Looking at the ribbon bar, the owner was obviously a combatant. If it is not a foreign award, I'm inclined to believe this might be the Baden Silver Merit Medal.
If so, I'm not sure why the Oldenburg War Merit Cross ribbon is so much higher (2nd from the left). From what I've learned, the mixing of older imperial awards and the third reich awards was often inconsistent.
Perhaps someone with more knowledge on the order of precendence could chime in?
I'm inclined to believe this might be the Baden Silver Merit Medal.
That one had a very different ribbon. I think JensF. was right and it is Baden's "Kreuz für freiwillige Krankenhilfe" ribbon, still used for the named Spanish Civil War medal.
id say Spanish for sure! i bet as has been said its a "it will do cos its close enough" Spanish condor legion award before the tailer got the correct ribbon!!lovely bar though!!
That one had a very different ribbon. I think JensF. was right and it is Baden's "Kreuz für freiwillige Krankenhilfe" ribbon, still used for the named Spanish Civil War medal.
I had the colors reversed on the ribbon. It is not the Baden Silver Merit Medal.
My opinion is that a career member of the army would not wear his decorations incorrectly and would not settle for the last ribbon on his ribbon bar to be the wrong color pattern. Having said that, the ribbon bar may have been made incorrectly and the incorrect bar was set aside turning up in collections years later.
I personally am leaning toward JensF suggestion of Baden's "Kreuz für freiwillige Krankenhilfe" ribbon.
The ribbon bar is a "resume" of the soldier's career. It is interesting to try to figure out what his career was like.
Comment