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Order of the Oak Crown

The Order of the Oak Crown is an order of the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg.

History
The Order of the Oak Crown was established in 1841 by Grand Duke William II, who was also King of the Netherlands. At that time, the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg and the Kingdom of the Netherlands were in personal union in which both nations shared the same person as their respective head of state, though remaining as two distinct and independent nations. Although the order was legally a Luxembourgish honour, it was often used by William II and his successor, King-Grand Duke William III, as a house order of the Nassau dynasty to reward Dutch subjects, beyond the control of the Dutch government. William II conferred membership of the order on fewer than 30 recipients. His successor, William III, liked the ability to confer membership of this order at his sole discretion, and awarded 300 decorations on the day of his investiture alone. In the following years, hundreds of additional awards of the order were made. Indeed, there were so many recipients in the Kingdom of the Netherlands itself that the order was widely (and falsely) regarded as a Dutch honour. Membership of the Order of the Oak Crown ceased to be awarded to Dutch subjects in 1890, when Queen Wilhelmina, as the only remaining member of the House of Orange-Nassau, succeeded her father as new Queen of the Netherlands. Since the Erneuter Erbverein, the Salic Law-based house-treaty between the two branches of the House of Nassau (the junior branch of Orange-Nassau and the senior branch of Nassau-Weilburg (present-day Luxembourg-Nassau)), did not allow women to succeed to the throne of Luxembourg as long as male heirs of the House of Nassau (in both branches) existed, the throne of Luxembourg went to a German relative of the new Dutch queen, also her maternal great-uncle Adolphe, Duke of Nassau, who became Grand Duke of Luxembourg at age 73. The Order of the Oak Crown remained a solely Luxembourgish honour; subsequently, the Netherlands established the Order of Orange-Nassau instead. Since the accession of Grand Duke Adolphe, the order has been primarily used as an award for Luxembourgish citizens, although membership has occasionally been conferred on foreigners, mainly on members of foreign royal families or on eminent foreigners with Luxembourgish ancestors. The Grand Duke of Luxembourg is the Grand Master of the order. == Grades and insignia ==
Grades and insignia
Origin After the abdication of King-Grand Duke William I in 1841, his successor William II granted Luxembourg a written anti-liberal constitution (called the Charter) in order to strengthen his authority over the country. At the same occasion, he established the Order of the Oak Crown with the idea to be able to reward loyal supporters of his regime in liberal-minded Luxembourg. The badge, the ribbon, and the (then) four-class hierarchy of the order were inspired by the Russian Order of St. George. This was probably due to the fact that William II was married to a daughter of Emperor Paul I of Russia, and that he had received the Order of St. George for his meritorious command in the Battle of Waterloo. Grades Nowadays, the order consists of five grades: • Grand Cross – wears the badge on a sash on the right shoulder, and the plaque on the left chest; • Grand Officer (as of 1858) – wears the badge on a necklet, and the plaque on the left chest; • Commander – wears the badge on a necklet; • Officer (as of 1858) – wears the badge on a chest ribbon with rosette on the left chest; • Knight – wears the badge on a chest ribbon on the left chest; plus gilt, silver and bronze medals, who wear the medal on a chest ribbon on the left chest. Insignia • The badge of the order is a gilt cross pattée, enamelled in white; the Officer class has a green enamelled oak wreath between the arms of the cross. The central disc bears the crowned monogram "W" (for William) on a green enamel background. • The plaque of the order is (for Grand Cross) an eight-pointed faceted silver star, or (for Grand Officer) a faceted silver Maltese Cross. The central disc bears the crowned monogram "W" (for William) on a green enamel background, surrounded by a red enamel ring with the motto Je Maintiendrai ("I Will Maintain", now the national motto of the Netherlands), in turn surrounded by a green enamelled oak wreath. • The medal of the order is in an octagonal shape, with the motif of the badge of the Order without enamel on the obverse, and an oak wreath without enamel on the reverse. • The ribbon of the order is yellow-orange moiré with three dark green stripes. The colors are said to be inspired by the oak forests and the fields of rue of the Luxembourg countryside. == Recipients ==
