Hogenzollern Campaign Medal,

Order of the Zähringer Lion,

1849 Campaign Medal Set

(Miniature)

霍亨索倫戰役獎章

扎林格雄獅勳章

1849戰役獎章

徽章組

(迷你版)

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Item number: M424

Year: AD 1851 (M424-1)/AD 1840-1866 (M424-2)/AD 1849 (M424-3)

Material: Bronze (M424-1)/Gold (M424-2)/Bronze (Gunmetal) (M424-3)

Size: 30.0 x 45.1 x 1.5 mm (M424)/14.0 x 14.0 x 1.5 mm (M424-1)/ 13.7 x 13.7 x 2.6 mm (M424-2)/14.0 x 14.0 x 1.5 mm (M424-3)

Weight: 8.05 g (M424)

Provenance: Auktionshavs Kendzia 2025

This miniature set consists of three miniature medals intended to be worn with civilian evening dress (such as a tailcoat). From left to right they comprise the Hohenzollern Campaign Medal, the Order of the Zähringer Lion, and the Campaign Medal for 1849.

The Hohenzollern Campaign Medal (Hohenzollersche Denkmünze für 1848/1849)

The obverse imitates the design of the Hohenzollern Royal House Orders. At the centre appears the “Imperial Eagle” representing the Kingdom of Prussia, crowned, wings displayed, its head turned to the right showing the left profile, the beak open with the tongue visible. On its breast is borne the Hohenzollern family coat of arms, a quartered shield in black and white. The eagle is framed by a double ring bearing the inscription “VOM FELS ZUM MEER” (“From the rock to the sea”), the motto newly assigned by King Friedrich Wilhelm IV to the House of Hohenzollern, summarising the dynasty’s ascent from its ancestral castle in the Swabian Alps to its expansion northwards to the shores of the Baltic and North Seas. The circular medallion is superimposed upon a cross pattée whose arms broaden outward and terminate in convex curves parallel to the enclosing ring. Along each arm, slightly detached from the outline, runs a finer four-armed ornamental pattern composed of narrow cross-hatched lines. The cross rests on a wreath composed of laurel leaves to the left and oak leaves to the right. The border is framed by a fine double line.

The reverse displays, across two horizontal lines, the name of the founder, “FRIEDRICH WILHELM IV”. These are separated above and below by a straight rule, with “1848” above and “1849” below. A surrounding ring encloses the legend “SEINEN BIS IN DEN TOD GETREUEN KRIEGERN” (“To his warriors steadfast unto death”). The border again consists of a fine double line.

The medal is suspended from two fixed rings attached at the top edge for mounting on a support bar, with the ribbon sewn above in medal-bar form. The ribbon is white with three black stripes, the outer stripes broader and slightly offset from the edge, and the central stripe narrower.

The Hohenzollern Campaign Medal was instituted by Friedrich Wilhelm IV on AD 1851 August 23 as a one-time distinction. It was awarded to those who, between AD 1848 and 1849, served loyally during the German revolutions and in the Schleswig–Holstein uprising from AD 1849 to AD 1851, provided they had completed at least fourteen days of service; non-combatant officials received a variant without the reverse inscription “SEINEN BIS IN DEN TOD GETREUEN KRIEGERN.”

The Order of the Zähringer Lion (Orden vom Zähringer Löwen)

The obverse centres on a gold-edged medallion depicting the ancestral Zähringen Castle, emblematic of the founding house. The four arms of the cross radiate equidistantly, their ends broader than their bases, and are filled with green, slightly domed glass enamel cut at an oblique angle at the extremities. The interstices between the cross arms are filled with foliate gold ornamentation. Unlike the full-size decorations, the foliate ornamentation here is reduced to outlines, the surfaces being flat and undecorated, perhaps owing to the miniature scale or to leave space for the setting of small diamonds.

The reverse medallion bears a gold lion rampant on a red enamel field, representing the Zähringen arms. Two suspension rings at the top allow the piece to hang from the support bar, the ribbon being sewn above in medal-bar form. The ribbon is green with a narrow yellow stripe near each edge.

