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396323 Los(e)/Seite
Italy, Republic, Order of Merit, Officer’s breast badge (2), by Cravanzola, 59mm including suspension x 45mm, silver-gilt and enamel, with rosette on riband, in case of issue; by Johnson, 64mm including suspension x 47mm, silver-gilt and enamel, with rosette on riband, with lapel rosette, in case of issue, the first heavily tarnished, good very fine and better (2) £60-£80
Japan, Empire, Order of the Golden Kite, Seventh Class breast badge, silver, with gilded falcon; Order of the Rising Sun (3), Seventh Class breast badge (2), silver and enamel, one in damaged rio-nuri lacquered case of issue; Eighth Class breast badge, silver; Order of the Sacred Treasure (3), Sixth Class breast badge, silver and enamel; Seventh Class breast badge (2), silver, one in rio-nuri lacquered case of issue, with lapel rosette; together with a Red Cross membership medal, aluminium, very fine or better (8) £160-£200
Korea, Republic, Order of Merit, Grand Cross set of insignia, comprising sash badge, 83mm including suspension x 56mm, silver and enamel, the reverse numbered ‘233’; breast star, 66mm, silver and enamel, the reverse also numbered ‘233’, with full sash riband, in case of issue, extremely fine and scarce (2) £400-£500
Korea, Republic, Order of Distinguished Diplomatic Service, 2nd type, First Class set of insignia, comprising sash badge, 81mm including suspension x 57mm, silver-gilt and enamel, with central taeguk surrounded by four amethysts, one amethyst missing, the reverse officially numbered ‘368’; breast star, 53mm, silver-gilt and enamel, with central taeguk surrounded by four amethysts, the reverse officially numbered ‘368’, good very fine and rare (2) £500-£700
Ottoman Empire, Order of Osmanieh, First Class set of insignia, comprising sash badge, with later added Scimitars, 82mm including Star and Crescent suspension x 63mm, silver, silver-gilt, and enamel, unmarked, damage to tips of points of star, with one ball finial missing, others bent or crudely repaired, and commensurate green enamel damage; Star, 93mm, silver, gilt, and enamel, mint mark to reverse, with silver retaining pin and two additional support hooks, significant green enamel damage to central medallion, with full sash riband, in embossed case of issue, generally very fine (2) £800-£1,000
Persia, Empire, Order of the Lion and the Sun, Third Class neck badge, by Vinc Mayer’s Söhne, Vienna, 99mm including suspension x 65mm, silver and enamel, maker’s cartouche to reverse and maker’s marks and silver marks to reverse, with neck riband, in fitted Spink, London, case, extremely fine £300-£400
Poland, Republic, Order of the White Eagle, Breast Star, by Paniasuk, Warsaw, 75mm, silvered, gilt, and enamel, with screw-back fitment for use as helmet plate; Order of Polonia Restituta, Officer’s breast badge, 50mm, silver-gilt and enamel; Independence Cross 1930, gilt and enamel; together with a regimental badge, by Zycmaniac, silver and enamel, 7/B/T/1926 on limbs of cross, generally good very fine (4) £100-£140
Portugal, Republic, Order of Christ, Commander’s set of Insignia, by Frederico Costa, Lisbon, comprising neck badge, 58mm x 43mm, silver-gilt and enamel, unmarked; Star, 73mm, silver-gilt and enamel, maker’s cartouché on reverse, with neck riband, in case of issue, about extremely fine (2) £200-£240
Romania, Kingdom, Order of the Crown, 1st type, First Class set of insignia, by Joseph Resch, Bucharest, comprising sash badge, 69mm, silver-gilt and enamel, maker’s mark on suspension ring, with test mark to suspension ring; Star, 88mm, silver, silver-gilt, and enamel, with maker’s cartouché on reverse and silver marks on pin, with full sash riband, in embossed case of issue, about extremely fine (2) £500-£700
Romania, Kingdom, Order of the Star, 2nd type, Civil Division, First Class set of Insignia, by Heinrich Weiss, Bucharest, comprising sash Badge, 90mm including crown suspension x 61mm, silver-gilt and enamel, maker's mark, silver marks, and workshop number on suspension ring, test mark to orb of crown; Star, 979mm, silver, silver-gilt, and enamel, maker's cartouché on reverse, and silver marks and workshop number on retaining pin, tips of two points of star broken and missing, with length of full sash riband, in embossed case of issue, good very fine (2) £300-£400
