The purpose of this thread will be to inform collectors about the basic characteristics of Godet Style Pour le Merites and to create a repository of these types of PlMs for readers to view and study.
The focus will be on 1914-1945 pieces. In addition to the straight Godet wartime and post-war pieces, it will also include ‘Godet-type’ pieces that are recognized as likely being made from Godet dies. These include Meybauer, Hemmerle and Schickle PlMs.
I want to be respectful of pictures that have been sent to me before from many of you and will credit all of you with your pics that I post to the extent that I know them. I will post nothing that I have not been given permission to use if the owner is known. I will correct any pics that do not give proper credit. I also hope collectors on this forum will post their Godet type PlMs here even if they have been posted in older threads. The idea is to gather them here for a single point of study.
My research on the firm of Godet reveals the following. Godet’s firm began under Jean Godet in 1761 and lasted for 5 generations ending with the end of World War II. The generations were as follows:
Jean Godet (1732-1796)
Jean Jaques Godet (1770-1847)
Jean Frédéric Godet (1798-1865)
Jean Pierre Godet (1823-1880)
Eugene Godet (1866-1947)
Its trade name varied over the years from GODET (1761-1860), GODET & SOHN (1860-1886), GEBR. GODET & Co. (1886-1911) or GODET & Co, and for a brief time EUGENE GODET & SOHN (1924-1926), and back to GODET (1926-1945?)
I will begin by covering the basic characteristics of the Godet-style PlMs produced from the 1914-1945 period.
The Pie-Shaped Wedge. The first and most obvious feature is the ‘pie-shaped’ wedge at the top of the cross that held the ribbon suspension ring. Understanding this one feature could save people thousands on fakes when they see a ‘baroque’ ‘Wagner’-style loop on a PlM and then marked JguS or some such. It was not done. Yet you see it all the time on Spanish and Rothe fakes on eBay.
The Crown and F. The Crown is very detailed, unlike Wagner crowns. It has distinct ‘gaps’ as the spars form ‘spades as they move upward from the band. On Silver-gilt (but not some gold) examples, the dies have a very distinct ‘gap’ on the right side of the crown. This right-side gap is found on variants and post-WWI pieces as well. The ‘F’ extends past the right base of the crown as well. The crown is almost always ‘chased’ by the jeweler to enhance it with engraving marks on the details.
Scored Letters. ‘Scored’ or engraved ‘chase’ marks along the details of the letters by a jeweler marks most all Godet pieces. This ‘chasing’ provides very handsome detail unlike all the other PlM styles.
Narrowed Center. Godet crosses have a very thin ‘waist,’ measuring only about 1mm. This makes faking them very difficult, as the dies and enamel work needed to duplicate are not often found. This narrow center is another key thing to look for in a Godet.
Cockaded, Open Beak Eagles. The eagles have a distinctive ‘flat top’ or ‘cockade’ on the heads. Their beaks are open. True PlMs have the eagles facing the center of the cross, no matter where positioned, rather than mounted in clockwise fashion as seen on some fakes. Godet eagles have prominent feet and wedge-shaped legs rather than the rounded ‘drum stick’ shaped legs like on the Wagner style crosses. The tail feathers are formed by five feathers—two sets parallel and a bottom feather.
The items described above are shown below on this beautiful silver-gilt wartime piece courtesy of association member Andreas (www.medalnet.net) who graciously has allowed me to use his pics. A study of these characteristics will allow one to spot a Godet style almost immediately and turn away a fake Godet rather quickly.
I will be posting more pics and I welcome all members to post their Godet pieces here, even if posted in old threads. More to come on the Meybauer PlM and variants. Thanks, Steve
The focus will be on 1914-1945 pieces. In addition to the straight Godet wartime and post-war pieces, it will also include ‘Godet-type’ pieces that are recognized as likely being made from Godet dies. These include Meybauer, Hemmerle and Schickle PlMs.
I want to be respectful of pictures that have been sent to me before from many of you and will credit all of you with your pics that I post to the extent that I know them. I will post nothing that I have not been given permission to use if the owner is known. I will correct any pics that do not give proper credit. I also hope collectors on this forum will post their Godet type PlMs here even if they have been posted in older threads. The idea is to gather them here for a single point of study.
My research on the firm of Godet reveals the following. Godet’s firm began under Jean Godet in 1761 and lasted for 5 generations ending with the end of World War II. The generations were as follows:
Jean Godet (1732-1796)
Jean Jaques Godet (1770-1847)
Jean Frédéric Godet (1798-1865)
Jean Pierre Godet (1823-1880)
Eugene Godet (1866-1947)
Its trade name varied over the years from GODET (1761-1860), GODET & SOHN (1860-1886), GEBR. GODET & Co. (1886-1911) or GODET & Co, and for a brief time EUGENE GODET & SOHN (1924-1926), and back to GODET (1926-1945?)
I will begin by covering the basic characteristics of the Godet-style PlMs produced from the 1914-1945 period.
The Pie-Shaped Wedge. The first and most obvious feature is the ‘pie-shaped’ wedge at the top of the cross that held the ribbon suspension ring. Understanding this one feature could save people thousands on fakes when they see a ‘baroque’ ‘Wagner’-style loop on a PlM and then marked JguS or some such. It was not done. Yet you see it all the time on Spanish and Rothe fakes on eBay.
The Crown and F. The Crown is very detailed, unlike Wagner crowns. It has distinct ‘gaps’ as the spars form ‘spades as they move upward from the band. On Silver-gilt (but not some gold) examples, the dies have a very distinct ‘gap’ on the right side of the crown. This right-side gap is found on variants and post-WWI pieces as well. The ‘F’ extends past the right base of the crown as well. The crown is almost always ‘chased’ by the jeweler to enhance it with engraving marks on the details.
Scored Letters. ‘Scored’ or engraved ‘chase’ marks along the details of the letters by a jeweler marks most all Godet pieces. This ‘chasing’ provides very handsome detail unlike all the other PlM styles.
Narrowed Center. Godet crosses have a very thin ‘waist,’ measuring only about 1mm. This makes faking them very difficult, as the dies and enamel work needed to duplicate are not often found. This narrow center is another key thing to look for in a Godet.
Cockaded, Open Beak Eagles. The eagles have a distinctive ‘flat top’ or ‘cockade’ on the heads. Their beaks are open. True PlMs have the eagles facing the center of the cross, no matter where positioned, rather than mounted in clockwise fashion as seen on some fakes. Godet eagles have prominent feet and wedge-shaped legs rather than the rounded ‘drum stick’ shaped legs like on the Wagner style crosses. The tail feathers are formed by five feathers—two sets parallel and a bottom feather.
The items described above are shown below on this beautiful silver-gilt wartime piece courtesy of association member Andreas (www.medalnet.net) who graciously has allowed me to use his pics. A study of these characteristics will allow one to spot a Godet style almost immediately and turn away a fake Godet rather quickly.
I will be posting more pics and I welcome all members to post their Godet pieces here, even if posted in old threads. More to come on the Meybauer PlM and variants. Thanks, Steve
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