Because this is a miniature, the precise class cannot be determined from suspension devices or dimensions. Its gold construction indicates at least the grade of Knight First Class (Ritterkreuz I. Klasse) or above; if originally set with diamonds, it may have represented Commander First Class in Diamonds (Kommandeur I. Klasse in Brillanten) or a higher grade.

The Order of the Zähringer Lion was instituted by Grand Duke Karl Friedrich of Baden on AD 1812 December 26, the name day of his consort, Grand Duchess Stéphanie. It has long been regarded as one of the most aesthetically refined orders among the German states. From AD 1815 onwards, recipients who rendered outstanding service could receive a gold oak-leaf device engraved with the letter “L”, signifying Grand Duke Leopold, until Grand Duke Friedrich I abolished the “L” upon reforming the statutes in AD 1866. After AD 1866, crossed swords were added to denote awards for military merit.

When founded in AD 1812 the order had three classes: Grand Cross, Commander, and Knight. Subsequent reforms introduced subdivisions: in AD 1840 the Commander class was divided into First and Second Class, the former accompanied by a breast star; in AD 1866 the Knight class was likewise divided into First and Second Class. The Second-Class Knight’s badge was struck in silver, while the higher grades were made in gold. Around AD 1910 the Commander badges began to be manufactured in silver-gilt.

The Campaign Medal for 1849 (Gedächtnismedaille für 1849)

The obverse bears the inscription “DEM TAPFEREN BEFREIUNGS HEER 1849” (“To the brave army of liberation, 1849”), encircled by a laurel wreath tied with a ribbon at the base. Around the outer margin appears “LEOPOLD GROSSHERZOG VON BADEN” (“Leopold, Grand Duke of Baden”).

The reverse displays an unsheathed sword flanked by palm branches. At the top the medal is fitted with two rings for mounting on a support bar, with the ribbon sewn in medal-bar form. The ribbon is yellow (originally perhaps orange), with narrow silver stripes near each edge.

This medal was instituted by Grand Duke Leopold I of Baden on AD 1849 August 29 as a one-time distinction. It was awarded to those members of other German Confederation states who participated in suppressing the Baden Revolution during the German revolutions of AD 1848–1849. Owing to its function as an award for operations against fellow Germans, it acquired the nickname “Brother-Slayer Medal” (Gedächtnismedaille Brudermordmedaille).

The German revolutions of AD 1848–1849 were a wave of liberal and nationalist movements that swept through the states of the German Confederation. Their origins lay in long-standing social and economic tensions in early nineteenth-century Europe: agrarian hardship, unemployment accompanying early industrialisation, the bourgeois demand for constitutional government and civil rights, and the immediate catalyst of the French February Revolution. The uprisings spread rapidly from March AD 1848—thus also known as the “March Revolution”—forcing rulers to accept liberal ministries, abolish censorship, and convene the Frankfurt National Assembly, which attempted to draft a constitution for a unified, constitutional German polity. Yet the revolution faltered as conservative forces regrouped, armies reasserted control, Prussia and Austria rejected the Assembly’s imperial plan, and deep divisions persisted within the revolutionary camp—between advocates of a Greater or Lesser Germany, and between republicans and constitutional monarchists. By late AD 1848 the movement was in retreat.

Baden had been regarded even before the revolution as the most constitutionally liberal state within the German Confederation, and its demands for a democratic republic proved particularly resolute. The first Baden uprising of AD 1848 began with military mutinies and democratic agitation but was swiftly suppressed after Prussian intervention. In spring AD 1849, following the rejection of the Frankfurt Constitution by most German states, Baden became the main centre of the “Imperial Constitution Campaign” (Reichsverfassungskampagne). Revolutionary forces and democrats seized power in Karlsruhe and Freiburg and sought to establish a republic; large portions of the Baden army defected to the revolutionaries, making Baden the most militarily significant revolutionary state. However, under overwhelming Prussian pressure the revolutionary armies were defeated in June and July, notably at Waghäusel and Rastatt. The fall of the Rastatt fortress on 23 July marked the definitive end of the Baden Revolution and the German revolutions of AD 1848–1849. After the defeat, many leaders were executed or fled to North America and Switzerland, and the revolutionary institutions were abolished.

