Order of Vasa

Order of Vasa
The Royal Order of Vasa
Kungliga Vasaorden
Vasaord.jpg
Star and cross of the order
Awarded by Personal Command Sign of the King of Sweden.svg The Monarch of Sweden
Type Five grade order of merit
Day 28 April
Eligibility Swedish and foreign citizens
Awarded for Services to agriculture, mining, art, trade, industry, crafts and education.
Status "Resting", i.e. dormant
Grand Master His Majesty King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden
Chancellor Ingemar Eliasson[1]
Grades (w/ post-nominals) Commander Grand Cross (KmstkVO)
Commander 1st Class (KVO1kl)
Commander 2nd Class (KVO2kl)
Knight (RVO)
Knight 2nd Class (RVO2kl)
Statistics
Established 1772 - 1975 (dormant, see text)
First induction 1772
Precedence
Next (higher) Order of the Sword
Next (lower) The Medal of the Seraphim
SWE Order of Vasa - Knight 2nd Class BAR.png
Ribbon bar of the order

The Royal Order of Vasa (Kungliga Vasaorden) was a Swedish Royal order of chivalry, awarded to citizens of Sweden for service to state and society especially in the fields of agriculture, mining and commerce. It was instituted on 29 May 1772 by King Gustav III of Sweden. It was unrestricted by birth or education and could therefore be awarded to anyone (as opposed to the Order of the Polar Star, which was intended as a reward for the learned professions). It was the most junior of all the Swedish orders. It was often awarded to Norwegian subjects of the dual monarchy until Oscar I founded the Norwegian Order of St. Olav in 1847. Since 1974 the order is no longer conferred: officially it has been declared an order in "resting", along with the Order of the Sword.

The Order had five classes:

  • Commander Grand Cross - wears the badge on a collar (chain) or on a sash on the right shoulder, plus the star on the left chest;
  • Commander 1st Class - wears the badge on a necklet, plus the star on the left chest;
  • Commander - wears the badge on a necklet;
  • Knight 1st Class (Member 1st Class for women and clergymen) - wears the badge on a ribbon on the left chest;
  • Knight (Member for women and clergymen) - wears the badge on a ribbon on the left chest;

Additionally, the Badge of Vasa and the Medal of Vasa, were both worn on a ribbon on the left chest.

Contents

Insignia

  • The collar of the Order is of gold, consisted of four sheaves (the emblem of King Gustav Vasa), four white-enamelled nettle leaves each bearing a shield in white above red (the emblem of Holstein, where King Adolf Frederik, the father of King Gustaf III, was born and from which his family, the House of Holstein-Gottorp, took its name) and eight crowned blue shields bearing the Three Crowns, the emblem of Sweden, each flanked by a pair of caduceus and a pair of cornucopia.
  • The badge of the Order is a white-enameled Maltese Cross, in silver for the Knight class, in gilt for Knight 1st Class and above; crowns appeared between the arms of the cross. The central oval disc, which was identical on both sides, featured a golden sheaf on a black enamel background, surrounded by a red enamel ring bearing the legend Gustaf 3. Instiktare 1772 ("Instituted by Gustaf III, 1772"). The badge hangs from a royal crown. During the early days of the Order, the badge consisted of the oval disc only.
  • The Badge of Vasa is similar to the knight's silver badge of the Order, but the cross had no white enamel.
  • The star of the Order is a silver Maltese Cross with a silver sheaf in the centre. That of Grand Cross also had the abovementioned nettle leaf emblem in silver between the arms of the cross.
  • The ribbon of the Order is green.
  • Formerly the Order also had a distinctive green and white habit worn on formal occasions such as at chapters of the Order. The habit included breeches, waistcoat, coat, cape and a black top hat with a plume of white ostrich and black egret feathers.

Images

See also

External links

Reference

  1. ^ Hovkalender 2010, Office of the Marshal of the Realm, retrieved 2010-07-07

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