Friedrich Wilhelm II (r. 1786–1797) the medallion shows the monogram FWR (Fridericus Wilhelminus Rex) . The medal could also be awarded in diamonds .
star
The medallion of the eight-pointed silver order star shows the black Prussian eagle on an orange background within the order's motto Suum cuique (German: "Each his own") as well as a branch of laurel. Until the middle of the 19th century, the order star was embroidered and sewn onto the uniform. From 1810, the first metal medal stars were awarded and Friedrich Wilhelm IV decreed in 1858 that only silver medal stars were to be awarded. Like the gem , the silver medal star could also be awarded with diamonds . Knights of the Black Eagle, who also knights of the English Order of the Garter were able, surround the star of the Black Eagle with the Garter.
tape
The jewel was carried on a plain, orange sash from the left shoulder to the right hip. The orange ribbon was a tribute to the House of Orange and Frederick's Dutch mother. It also gave hope to the legacy of the childless Orange William III. of England expression.
Order chain
As a special distinction, the order could be awarded with the collar (order chain) (e.g. to Otto von Bismarck , who also received the order in diamonds ). The chain is made up of two types of chain links: a black enameled eagle with golden thunderbolts in its claws and a blue enamelled ring with four royal crowns attached to its sides. Inside the circlet there is a white enamelled medallion with the motto of the order painted on it. The hoop is the medallion through the golden initial letters of the founder F R , respectively.
useful information
From 1861 the knights of the Order of the Black Eagle always wore the Grand Cross of the Order of the Red Eagle as a neck decoration. In the Prussian court rank regulations of 1878 , the members of the order ranked ninth after the holders of the highest court offices and the Prussian prime minister, even before the heads of the princely and formerly imperial count families .
Today the Order zodiac sign is the Military Police of the Armed Forces and to the establishment of the Military Police Corps by Frederick II. Remember in 1740. It is worn as a badge set in oak leaves on the beret .
The Masonic Lodge Black Eagle in Berlin in addition to the Order of Star of the Order's motto Suum cuique in their Bijou and commemorates the formation of Freemasonry in Prussia by Frederick II. In 1740.
The statutes stipulated that the order had to be worn daily. The first time the knight missed the obligation to wear it, he had to pay 30 Thaler, the second 100 Thaler to the Royal Orphanage in Königsberg . On the third failure, the medal was revoked.
King Friedrich II did not bestow the medal to any general who had been a prisoner of war , including the Imperial Count Friedrich Ludwig Finck von Finckenstein after 55 years of service. General Ernst Ludwig von Pfuhl was the last in 1786 to be awarded the Order of the Black Eagle by Frederick II. Frederick II sent the order to his confidante with the words written by hand: "My dear and honest lake" .
Awards
By the end of the monarchy in November 1918, the order was awarded a total of 1,341 times. In addition, there were 92 awards with diamonds. From the Prussian King Friedrich Wilhelm III. On April 7, 1805, Napoléon I , Murat , Talleyrand , Duroc , Berthier , Bernadotte and Cambacérès received the Order of the Black Eagle at the same time . The Swedish King Gustav IV Adolf , who had received the order in 1792, then sent it back in 1805 because, as a legitimate king by God's grace, he did not want to be placed on the same level as a usurper and generals of bourgeois origin.
Since 1919 the award has only been given to members of the House of Hohenzollern. 13 awards had been made by 1934. Until the death of the former Emperor Wilhelm II in 1941, the festival of the Order, July 11th (Friedrich I's birthday), was celebrated every year in Doorn . August von Mackensen was a permanent guest .
Order knight
The first nineteen knights were accepted into the order on the day of the foundation. After Johann Kasimir Kolb von Wartenberg was first made chancellor of the order, the following people were knighted:
- Crown Prince Friedrich Wilhelm
- Margrave Philipp Wilhelm of Brandenburg-Schwedt
- Margrave Albrecht Friedrich of Brandenburg-Schwedt
- Margrave Christian Ludwig of Brandenburg-Schwedt
- Duke Friedrich Wilhelm Kettler (1692–1711)
- Duke Friedrich Ludwig of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Beck (1653–1728), Governor of Prussia, Field Marshal General
- Count Hans Albrecht von Barfus (1635–1704), Brandenburg-Prussian field marshal
- Count Alexander zu Dohna-Schlobitten (1661–1728), Brandenburg-Prussian general and diplomat
- Philipp Karl von Wylich and Lottum (1650–1719), Prussian field marshal
- Otto Wilhelm von Perbandt (1635–1706), Obermarschall and Landhofmeister
- Christoph Alexander von Rauschke († 1725), Oberburggraf of Prussia
- Georg Friedrich von Creytzen (1639–1710), Prussian senior councilor and chancellor
- Count Adam Christoph von Wallenrodt (1644–1711), Court Marshal of Prussia
