Order of Leopold II

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Order of Leopold II
Ordre de Léopold II
Orde van Leopold II
Leo 2 commander.jpg
Commander's cross of the Order of Leopold II
Awarded by Flag of Belgium.svg Kingdom of Belgium
Type Order of Merit with five classes and three medals
Motto EENDRACHT MAAKT MACHT -
L'UNION FAIT LA FORCE
Day Awarded on 8 April (Birthday of King Albert I) and 15 November (King's Feast), and for obliging cases on 21 July (Belgian national holiday).
Eligibility Eligible for persons above the age of 42
Awarded for Bravery in combat or meritorious service
Status Currently constituted
Sovereign His Majesty King Philippe
Grades (w/ post-nominals) Grand Cross
Grand Officer
Commander
Officer
Knight
Established 24 August 1900
1900 - 1908 (Order of Congo)
1908 - present (as Belgian Order)
Precedence
Next (higher) Order of the Crown
Next (lower) Military Decoration for exceptional action or for acts of bravery or devotion

The Order of Leopold II is an order of Belgium and is named in honor of King Léopold II. The decoration was established on 24 August 1900 by Leopold II as king of the Congo Free State and was in 1908, upon Congo being handed over to Belgium, incorporated into the Belgian awards system. The order is awarded for meritorious service to the Sovereign of Belgium, and as a token of his personal goodwill. It can be awarded to both Belgians and foreigners.

The order has become a long service order for people in the civil service and is awarded alternatively with the Order of the Crown, as the Order of Leopold is awarded under rarer circumstances. The Order currently stands third after the Order of Leopold (1st) and the Order of the Crown (2nd) in the Belgian honors hierarchy. The Order of Leopold II is awarded by Royal Decree.

Classes

The Order of Leopold II is issued in five classes and three medals:

  • Grand Cross, who wears the badge on a sash on the right shoulder, plus a plaque on the left chest;
  • Grand Officer, who wears only a plaque on the left chest;
  • Commander, who wears the badge on a necklet;
  • Officer, who wears the badge on a ribbon with rosette on the left chest;
  • Knight, who wears the badge on a ribbon on the left chest;
  • Gold Medal, who wears the medal on the left chest;
  • Silver Medal, who wears the medal on the left chest;
  • Bronze Medal, who wears the medal on the left chest.

Insignia

  • The badge of the Order is a metal Maltese Cross, in silver for the Knight class and in gold for the higher classes, with a wreath of laurel leaves of the same metal between the arms of the cross. The obverse central disc features a lion on a black enamel background surrounded by a blue enamel ring with the motto "Unity Is Strength" in French (L'union fait la force) and in Dutch (Eendracht maakt macht). The badge is topped by a crown of the same metal. Up to the inclusion of the Order of Leoplold II in the Belgian National Orders, the central disk showed an enamelled blue, black and white crest of the Congo Free State and the motto Travail et Progrès.
  • The plaque for Grand Cross is a faceted silver five-pointed star with golden rays between the branches of the star. The centre shows the obverse of a commander's cross. The plaque for Grand Officer is a faceted five-armed 'Maltese Asterisk' (see Maltese Cross), with golden rays between the arms. The centre shows the obverse of an officer's cross.
  • The medal shows the shape of the Order badge imprinted in a metal shape that is vaguely octagonal and looks like a closed florian cross. The metal of the Medal is gold for the Gold Medal, Silver for the Silver Medal and Bronze for the Bronze Medal.
  • The ribbon of the Order is blue with a central black stripe. However, if the Order is awarded in special circumstances, the ribbon of the Officer and Knight classes show the following variations:
    • Crossed swords are added to the ribbon when awarded in wartime (if the Order was awarded during the Second World War or during the Korean War, a small bar is added to the ribbon mentioning the name of the war);
    • The ribbon has a vertical gold border on both sides when awarded for a special act of valour;
    • The ribbon has a central vertical gold stripe in the middle of the black stripe when awarded for an exceptionally meritorious act;
    • A gold star is added to the ribbon when the recipient has been mentioned in despatches at the national level;
    • Silver or gold palms are added to the ribbon when awarded in wartime to military personnel.

Stars and borders or stripes can be awarded together, but these deviations are currently only rarely awarded.

Originally, the central stripe of the ribbon was white, as blue and white were the colours of the Congo Free State.

The ribbon bar of the order, which is worn on the semi-formal dress uniform is:

Ribbon bars
BEL Order of Leopold II - Grand Cross BAR.png
Grand Cross
85px
Grand Officer
BEL Order of Leopold II - Commander BAR.png
Commander
BEL Order of Leopold II - Officer BAR.png
Officer
BEL Order of Leopold II - Knight BAR.png
Knight
BEL Order of Leopold II - Gold Medal BAR.png
Gold Medal
BEL Order of Leopold II - Silver Medal BAR.png
Silver Medal
BEL Order of Leopold II - Bronze Medal BAR.png
Bronze Medal

Despite the fact that, contrary to the Order of Leopold, no maritime or military divisions of the Order of Leopold II exist, some unofficial decorations with crossed anchors or crossed swords under the suspension crown are known to exist.

