Orders,_decorations,_and_medals_of_the_Republic_of_China

Orders, decorations, and medals of the Republic of China

Orders, decorations, and medals of the Republic of China

Add article description


This is a list of orders, decorations and medals of the Republic of China, usually known as Taiwan after 1949. This list is sorted in order of precedence of the highest grade of each award on a full military dress. The Honour Sabre is a special case and is listed separately under Military orders, as per its official classification by the Ministry of National Defense.

Military orders

More information Name, Grades ...
More information Name, Grades ...

Military medals

General Armed Forces medals

More information Name, Grades ...

Army medals

More information Name, Grades ...
More information Name, Grades ...

Air Force medals

More information Name, Grades ...

Victory medals

More information Name, Grades ...

Commemorative and Service awards

More information Name, Grades ...

Civilian orders

More information Name, Grades ...

Defunct orders

Prior to the modern system, the Republican government established numerous orders that are now defunct.

Nanjing Era

After the founding of the Republic, the Provisional Government of the Republic of China (1912) in Nanjing established the following orders in 1912:

  • Order of the Nine Tripods (九鼎勳章): 9 grades, a military decoration.
  • Order of Tiger and Bear (虎羆勳章): 9 grades, a military decoration.
  • Order of the Waking Lion (醒獅勳章): 9 grades, mixed military and civilian decoration.

Beiyang Era

The Beiyang government re-established the honour system with the following orders:

  • Grand Merit Order (大勳章): for ceremonial use by the Head of State.
  • Badge of Mongolian, Hui and Tibetan Nobility (蒙回藏爵章): 5 grades, awarded to lords of Mongolia, Xinjiang and Tibet who bore Qing dynasty princely and ducal titles. The grades of this order correspond to Qing's princely ranks.
  • Order of Rank and Merit (勳位章): 5 grades, highest general decoration.
  • Order of Precious Brilliant Golden Grain (寶光嘉禾勳章): 5 grades and 6 classes, awarded only to high-level officials.
  • Order of the Golden Grain (嘉禾勳章): 9 grades, civilian decoration.
  • Order of the White Eagle (白鷹勳章): 9 grades.
  • Order of the Striped Tiger (文虎勳章): 9 grades, military decoration.
  • Order of Cloud and Crane (雲鶴勳章)
  • Order of the Golden Lion (金獅勳章)
  • Order of the Nebula (星雲勳章)
  • Order of the Begonia (棠勳章)
  • Medal of Compassion (慈惠章): awarded to women in charitable works.

Various warlords also issued their own orders and commemorative medals.

See also


Notes

  1. Date of institution given is of the first incarnation of the award. Changes since then of the design and/or grades are noted separately. Dates of institution obtained from Ministry of National Defense and Office of the President, see References below.
  2. The Order of National Glory and Order of Blue Sky and White Sun had a Rosette device until 19 November 1980
  3. The Order of Precious Tripod, 3rd Class and Order of Resplendent Banner, 3rd Class had no device prior to 19 November 1980
  4. The Special Cravat and Cravat grades are neck orders.
  5. Prior to 1 August 1935 the Honour Sabre was presented in nine grades, from 9 stars to 1 star, respectively. On the current design, lions are carved in golden relief on the scabbard and hilt.
  6. For all medals with A and B grades, A grade medals are awarded to officers holding the rank of Major or above, and B grade medals are awarded to soldiers of ranks including and below Captain.
  7. First time recipients receive the Second Class of the medal, second time recipients receive the First Class of the medal, and further decorations are to be denoted with award stars.
  8. First time recipients receive 1 silver star; Second time recipients 2 silver stars; Third time 3 silver stars; Beyond 3, every 3 silver stars is exchanged for a gold star.
  9. First time recipients receive the Second Class of the medal and second time recipients receive the First Class of the medal.
  10. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 30 September 2007. Retrieved 30 August 2006.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  11. "Regulations on the Conferment of the Medal of Culture by the Ministry of Culture". Laws & Regulations Database of The Republic of China. 31 January 2020. Retrieved 15 February 2021.

References


Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Orders,_decorations,_and_medals_of_the_Republic_of_China, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.