- Count Christoph I. zu Dohna-Schlodien (1665–1733), Brandenburg-Prussian general and diplomat
- Count Otto Magnus von Dönhoff (1665–1717), Brandenburg-Prussian lieutenant general and envoy
- Julius Ernst von Tettau (1644–1711), Oberamtmann von Angerburg, Feldzeugmeister of the States General
- Wilhelm Dietrich von Bülow (1664–1737), the Queen's Chief Chamberlain
- Johann Georg von Tettau (1650–1713), Chamberlain Friedrich III. , Major General of the Cavalry, Commander of the Garde du corps
See also: Knight of the Black Eagle Order
literature
- Relationis historicae semestralis vernalis continuatio. Jacobi Franci historical description of the most memorable stories […] 1700 bit […] 1701. Franckfurt 1701, p. 87 ( digitized version )
- Statutes of the Royal Prussian Order of the Black Eagle. Ulrich Liebpert, Cölln on the Spree 1701 ( digitized )
- Rudolf Grieser (Ed.): The Memories of Burgrave and Count Christoph zu Dohna (1665–1733). Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen 1974, p. 215 (created 1729 to 1733)
- Leopold von Zedlitz-Neukirch : Contributions to the history of the black eagle order, as the highest honor and court honor in Prussia . In: New Prussian Nobility Lexicon . Volume 2, Gebrüder Reichenbach, Leipzig 1836, pp. 71–98 ( digitized version )
- List of Knights of the Royal Prussian High Order of the Black Eagle. Decker, Berlin 1851 ( digitized version )
- Eduard Vehse: History of the Prussian court and nobility and Prussian diplomacy. Volume 2, Hoffman and Campe, Hamburg 1851, pp. 24-25 ( digitized version )
- Gustav Adolph Ackermann: Order book of all in Europe flourishing and extinct orders and decorations. Rudolph & Dieterici, Annaberg 1855, p. 22 f. ( Digitized version )
- Louis Schneider : The book of the Black Eagle Order. Duncker, Berlin 1870 ( digitized version )
- List of Knights of the Royal Prussian Order of the Black Eagle. Von Decker, Berlin 1871 ( digitized version )
- Paul Seidel: The foundation of the high order of the Black Eagle and the royal coronation on January 17th and 18th, 1701 in Königsberg in East Prussia. In: Hohenzollern yearbook. Volume 4, 1900, pp. 127-139 ( PDF )
- Hermann Hengst: The Knights of the Black Eagle Order. Biographical directory of all knights of the High Order of the Black Eagle from 1701 to 1900. Festschrift to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the High Order. Duncker, Berlin 1901.
- Rudolf Count Stillfried-Alcántara: The Knights of the Royal Prussian High Order of the Black Eagle and their coat of arms (1701–1901) . 3rd edition, ed. by Georg Graf Kanitz . Moeser, Berlin 1901. (with 1129 counted coats of arms images)
- Erast Schubersky and Peter Sauerwald: The High Order of the Black Eagle. Foundation and awards under King Friedrich I in Prussia 1701–1713. In: Prussia 1701. A European history. Volume 2: Essays. Henschel, Berlin 2001, ISBN 3-89487-388-4 , pp. 205-210
- André Hüsken : Catalog of orders, decorations and awards of the Electorate of Brandenburg, the Margraviate of Brandenburg-Ansbach and Brandenburg-Bayreuth, the Kingdom of Prussia, the Republic of Prussia, taking into account the German Empire. Volume 1: Electorate of Brandenburg, Margraviate Brandenburg-Ansbach, Margraviate Brandenburg-Bayreuth, Order of the Kingdom of Prussia. Hauschild, Bremen 2001, ISBN 3-89757-136-6 .
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b Gustav Adolph Ackermann: Order book of all orders and decorations that have flourished and died in Europe. Rudolph & Dieterici, Annaberg 1855, p. 22f. ( Digitized version )
- ↑ Maximilian Gritzner : Handbook of the knights and orders of merit of all civilized states of the world. Weber, Leipzig 1893, p. 352 ( digitized version )
- ↑ Hannah Pakula: Victoria. Daughter of Queen Victoria, wife of the Prussian Crown Prince, mother Wilhelm II. Marion von Schröder-Verlag, Munich 1999, ISBN 3-547-77360-1
- ^ Hüsken: Catalog of the orders, decorations and awards of the Electorate of Brandenburg, the Margraviate of Brandenburg-Ansbach and Brandenburg-Bayreuth, the Kingdom of Prussia, the Republic of Prussia, taking into account the German Empire. Volume 1 Electorate of Brandenburg, Markgraftum Brandenburg-Ansbach, Markgraftum Brandenburg-Bayreuth Order of the Kingdom of Prussia. Hamburg 2001, p. 58
- ↑ Gustav Adolph Ackermann: Order book of all orders and decorations that have flourished and died in Europe. Rudolph & Dieterici, Annaberg 1855, p. 23 ( digitized version )
- ↑ Ernst Graf zur Lippe-Weißenfeld : Finkenstein, Friedrich Ludwig Reichsgraf Fink v. In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 7, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1877, p. 20 f.
- ^ Kurd Wolfgang von Schöning : The generals of the Chur-Brandenburg and Royal Prussian Army from 1640-1840. P. 123 ( digitized version )
- ^ Leopold von Zedlitz-Neukirch : New Preussisches Adels-Lexicon . Volume 4, Reichenbach, Leipzig 1842, p. 35 ( digitized version )
- ^ A b c Jörg Nimmergut : German medals and decorations until 1945. Volume 2: Limburg-Reuss. Central Office for Scientific Order Studies, Munich 1997, ISBN 3-00-001396-2 , p. 761