Hi Greg,
As you can tell in the picture of the ribbon bars, colors in enameled/painted ribbon bars do not always exactly match its original (and thus blue may look gray and vice-versa). I really think it´s the order of the red star. One of those and a Victory over Germany medal following it makes it more likely than a mongolian low level award (comparing it to other awards and other countries´) after a soviet one.
Yes, we may not know regulations of each and every WP country, but if we take a look closely to high ranking armed forces personnel photos when wearing their ribbon bars, soviet ones are, most of the times, placed before the other foreign awards´ ribbons.
You´re right about the partisan star ribbon, but I´d rather think of the St. Alexander/Merit Order since he already got two War Merit Awards.
Here are the links where we can see both ribbons.
http://www.medals.lava.pl/yu/yu2.htm
http://www.medals.lava.pl/bg/bg12.htm
As you can tell in the picture of the ribbon bars, colors in enameled/painted ribbon bars do not always exactly match its original (and thus blue may look gray and vice-versa). I really think it´s the order of the red star. One of those and a Victory over Germany medal following it makes it more likely than a mongolian low level award (comparing it to other awards and other countries´) after a soviet one.
Yes, we may not know regulations of each and every WP country, but if we take a look closely to high ranking armed forces personnel photos when wearing their ribbon bars, soviet ones are, most of the times, placed before the other foreign awards´ ribbons.
You´re right about the partisan star ribbon, but I´d rather think of the St. Alexander/Merit Order since he already got two War Merit Awards.
Here are the links where we can see both ribbons.
http://www.medals.lava.pl/yu/yu2.htm
http://www.medals.lava.pl/bg/bg12.htm
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