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Order of the Medjidie facts for kids

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Order of the Medjidie
Medaille-turque-IMG 1099.JPG
Arms of the Order of the Medjidie
Country Ottoman Empire
Type Order
Eligibility Civilians and military
Awarded for Outstanding services to the state by foreign nationals
Status No longer awarded
Statistics
Established 1851
Order of the Medjidie lenta.png
Ribbon bar of the medal

Order of the Medjidie (Ottoman Turkish: نشانِ مجیدیه, August 29, 1852 – 1922) is a military and civilian order of the Ottoman Empire. The Order was instituted in 1851 by Sultan Abdulmejid I.

History

Instituted in 1851, the Order was awarded in five classes, with the First Class being the highest. The Order was issued in considerable numbers by Sultan Abdülmecid as a reward for distinguished service to members of the British Army and the Royal Navy and the French Army who came to the aid of the Ottoman Empire during the Crimean War against Russia and to British recipients for later service in Egypt and/or the Sudan. In Britain it was worn after any British gallantry and campaign medals awarded, but, as an Order, before foreign medals like the Turkish Crimean War medal. The Order was usually conferred on officers but a few enlisted soldiers and sailors also received it in a lower class. During World War I it was also awarded to a number of German, Austrian and Bulgarian officers.

The Order was often conferred on non-Turkish nationals.

Design of the Order

On the obverse of the star is Sultan Abdülmecid's royal cipher surrounded by an inscription on a gold-bordered circle of red enamel; all on a star of seven triple quills with small crescents and five-pointed stars between them, suspended from a red enameled crescent and star suspender with green enameled edges.

Mecidi 1Kl
First Class Order

Rough translation of the front: To the left: (you have) crossed. To the right: (you are proven to be) correct. At the top: (you have provided) protection. At the bottom: Year 1268. In the centre: In the name of the God the forgiver, the merciful.

The order has 5 classes. First, second, third and fourth classes are gold. Fifth (lower) class is silver.

Owners of the order:

  • First Class Order (Gold) - 50 people (Given by Sultan)
  • Second Class Order (Gold) - 150 people (Given by Sultan)
  • Third Class Order (Gold) - 800 people
  • Fourth Class Order (Gold) - 3,000 people
  • Fifth Class Order (Silver) - 6,000 people

Some notable recipients

Distribution of the Medjidie, After the Battle of Citate
Distribution of the Medjidie, after the Battle of Cetate (1854)
Order of the Medjidie awarded to Major Rodolph De Salis of the 8th Hussars
Order of the Medjidie awarded to Major Rodolph De Salis (1811-1880) of the 8th Hussars.
  • Abdelkader El Djezairi, Algerian Islamic scholar and political and military leader who led a struggle against the French invasion.
  • Shemaiah Angel
  • Abraham Ashkenazi, chief rabbi of Palestine
  • Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, Ottoman Army officer
  • Lucien Baudens, French military surgeon
  • Mohammed Shitta Bey, First titled Seriki Musulumi of Lagos & foremost Muslim trader of the Lagos Colony
  • Edward Wilmot Blyden, Pan Africanist and Liberian Statesman
  • Eugène Chauffeur, French Army officer, from Valence (Drôme), Commandeur of the Legion of Honor, on 6 May 1856. Sous-Lieutenant in the 10th "Bataillon de chasseurs à pied" who sustained a severe wound to the head during the Siege of Sevastopol (Crimea).
  • Charles Doughty-Wylie, English army officer who was later killed in the Gallipoli Campaign, ironically in action against Ottoman forces.
  • Arthur Conan Doyle, Scottish author
  • Richard England, British soldier
  • Pierre Louis Charles de Failly, French soldier
  • Emanuele Luigi Galizia, Maltese architect and civil engineer
  • Rafael de Nogales Méndez, Venezuelan soldier, adventurer and writer.
  • George Walter Grabham, British geologist
  • George Alfred Henty, English Commissariat Officer and author
  • Theodor Herzl, journalist and Zionist leader
  • Auguste Lumière, French industrialist and biologist
  • Léon-Eugène Méhédin, French architect and photographer
  • Helmuth von Moltke the Elder, Prussian Army officer
  • Sir William Montgomery-Cuninghame, 9th Baronet, British Army Officer and Victoria Cross recipient
  • Napoleon III, Emperor of The French
  • Major-General Charles George Gordon, Gordon of Khartoum
  • Rear-Admiral Maurice Horatio Nelson, son of Thomas Nelson, 2nd Earl Nelson
  • Lord Blyth James Blyth, 1st Baron Blyth, British businessman and politician
  • General Sir William Parke, British soldier
  • Lord George Paulet, British naval officer
  • Pedro II of Brazil, Emperor of Brazil
  • Ludomił Rayski, Polish pilot
  • Cecil Spring Rice, British diplomat
  • Haim Palachi, chief rabbi of Izmir
  • Jules Ernest Renoux, French painter
  • Pierre-Auguste Sarrus, French musician
  • Emanuel Stross, Wholesaler
  • Charles Carroll Tevis, American soldier of fortune and Anatolian Cavalry leader
  • Alfred Tippinge, British Army officer of the Grenadier Guards, and Legion of Honour recipient
  • Maréchal Vaillant
  • Carol Davila
  • Živojin Mišić, Serbian field marshal and Chef of General Staff
  • Louis Pasteur, French chemist and microbiologist
  • Yosef Navon, Jerusalem businessman and the man principally responsible for the construction of the Jaffa–Jerusalem railway.
  • Field Marshal Sir Frederick Paul Haines GCB GCSI CIE
  • Charles Pomeroy Stone, career U.S. Army officer, post Civil War soldier of fortune in Ottoman service.
  • Dimitrije Cincar-Marković, Serbian Prime Minister and general
  • Grocholski Tadeusz
  • Perestu Kadın, Valide Sultan of Ottoman Empire
  • Princess Victoria Louise of Prussia, Duchess Consort of Brunswick
  • Oswald Longstaff Prowde, English civil engineer on Aswan Low Dam
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