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Medal

A medal or medallion is a small portable artistic object, a thin disc, normally of metal, carrying a design, usually on both sides. They typically have a commemorative purpose of some kind, and many are presented as awards. They may be intended to be worn, suspended from clothing or jewellery in some way, although this has not always been the case. They may be struck like a coin by dies or die-cast in a mould.

Obverse of medal distributed by Cecilia Gonzaga's family to political allies, a common practice in Renaissance Europe. Designed by Pisanello in 1448.
Reverse of the same medal, this copy with a suspension hole added later (inside a crescent moon in the design).
Medal depicting Herbert C. Hoover by Devreese Godefroi

A medal may be awarded to a person or organisation as a form of recognition for sporting, military, scientific, cultural, academic, or various other achievements. Military awards and decorations are more precise terms for certain types of state decoration. Medals may also be created for sale to commemorate particular individuals or events, or as works of artistic expression in their own right. In the past, medals commissioned for an individual, typically with their portrait, were often used as a form of diplomatic or personal gift, with no sense of being an award for the conduct of the recipient.

An artist who creates medals or medallions is called a "medalist". Medals have long been popular collectible items, and in numismatics form a class called either exonumia or militaria.

In the proper use of the term, medallions are larger, starting at perhaps four inches across, and are, as such, usually too large to be worn very comfortably, though in colloquial use, "medallion" is often used to refer to a medal used as the pendant of a necklace (as in the medallion man fashion style of the 1960s and 1970s), or for other types of medals. Medallions may also be called "table medals" because they are too large to be worn and can only be displayed on a wall, table top, desk, or cabinet.

Main types

 
Various prize medals with obverse designs, suspension rings and ribbons typical of medals intended to be draped over the head and hung from the neck
 
Plaquette by Peter Flötner, Vanitas, 1535–1540, gilt bronze. Created purely as an art object for a collector's market.

Numismatists divide medals into at least seven classes:

  • Awards: awarded to a person or organization as a form of recognition for sporting, military, scientific, cultural, academic, or various other achievements. Military awards and decorations are more precise terms for certain types of state decoration. Military decorations are often in shapes such as crosses or stars, but are still loosely called "medals", as in the star-shaped American Medal of Honor.
  • Commemoratives: created for sale to commemorate particular individuals or events, or as works of medallic art in their own right.
  • Souvenirs: similar to a commemorative, but more focused on a place or event like state fairs, expositions, museums, historic sites, etc., and frequently found for sale within their respective souvenir shops.
  • Religious: devotional medals may be worn for religious reasons.
  • Portraits: produced to immortalize a person with their portrait; European portrait medallions sometimes bear the Latin word aetatis ("of his age") to describe the depicted person's age at the time of the portrait.
  • Artistic: made purely as an art object. Plaquettes are often of this type.
  • Society Medals: made for societies used as a badge or token of membership.

Etymology

First attested in English in 1578, the word medal is derived from the Middle French médaille, itself from Italian medaglia, and ultimately from the post-classical Latin medalia, meaning a coin worth half a denarius. The word medallion (first attested in English in 1658) has the same ultimate derivation, but this time through the Italian medaglione, meaning "large medal". There are two theories as for the etymology of the word medalia: the first being that the Latin medalia itself is derived from the adjective medialis meaning "medial" or "middle";[1] the second being that medaglia comes from the Vulgar Latin metallea (moneta), meaning "metal (coin)" and that from Latin metallum,[2] which is the latinisation of the Greek μέταλλον (metallon), "a mine".[3][4][5][6]

Features

Traditionally medals are stamped with dies on a durable metal flan or planchet, or cast from a mould. The imagery, which usually includes lettering, is typically in low relief, albeit often higher than on coins: Limited-edition medals may be struck in repeated impacts allowing more metal displacement than in coins produced for mass circulation in a single impact. Circular medals are most common; rectangular medals are often known as plaquettes. The "decoration" types often use other shapes, especially crosses and stars. These in particular usually come with a suspension loop, and a wide coloured ribbon with a clip at the top, for attaching to clothing worn on the chest.

The main or front surface of a medal is termed the obverse, and may contain a portrait, pictorial scene, or other image along with an inscription. The reverse, or back surface of the medal, is not always used and may be left blank or may contain a secondary design. It is not uncommon to find only an artistic rendering on the obverse, while all details and other information for the medal are inscribed on the reverse. The rim is found only occasionally employed to display an inscription such as a motto, privy mark, engraver symbol, assayer's marking, or a series number.

Medals that are intended to be hung from a ribbon also include a small suspension piece at the crest with which to loop a suspension ring through. It is through the ring that a ribbon is run or folded so the medal may hang pendent. Medals pinned to the breast use only a small cut of ribbon that is attached to a top bar where the brooch pin is affixed. Top bars may be hidden under the ribbon so they are not visible, be a plain device from which the ribbon attaches, or may even be decorative to complement the design on the medal. Some top bars are elaborate and contain a whole design unto themselves.

Bronze has been the most common material used to create medals, due to its fair price range, durability, ease with which to work when casting, and the ample availability. However, a wide range of other media have also been used. Rarer metals have been employed, such as silver, platinum, and gold, when wishing to add value beyond the mere artistic depiction, as well as base metals and alloys such as copper, brass, iron, aluminum, lead, zinc, nickel, and pewter. Medals that are made with inexpensive material might be gilded, silver-plated, chased, or finished in a variety of other ways to improve their appearance. Medals have also been made of rock, gemstone, ivory, glass, porcelain, terra cotta, coal, wood, paper, enamel, lacquerware, and plastics.