Serbia, Principality, Medal of the Chancellery of the the Royal Serbian Orders of Chivalry, gilt and enamel, with replacement chain suspension; Commemorative Medal for the Restoration of Miloch Obrenovitch 1858, silver; Commemorative Medal for the death of Michel III Obrenovitch 1868, silver; Commemorative Medal for the Accession of Milan IV 1872 (2), bronze-gilt; bronze, nearly very fine and better (5) £120-£160
Serbia, Kingdom, Order of the White Eagle, 2nd type, Knight’s breast badge (2), both 73mm including crown and crossed swords suspension x 34mm, silver, gilt, and enamel, one in fitted and embossed Huguenin Frères, Le Locle, case of issue, some red enamel damage to central medallions, otherwise very fine (2) £100-£140
Serbia, Kingdom, Medal for Bravery 1912 (2), First Class, bronze-gilt; Second Class, silver; Medal for Zealous Service (6), First Class, bronze-gilt (3), all ‘single crown’ type; Second Class, silver (3), two ‘single crown’ type, the third the ‘double crown’ type; Cross of Charity 1912, First Class, gilt and enamel; King Peter I Commemorative Cross 1912-13, bronze-gilt, nearly very fine and better (10) £100-£140
The Boer War C.M.G. group of four awarded to the Rt. Hon. Colonel The Lord B. E. B. Castletown, late of the Militia and Yeomanry, and Leinster Regiment, one of the last Knights of Saint Patrick, whose colourful life as a soldier, sportsman and traveller is vividly recalled in his autobiography Ego The Most Distinguished Order of St. Michael and St. George, C.M.G., Companion’s, breast badge, silver-gilt and enamel; Egypt and Sudan 1882-89, dated reverse, 1 clasp, Tel-El-Kebir (Lieut: Hon: B. E. B. Fitz Patrick. Rl. E. Kent. Yy. Cav:); Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 4 clasps, Cape Colony, Orange Free State, Johannesburg, Diamond Hill (Lt. Col. F. E. B. Lord Castletown. Lnstr. Rgt.); Khedive’s Star, dated 1882, contact marks, otherwise very fine or better (4) £2,000-£2,400 --- K.P. Nominated in 1907 and invested on 29 February 1908. C.M.G. London Gazette 26 June 1902. Bernard Edward Barnaby Fitzpatrick, 2nd Baron Castletown, was born in July 1848 and was educated at Eton and Brasenose College, Oxford. Having then made a grand tour of the continent, he served as an observer and ambulance worker in the Franco-Prussian War: ‘During the time I was in France I saw a good deal of the actual fighting, including the termination of the battle of Gravelotte and the deep road where the Germans made their great sacrifice of life, and I also watched the retreat of the French at Sedan ... The poor dead, half-burnt by the conflagration, were lying in all directions, and the wretched French prisoners were being collected by the Bavarians ... I was sent to work at a typhus and typhoid hospital for some time - a very unpleasant experience’ (Ego refers). Commissioned in the 1st Life Guards on his return from France, Fitzpatrick resigned his commission on getting married in April 1874, but maintained his military links with an appointment as a Captain in the City of Cork Artillery Militia from 1875-77 and in the Royal East Kent Yeomanry, in which latter capacity he gained attachment to his old regiment, the 1st Life Guards, during the Egypt operations of 1882, including the battles of Kassassin and Tel-el-Kebir (Medal & clasp; Khedive’s Star): and surely a uniquely named award to the Royal East Kent Yeomanry. Of Tel-el-Kebir, Fitzpatrick later wrote: ‘A little before dawn one gun was fired from the works, and then the whole sky was lit up as gun after gun was fired from both sides, and the rattle of rifle fire was overwhelming. It seemed to last only a short time; then dawn came, and one of the first things I could distinguish was the head of a soldier lying on the ground at my horse’s feet; how it came there I have no idea, but there it was. We advanced at a trot, shells whistling about us, but I do not think we had any casualties. As the dawn grew stronger, I saw Indian lancers galloping all over the place, and spitting unfortunate Egyptians with their lances. At last the firing ceased, and we worked up to the entrenchments and dismounted. I walked into the redoubt nearest to us and realised what a strong place it was. There has been severe fighting; some of the Soudanese had fought to the end, and men were lying wounded and dead in all directions ... We had our lunch by the canal, and I wandered into the low bush which