Order of Merit

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The Order of Merit is a British and Commonwealth Order bestowed by the Monarch. It was established in 1902 by King Edward VII (based on the Prussian Pour le Mérite) as a reward for distinguished service in the armed forces, science, art, literature, or for the promotion of culture. The rarer military awards are distinguished from the civil by having a pair of crossed swords behind the central medallion. Appointments to the Order are in the Sovereign's personal gift and ministerial advice is not required. The Order of Merit is a very high honour, ranking immediately below Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath - even though it confers no title.

Image:Order of Merit UK ribbon.png
Ribbon of Order of Merit

The Order is limited to the Sovereign and twenty-four members, but additional foreigners may be added as "honorary members." From the beginning the Order was open to women; Florence Nightingale was the first woman to receive the Order, in 1907. The Order confers no knighthood or other status, but recipients of this single-class Order are entitled to use the post-nominal letters OM. The badge has the appearance of a red cross surmounted by a golden crown. The ribbon is red and blue.

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[edit] Current members

[edit] References

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

de:Order of Merit

es:Orden de Mérito del Reino Unido fr:Ordre du Mérite (Royaume-Uni) it:Ordine al Merito del Regno Unito nl:Order of Merit (Verenigd Koninkrijk) ja:メリット勲章 no:Order of Merit pt:Order of Merit ru:За заслуги (орден, Великобритания) fi:Ansioritarikunta sv:Order of Merit zh:功績勳章

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