History

 
Bronze medal of Isabella d'Este, princess and patron of Renaissance humanists, distributed as a gift.
 
Silver Geuzen medal commemorating the Capture of Brielle in 1572 by the Sea Beggars; this was produced commercially

The first known instance of a medal being awarded comes from the historian Josephus who, writing long after the event, accounts that in the second century BCE, the High Priest Jonathan led the Hebrews in aid of Alexander Balas, and that in return for this, Alexander "...sent to Jonathan... honorary awards, as a golden button, which it is custom to give the king's kinsmen." Roman emperors used both military awards of medals, and political gifts of medallions that were like very large coins, usually in gold or silver, and die-struck like coins.[7] Both these and actual golden coins were often set as pieces of jewellery, worn by both sexes.

The bracteate is a type of thin gold medal, usually plain on the reverse, found in Northern Europe from the so-called "Dark Ages" or Migration Period. They often have suspension loops and were clearly intended to be worn on a chain as jewellery. They imitate, at a distance, Roman imperial coins and medallions, but have the heads of gods, animals, or other designs.[8] The Liudhard medalet, produced around AD 600 in Anglo-Saxon England, is an isolated example, known from a single copy, of a Christian medal, featuring an inscription naming Liudhard (or "Saint Letard"), the first priest among the Anglo-Saxons, and most likely presented to converts. The surviving example is mounted for wearing as jewellery.

In Europe, from the late Middle Ages on, it became common for sovereigns, nobles, and later, intellectuals to commission medals to be given simply as gifts to their political allies to either maintain or gain support of an influential person. The medals were made in a range of metals, such as gold, silver-gilt, silver, bronze, and lead, depending on the status of the recipient. They were typically up to about three inches across, and usually featured the head of the donor on the obverse, surrounded by an inscription with their name and title, and their emblem on the reverse, with a learned motto inscribed round the edges. Such medals were not usually intended to be worn, although they might have been set as pendants on a chain. From the 16th century onward, medals were made, both by rulers for presentation and private enterprise for sale, to commemorate specific events, including military battles and victories, and from this grew the practice of awarding military medals specifically to combatants, though initially only a few of the much higher-ranking officers.

 
Medal of the Emperor John VIII Palaiologos during his visit to Florence, by Pisanello (1438). The legend reads, in Greek: "John the Palaiologos, basileus and autokrator of the Romans".

The medieval revival seems to have begun around 1400 with the extravagant French prince Jean, Duc de Berry, who commissioned a number of large classicising medals that were probably produced in very small numbers, or a unique cast. Only casts in bronze from the originals in precious metal survive, although it is known that at least some medals were also set with jewels, and these may well have been worn on a chain.[9] At the same period, the first known post-classical medal commemorating a victory was struck for Francesco Carrara (Novello) on the occasion of the capture of Padua in 1390. The Italian artist Pisanello, generally agreed to be the finest medallist of the Renaissance, began in 1438 with a medal, celebrating the unprecedented visit of the Byzantine Emperor John VIII Palaiologos to Italy. This was presumably a commercial venture, but his later medals were mostly commissioned for distribution as gifts by rulers or nobles. Like almost all early Renaissance medals, it was cast rather than die-struck. With each successive cast the medal became slightly smaller, and the numbers that could be produced were probably not large. A lead "proof" was probably often used. The association between medals and the classical revival began to take a rather different form, and the exchange of medals became associated with Renaissance Humanism. Princes would send humanist writers and scholars medals in recognition of their work, and the humanists began to make their own medals, normally in bronze, to send to their patrons and peers.[10] The fashion remained restricted to Italy until near the end of the 15th century, when it spread to other countries. By the 16th century, medals were increasingly produced by rulers or cities for propaganda purposes.[11] In 1550, a die-stamping machine, using steel dies, was introduced in Augsburg, Germany, and soon this process became standard. The artist now cut an intaglio die rather than modelling in relief.[12]

By the 16th century, the wearing of smaller medals on a chain was a persistent fashion for both sexes, and a variety of medals were produced commercially for the purpose, commemorating persons or events, or just with non-specific suitable sentiments. German artists had been producing high-quality medals from the beginning of the century, while the French and British were slower to produce fine work. However, by the late 17th century, most parts of Western Europe could produce fine work. Some medals were also collected, which continues to the present day. Official medals, from which specialized military awards descended, were increasingly produced, but the real growth in military medals did not come until the 19th century.

In the East, a wide variety of medals and decorations have been given by the Ottoman Empire since the 18th century.[13]

Devotional medals became very popular in Catholic countries. Very famous is the Miraculous Medal, whose design was created based on the apparitions of the Blessed Virgin Mary to Saint Catherine Labouré in Paris. In 1832, during an epidemic, the first medals were distributed, to which numerous healings and conversions were attributed, receiving the name of Miraculous Medal and distributed to millions of people around the world.[14]

During the Reformation there had also been a vigorous tradition of Protestant medals, more polemical than devotional, which continued with the Geuzen medals produced in the Dutch Revolt.

Military medals and decorations

Military decorations, service awards, and medals are often mistakenly confused with one another. Decoration is a term for awards which require specific acts of heroism or achievement (such as the British Victoria Cross or American Silver Star), whereas a service award or campaign medal is awarded for serving in a particular capacity in a particular geographical area and time frame (such as the Iraq Campaign Medal). In either case, an award or decoration may be presented as a medal.

