Civic Decoration Explained

Civic Decoration (Belgium)
Presenter: Kingdom of Belgium
Type:Decoration (cross and medal)
Eligibility:Belgian civilians
Awarded For:Meritorious, long service or exemplary behaviour or act
Status:Currently awarded
Established:21 July 1867
Higher:Order of Leopold II

The Civic Decoration (French: Décoration Civique|, Dutch; Flemish: Burgerlijke Ereteken|) is a civilian decoration of the Kingdom of Belgium. It was first established by royal decree on 21 July 1867 to reward exceptional acts of bravery, devotion or humanity.[1] A further royal decree of 15 January 1885 extended the award to state civil servants for long service by a mere change of ribbon.[2] The award statute was once again amended by royal decree in 1902 to include long service in the Civic Guard and firefighters, each with its distinctive ribbon.[3]

Two wartime variants were created to reward civilians who distinguished themselves during the World Wars. The Civic Decoration 1914–1915 (later dated 1918) was created on 18 May 1915 to reward civilians and non-combatants who served their country with distinction during World War I.[4] A similar Decoration was also established for World War II on 21 July 1944 by the Belgian government in exile.[5]

The Civic Decoration, previously solely awarded by Royal Decree, has been awarded directly by regions and communities since the 1993 federalisation of Belgium.

Award statute

Classes

The Civic Decoration is awarded in two categories:[1]

These classes are common to all the types of the Civic Decoration.

Award criteria

The Civic Decoration for long and distinguished service in the administration and firefighters is awarded:[2]

The Civic Medal Third Class (bronze), which was principally intended for award to indigenous personnel in the colonies, is no longer awarded.

The Decoration for exceptional acts of bravery, devotion or humanity is awarded on a case-by-case basis. The Civic Cross First Class for exceptional acts of bravery, devotion or humanity is only awarded posthumously.[1]

Award description

The badge of the Civic Cross is a white enamelled maltese cross with the central medallion bearing the monogram of King Leopold I[1] or of King Albert I (for the 1914–1918 Cross) on the obverse and reverse. Between the arms of the Cross are:

The cross 1st class is gilt, the second class is silver.

The Medal is vaguely octagonal and looks like a closed florian cross, it bears the relief image of the Civic Cross.[1] The medal for 1914–1918 is topped with crossed swords,[4] the medal for 1940–1945 is topped with crossed flaming torches.[5] The medal first class is gold, the second class is silver and the third class is bronze.[1]

The ribbons of the Civic Decoration and Medal differ with the type of award:

The ribbons of the war time awards are adorned with a metal clasp bearing 1914–1918 or 1940–1945.[4] [5]

Notable recipients (partial lists)

Civic Cross 1st class

Civic Cross 2nd class

Civic Medal 1st class

1914–1918 Civic Cross 1st class

1914–1918 Civic Cross 2nd class

1940–1945 Civic Cross 1st class

See also

Other sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Belgian government . Royal Decree of 21 July 1867 creating the Civic Decoration . Belgian Government . 1867-07-21 .
  2. Web site: Belgian government . Royal Decree of 15 January 1885 extending the Civic Decoration to the Civil Functions of the State Administration . Belgian Government . 1885-01-15 .
  3. Web site: Belgian government . Royal Decree of 1902 extending the Civic Decoration to the Civic Guard and firefighters . Belgian Government . 1902 .
  4. Web site: Belgian government . Royal Decree of 18 May 1915 creating the Civic Decoration 1914–1915 . Belgian Government . 1915-05-18 .
  5. Web site: Belgian government . Decree of 21 July 1944 creating the Civic Decoration 1940–1945 . Belgian Government . 1944-07-21 .
  6. Web site: ARS MORIENDI . Recipients of the Civic Decoration compiled from the ARS MORIENDI website . ARS MORIENDI . 2012-07-06 . French . 2012-09-14 . 2011-09-06 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110906163645/http://www.ars-moriendi.be/index%20FR.htm . dead .