Pour le Mérite
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The Order Pour le Mérite, known informally as the Blue Max, was Prussia's highest military order until the end of World War I.
Related Topics:
Prussia - Order - World War I
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The award was first founded in 1740, named in French, the language of the royal court, for merit. Until 1810 the award was both a civilian and military honor. In January of that year, Prussian King Friedrich Wilhelm III decreed that the award could only be presented to serving military personnel.
Related Topics:
1740 - French - 1810 - King - Friedrich Wilhelm III
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In 1842, King Friedrich Wilhelm IV founded the so-called peace class of the award, the Pour le Mérite für Wissenschaften und Künste ("Order Pour le Mérite for Science and Arts"), with the three sections humanities, natural science and fine arts. One of the most famous artists who received the peace class of Pour le Mérite was Käthe Kollwitz (she was deprived of it later by the Nazis).
Related Topics:
1842 - King - Friedrich Wilhelm IV - Humanities - Natural science - Fine arts - Käthe Kollwitz - Nazi
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In 1866 a special military Grand Cross class of the award was established.
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It was during World War I that the award gained international fame. Although it could be awarded to any military officer, its most famous recipients were the pilots of the German air arm, whose exploits were celebrated in wartime propaganda. In the aerial war a fighter pilot was initially entitled to the award upon downing eight enemy aircraft. Ace Max Immelmann was the first airman to receive the award, after which it became known among his fellow pilots, on account of its color and its recipient, as the Blue Max — in German, Blauer Max).
Related Topics:
World War I - Propaganda - Fighter - Ace - Max Immelmann
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The number of aircraft downed needed to win the award continued to increase during the war; eventually it became a requirement to down sixteen (16) enemy airplanes.
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Recipients of the Blue Max were required to wear the badge, which was a blue Maltese Cross with eagles between the arms, and the royal cipher and the words "Pour le Mérite" on the cross, whenever in uniform.
Related Topics:
Maltese Cross - Eagle - Cipher
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Notable recipients included Manfred von Richthofen, better known as the "Red Baron", Hermann Göring, who flew with the Red Baron and later to become one of the most senior leaders of the Third Reich, Erwin Rommel, the famed "Desert Fox" of WWII, and Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck, who led German forces in the guerrilla campaign in German East Africa. The last living holder of the Pour le Mérite was novelist Ernst Jünger who died in 1998 and who, at the age of 23, was the youngest ever recipient as well.
Related Topics:
Manfred von Richthofen - Hermann Göring - Third Reich - Erwin Rommel - WWII - Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck - Novelist - Ernst Jünger - 1998
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Although many of its most famous recipients were junior officers, especially pilots, more than a third of all awards went to general officers and admirals. Junior officers (army captains and lieutenants and their navy equivalents) accounted for only about 25% of all awards. Senior officer awards tended to be more for outstanding leadership in combat than for individual acts of bravery.
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The award was abolished along with Kaiser Wilhelm II's abdication on 9 November 1918.
Related Topics:
Kaiser - Wilhelm II - 9 November - 1918
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In 1952, the President of West Germany, Theodor Heuss, revived the peace class of the order as an autonomous organization under the protection of the German President (although it is not a state order like the Bundesverdienstkreuz).
Related Topics:
1952 - President - West Germany - Theodor Heuss - Bundesverdienstkreuz
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