The Roman Republic adopted an elaborate system of military awards that included medals called phalerae to be issued to soldiers and units for a variety of achievements. The practice was revived in the Early Modern period, and medals began to be worn on the chest as part of standard military uniform. The United States Continental Congress awarded the Fidelity Medallion as early as 1780, to three specified men for a particular incident, as a one-off award, which was characteristic of early military decorations. In 1782, the Badge of Military Merit was established, and mostly awarded to non-officers. The Légion d'honneur instituted by Napoleon I in 1802 had some of the characteristics of the old military orders, but was intended to be far more inclusive, and was awarded to rank and file soldiers for bravery or exceptional service. Other nations followed with decorations such as the British Army Gold Medal from 1810, though this only went to senior officers, and the Prussian Iron Cross from 1813. Medals were not awarded to all combatants in a war or battle until the 19th century, when the Waterloo Medal was the first British medal given to all present, at the Battle of Waterloo and all associated actions in 1815. By the middle of the 19th century, the number of awards used had greatly expanded in most countries to something near modern levels.

 
The United States' Medals of Honor (l to r: Army, Navy, Air Force), for "Conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of life above and beyond the call of duty".

An order tends to be the most elaborate of military decorations, typically awarded for distinguished services to a nation or to the general betterment of humanity. Orders are distinguished from other forms of decoration in that they often imply membership in an organization or association of others that have received the same award. Two of the most well known and commonly awarded orders are the Légion d'honneur of France (military and civil) and the civil Order of the British Empire. The practice of conferring orders originates with the mediaeval fraternities of knighthood, some of which still exist and are still awarded. While most modern orders have no roots in knighthood, they still tend to carry over the terms of their historic counterparts, and terms such as knight, commander, officer, members, and so on are still commonly found as ranks. A military order may use a medal as its insignia, however, most tend to have a unique badge or a type of plaque specifically designed for an emblem.

The Medal of Honor is the highest military decoration awarded by the United States Government, and is an example of a decoration that is modeled as a military order, even though not expressly defining itself as one (The Legion of Merit distinctly serves this purpose, and unlike any other U.S. military decoration, has classes). It is bestowed on a member of the United States Armed Forces who distinguishes himself, "conspicuously by gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while engaged in an action against an enemy of the United States."[15] Each of the three departments of the American armed forces has a unique picture displayed on a medal, which is in turn displayed upon a star-shaped heraldic badge. The medal of the U.S. Army depicts the head of Minerva, the U.S. Navy medal shows a scene of Minerva doing battle with Discord, and the U.S. Air Force depicts the Statue of Liberty upon its medal.

Military decorations, including medals and orders, are usually presented to the recipient in a formal ceremony. Medals are normally worn on more formal occasions and are suspended from a ribbon of the medal's colours on the left breast, while a corresponding ribbon bar is to be worn to common events where medals would be inappropriate or impractical to wear.

Table medals and other large forms

 
Commemorative medal of Finnish president J. K. Paasikivi, designed by Heikki Häiväoja

Medallion is a vague term, often used for larger, usually circular, medals, which might be worn as pendants round the neck. It is the correct term for such medals from the late Roman Empire, typically distributed by the emperor and bearing his image, but in later periods larger medals are best termed just as medals.

Generally circular, table medals are issued for artistic, commemoration, or souvenir purposes, not for commerce, and are too large to be plausibly worn. Tokens and Table Medals of coin-like appearance are part of the Exonumia subcategory of Numismatics, while Orders, Decorations, and Medals are considered Militaria (military related). The Nobel Foundation, the organization awarding the prestigious Nobel Prize, presents each winner, "an assignment for the amount of the prize, a diploma, and a gold medal..." This medal would be displayed framed like a picture, on a table, wall or in a cabinet, rather than be worn by the winner.

The Carnegie Hero Foundation is the issuer of a bravery medal, most commonly issued in the US, Canada, and the UK. This large bronze table medal features Andrew Carnegie's likeness on the obverse and the name of the awardee and citation engraved on the reverse. It is usually issued for lifesaving incidents. In the U.S. Military, challenge coins are a type of relatively unofficial medal given to boost morale, and sometimes to act as convenient passes for unit members.

Also related are plaques and plaquettes, which may be commemorative, but especially in the Renaissance and Mannerist periods were often made for purely decorative purposes, with often crowded scenes from religious, historical or mythological sources. While usually metal, table medals have been issued in wood, plastic, fibre, and other compositions. The US Government awards gold medals on important occasions, with bronze copies available for public sale.

Fraternal jewels

 
Breast jewels (medals) worn by members of a secular fraternity in Poland.

Amongst the many fraternal organisations which wear ceremonial regalia, the use of medals is commonplace. In many prominent fraternal organisations, fraternal medals are known as jewels. Their purpose varies, and may include use as a badge of membership, an indication of rank, a symbol of office within the fraternity, or an indication of support having been given to a designated charitable cause (so-called charity jewels). Common secular fraternities using jewels (medals) in the English-speaking world include Freemasonry, the Orange Order, the Royal Antediluvian Order of Buffaloes, and the Oddfellows. There are also religious fraternal organisations attached to certain Christian denominations (for example, the Catenian Association), also using medals as jewels of their Orders. Many of these organisations advertise jewels (medals) for sale on their corporate websites.[16]

Fraternal jewels may be worn as military-style medals, on ribbons, from the left breast, or more prominently on collars or collarettes as part of the organisation's regalia. Historic examples of such medals and jewels may be found in many museums, particularly museums dedicated to fraternal organisations.[17]

There is extensive trade in fraternal jewels and medals, with societies and associations existing to promote such trade, and to encourage the sharing of resources,[18] and on-line resources available to support the hobby.[19]

Different metals

 
A silver medal was awarded to the winner of each event during the 1896 Summer Olympics. Recent Olympic medals are suspended as a pendant from a ribbon, and are awarded in gold, silver and bronze.

