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Medal bars- good or bad
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Well, since I'm ignorant about just about everything associated with these medals , I'll just jump right in and say if I had unlimited funds, I'd buy both of these bars. Now I'm sure the experts will jump in and tell us all why I'm as ignorant as I believe I am, but they sure look nice to me . Since I don't have unlimited funds, I wouldn't touch either one because I just don't know enough to make an educated decision. The only thing I noticed was the EK2s seem to be done in the original style with the stitching around the upper arm to keep it from swinging around all the time.
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Originally posted by Jim Woods View PostThe problem I have withe the Austrian bar is the lack of trifol ribbons and a German WWI Iron Cross in the dominate position. To the Austrians the Iron Cross was a foreign award and would be last here. But???????????????????
Well, this bar should be an austrian officers bar post-19138 when austria became part of the 3rd Reich - that explains the german mounting and the IC2 on 1st position. a lot of bars sold by this special seller via ebay are and were questionable. but to be honest i would buy this one. it looks the way it should be.
haynau
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I have to agree with Haynau. These bars have far more going for them than not. The ribbons, backs, pins, thread tacking on the back cloth and medals - they all speak authentic. Given the Austrian and Hungarian service medals there, a late 30s or later bar for certain, even if all Imperial.
In my opinion, those are beauties Don. Steve
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They are beautiful, but I have two questions:
1. Do I count three Sls altogether in #1?
and
2. is that a tarnished silver FA medal or a bronze?
RE: #2 would possibly be tracable in the OA or the Diplomatic Gotha? The Japanese medal I know nothing about..is that commonly awarded as a merit medal?
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maybe someone should put the bar with the rising sun 8th class in the japanese section of the WAF. as far as i know the experts can date the medal from the kanji (inscription) on the backside of the medal. if it turns out to be a post 1945-style we know the bar is a put-together.
regards
haynau
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I don't know...I don't know....I don't...
The more I look at these the more ambivalent I am.
As the others above said they show great construction, patina etc. etc..
The Austrian one appears awesome. However, that's what frightens me a little. This guy, with no LS medals and a post 1938 medal order was probably the bravest man i have ever seen as a jr. officer: Three SLs AND a large silver bravery medal-yet no LS medals means war time enlistee. I mean if I saw a contemporary (mid 1940s) US medal bar with a DFC and 3 bronze stars I would think long and hard about it.
The bottom one is really unusual-not totally impossible, but really, really unusual and that's worrying. I mean a Bronze FA for Africa-or even more unlikely-as a civil servant/1914 mariner? No clasp on the colonial medal implies navy or merchant marine (which is what i was thinking...but how would he get a sacred treasure 8th-embassy staff? chauffer? merchant marine/ navy training in the 1920s/early 1930s? How did he ever get the Austrian merit cross-?The AEZ implies either a civil servant with 15 years + time in, a really unusual event OR an NCO with @ 15 years time in (+)...but no 15 year LS cross and a bronze FAM???
However, I am certain I have seen it before. Indeed, wasn't there a ribbon bar query not too long ago about a similar ribbon bar?
I think this is one to post for review by the doyons at the gmic. forum. It's waaaaay beyond me.
I am at the point now where almost ANY foreign decoration at the end of a bar is a "look really close at this thing" signal. See here-look at the other items & history for an education.
http://cgi.ebay.de/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?...m=330191274902
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