Holstein belonged to the German Confederation and was predominantly German-speaking, whereas Schleswig was a territory of the Kingdom of Denmark, though its southern districts likewise contained a substantial German-speaking population. In the AD 1840s, Danish liberals advanced the policy of a “unitary kingdom”, seeking to integrate both duchies fully into Denmark’s constitutional framework, a move that provoked strong resistance among German inhabitants. When the waves of the March Revolution reached the Danish border in AD 1848, the Schleswig–Holstein provisional national government was established in Kiel, declaring its opposition to Danish centralisation and its intention to join the German Confederation, thereby triggering armed conflict. Prussia, acting on behalf of the Confederation, initially intervened in support of the insurgents, rapidly escalating the war. However, under pressure from the European Great Powers, Prussia was compelled to withdraw, and the insurgent forces were gradually subdued by the Danish army. The conflict concluded in AD 1851 with the complete defeat of the uprising, and both duchies were restored to Danish royal rule. Nonetheless, the underlying national tensions remained unresolved and culminated in the Second Schleswig War of AD 1864, after which Prussia and Austria ultimately seized control of the two duchies.

Grand Duke Leopold I, who succeeded to the throne in AD 1830 after succession adjustments following the Congress of Vienna restored the Zähringen dynasty in Baden, governed during a period of rapid social and political transformation across the German lands: economic strains from early industrialisation, agrarian difficulties, the rise of liberal and nationalist ideas, and growing demands for parliamentary reform. Although comparatively liberal among German princes—implementing limited administrative and legal reforms and permitting broader public discourse in the AD 1840s—his moderate policies failed to satisfy radical democrats and republicans. During the AD 1848 revolution, Baden became a stronghold of radical democratic forces, many soldiers defected, and the government faced an unprecedented crisis, ultimately forcing Leopold I to flee Karlsruhe and rely on Prussian troops to suppress the uprising.

King Friedrich Wilhelm IV of Prussia, who ascended the throne in AD 1840, ruled at a time when conservative monarchy and liberal movements clashed dramatically. Steeped in a romantic conception of kingship and viewing himself as a ruler by divine grace, he favoured a revival of medieval hierarchical order over modern constitutional governance. Externally his reign confronted the loose structure of the post-Vienna German Confederation and Austria’s constraints; internally it faced the poverty and unrest generated by early industrialisation and growing liberal demands for constitutions, press freedom, and representative government. When revolution broke out in AD 1848 he initially offered symbolic concessions—such as adopting the black-red-gold colours—to appease public sentiment, but soon relied on military force to suppress uprisings in Prussia and across German territories. His refusal to accept the imperial crown drafted by the Frankfurt Assembly doomed its constitutional project. After the revolution’s failure he introduced a conservative constitutional framework in the AD 1850s that preserved royal authority and laid structural foundations for the military reforms and Prussian ascendancy later directed by his brother, Wilhelm I.

物件編號: M424

年代: 公元 1851 年 (M424-1)/公元 1840-1866 年 (M424-2)/公元 1849 年 (M424-3)

材質: 青銅 (M424-1)/黃金 (M424-2)/青銅(炮銅) (M424-3)

尺寸: 30.0 x 45.1 x 1.5 mm (M424)/14.0 x 14.0 x 1.5 mm (M424-1)/ 13.7 x 13.7 x 2.6 mm (M424-2)/14.0 x 14.0 x 1.5 mm (M424-3)

重量: 8.05 g (M424)

來源: 肯吉亞拍賣行 2025

此迷你版章組包含三個迷你版勳獎章,用以著非軍服正裝(例如燕尾服)時配戴,由左至右分別為霍亨索倫戰役獎章、扎林格雄獅勳章,以及1849戰役獎章。

霍亨索倫戰役獎章(Hohenzollersche Denkmünze für 1848/1849)