Traditionally, medals are made of the following metals, in order of decreasing value[citation needed]:

  1. Platinum
  2. Gold
  3. Silver, or silver-gilt, which is in fact used for Olympic "gold medals"
  4. Bronze
  5. Pewter
  6. Copper
  7. Tin
  8. Iron
 
Silver 2nd place medal of European Athletic Indoor Games 11–12 March 1972

Many medals were and are made in several different metals, either representing awards for different places in a competition, or standards or classes, as with the Olympic medals, or simply different price levels for medals made for sale or donation by the commissioner. Medals have historically been given as prizes in various types of competitive activities, especially athletics. The gold, silver and bronze Olympic medals for first, second and third places were first used at the 1904 Summer Olympics. At the 1896 event, silver was awarded to winners and bronze to runners-up, while at 1900 other prizes were given, not medals. The medals for the London 2012 Summer Olympics are the largest ever, reflecting a trend for increasing size in Olympic medals.

Medals as art

The first well-known great artist to create medals was the Italian painter Antonio Pisano, also known as Pisanello, who modelled and cast a number of portrait medals of princes and scholars in the 1440s. Many other artists followed his example, in places such as Italy, the Low Countries, Germany, and France. In the seventeenth century medals were extensively used to commemorate events and glorify rulers. In the eighteenth century prize medals became common. In the 19th century art medals exploded in popularity. In the early part of the aforementioned century, David d'Angers produced a great series of portrait medals of famous contemporaries and in the latter part of the century, Jules-Clément Chaplain and Louis-Oscar Roty were among many highly regarded medalists. The early twentieth century saw art medals flourish, particularly in France, Italy, and Belgium, while later in the century Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland, the US, Canada, and England produced much high quality work.

   
1896 Colonial Exposition medal,
by Louis-Oscar Roty.
1900 Exposition Universelle medal,
by Jules-Clément Chaplain.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Oxford English Dictionary, s.v. "medal 2016-03-13 at the Wayback Machine"; Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, s.v. "medal 2011-11-08 at the Wayback Machine".
  2. ^ metallum 2023-01-02 at the Wayback Machine, Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary, on Perseus
  3. ^ μέταλλον 2021-01-20 at the Wayback Machine, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, on Perseus
  4. ^ The New American Webster Handy College Dictionary, p. 450, Signet, 2006, on Google books
  5. ^ Heinemann English Dictionary, p. 623,
  6. ^ medal 2011-08-23 at the Wayback Machine, Online Etymology Dictionary
  7. ^ Weitzmann, Kurt, Age of spirituality : late antique and early Christian art, third to seventh century 2015-04-26 at the Wayback Machine, (online as PDF), pp. 36-46, New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1979; Osbourne, 563
  8. ^ [https://web.archive.org/web/20101125114508/https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/works-of-art/2001.583 Archived 2010-11-25 at the Wayback Machine "Bracteate [Scandinavian] (2001.583)"]. In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000. (October 2006)
  9. ^ "Constantine medal, French (Paris) 2011-05-01 at the Wayback Machine (1988.133)". In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. Accessed July 5, 2010
  10. ^ Osbourne, 563-564
  11. ^ Scher
  12. ^ Osbourne, 567
  13. ^ Küskü, Fırat (2021). "II. ABDÜLHAMİD İN MADALYA SİYASETİ: LİYAKAT MADALYASI ÖRNEĞİ". Turk Kulturu Lncelemeleri Dergisi. 04 (46): 109–144. doi:10.24058/tki.2021.440. ISSN 1302-4787. S2CID 245535051.
  14. ^ "The apparitions and the Miraculous Medal | Chapelle Notre-Dame de la Médaille Miraculeuse".
  15. ^ "Code of Federal Regulations". Department of the Army. Retrieved 27 November 2009.
  16. ^ Jewels displayed on the RAOB 2016-01-21 at the Wayback Machine central website.
  17. ^ See this webpage 2015-09-24 at the Wayback Machine from the Library and Museum of Freemasonry, London.
  18. ^ For example, see official website of Jewels of the Craft 2015-10-17 at the Wayback Machine.
  19. ^ See, for example, Masonic Medals 2015-08-01 at the Wayback Machine website.

References

  • Osborne, Harold (ed), The Oxford Companion to the Decorative Arts, 1975, OUP, ISBN 0-19-866113-4
  • Stephen K. Scher, et al. "Medal." In Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online, Subscription required, (accessed July 28, 2010).
  • Weiss, B. "Collection of Historical and Commemorative Medals". [1]

Further reading

  • Louis Forrer, Biographical Dictionary of Medallists (Spink & Sons, 1904–1930) is an eight volume reference in English listing medallists through history.
  • Ulrich Thieme, Felix Becker, Allgemeines Lexicon der Bildenden Kùnstler von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart (Leipzig : 1907–1949) is a thirty six volume work in German that lists all artists without differentiating their specialty and medium like the Forrer work.

