- China War Medal (1842)
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China War Medal
Obverse (top). Ribbon: 35mm crimson ribbon with yellow edgesAwarded by the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Type Campaign medal Eligibility British forces Awarded for Campaign service Campaign First Anglo-Chinese War (1839–42) Description Silver disk, 36mm diameter. Statistics Established 1843 The China War Medal was issued by the British Government in 1843 to members of the British Army and Royal Navy who took part in the First Anglo-Chinese War (1839–42). The medal was designed by William Wyon.
Contents
Recipients
The China War Medal was originally intended by the Governor-General of India, in October 1842, to be awarded exclusively to all ranks of the Honourable East India Company's Forces. Instead, in 1843, under the direction of Queen Victoria, the British Government awarded it without clasp to all members of the British Army and Royal Navy who had "served with distinction" between 5 July 1840 and 29 August 1842 in the following actions :
- In the Canton River operations of 1841.
- At the first and second capture of Chusan, in 1840 and 1841.
- At the battles of Amoy, Ningpo, Chinhai, Tsekee, Chapoo, Woosung, in the Yangtze River, and in the assault of Chinkiang.
This campaign became known as the First Opium War, ending in the seizure of Nanking. The resultant treaty opened five ports to trade, and ceded Hong Kong to Great Britain.
Description
The medal's obverse shows the diademed head of Queen Victoria with the legend "VICTORIA REGINA". The reverse has the same coat of Royal Arms and shield found on both the First, Second and Third China War Medals with the inscription "ARMIS EXPOSCERE PACIM" and the word "CHINA" and the date "1842" in the exergue below. The First China War Medal's reverse was originally designed depicting the British lion devouring a Chinese dragon. However, this design was considered too insensitive to the Chinese and so the reverse described above was used. The non-swivelling suspender is plain and straight being sweated directly to the medal.[1]
The medals were named in bold block capital letters with stars used to fill in the spaces as on the Waterloo Medal. However, since new punches were used for this medal the naming appears somewhat sharper than on Waterloo Medal examples.[1]
Those in receipt of this medal and who also qualified for the Second China War Medal in 1861 were supposed to receive the clasps awarded with the second medal only. These clasps were intended to be fixed to this medal but due to the difference in the width and style of the suspender it was not known how this was actually to be done. As a result the clasps were often simply slipped over the ribbon which was sometimes replaced with the narrower 32mm type supplied with the second medal. Other recipients of this medal removed the original suspender and replaced it with one similar to that found on the second medal.[1]
References
External links
- An example of the medal in the Australian War Memorial
- Proof specimen in the Fitzwilliam Museum Collection
19th Century Army Gold Cross (1810) • Army Gold Medal (1810) • Waterloo Medal (1815) • Ghuznee Medal (1839) • Candahar, Ghuznee, Cabul Medal (1842) • Jellalabad Medals (1842) • Medal for the Defence of Kelat-I-Ghilzie (1842) • First China War Medal (1842) • Scinde Medal (1843) • Gwalior Star (1843) • Sutlej Medal (1846) • Naval General Service Medal (1847) • Military General Service Medal (1847) • Punjab Medal (1849) • Army of India Medal (1851) • India General Service Medal (1854) • South Africa Medal (1854) • Crimean War Medal (1854) • Baltic Medal (1856) • Indian Mutiny Medal (1858) • Second China War Medal (1861) • New Zealand Medal (1869) • Abyssinian War Medal (1869) • Canada General Service Medal (1866-70) • Ashantee Medal (1873-74) • South Africa Medal (1877-79) • Afghanistan Medal (1878-80) • Kabul to Kandahar Star (1880) • Cape of Good Hope General Service Medal (1880-97) • Egypt Medal (1882-89) • North West Canada Medal (1885) • _
British_South_Africa_Company_Medal_(1890-97) _British South Africa Company Medal (1890-97) East and West Africa Medal (1892) • India Medal (1896) • Ashanti Star (1896) • Queen's Sudan Medal (1899) • East and Central Africa Medal (1899) • Queen's South Africa Medal (1899) • Queen's Mediterranean Medal (1899) Pre World War 1 China War Medal (1900) • Ashanti Medal (1901) • King's South Africa Medal (1902) • Africa General Service Medal (1902) • Transport Medal (1902) (for South Africa or China) • Tibet Medal (1905) • India General Service Medal (1909)
World War 1 1914 Star • 1914-15 Star • British War Medal • Victory Medal • Territorial Force War Medal • Mercantile Marine War Medal
Inter World War World War 2 _
1939-1945_Star _ •___ Atlantic_Star_ •__ 1939-1945 Star • _ Atlantic_Star _ •__Atlantic Star • Air Crew Europe Star • _ Africa_Star _ •___ Pacific_Star_ •__ Africa Star • _ Pacific_Star _ •__Pacific Star • Burma Star • Italy Star • France and Germany Star • _ Defence_Medal _ •__Defence Medal • War Medal 1939–1945 Post World War Korea Medal (1951) • General Service Medal (1962) • Rhodesia Medal (1980) • South Atlantic Medal (1982) • Gulf Medal (1992) Accumulated Campaign Service Medal (1994)
21st Century OSM for Sierra Leone (2000) • OSM for Afghanistan (2002) • OSM for Democratic Republic of Congo (2003) • Iraq Medal (2004) _
Iraq_Reconstruction_Service_Medal_(2004) _ •__Iraq Reconstruction Service Medal (2004) • Accumulated Campaign Service Medal (2011) Categories:- 1842 establishments
- British campaign medals
- First Opium War
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