fringed it. Bang! went a rifle and I heard a bullet whistle past my head; I fired at the spot from whence the shot had come, and dropped to the ground to await events. As nothing further happened, I cautiously worked my way through the bush, and found I had shot an Egyptian soldier. He was badly wounded, poor chap, and I did what I could for him and got him water; he was a brave fellow as he never whimpered or groaned. As I sat by him he motioned with his hand to his breast pocket, which he could not reach. I felt in the pocket and pulled out a small paper Koran, and handed it to him. He read it carefully, and after a few minutes turned on his side and died’ (Ego refers). Fitzpatrick was M.P. for Portarlington Borough 1880-83 and succeeded his father in 1883 as 2nd Baron Castletown. In the Boer War, and having been appointed a Lieutenant-Colonel in the 4th Battalion, Leinster Regiment, he served as Assistant Adjutant-General on Lord Roberts’ staff, and was awarded the C.M.G. Never one to be found behind a desk for too long, Fitzpatrick made it his business to go out on intelligence gathering patrols, and to share in the dangers of other offensive operations. From 1906-10 he was chancellor of the Old Royal University of Ireland, of which he was an honorary LLD. In 1907 he was appointed a Knight of Saint Patrick, and in 1908 was sworn of the Irish Privy Council. In the Great War he did admirable recruiting work and his coolness, courage and devotion were remarkable in the troubles that followed. He married in 1874, the Hon. Ursula Clare Emily St Leger, daughter of 4th Viscount Doneraile. Lord Castletown died without issue on 29 May 1937.
Serbia, Kingdom, Medal of St. Sava, bronze; Medal of Agricultural Merit, First Class, gilt and enamel; Medal of Musical Merit, bronze-gilt; Commemorative Medal for the 25th Anniversary of the Liberation of South Serbia 1912-37, bronze; Commemorative Medal for the 50th Anniversary of the Great War 1918-68, bronze; together with an unofficial Serbian Medal ‘Serbia Surrenders Only to God’, gilt, very fine (6) £60-£80
Serbia, Kingdom, Serbian Red Cross Society Decoration 1876, Royal issue, with Crown suspension, silver and enamel; Red Cross Medal for Financial Aid 1912, silver; Red Cross Medal for the Balkan War 1912-13, Second Class, silver and enamel; Red Cross Medal for Services Rendered to Serbia During the Great War 1914-18, bronze, generally very fine (4) £140-£180
Spain, Franco Period, Order of Isabella the Catholic, Commander’s Star, 71mm, silver-gilt and enamel, lower limb chipped; Order of Military Merit, First Class Cross, gilt and red enamel; Order of Aeronautical Merit, Second Class Cross, silver, gilt, and white enamel; War Cross, silvered, gilt, and enamel, good very fine or better (4) £100-£140
Sweden, Kingdom, Order of the North Star, Knight’s breast badge, by Carlman, Stockholm, 60mm including crown suspension x 40mm, silver and enamel, in case of issue; together with a Patriotic Society Silver Medal, Gustav V issue (E. G. Karlsson) the first heavily tarnished, therefore very fine and better (2) £70-£90
Thailand, Kingdom, Order of the Crown, 3rd (1941) issue, Special Class set of insignia, comprising sash badge, 93mm including crown and sun suspension x 58mm, silver, silver-gilt, and enamel, unmarked; Star, 90mm, silver, silver-gilt, and enamel, maker’s mark to retaining pin, with full sash riband, in case of issue, good very fine (2) £400-£500
Thailand, Kingdom, Order of the Crown, 3rd (1941) issue, Second Class set of insignia, comprising neck badge, 87mm including crown and sun suspension x 54mm, silver, silver-gilt, and enamel, maker’s mark to reverse of suspension; Star, 83mm, silver, silver-gilt, and enamel, maker’s mark to reverse, with neck riband, in case of issue, nearly extremely fine (2) £180-£220
Thailand, Kingdom, Order of the Crown (2), Commander’s neck badge, 3rd (1941) issue, 81mm including suspension x 55mm, silver, silver-gilt, and enamel, the suspension and reverse hallmarked with three Thai characters and 36, with neck riband; Knight’s breast badge, 2nd issue, 42mm including suspension x 32mm, silver and enamel, with gilt reverse, good very fine (2) £60-£80
Thailand, Kingdom, Order of the White Elephant, 3rd (1941) issue, First Class set of insignia, comprising sash badge, 110mm including crown and sun suspension x 60mm, silver-gilt and enamel, unmarked, obverse central medallion slightly loose; Star, 80mm, silver-gilt and enamel, maker’s mark to retaining pin, with full sash riband, in case of issue, nearly extremely fine (2) £300-£400