External links

  • "Historical Medallions". historicalmedallions.com
  • European sculpture and metalwork, a collection catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art Libraries (fully available online as PDF), which contains material on medals (see index)
  • Medals and the Royal Mint
  • "American World's Fair and Expo Medals". ExpositionMedals.com.
  • "Historical and Commemorative Medals". Benjamin Weiss.
  • "Medals of the World". Megan C. Robertson.
  • . Julie McCullum's Militarium. Archived from the original on 2008-08-11.
  • . The Nobel Foundation. Archived from the original on 2005-04-10.
  • "Medal" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 18 (11th ed.). 1911. pp. 1–18.

medal, confused, with, meddle, metal, mettle, other, uses, disambiguation, lion, redirects, here, other, uses, lion, disambiguation, medal, medallion, small, portable, artistic, object, thin, disc, normally, metal, carrying, design, usually, both, sides, they,. Not to be confused with Meddle Metal or Mettle For other uses see Medal disambiguation Medallion redirects here For other uses see Medallion disambiguation A medal or medallion is a small portable artistic object a thin disc normally of metal carrying a design usually on both sides They typically have a commemorative purpose of some kind and many are presented as awards They may be intended to be worn suspended from clothing or jewellery in some way although this has not always been the case They may be struck like a coin by dies or die cast in a mould Obverse of medal distributed by Cecilia Gonzaga s family to political allies a common practice in Renaissance Europe Designed by Pisanello in 1448 Reverse of the same medal this copy with a suspension hole added later inside a crescent moon in the design Medal depicting Herbert C Hoover by Devreese Godefroi A medal may be awarded to a person or organisation as a form of recognition for sporting military scientific cultural academic or various other achievements Military awards and decorations are more precise terms for certain types of state decoration Medals may also be created for sale to commemorate particular individuals or events or as works of artistic expression in their own right In the past medals commissioned for an individual typically with their portrait were often used as a form of diplomatic or personal gift with no sense of being an award for the conduct of the recipient An artist who creates medals or medallions is called a medalist Medals have long been popular collectible items and in numismatics form a class called either exonumia or militaria In the proper use of the term medallions are larger starting at perhaps four inches across and are as such usually too large to be worn very comfortably though in colloquial use medallion is often used to refer to a medal used as the pendant of a necklace as in the medallion man fashion style of the 1960s and 1970s or for other types of medals Medallions may also be called table medals because they are too large to be worn and can only be displayed on a wall table top desk or cabinet Contents 1 Main types 2 Etymology 3 Features 4 History 5 Military medals and decorations 6 Table medals and other large forms 7 Fraternal jewels 8 Different metals 9 Medals as art 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksMain types Edit Various prize medals with obverse designs suspension rings and ribbons typical of medals intended to be draped over the head and hung from the neck Plaquette by Peter Flotner Vanitas 1535 1540 gilt bronze Created purely as an art object for a collector s market Numismatists divide medals into at least seven classes Awards awarded to a person or organization as a form of recognition for sporting military scientific cultural academic or various other achievements Military awards and decorations are more precise terms for certain types of state decoration Military decorations are often in shapes such as crosses or stars but are still loosely called medals as in the star shaped American Medal of Honor Commemoratives created for sale to commemorate particular individuals or events or as works of medallic art in their own right Souvenirs similar to a commemorative but more focused on a place or event like state fairs expositions museums historic sites etc and frequently found for sale within their respective souvenir shops Religious devotional medals may be worn for religious reasons Portraits produced to immortalize a person with their portrait European portrait medallions sometimes bear the Latin word aetatis of his age to describe the depicted person s age at the time of the portrait Artistic made purely as an art object Plaquettes are often of this type Society Medals made for societies used as a badge or token of membership Etymology EditFirst attested in English in 1578 the word medal is derived from the Middle French medaille itself from Italian medaglia and ultimately from the post classical Latin medalia meaning a coin worth half a denarius The word medallion first attested in English in 1658 has the same ultimate derivation but this time through the Italian medaglione meaning large medal There are two theories as for the etymology of the word medalia the first being that the Latin medalia itself is derived from the adjective medialis meaning medial or middle 1 the second being that medaglia comes from the Vulgar Latin metallea moneta meaning metal coin and that from Latin metallum 2 which is the latinisation of the Greek metallon metallon a mine 3 4 5 6 Features EditTraditionally medals are stamped with dies on a durable metal flan or planchet or cast from a mould The imagery which usually includes lettering is typically in low relief albeit often higher than on coins Limited edition medals may be struck in repeated impacts allowing more metal displacement than in coins produced for mass circulation in a single impact Circular medals are most common rectangular medals are often known as plaquettes The decoration types often use other shapes especially crosses and stars These in particular usually come with a suspension loop and a wide coloured ribbon with a clip at the top for attaching to clothing worn on the chest The main or front surface of a medal is termed the obverse and may contain a portrait pictorial scene or other image along with an inscription The reverse or back surface of the medal is not always used and may be left blank or may contain a secondary design It is not uncommon to find only an artistic rendering on the obverse while all details and other information for the medal are inscribed on the reverse The rim is found only occasionally employed to display an inscription such as a motto privy mark engraver symbol assayer s marking or a series number Medals that are intended to be hung from a ribbon also include a small suspension piece at the crest with which to loop a suspension ring through It is through the ring that a ribbon is run or folded so the medal may hang pendent Medals pinned to the breast use only a small cut of ribbon that is attached to a top bar