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Order of Elizabeth

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Imperial Austrian Order of Elizabeth
Insignia of the order's third grade
TypeOrder of chivalry for women
Established17 September 1898
1898 - 1918 (National Order)
1918 - present (Dynastic Order)
17 November (Feast day)
Royal houseHabsburg-Lorraine
Religious affiliationRoman Catholic
Awarded forGeneral welfare in Religious, Charitable or Philanthropic Merit
StatusDormant since 1951
Grades
  • Grand Cross
  • 1st Class
  • 2nd Class
  • Elizabeth Medal
Statistics
First induction1898: Countess Irma Sztáray de Sztára et Nagymihály
Last induction1951: Princess Regina of Saxe-Meiningen
Total inductees1121
Precedence
Next (higher)Order of Leopold
Next (lower)Order of Franz Joseph
EquivalentOrder of the Iron Crown

Ribbon of the order

The Imperial Austrian Order of Elizabeth (German: Kaiserlich österreichischer Elisabeth-Orden), established in 1898 by Francis Joseph, Emperor of Austria and King of Hungary, was an order created for women. The order was named after Saint Elisabeth of Hungary, but it was also founded to honor and memorialize Francis Joseph's late wife, Empress-Queen Elisabeth.

The order was divided into three grades – Grand Cross, 1st Class and 2nd Class. In addition, there was an Elizabeth Medal for civil merit.

Overview

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According to medal expert and collector Yuri Yashnev:[1]

The award was intended for ladies, regardless of social status or religion, for merits in religious and charitable work. The award had four degrees - the Grand Cross, I Degree and II Degree, and also a cross of merit... Awards were made, personally, by the emperor... the badges and insignia of the Order were to be returned to the state upon the death of the member, or upon the advancement from a lower degree to a higher degree... There were 81 awards of the Grand Cross, 332 awards of the I Degree, 500 awards of the II Degree, and 208 awards of the Elizabeth Medal for merit, between 1898 and 1918, when the Order was disbanded with the collapse of the monarchy.

Notable recipients

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Austrian

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Foreign

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Sources

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  1. ^ Yashnev, Yuri (2003). Orders and Medals of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Archived from the original on 2 April 2009.