Order of the White Eagle (Russian Empire) explained

Imperial Order of the White Eagle
Орден Белого Орла
Awarded By: Head of the House of Romanov
Type:Dynastic Order
Motto:Pro Fide, Rege et Lege
For Faith, The King and The Law
Status:Rarely constituted
Head Title:Sovereign
Head:None
Grades:Knight
Date:
1831 – 1918 (National Order)
1918 - Present (House Order)
House:House of Romanov
Religion:Russian Orthodox
Higher:Imperial Order of St. Prince Alexander Nevsky
Lower:Imperial Military Order of St. George

The Imperial Order of the White Eagle (Russian: О́рден Бе́лого Орла́) was an Imperial Russian Order based on the Polish honor. Emperor Nicholas I of Russia established the award in 1831 as the Imperial and Royal Order of the White Eagle. A recipient of the Order was granted the title Knight of the Imperial (and Royal) Order of the White Eagle.

Background

The "white eagle" has been associated with Poland even prior to statehood; first appearing on the Polish Coat of Arms in the 13th century.[1] The original Order of the White Eagle (Polish: Order Orła Białego) was reputedly established by King Władysław I in 1325. There is no evidence of it being awarded, however, until 1705 under Augustus II the Strong, King of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.[2]

After the Third Partition of Poland in 1795, the Order of the White Eagle briefly disappeared along with the Polish monarchy. After his death in 1798, Empress Alexandra wore the Collar of the Grand Master of the Order at Nicholas’s coronation as King of Poland.[3] The order was resurrected in 1807 by Napoleon I in his short-lived Duchy of Warsaw.

In 1815, the Congress of Vienna divided the historically Polish lands among Prussia, the Austrian Empire and the Russian Empire. The majority of the territory was renamed the Kingdom of Poland and was to be an autonomous part of the Russian Empire.

The Order of the White Eagle is mentioned as belonging to the Kingdom of Poland in its constitution of 1815:

During the years immediately following the Congress of Vienna, the badge and cross of the Order were awarded with the same Polish insignia, but the majority of the recipients were Russians or members of the Austrian Empire.

After Russian troops put down the Polish uprising of 1830-31, Nicholas I stripped the autonomy from the Kingdom of Poland and adopted all Polish orders of merit.[4]

Order within the Russian Empire

The Order of the White Eagle was officially "annexed" by Nicholas I on 17 November 1831 and became part of the Russian Imperial honors system. Among the first recipients of the Imperial Order of the White Eagle were Ivan Paskevich and Pyotr Petrovich Palen, recognised for their part in suppressing the Polish uprising.

The new design featured significant alterations: the badge was now of gold and red enamel; on the front, the original red maltese cross and white eagle were reduced in size and superimposed over the double-headed eagle of the Russian Empire. The back of the badge featured the original Polish badge design, superimposed over the Russian imperial eagle. The star now featured the Russian royal crown.

On 25 January 1832, a blue ribbon and sash were introduced.

The Order of the White Eagle was given a high status in the hierarchy of distinction, ranked only behind the Order of Saint Andrew, the Order of Saint Catherine (for women only) and the Order of Saint Alexander Nevsky. As the top three awards were named after Russian Orthodox saints, the Order of the White Eagle was the preferred award to bestow upon non-Christians. It granted hereditary nobility.

Recipients

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The White Eagle. Jan Rękawek. Polish Academic Information Center. University of Buffalo. 5 February 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20161010162805/http://info-poland.buffalo.edu/classroom/eagle.html. 10 October 2016. dead.
  2. Book: A cyclopedia of costume, or, dictionary of dress, including notices of contemporaneous fashions on the continent: a general chronological history of the costumes of the principal countries of Europe . James Robinson Planché . Chatto and Windus . 1879. 372. 9781179956510.
  3. Web site: https://web.archive.org/web/20100103115720/http://www.polishnobles.com/eagle.html . 3 January 2010. Order of the White Eagle. Rafal Heydel-Mankoo . PolishNobles.com. 6 February 2015.
  4. Web site: http://www.rusempire.ru/rossijskaya-imperiya/nagrady-rossijskoj-imperii/161-imperatorskij-i-tsarskij-orden-belogo-orla.html . ru:Императорский и Царский Орден Белого Орла. Imperial and Royal Order of the White Eagle. 5 February 2015. ru.