where the brooch pin is affixed Top bars may be hidden under the ribbon so they are not visible be a plain device from which the ribbon attaches or may even be decorative to complement the design on the medal Some top bars are elaborate and contain a whole design unto themselves Bronze has been the most common material used to create medals due to its fair price range durability ease with which to work when casting and the ample availability However a wide range of other media have also been used Rarer metals have been employed such as silver platinum and gold when wishing to add value beyond the mere artistic depiction as well as base metals and alloys such as copper brass iron aluminum lead zinc nickel and pewter Medals that are made with inexpensive material might be gilded silver plated chased or finished in a variety of other ways to improve their appearance Medals have also been made of rock gemstone ivory glass porcelain terra cotta coal wood paper enamel lacquerware and plastics History Edit Bronze medal of Isabella d Este princess and patron of Renaissance humanists distributed as a gift Silver Geuzen medal commemorating the Capture of Brielle in 1572 by the Sea Beggars this was produced commercially The first known instance of a medal being awarded comes from the historian Josephus who writing long after the event accounts that in the second century BCE the High Priest Jonathan led the Hebrews in aid of Alexander Balas and that in return for this Alexander sent to Jonathan honorary awards as a golden button which it is custom to give the king s kinsmen Roman emperors used both military awards of medals and political gifts of medallions that were like very large coins usually in gold or silver and die struck like coins 7 Both these and actual golden coins were often set as pieces of jewellery worn by both sexes The bracteate is a type of thin gold medal usually plain on the reverse found in Northern Europe from the so called Dark Ages or Migration Period They often have suspension loops and were clearly intended to be worn on a chain as jewellery They imitate at a distance Roman imperial coins and medallions but have the heads of gods animals or other designs 8 The Liudhard medalet produced around AD 600 in Anglo Saxon England is an isolated example known from a single copy of a Christian medal featuring an inscription naming Liudhard or Saint Letard the first priest among the Anglo Saxons and most likely presented to converts The surviving example is mounted for wearing as jewellery In Europe from the late Middle Ages on it became common for sovereigns nobles and later intellectuals to commission medals to be given simply as gifts to their political allies to either maintain or gain support of an influential person The medals were made in a range of metals such as gold silver gilt silver bronze and lead depending on the status of the recipient They were typically up to about three inches across and usually featured the head of the donor on the obverse surrounded by an inscription with their name and title and their emblem on the reverse with a learned motto inscribed round the edges Such medals were not usually intended to be worn although they might have been set as pendants on a chain From the 16th century onward medals were made both by rulers for presentation and private enterprise for sale to commemorate specific events including military battles and victories and from this grew the practice of awarding military medals specifically to combatants though initially only a few of the much higher ranking officers Medal of the Emperor John VIII Palaiologos during his visit to Florence by Pisanello 1438 The legend reads in Greek John the Palaiologos basileus and autokrator of the Romans The medieval revival seems to have begun around 1400 with the extravagant French prince Jean Duc de Berry who commissioned a number of large classicising medals that were probably produced in very small numbers or a unique cast Only casts in bronze from the originals in precious metal survive although it is known that at least some medals were also set with jewels and these may well have been worn on a chain 9 At the same period the first known post classical medal commemorating a victory was struck for Francesco Carrara Novello on the occasion of the capture of Padua in 1390 The Italian artist Pisanello generally agreed to be the finest medallist of the Renaissance began in 1438 with a medal celebrating the unprecedented visit of the Byzantine Emperor John VIII Palaiologos to Italy This was presumably a commercial venture but his later medals were mostly commissioned for distribution as gifts by rulers or nobles Like almost all early Renaissance medals it was cast rather than die struck With each successive cast the medal became slightly smaller and the numbers that could be produced were probably not large A lead proof was probably often used The association between medals and the classical revival began to take a rather different form and the exchange of medals became associated with Renaissance Humanism Princes would send humanist writers and scholars medals in recognition of their work and the humanists began to make their own medals normally in bronze to send to their patrons and peers 10 The fashion remained restricted to Italy until near the end of the 15th century when it spread to other countries By the 16th century medals were increasingly produced by rulers or cities for propaganda purposes 11 In 1550 a die stamping machine using steel dies was introduced in Augsburg Germany and soon this process became standard The artist now cut an intaglio die rather than modelling in relief 12 By the 16th century the wearing of smaller medals on a chain was a persistent fashion for both sexes and a variety of medals were produced commercially for the purpose commemorating persons or events or just with non specific suitable sentiments German artists had been producing high quality medals from the beginning of the century while the French and British were slower to produce fine work However by the late 17th century most parts of Western Europe could produce fine work Some medals were also collected which continues to the present day Official medals from which specialized military awards descended were increasingly produced but the real growth in military medals did not come until the 19th century In the East a wide variety of medals and decorations have been given by the Ottoman Empire since the 18th century 13 Devotional medals became very popular in Catholic countries Very famous is the Miraculous Medal whose design was created based on the apparitions of the Blessed Virgin Mary to Saint Catherine Laboure in Paris In 1832 during an epidemic the first medals were distributed to which numerous healings and conversions were attributed receiving the name of Miraculous Medal and distributed to millions of people around the world 14 During the Reformation there had also been a vigorous tradition of Protestant medals more polemical than devotional which continued with the Geuzen medals