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The Honour Cross of the World War 1914/1918
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The Honour Cross of the World War (Hindenburg Cross)
Honour Cross with Swords (for front-line veterans)
Type
First World War Service Medal
Presented by
Nazi Germany
Eligibility
All German and Austrian participants in the war or their next of kin
Status
Obsolete
First awarded
13 July 1934
Last awarded
1944
Total
8,041,414
Total awarded posthumously
Yes
The Honour Cross of the World War 1914/1918
(
German
:
Das Ehrenkreuz des Weltkrieges 1914/1918
), commonly, but incorrectly, known as the
Hindenburg Cross
or the German WWI Service Cross was established by
Field Marshal
Paul von Hindenburg
, President of the German Weimar Republic, by an order dated 13 July 1934, to commemorate service of the German people during the
First World War
.
[1]
This was Germany's first official service medal for soldiers of
Imperial Germany
who had taken part in the war, and where they had since died it was also awarded to their surviving next-of-kin.
[1]
Shortly after its issuance, the government of
Nazi Germany
declared the award as the only official service decoration of the First World War and further forbade the continued wearing of
German Free Corps awards
on any military or paramilitary uniform of a state or
Nazi Party
organization.
The Honour Cross was awarded in three forms:
[1]
- for front-line veterans, with swords
- for non-combatant veterans, without swords
- for surviving widows and parents of fallen participants in the war, without swords.
[2]
The Honour Cross was modelled on the reverse side of the
War Commemorative Medal of 1870/71
(
Preußen Kriegsdenkmünze 1870-1871
), and was designed by Eugene Godet.
[3]
The medal awarded to combatants (the
Frontkämpferkreuz
) displayed a laurel wreath encircling a medallion, with the dates "1914 1918". Crossed swords are between the arms. The reverse side was plain, except for the manufacturer's logo. The Honour Cross for non-combatants has no swords and a wreath of oak leaves. Both crosses are in bronze. The Honour Cross for Next-of-Kin (commonly known as the Widows Cross), was finished in black.
[4]
The Honour Cross was worn suspended from a ribbon with black edge stripes, two white stripes, two black stripes and a red stripe in the middle between them. The ribbon for the Honour Cross for Next-of-Kin had these colours in a different order, having a white edge stripes, with two black stripes, white stripes on either side of a red stripe in the middle.
[1]
They were frequently worn with the ribbon fashioned into a bow, with a pin on the back, which the mother or widow in question attached to her clothing. The application for this award had a time limit, which expired at the end of 1942. Each award came with an
Urkunde
, or certificate, which indicated which form the award took. The certificates for the next-of-kin crosses came in two types: those for widows were titled
Ehrenkreuz für Witwen
(Honour Cross for Widows), those for parents
Ehrenkreuz für Eltern
(Honour Cross for Parents). The award was ranked above other service and occupation medals, but below other awarded combat medals.
[5]
The number of awards given was:
for combatants 6,202,883
[1]
for non-combatants 1,120,449
[1]
for widows 345,132
[1]
for parents 372,950
[1]
total 8,041,414
By a decree dated 30 November 1938, the State Minister of the Interior introduced these awards into the
Ostmark
(the name of Austria after it was
annexed
by Nazi Germany). By 1940, it had also been approved for persons of German heritage from seized lands of the
Sudetenland
,
Czechoslovakia
, Danzig, Saar and Memel.
[1]
Awarding of the cross to war participants of German heritage continued after the deadline for applications had closed within the previous boundaries of Germany. Such Honour Crosses were still being awarded as late as 1944. For all attached military personnel outside these regions, the
Führer
, through the ordinance of 30 June 1942, had already ordered approval of these awards.