Recipients
;Grand Crosses • Shinzo AbeAlexander, Prince of OrangeAlexis, Prince of Bentheim and SteinfurtAnne, Princess RoyalBeatrix of the NetherlandsJoseph BechPrince Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach (1792–1862)Xavier BettelOtto von BismarckAníbal Cavaco SilvaCharles XVCharles Augustus, Hereditary Grand Duke of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach (1844–1894)Charles III of the United Kingdom • Charlotte, Grand Duchess of LuxembourgPrincess Christina of the NetherlandsWinston ChurchillFrancesco CossigaCharles de BroquevilleThéophile de LantsheereLaurentius Nicolaas DeckersRudolf von DelbrückÉdouard DescampsAugustin Dumon-DumortierDwight D. EisenhowerGiustino Fortunato (1777–1862)Prince Frederick of Prussia (1794–1863)Hans GlobkeGuillaume V, Grand Duke of LuxembourgCamille GuttDennis HastertHenri, Grand Duke of LuxembourgPrince Henry of the Netherlands (1820–1879)Jean, Grand Duke of LuxembourgJos van KemenadeThanat KhomanThanom KittikachornMarie-Pierre KœnigFrits Korthals AltesAuguste, Baron LambermontEdmond LeburtonPhilippe Leclerc de HauteclocqueCharles de Limburg StirumLudwig Wilhelm, Prince of Bentheim and SteinfurtJoseph LunsSicco MansholtMarcellin MarbotPrincess Margriet of the NetherlandsJaime de MarichalarWilfried MartensDésiré-Joseph MercierJoannes Josephus van MulkenNursultan NazarbayevJean-Baptiste NothombOscar IIPieter OudMaurice de PatoulPels RijckenJan Jacob RochussenJosef van SchaikEmil von SchlitzPoul SchlüterWillem ScholtenEmmanuel ServaisWalter Bedell SmithHeinrich von StephanDirk StikkerLudwig Freiherr von und zu der Tann-RathsamhausenIñaki UrdangarinAchille Van AckerVictor van Strydonck de BurkelPieter van VollenhovenFrans WeisglasWilhelmina of the NetherlandsWillem-Alexander of the NetherlandsWilliam, Prince of WiedJohan WitteveenAugust zu Eulenburg ;Grand Officers • Jozias van AartsenFrançois AltwiesHubert BiermansTheo BotHans van den BroekPiet BukmanLéon DelacroixJean HengenClarence R. HuebnerDolf JoekesHenk KampMarga KlompéRudolf de KorteHenk KorthalsErnest KringsPierre LardinoisAuguste LavalAstrid LullingLunsford E. OliverJohan RemkesCarl RommeBauke RoolvinkOnno RudingJob de RuiterNorbert SchmelzerÉmile SpellerKees StafEdzo ToxopeusAnne VondelingBerend-Jan van Voorst tot Voorst ;Commanders • Victor AbensWillem AlbardaMarie-Claude BeaudLaurens Jan BrinkhorstBill Davidson (businessman)Wim DeetmanAnthony van der EbJean FavierRudi FuchsLeendert GinjaarEmile HaagAloyse HentgenHarold HindeJan KohoutCornelis KrusemanRené van der LindenPeter MaurerLéon MetzLiz MohnJan Willem Louis van OordtJean-Baptiste PironMikhail Mikhailovich PleshkovHarry Alexander SmithGerard VeringaJoris VoorhoeveJoseph Weyland ;Officers • Father Jean BernardHugo GernsbackJean-Marie HalsdorfJoseph HollmanOscar KochNicolae Petrescu-ComnenSalomon VerveerHenk VonhoffTjerk WesterterpPiet van Zeil ;Knights • Henry AttwellJules MerschDaniel NordlanderAat van RhijnJean SoupertGábor Harakály ;Gold/Gilt Medal ;Silver Medal ;Bronze Medal ;Ridders (Obsolete) • Christoffel BisschopJan Willem van BorselenArie Johannes Lamme ;Unknown Class • Clare Hibbs ArmstrongAlphonse BernsJohn E. DoliboisRémy EiffesPeter C. Hains IIIFloris Adriaan van HallBerend HeringaCourtney HodgesHenry J. LeirPerle MestaPierre NottingThéodore PescatoreNico RiesSamuel SarphatiNicolaas ScheltemaOtto SchilyÉmile ServaisThaksin ShinawatraAlbertus Willem SijthoffJan Szembek (diplomat)Robert A. Mandell File:Order of the Oak Crown 2.png|Grand Cross set of the order. File:Order of the Oak Crown 3.png|The Grand Cross star and sash. File:Order of the Oak Crown 7.png|The star of the order. File:Aug Dumon-Dumortier.jpg|Augustine Dumon-Dumortier wearing the Grand Cross of the order back when the Grand Cross star resembled the Grand Officer of today. File:Order of the Oak Crown 8.png|Close-up of the Grand Cross badge. File:Order of the Oak Crown 4.png|Grand Cross set. File:Order of the Oak Crown 1.png|The Grand Cross sash, badge and star of the order. File:Order of the Oak Crown 6.png|Grand Cross. File:Order of the Oak Crown 5.png|Grand Cross. File:Order of the Oak Crown grand cross badge (Luxembourg 1970) - Tallinn Museum of Orders.jpg|Grand Cross badge showing the royal monogram of William II. File:Order of the Oak Crown grand cross star (Luxembourg 1970) - Tallinn Museum of Orders.jpg|Close-up of the Grand Cross star. File:Luxembourg, Ordre de la Couronne de Chêne - Grand Croix (2).jpg|Grand Cross set from the early 20th Century File:Luxemburgse ridderorde (Orde van de Eikenkroon), ontvangen door Willem Drees, NG-2003-48.jpg|The Grand Cross set of Dutch Prime Minister Willem Drees File:Order of the Oak Crown 11.png|Grand Cross set by Arthus Bertrand. == References ==
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