produced in the Dutch Revolt Military medals and decorations EditMain article Military awards and decorations Military decorations service awards and medals are often mistakenly confused with one another Decoration is a term for awards which require specific acts of heroism or achievement such as the British Victoria Cross or American Silver Star whereas a service award or campaign medal is awarded for serving in a particular capacity in a particular geographical area and time frame such as the Iraq Campaign Medal In either case an award or decoration may be presented as a medal The Roman Republic adopted an elaborate system of military awards that included medals called phalerae to be issued to soldiers and units for a variety of achievements The practice was revived in the Early Modern period and medals began to be worn on the chest as part of standard military uniform The United States Continental Congress awarded the Fidelity Medallion as early as 1780 to three specified men for a particular incident as a one off award which was characteristic of early military decorations In 1782 the Badge of Military Merit was established and mostly awarded to non officers The Legion d honneur instituted by Napoleon I in 1802 had some of the characteristics of the old military orders but was intended to be far more inclusive and was awarded to rank and file soldiers for bravery or exceptional service Other nations followed with decorations such as the British Army Gold Medal from 1810 though this only went to senior officers and the Prussian Iron Cross from 1813 Medals were not awarded to all combatants in a war or battle until the 19th century when the Waterloo Medal was the first British medal given to all present at the Battle of Waterloo and all associated actions in 1815 By the middle of the 19th century the number of awards used had greatly expanded in most countries to something near modern levels The United States Medals of Honor l to r Army Navy Air Force for Conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of life above and beyond the call of duty An order tends to be the most elaborate of military decorations typically awarded for distinguished services to a nation or to the general betterment of humanity Orders are distinguished from other forms of decoration in that they often imply membership in an organization or association of others that have received the same award Two of the most well known and commonly awarded orders are the Legion d honneur of France military and civil and the civil Order of the British Empire The practice of conferring orders originates with the mediaeval fraternities of knighthood some of which still exist and are still awarded While most modern orders have no roots in knighthood they still tend to carry over the terms of their historic counterparts and terms such as knight commander officer members and so on are still commonly found as ranks A military order may use a medal as its insignia however most tend to have a unique badge or a type of plaque specifically designed for an emblem The Medal of Honor is the highest military decoration awarded by the United States Government and is an example of a decoration that is modeled as a military order even though not expressly defining itself as one The Legion of Merit distinctly serves this purpose and unlike any other U S military decoration has classes It is bestowed on a member of the United States Armed Forces who distinguishes himself conspicuously by gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while engaged in an action against an enemy of the United States 15 Each of the three departments of the American armed forces has a unique picture displayed on a medal which is in turn displayed upon a star shaped heraldic badge The medal of the U S Army depicts the head of Minerva the U S Navy medal shows a scene of Minerva doing battle with Discord and the U S Air Force depicts the Statue of Liberty upon its medal Military decorations including medals and orders are usually presented to the recipient in a formal ceremony Medals are normally worn on more formal occasions and are suspended from a ribbon of the medal s colours on the left breast while a corresponding ribbon bar is to be worn to common events where medals would be inappropriate or impractical to wear Table medals and other large forms Edit Commemorative medal of Finnish president J K Paasikivi designed by Heikki Haivaoja Medallion is a vague term often used for larger usually circular medals which might be worn as pendants round the neck It is the correct term for such medals from the late Roman Empire typically distributed by the emperor and bearing his image but in later periods larger medals are best termed just as medals Generally circular table medals are issued for artistic commemoration or souvenir purposes not for commerce and are too large to be plausibly worn Tokens and Table Medals of coin like appearance are part of the Exonumia subcategory of Numismatics while Orders Decorations and Medals are considered Militaria military related The Nobel Foundation the organization awarding the prestigious Nobel Prize presents each winner an assignment for the amount of the prize a diploma and a gold medal This medal would be displayed framed like a picture on a table wall or in a cabinet rather than be worn by the winner The Carnegie Hero Foundation is the issuer of a bravery medal most commonly issued in the US Canada and the UK This large bronze table medal features Andrew Carnegie s likeness on the obverse and the name of the awardee and citation engraved on the reverse It is usually issued for lifesaving incidents In the U S Military challenge coins are a type of relatively unofficial medal given to boost morale and sometimes to act as convenient passes for unit members Also related are plaques and plaquettes which may be commemorative but especially in the Renaissance and Mannerist periods were often made for purely decorative purposes with often crowded scenes from religious historical or mythological sources While usually metal table medals have been issued in wood plastic fibre and other compositions The US Government awards gold medals on important occasions with bronze copies available for public sale Fraternal jewels Edit Breast jewels medals worn by members of a secular fraternity in Poland Amongst the many fraternal organisations which wear ceremonial regalia the use of medals is commonplace In many prominent fraternal organisations fraternal medals are known as jewels Their purpose varies and may include use as a badge of membership an indication of rank a symbol of office within the fraternity or an indication of support having been given to a designated charitable cause so called charity jewels Common secular fraternities using jewels medals in the English speaking world include Freemasonry the Orange Order the Royal Antediluvian Order of Buffaloes and the Oddfellows There are also religious fraternal organisations attached to certain Christian denominations for example the Catenian Association also using