Order of Victory

Order of Victory
Order of Victory
Orden-Pobeda-Marshal Vasilevsky.jpg
The Order of Victory
Awarded by the  Soviet Union
Type Single-grade order
Eligibility Military Generals and Marshals only
Awarded for Conducting combat operations involving one or more army groups and resulting in a "successful operation within the framework of one or several fronts resulting in a radical change of the situation in favor of the Red Army"
Status No longer awarded
Statistics
Established November 8, 1943
First awarded April 10, 1944
Last awarded February 20, 1978
Total awarded 20
Ordervictory rib.png
Ribbon of the Order of Victory

The Order of Victory (Russian: Орден "Победa", Orden "Pobeda") was the highest military decoration in the Soviet Union, and one of the rarest orders in the world. The order was awarded only to Generals and Marshals for successfully conducting combat operations involving one or more army groups and resulting in a "successful operation within the framework of one or several fronts resulting in a radical change of the situation in favor of the Red Army." In its history, it has been awarded twenty times to thirteen Soviet leaders and five foreign leaders, with one revocation.

Contents

History

The order was proposed by Colonel N. S. Neyelov, who was serving at the Soviet Army Rear headquarters around June 1943. The original name that Colonel Neyelov suggested was Order for Faithfulness to the Homeland; however, it was given its present name around October of that year.[1] The order was officially adopted on November 8, 1943. The first awarding of the order was on April 10, 1944 and it was presented to Marshalls Aleksandr Vasilevsky and Georgy Zhukov, and Joseph Stalin as Commander-in-Chief of the Soviet Armed Forces. The order was also bestowed to top commanders of the Allied forces. Every order was presented during World War II, except for the 1978 award to Leonid Brezhnev. Brezhnev's award was revoked posthumously in 1989 for not meeting the requirements for the award.

Like other orders awarded by Communist nations, the Order of Victory could be awarded more than once to the same individual. In total, the order was presented twenty times to seventeen people (including Brezhnev).

Unlike all other Soviet orders, the Order of Victory had no serial number on it, the number was only mentioned in the award certificate. After a holder of the Order of Victory died, the award was to be given back to the state. The awards are now preserved by the Diamond Fund in the Moscow Kremlin. Notable exceptions are Dwight D. Eisenhower's Order of Victory, which is on display at the United States National Archives Building in Washington D.C., and Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery's Order of Victory, which is on display at the Imperial War Museum in London.

Construction details

The Order is made out of platinum in the form of a pentangular star with rays between the arms, measuring 72 mm in diameter. The star is studded with 174 diamonds weighing a total of 16 carats (3.2 g), while the arms of the star are made out of synthetic rubies. In the center of the star is a silver medallion, with the Moscow Kremlin wall, the Spasskaya Tower, and Lenin's Mausoleum depicted in gold surrounded by bands of laurel and oak also colored in gold. The laurel and oak are bound with a red banner. The sky in the background is inlaid with blue enamel.[2] Against the sky, the letters "СССР" (USSR) appear in gold centered on the top of the medallion, while the word "Победа" (Victory) is displayed on the red banner at the bottom.

Who the main designer of the order was remains uncertain; however, the current design was chosen by Joseph Stalin on October 20, 1943. Instead of being made at a mint, each Order was made in a jeweler's workshop.

Dwight D. Eisenhower had his star valued by an American jeweler; he told Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands, who was interested in receiving such a prestigious award himself, that the stones were "fakes".[3]

Ribbon

The Order Ribbon.

The ribbons of various Soviet orders have been combined to create the Order Ribbon. The total length of the ribbon is 44 mm and it is mostly worn on the field uniform.[4] The following featured orders are depicted on the ribbon (read from outside towards the center):

  • Order of Glory (Орден Славы/Orden Slavy). Orange with black center stripe
  • Order of Bogdan Khmelnitsky (Орден Богдана Хмельницкого/Orden Bogdana Khmelnitskogo). Light blue stripe
  • Order of Alexander Nevsky (Орден Александра Невского/Orden Aleksandra Nevskogo). Dark red stripe
  • Order of Kutuzov (Орден Кутузова/Orden Kutuzova). Dark blue stripe
  • Order of Suvorov (Орден Суворова/Orden Suvorova). Green stripe
  • Order of Lenin (Орден Ленина/Orden Lenina). Large Red stripe (center section)

List of recipients

British Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery (left, wearing beret) was awarded the Order of Victory on June 5, 1945. American general Dwight Eisenhower and Soviet field marshal Georgy Zhukov, also recipients of the Order of Victory, are to the right of Montgomery. British air marshal Sir Arthur Tedder (right of Zhukov) is also present.
# Date Name Died Summary
1 1944-04-10April 10, 1944 Soviet Union Georgy Zhukov 1974-06-18June 18, 1974
2 1944-04-10April 10, 1944 Soviet Union Aleksandr Vasilevsky 1977-12-05December 5, 1977
3 1944-04-10April 10, 1944 Soviet Union Joseph Stalin 1953-03-05March 5, 1953
4 1945-03-30March 30, 1945 Soviet Union Konstantin Rokossovsky 1968-08-03August 3, 1968
5 1945-03-30March 30, 1945 Soviet Union Ivan Konev 1973-05-21May 21, 1973
6 1945-04-19April 19, 1945 Soviet Union Aleksandr Vasilevsky 1977-12-05December 5, 1977 (2nd time)
7 1945-04-26April 26, 1945 Soviet Union Rodion Malinovsky 1967-03-31March 31, 1967
8 1945-04-26April 26, 1945 Soviet Union Fyodor Tolbukhin 1949-10-17October 17, 1949
9 1945-05-31May 31, 1945 Soviet Union Leonid Govorov 1955-03-19March 19, 1955
10 1945-05-31May 31, 1945 Soviet Union Georgy Zhukov 1974-06-18June 18, 1974 (2nd time)
11 1945-06-04June 4, 1945 Soviet Union Semyon Timoshenko 1970-03-31March 31, 1970
12 1945-06-04June 4, 1945 Soviet Union Aleksei Antonov 1962-06-18June 18, 1962
13 1945-06-05June 4, 1945 United States Dwight D. Eisenhower 1969-03-28March 28, 1969
14 1945-06-05June 5, 1945 United Kingdom Bernard Montgomery 1976-03-24March 24, 1976
15 1945-06-26June 26, 1945 Soviet Union Joseph Stalin 1953-03-05March 5, 1953 (2nd time)
16 1945-07-06July 6, 1945 Kingdom of Romania Michael I of Romania 2Alive Sole surviving recipient as of 2011
17 1945-08-09August 9, 1945 Poland Michał Rola-Żymierski 1989-10-15October 15, 1989
18 1945-09-08September 8, 1945 Soviet Union Kirill Meretskov 1968-12-30December 30, 1968
19 1945-09-09September 9, 1945 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Josip Broz Tito 1980-05-04May 4, 1980
20 1978-02-20February 20, 1978 Soviet Union Leonid Brezhnev 1982-11-10November 10, 1982 Revoked (posthumously)

See also

References

  1. ^ Dmitry Markov, Order of Victory - 1943 (Russian-medals.net)
  2. ^ Voice of Russia, World Service in English (2005) The Order of Victory
  3. ^ Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands in an interview with H.G. Meijer, published in "Het Vliegerkruis", Amsterdam 1997, ISBN 90 6707 347 4 . page 92
  4. ^ (Russian) Awards and medals of the Soviet Union Орден "Победа"

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