獎章的正面仿霍亨索倫王室勳章的設計,中央為代表普魯士王國的「帝國鷹」,頭戴王冠,雙翅開展,鷹首朝右展露左側面,張喙吐舌,胸前承托霍亨索倫家族紋章,為一黑白相間的四分盾徽。帝國鷹以之間環列有銘文的雙環環繞,呈圓徽,銘文為德文「VOM FELS ZUM MEER」,即「從岩石到大海」,是普魯士國王腓特烈·威廉四世為其霍亨索倫家族所賦予的新格言。該格言總結了霍亨索倫家族自一座施瓦本阿爾卑斯山區的城堡,一路北上征伐直到波羅的海及北海沿岸的經歷。圓徽疊於十字之上,十字為四臂漸寬,末端圓弧於外環平行的展臂十字(cross pattée),四臂上沿著輪廓,與輪廓稍微間隔各有一以細格紋繪成的稍細四臂作為紋飾。十字紋飾疊於一桂冠之上,由左側的月桂葉枝與右側的橡葉枝環繞而成。章緣有細雙環。

獎章的背面中央橫列二行為設立者「FRIEDRICH WILHELM IV」,即德文之「腓特烈·威廉四世」。以上下各一道直線相隔,上方為「1848」,下方為「1849」。以圍繞的環相隔,外側環列德文「SEINEN BIS IN DEN TOD GETREUEN KRIEGERN」,可譯為「獻給那些對他忠誠至死的戰士」。章緣有細雙環。

章緣上方有兩個環以正面懸掛於支撐槓上,綬帶則縫於上方固定,呈勳表形式。綬帶為白底上三道黑帶,兩側黑帶與邊緣稍微相隔並較寬,中央黑帶較細。

霍亨索倫戰役獎章為腓特烈·威廉四世於公元1851年8月23日所設立的一次性獎章,授予在公元1848至1849年德意志革命,以及公元1849至1951年什列斯威-霍爾斯坦起義中,忠於國王並至少服役滿十四天的戰鬥人員,如官員等非戰鬥人員另有章背無「SEINEN BIS IN DEN TOD GETREUEN KRIEGERN」銘文的版本以供酬勳。

扎林格雄獅勳章(Orden vom Zähringer Löwen)

勳章正面中央為金色描邊的圓盤,圓盤上繪有家族的象徵——扎林格城堡。圓盤四周十字四臂等距,但十字末端較根部寬大,十字臂正面填充綠色半圓凸起玻璃琺瑯。填充物末端磨成斜角。十字臂之間的空間填滿花葉紋金飾,與正章不同,花葉紋金飾僅有輪廓,正背面平夷無浮雕,或許是因為迷你版而省略,也可能因曾需鑲嵌碎鑽。

勳章的背面圓盤繪有以紅色琺琅為底的金色直立雄獅,為扎林格家族紋章。章緣上方有兩個環以正面懸掛於支撐槓上,綬帶則縫於上方固定,呈勳表形式。綬帶底色呈綠色,兩側各一道黃帶與邊緣稍微相隔。

此勳章為迷你版,無法依懸掛飾物及章體大小分辨詳細等級,金質表示其至少為「一級騎士勳章」(Ritterkreuz I. Klasse)等級以上,若曾鑲鑽則其可能為「鑲鑽一級指揮官勳章」(Kommandeur I. Klasse in Brillanten)以上之等級。

扎林格雄獅勳章由巴登大公國大公卡爾·弗里德里希(Karl Friedrich) 於公元1812年12月26日設立,該日亦為大公夫人史蒂芬妮的命名日。扎林格雄獅勳章是公認最漂亮的德意志邦國勳章之一。公元1815年後,如果受勳者作出了獨特的貢獻,他們的勳章上方會有黃金打造的橡樹葉,葉子上刻有「L」的戳記,代表大公利奧波德(Leopold),直到公元1866年大公腓特烈一世(Friedrich I)修改相關的法規,將「L」移除。公元1866年後如果受勳者是因為軍功而被授予此枚勳章,他們的勳章上會有交叉的雙劍。

