Order of Civil and Military Merit of Adolph of Nassau | |
Awarded By: | Grand Duke of Luxembourg |
Type: | Order of merit with eight grades |
Motto: | VIRTUTE |
For: | Meritorious service to the Grand Duke and Luxembourg |
Status: | Currently constituted |
Head Title: | Grand Master |
Head: | Grand Duke Henri of Luxembourg |
Head2 Title: | Chancellor |
Head2: | Henri Ahlborn |
Grades: | Grand Cross, Grand Officer, Commander of the Crown, Commander/Cross of Honour for Ladies, Officer of the Crown, Officer, Knight of the Crown, Knight |
Established: | 8 May 1858 1858–1866 (Duchy of Nassau) 1890–present (Luxembourg) |
Higher: | Order of the Gold Lion of the House of Nassau |
Lower: | Order of the Oak Crown |
The Order of Civil and Military Merit of Adolph of Nassau (French: Ordre de Mérite civil et militaire d’Adolphe de Nassau) is an order of merit of the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg for meritorious service to the Grand Duke, the Grand-Ducal House and Luxembourg.[1] It was founded in 1858 as a chivalric order of the Duchy of Nassau by Adolphe of Nassau in honor of his namesake and ancestor, Adolf, Count of Nassau, the only member of the House of Nassau to have been Roman King of Germany. After the Duchy of Nassau was annexed by Prussia in 1866 and Adolphe became Grand Duke of Luxembourg in 1890, he revived the order as an order of merit.[1]
The order consists of eight grades, with two crosses and three medals attached to the order:
Members of the order belong to either the Civil or the Military Division. The Grand Duke of Luxembourg is the Grand Master of the order.
Attached to the order are the following crosses and medals of merit:
The medals and crosses do not confer membership in the order upon the recipient.
Foreigners may also be made members of the order, and it is common as a diplomatic award. The order was used as well in World War II to reward a handful of Allied officers who had helped liberate Luxembourg from the rule of Nazi Germany. Because of the small size of Luxembourg, and its minor role as a campaign theater, membership of the order was not awarded as frequently as other major World War II honours, such as the Croix de Guerre.
"Honorary distinctions of the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg" :
"The Order of Civil and Military Merit of Adolph of Nassau recognises, in addition to foreign heads of state, individuals for their meritorious service to the Grand Duke, the Grand-Ducal House and Luxembourg, as well as for their outstanding loyalty to the Grand Duke or his House. The order also rewards those who have excelled in the arts and sciences, as it does residents of Luxembourg or foreign nationals as a sign of benevolence.
"All the grades of the Order of Civil and Military Merit of Adolph of Nassau are bestowed by a decree signed by the Grand Duke and countersigned by the chancellor of the order. When the order is conferred on foreign nationals, the consent of the foreign government must be sought."
By statute of the order, princes and princesses of the Grand-Ducal House of Luxembourg are Grand Crosses of the order by birth, but they don't wear the order's decoration until they are 18 years old.