Order of Merit of the Kingdom of Hungary

Summary

The Order of Merit of the Kingdom of Hungary (Hungarian: Magyar Érdemrend) was established on 14 June, 1922, by Miklós Horthy, the Regent of the Kingdom of Hungary. On 23 December, 1935, it was transformed into an official distinction. Since then, it has been known as the Order of Merit of the Kingdom of Hungary (Hungarian: Magyar Érdemrend). After the Hungarian monarchy was abolished, on 14 September, 1946, the National Assembly of Hungary disestablished the order and replaced it by the Order of Merit of the Republic of Hungary (Hungarian: Magyar Köztársasági Érdemrend). After the promulgation of the new Hungarian constitution on 20 August, 1949, the order was disestablished. After the collapse of the communist regime in Hungary, the order was re-established as the second-highest distinction of the country. Since 2012, the official name is Order of Merit of Hungary (Hungarian: Magyar Érdemrend).

Order of Merit of the Kingdom of Hungary
Grand Cross with the Holy Crown of Saint Stephen, War Decoration and Swords
CountryHungary
EstablishedJune 14, 1922
First awarded1922
Last awarded1946

Originally, the order was instituted as the Order of Merit in three grades: gilt, silver and bronze. Eventually the order was expanded to include the following seven classes: Collar, Grand Cross with Holy Crown, Grand Cross, Grand Commander, Commander, Officer and Knight.

Sash and Cross for the grade of Grand Cross with the Holy Crown of Saint Stephen

History edit

The Order of Merit of the Kingdom of Hungary (Hungarian: Magyar Érdemrend) was established on 14 June 1922 by the Regent of the Kingdom of Hungary, Vice Admiral Miklós Horthy. After its establishment, the rules of the order were changed numerous times. On 23 December 1935 it became an official distinction recognizing both civil and military accomplishments. From on 1939 to 1944 the highest degree of the order, the Grand Cross with the Holy Crown of Stephen (Istvan), was awarded to both chiefs of state (i.e. monarchs of presidents) or heads of government (i.e. prime ministers and chancellors). In addition, the class of the Holy Crown and the Collar was instituted which was awarded exclusively to chiefs of state. All classes of the order could be awarded in recognition of military distinction, the military "division" of the order having crossed swords and a different ribbon which was mostly red rather than the green of the civil division.

After the Hungarian monarchy was formally abolished following the abdication of Admiral Horthy and the defeat of Hungary in World War II, on 14 September 1946 the National Assembly of Hungary disestablished the order and replaced it by the Order of Merit of the Republic of Hungary (Hungarian: Magyar Köztársasági Érdemrend). After the Communist take over of Hungary and the promulgation of the new Hungarian constitution on August 20, 1949, the new order was disestablished.

Following the collapse of the Communist regime in Hungary in 1989 a new order, known as Order of Merit of Hungary (Hungarian: Magyar Érdemrend), was established. Though it has a similar appearance, this is a new order and not a re-establishment of the previous order.

Recipients edit