在公元1812年設立時,扎林格雄獅勳章分為三級——大十字級、指揮級及騎士級,及後經歷多次修改,包括公元1840年將指揮官級分為一級及二級,其中指揮一級同時獲頒星章;公元1866年將騎士級亦分為一級及二級。二階騎士勳章由銀打造,其餘勳章的原材料為金。公元1910年左右,指揮級勳章改為銀鍍金。

1849戰役獎章(Gedächtnismedaille für 1849)

獎章正面中央為「DEM TAPFEREN BEFREIUNGS HEER 1849」,可譯為「致英勇的解放之軍 1849」,以月桂花環環繞,下方為繫結兩樹枝的飄帶,外側上側環列「LEOPOLD GROSSHERZOG VON BADEN」,即「巴登大公利奧波德」。

獎章背面中央為一把出鞘的劍,兩側環繞棕櫚枝葉。章緣上方有兩個環以正面懸掛於支撐槓上,綬帶則縫於上方固定,呈勳表形式。綬帶底色呈黃色(原可能為橙色),兩側各一道黃色細橫紋的銀帶與邊緣稍微相隔。

霍亨索倫戰役獎章為巴登大公利奧波德一世於公元1849年8月29日所設立的一次性獎章,授予在公元1848至1849年德意志革命中,協助鎮壓巴登革命的其他德意志邦聯成員。因此該獎章也被稱為「兄弟鬩牆獎章」(Gedächtnismedaille Brudermordmedaille)。

公元1848年至1849年的德意志革命,是一場席捲德意志邦聯各邦國的自由主義與民族主義運動,其根源來自歐洲 19 世紀上半葉長期累積的社會與經濟矛盾,包括農民壓力、工業化初期的失業問題、中產階級對憲政與公民權的追求,以及受法國「二月革命」的直接刺激。革命於公元1848年三月至四月迅速在多個邦國爆發,因此也稱為「三月革命」。革命迫使各地君主接受自由主義內閣、廢除審查制度並召開法蘭克福國民議會,議會企圖制定全德意志地區的憲法與君主立憲架構。然而,隨著保守勢力重整力量、軍隊重新掌握局面、普魯士與奧地利拒絕接受議會的皇權安排,加上革命陣營內部在「大德意志/小德意志」、「共和/君主立憲」等重大議題上無法取得共識,革命自公元1848年底起逐步走向潰敗。

巴登(Baden)於革命前便被譽為德意志地區最為自由憲政的邦國,然而革命爆發後,其建立民主共和制度的訴求也是最堅定的。公元1848年巴登革命最初由軍官譁變及民主派集會引發,但在普魯士援軍介入後被迅速平息。公元1849年春,法蘭克福議會憲法遭多數邦國拒絕後,巴登成為「帝國憲法運動」(Reichsverfassungskampagne)最激烈的據點。革命軍與民主派在卡爾斯魯厄和弗萊堡一帶掌握政權,並試圖建立共和制度;同時,大批巴登軍隊倒戈加入革命者,使巴登成為德意志革命中軍事力量最完整、最具規模的革命政權。然而,在普魯士強大軍力壓境下,革命軍於公元1849年6月至7月間在維格(Waghäusel)、拉施塔特(Rastatt)等地接連敗退。7月23日拉施塔特要塞陷落後,巴登革命正式宣告終結,也標誌著整場德意志公元1848-1849年革命的最終崩潰。革命失敗後,許多領袖被處決或流亡北美與瑞士,革命制度亦被全面廢除。

