Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/orders-decorations-and-medals-of-bavaria

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Order of Saint Michael (Bavaria)


FieldValue
titleOrder of Merit of Saint Michael
Verdienstorden vom Heiligen Michael
imageRidder in de Orde van Verdienste van de Heilige Michaël van Beieren voorzijde.gif
image_size100px
image2file:OrderofSt.MichaelMerit.gif
caption2Ribbon of the order
awarded_byKingdom of Bavaria
typebefore 1837: Military Order
after 1837: Order of merit
mottoQUIS UT DEUS
("Who [is] like God")
founderArchbishop Joseph Clemens, Archbishop-Elector of Cologne
statusNo longer awarded
gradesMilitary Order:
Knight Commander
Knight Officer
Knight
establishedMilitary Order: 29 September 1693
Order of Merit: 16 February 1837
houseHouse of Wittelsbach
religionRoman Catholicism
higherOrder of Merit of the Bavarian Crown
lowerBavarian Maximilian Order for Science and Art

Verdienstorden vom Heiligen Michael after 1837: Order of merit ("Who [is] like God") Knight Commander Knight Officer Knight

Order of Merit: 1st class with Grand Cross 1st class 2nd class with star 2nd class Cross of Honour 3rd class 4th class Cross of Merit Medal of Merit Order of Merit: 16 February 1837

The Order of Saint Michael (), later Order of Merit of Saint Michael (), was founded on September 29, 1693 by Joseph Clemens of Bavaria, then Archbishop-Elector of Cologne, as a military order. Its full name was Most Illustrious Military Order of Defenders of Divine Glory under the Protection of the Holy Archangel Michael. Initially, this order was only open to the Catholic nobility. Upon its institution, the order consisted of the Grand Master and three classes: Knight Commander, Knight Officer and Knight, divided in two divisions, spiritual and secular. The Grand Master and Knight Commanders were bestowed with a breast star. The Knight Commanders or Knights Grand Cross, officially limited to nine of the spiritual and the secular division each, constituted the chapter. The order has had four spiritual Knights Officers: chancellor, honorary chaplain, almoner, and sacristan, and the same amount of secular Knights Officers: marshal, treasurer, equerry, and chamberlain. The third class of Knights was limited to 18 spiritual and secular knights each, so the order ideally should have had 63 members, representing the age of the queen of angels.

The first headquarter on the order was located in the Godesburg in the Electorate of Cologne, from the 1750s in the Electoral Palace. Its Bavarian main church was St. Michael in Berg am Laim, Munich.

In 1808, the order was recognized by Maximilian I Joseph of Bavaria as an order of chivalry in the Kingdom of Bavaria, and the grade of Knights of Honour, limited to twelve recipients, mostly Protestants and literary commoners, was added to the third class. In 1813, the order received the official title of the Knightly House Order of St. Michael.

On 16 February 1837, Ludwig I of Bavaria transformed the military order into an order of merit, called Order of Merit of St. Michael, divided into three classes: Knight Grand Cross, Knight Commander, and Knight. The physical appearance of the decorations also changed at this time. In 1855, the classes of Knight Grand Commander and Knight 2nd class were introduced. In 1887, according to a proposal of Crailsheim, the order got reformed and divided into Knights 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th class; a cross of merit and a silver medal were affiliated with the order.

List of grandmasters

  1. 1693–1723: Joseph Clemens of Bavaria, Archbishop-Elector of Cologne
  2. 1723–1761: Clemens August of Bavaria, Archbishop-Elector of Cologne and Grand Master of the Teutonic Order
  3. 1761–1763: Johann Theodor of Bavaria, Prince-Bishop of Regensburg, Prince-Bishop of Freising, and Prince-Bishop of Liège.
  4. 1763–1770: Duke Clement Francis of Bavaria
  5. 1770–1777: Maximilian III Joseph, Elector of Bavaria
  6. 1778–1795: Charles II August, Duke of Zweibrücken
  7. 1795–1799: Maximilian Joseph, Duke of Zweibrücken
  8. 1799–1837: Duke Wilhelm in Bavaria

After the death of Duke Wilhelm and the transformation into an order of merit, the King of Bavaria as the fount of honor was de facto Grand Master.

References

References

  1. Robertsom, Megan C.. (30 September 2007). "Kingdom of Bavaria: Royal Merit Order of St Michael". Medals of the World.
  2. Michael, Verdienstorden vom Heiligen. (1769). "Nouveau calendrier du Très Illustre Ordre Equestre de Bavière sous le Titre de Défenseurs de la Gloire de Dieu sous la Protection de Saint-Michel Archange: 1769".
  3. Trost, Ludwig. (1888). "Die Geschichte des St.-Michaels-Ordens in Bayern und der St.-Michaels-Bruderschaft seit dem Jahre 1693 bis auf die Gegenwart". Oldenbourg.
  4. Trost, Ludwig. (1888). "Die Geschichte des St.-Michaels-Ordens in Bayern und der St.-Michaels-Bruderschaft seit dem Jahre 1693 bis auf die Gegenwart". Oldenbourg.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Order of Saint Michael (Bavaria) — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report