medals as jewels of their Orders Many of these organisations advertise jewels medals for sale on their corporate websites 16 Fraternal jewels may be worn as military style medals on ribbons from the left breast or more prominently on collars or collarettes as part of the organisation s regalia Historic examples of such medals and jewels may be found in many museums particularly museums dedicated to fraternal organisations 17 There is extensive trade in fraternal jewels and medals with societies and associations existing to promote such trade and to encourage the sharing of resources 18 and on line resources available to support the hobby 19 Different metals Edit A silver medal was awarded to the winner of each event during the 1896 Summer Olympics Recent Olympic medals are suspended as a pendant from a ribbon and are awarded in gold silver and bronze Traditionally medals are made of the following metals in order of decreasing value citation needed Platinum Gold Silver or silver gilt which is in fact used for Olympic gold medals Bronze Pewter Copper Tin Iron Silver 2nd place medal of European Athletic Indoor Games 11 12 March 1972 Many medals were and are made in several different metals either representing awards for different places in a competition or standards or classes as with the Olympic medals or simply different price levels for medals made for sale or donation by the commissioner Medals have historically been given as prizes in various types of competitive activities especially athletics The gold silver and bronze Olympic medals for first second and third places were first used at the 1904 Summer Olympics At the 1896 event silver was awarded to winners and bronze to runners up while at 1900 other prizes were given not medals The medals for the London 2012 Summer Olympics are the largest ever reflecting a trend for increasing size in Olympic medals Medals as art EditThe first well known great artist to create medals was the Italian painter Antonio Pisano also known as Pisanello who modelled and cast a number of portrait medals of princes and scholars in the 1440s Many other artists followed his example in places such as Italy the Low Countries Germany and France In the seventeenth century medals were extensively used to commemorate events and glorify rulers In the eighteenth century prize medals became common In the 19th century art medals exploded in popularity In the early part of the aforementioned century David d Angers produced a great series of portrait medals of famous contemporaries and in the latter part of the century Jules Clement Chaplain and Louis Oscar Roty were among many highly regarded medalists The early twentieth century saw art medals flourish particularly in France Italy and Belgium while later in the century Czechoslovakia Hungary Poland the US Canada and England produced much high quality work 1896 Colonial Exposition medal by Louis Oscar Roty 1900 Exposition Universelle medal by Jules Clement Chaplain See also Edit Numismatics portalExonumia Orders decorations and medals of Belgium List of highest military decorations Medalist List of medallists Orders decorations and medals of Russia Orders and decorations of the Commonwealth realms Awards and decorations of the United States government Awards and decorations of the United States Armed Forces Military awards and decorations Medal ribbon Medal inflationNotes Edit Oxford English Dictionary s v medal Archived 2016 03 13 at the Wayback Machine Merriam Webster s Collegiate Dictionary s v medal Archived 2011 11 08 at the Wayback Machine metallum Archived 2023 01 02 at the Wayback Machine Charlton T Lewis Charles Short A Latin Dictionary on Perseus metallon Archived 2021 01 20 at the Wayback Machine Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon on Perseus The New American Webster Handy College Dictionary p 450 Signet 2006 on Google books Heinemann English Dictionary p 623 medal Archived 2011 08 23 at the Wayback Machine Online Etymology Dictionary Weitzmann Kurt Age of spirituality late antique and early Christian art third to seventh century Archived 2015 04 26 at the Wayback Machine online as PDF pp 36 46 New York Metropolitan Museum of Art 1979 Osbourne 563 https web archive org web 20101125114508 https www metmuseum org toah works of art 2001 583 Archived 2010 11 25 at the Wayback Machine Bracteate Scandinavian 2001 583 In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art 2000 October 2006 Constantine medal French Paris Archived 2011 05 01 at the Wayback Machine 1988 133 In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art 2000 Accessed July 5 2010 Osbourne 563 564 Scher Osbourne 567 Kusku Firat 2021 II ABDULHAMID IN MADALYA SIYASETI LIYAKAT MADALYASI ORNEGI Turk Kulturu Lncelemeleri Dergisi 04 46 109 144 doi 10 24058 tki 2021 440 ISSN 1302 4787 S2CID 245535051 The apparitions and the Miraculous Medal Chapelle Notre Dame de la Medaille Miraculeuse Code of Federal Regulations Department of the Army Retrieved 27 November 2009 Jewels displayed on the RAOB Archived 2016 01 21 at the Wayback Machine central website See this webpage Archived 2015 09 24 at the Wayback Machine from the Library and Museum of Freemasonry London For example see official website of Jewels of the Craft Archived 2015 10 17 at the Wayback Machine See for example Masonic Medals Archived 2015 08 01 at the Wayback Machine website References EditOsborne Harold ed The Oxford Companion to the Decorative Arts 1975 OUP ISBN 0 19 866113 4 Stephen K Scher et al Medal In Grove Art Online Oxford Art Online Subscription required accessed July 28 2010 Weiss B Collection of Historical and Commemorative Medals 1 Further reading EditLouis Forrer Biographical Dictionary of Medallists Spink amp Sons 1904 1930 is an eight volume reference in English listing medallists through history Ulrich Thieme Felix Becker Allgemeines Lexicon der Bildenden Kunstler von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart Leipzig 1907 1949 is a thirty six volume work in German that lists all artists without differentiating their specialty and medium like the Forrer work External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Medals Historical Medallions historicalmedallions com European sculpture and metalwork a collection catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art Libraries fully available online as PDF which contains material on medals see index Medals and the Royal Mint American World s Fair and Expo Medals ExpositionMedals com Historical and Commemorative Medals Benjamin Weiss Medals of the World Megan C Robertson The home of British and Allied militaria Julie McCullum s Militarium Archived from the original on 2008 08 11 The Nobel Prize Medals and the Medal for the Prize in Economics The Nobel Foundation Archived from the original on 2005 04 10 Medal Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 18 11th ed 1911 pp 1 18 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Medal amp oldid 1136166700, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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