Award conditions

Current award conditions of Belgian national orders

National Orders are awarded by Royal Decree at fixed dates: 8 April (Birthday of King Albert I), 15 November (King's Feast), and in some cases on 21 July (Belgian national holiday)) to reward meritorious services to the Kingdom of Belgium based on the career path and age of the recipient. A number of different regulations rule the award of National Order for the various ministries. In addition, the National Orders may be awarded by the King for especially meritorious deeds. The Royal Decrees are published in the Belgian Official Journal (Moniteur Belge).

Top left and center: Grand Cross' plaque and sash, top right: Grand Officer's plaque, bottom, from left to right: Commander's cross, Officer's cross, Knight's cross, Gold Medal, Silver Medal, Bronze Medal (courtesy Société de l'Ordre de Léopold)

The Minister responsible for Foreign Affairs, currently the Federal Public Service (SPF/FOD) Foreign Affairs, administers the national orders and has a role of advisor in cases not fitting within a regulation.

For the award of National Orders for persons to which no regulation apply or has been adopted, the number of awards is limited every year by decision of the Council of Ministers (contingent).

The classes of the National Orders are integrated in a combined hierarchy defined by law, whereby within one class the Order of Leopold is senior to the Order of the Crown, which is senior to the Order of Leopold II. Except in some specific cases, one cannot be awarded a National Order at a level below the highest that the recipient has already received (e.g. a commissioned officer who become a Commander of the Order of Leopold II because of meritorious personal service to the King before he became a Knight of the Order of Leopold may not be awarded the latter decoration or that of Officer of the Order of Leopold).

People who are the subject of criminal proceedings will usually not be awarded a National Order until they are declared not guilty.

Award conditions to military personnel

The Order of Leopold II is awarded to military personnel on the basis of their length of service, with the years of training counting for half:

For awards to military personnel, there is no minimum age requirement.

For commissioned officers not members of the flying personnel, the Order of Leopold II is only awarded at the time of retirement, even if it is in fact earned before that in line with the rules presented above. Even then, because of the generic rule that one cannot be awarded a National Order at a level below the highest that the recipient has already received, the Order of Leopold II will not be awarded if the recipient has been awarded in the meantime a higher National Order than the Order of Leopold II at the Class he could receive. This apparent anomaly is due to the fact that King Albert I, who was fond of aviation, wanted to provide a special reward to aircraft pilots, and therefore ordered that the Order of Leopold II only be awarded to them. In its early days, the Order of Leopold II awarded to pilots was adorned with a bar for every one hundred hours flown (a practice currently discontinued).

The Order of Leopold II is also sometimes awarded to military personnel not meeting the conditions above when they have performed especially meritorious services to the King that do not deserve a special award of the Order of Leopold. This is in particular the case for commissioned officers who have been adjutant to the King or Crown Prince (usually a part-time position for a few especially selected Major), who are usually awarded the Order at the rank of commander.

Award conditions for long civilian service

The Knight's Cross of the Order of Leopold II is awarded to the presidents, secretaries and members of the board of directors of the largest representative trade organisations such as trade unions on the basis of the number of members of the organisation, of the length of their membership of the board, and on the length of their tenure within the board.

The Knight's Cross of the Order of Leopold II is also awarded, after a tenure of 10 years, to the members of the provincial committees for the promotion of labour who have reached the age of 42.

The Officer's Cross of the Order of Leopold II is awarded, after a tenure of 30 years, to the members of the national committee for the promotion of labour who have reached the age of 42.[dubious ]

Equivalent orders

Even though orders from different States are not always easy to compare, the Order of Leopold II is roughly equivalent to the following orders from other States.

See also

References

  • Royal Decree of 24 August 1900 Creating the Order of Leopold II
  • Law of 1 May 2006 on the Award of Honours in the National Orders (Moniteur Belge of 24 October 2006)
  • Royal Decree of 13 October 2006 Defining the Rules and Procedure for the Award of Honours in the National Orders (Moniteur Belge of 24 October 2006)
  • Royal Decree of 24 January 1994 Creating the Insignia of Two Crossed Swords topped by a Bar Showing the Mention Korea
  • Royal Decree of 18 April 1983 Creating the Insignia of Two Crossed Swords topped by a Bar Showing the Millesimes 40-45
  • Royal Decree of 24 June 1919 Creating gold borders, gold stripes and gold stars for the National Orders Awarded in War Time (Moniteur Belge of 11–12 August 1919)
  • Royal Decree of 15 November 1915 Creating Palms for the National Orders Awarded in War Time (Moniteur Belge of 28–30 November and 1–4 December 1915)
  • Belgian military regulation A83 on Military Decorations
  • Belgian military regulation DGHR-REG-DISPSYS-001 of 20 February 2006
  • Belgian Ministry of Labour (SPF Emploi, Travail et Concertation Sociale), Clés pour les décorations du travail (Brussels: 2008)
  • Borné A.C., Distinctions honorifiques de la Belgique, 1830-1985 (Bruxelles: 1985)
  • Van Hoorebeke P., 175 Ans de l'Ordre de Léopold et les Ordres Nationaux Belges (MRA: 2007)

External links