Thailand, Kingdom, Order of the White Elephant, 3rd (1941) issue (3), Commander’s neck badge (2), the first 92mm including suspension x 55mm, silver-gilt and enamel, the reverse marked 45 and a single Thai character; the second 87mm including suspension x 51mm, silver, gilt, and enamel, the reverse marked 28 and with 9 Thai characters, both with neck ribands; Officer’s breast badge, 59mm including suspension x 33mm, silver-gilt and enamel, the reverse marked with 7 Thai characters, with rosette on riband, last in case of issue, with waster pot in wreath design on inner lid, generally good very fine or slightly better (3) £140-£180
A Thai Order of the Crown group of three Thailand, Kingdom, Order of the Crown, 3rd (1941) issue, Fifth Class breast badge silver-gilt and enamel; Rama IX Coronation Medal 1950, silver; Royal Visit to the United States of America and Europe Medal 1962, silver, mounted as worn, very fine A Thai group of five Thailand, Kingdom, Chai Medal 1975, silvered; Safeguarding of Freedom Medal 1969, Second Class, bronze, with top riband bar; Border Service Medal 1954, gilt; 25th Centenary of Buddhism Medal 1957, gilt; Red Cross Medal, silvered, naming engraved on reverse, mounted as worn, good very fine A Thai group of three Thailand, Kingdom, Safeguarding of Freedom Medal 1969, Second Class, bronze; Silver Jubilee Medal 1971, silver; Investiture of Prince Varijalongkorn as Crown Prince 1972, silver, mounted as worn; together with various miscellaneous Thai badges (6), very fine and better (17) £120-£160
A Thai Order of the White Elephant group of four Thailand, Kingdom, Order of the White Elephant, 3rd (1941) issue, Fifth Class breast badge, silver-gilt and enamel; Order of the Crown, 2nd issue, Fifth Class breast badge, silver-gilt and enamel; Rama VI Coronation Medal 1911, silver; Rama VII Coronation Medal 1925, silver, mounted as worn, the riband of the first somewhat distressed, generally good very fine (4) £70-£90
Tunisia, Kingdom, Order of Nichan Iftikah, 2nd type, First Class set of Insignia, comprising sash badge, 88mm including bow suspension x 60mm, silver and enamel, monogram of Ahmad Il ibn Ali (1929-42) to centre, unmarked; Star, 85mm, silver and enamel, monogram of Ahmad Il ibn Ali (1929-42) to centre, unmarked, with two additional support hooks, with full sash riband, about extremely fine (2) £400-£500
Tunisia, Kingdom, Order of Nichan Iftikah, 2nd type, First Class star, 80mm, silver and enamel, monogram of Muhammad IV al-Hadi (1902-06) to centre, silver mark to retaining pin and mint mark to reverse, with two additional support hooks, some damage to tips of rays, otherwise very fine £200-£240
Tunisia, Kingdom, Order of Nichan Iftikah, 2nd type, Officer’s breast badge (2), 67mm including bow suspension x 49mm, silver and enamel, monogram of Muhammad V an-Nasir (1906-22) to centre, unmarked; 64mm including bow suspension x 50mm, silver and enamel, monogram of Muhammad VI al-Habib (1922-29) to centre, unmarked, with rosette on riband, generally very fine (2) £80-£100
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, Order of Alexander Nevsky, breast badge, type 1, variation 3, with rectangular suspension, silver and red enamel, the reverse numbered ‘3905’, an altered type 2 with fraudulent number; Order of the Red Banner (2), Third award, the reverse officially numbered ‘11974’; Second award, the reverse officially numbered 20563’; Order of the Badge of Honour, type 4 (2), the reverses officially numbered ‘797219’ and ‘1086283’; Order of Personal Courage, variation 1, the reverse numbered ‘000183’, a good quality copy; Order of the Red Banner of Labour, type 6, variation 2, the reverse officially numbered ‘602346’; Order of Labour Glory, Third Class, the reverse officially numbered ‘474907’, very fine or better (8) £180-£220
Vatican, Holy See, Order of St. Gregory, Civil Division, Commander’s neck badge, 77mm including wreath suspension x 55mm, silver-gilt and enamel, with short section of neck riband, in Tanfani, Rome, embossed case of issue, one ball finial detached (but present) from lower arm of cross, otherwise very fine £100-£140

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396323 Los(e)/Seite