霍爾斯坦大部屬於德意志邦聯,主要為德語區;而什列斯威則為丹麥王國的領地,但其南部同樣擁有大量德語人口。丹麥自由派在公元1840年代推動「三合一王國」政策,意圖將兩公國全面納入丹麥憲政架構,引發德語居民的強烈反彈。公元1848年三月革命的浪潮抵達丹麥邊境後,什列斯威–霍爾斯坦民族自由政府在基爾(Kiel)成立,宣布反對丹麥中央集權化並試圖加入德意志邦聯,引發武裝衝突。初期普魯士代表德意志邦聯出兵支援起義軍,使戰事迅速升級。然而在歐洲列強干預下,普魯士被迫退出戰事,起義軍勢力逐步被丹麥軍隊壓制。戰爭於公元1851年隨著起義徹底失敗而結束,兩公國重回丹麥王室管轄。儘管如此,民族矛盾並未消失,並在隨後的公元1864年第二次什列斯威戰爭爆發後,最終由普魯士和奧地利奪取兩公國。

巴登大公利奧波德一世於公元1830年繼承大公位,他的上位本身便源於維也納會議後的繼承調整,使哲林根王朝得以於巴登復辟。在他統治期間,巴登面臨整個德意志地區急速變化的社會與政治環境:工業化初期的經濟壓力、農業困境、自由主義與民族主義思想的興起,以及議會政治改革的訴求相互交織。利奧波德一世相較於其他德意志君主較為開明,推動有限度的行政改革與法制近代化,也在公元1840年代容許更高程度的公共討論。然而,他所採取的溫和自由路線仍無法滿足激進自由派與共和派的要求。公元1848年革命爆發後,巴登成為激進民主派的中心之一,軍隊中大批士兵倒戈,使巴登政府面臨前所未有的政治危機。利奧波德一世最終被迫逃離卡爾斯魯厄,並依靠普魯士軍隊平定叛亂。

普魯士國王腓特烈·威廉四世自公元1840年即位,是德意志保守君主制與自由主義思潮劇烈碰撞時期的重要人物。他以浪漫主義式的王權觀著稱,自視為「上帝恩典下的君主」,主張恢復中世紀式的階級秩序與君主父權,而非近代憲政體系。其統治初期在外部面臨維也納會議後的德意志邦聯鬆散格局與奧地利的壓制;在內部則遭遇工業化初期帶來的貧困、社會動盪與自由派對憲法、新聞自由與議會制度的要求。公元1848年,革命爆發時,他先以讓步與象徵性姿態(如戴上黑紅金三色)試圖安撫輿論,但很快轉向依賴軍隊鎮壓普魯士與德意志各地的革命運動,並拒絕接受法蘭克福國民議會所擬的全德帝位,使德意志憲政統一的嘗試破局。革命失敗後,他在公元1850年代推行保守的憲政形式,維持王權優勢,並為其弟威廉一世後來主導的軍事改革與普魯士崛起奠定制度基礎。

類似/相同物件 請看:

德國 沃爾米施泰特博物館 Museum Wolmirstedt

https://nat.museum-digital.de/object/98377

德國 維斯特科堡博物館 Kunstsammlungen der Veste Coburg

https://global.museum-digital.org/object/2295891

德國 沃爾米施泰特博物館 Museum Wolmirstedt

https://global.museum-digital.org/object/77368

澳大利亞戰爭紀念館 Australian War Memorial

https://www.awm.gov.au/collection/C134543?image=2

更多相關訊息請參考:

“Stiftungserlass.” Gesetz-Sammlung für die Königlichen Preußischen Staaten, 1851, pp. 675-677.
https://www.google.de/books/edition/Gesetzsammlung_f%C3%BCr_die_K%C3%B6niglich_Preu/YxxGAAAAcAAJ?hl=de&gbpv=1&pg=PA675&printsec=frontcover&dq=671

Großherzogtum Baden. “Der Orden vom Zähringer Löwen.” Ordensjournal, no. 14, Nov. 2007, pp. 1-15.

“Statutem” Großherzoglich Badisches Regierungs-Blatt, no. LXVI, 1849, pp. 533–534.
https://books.google.de/books?id=BnwrAQAAMAAJ&hl=de&pg=RA1-PA533#v=onepage&q&f=false

Borna Barac, Reference Catalogue Orders Medals and Decorations of the World : instituted until 1945 : Part II Bronze Book D-G. Zagreb: OBOL d.o.o., 2010.

Burke, Bernar. The book of orders of knighthood and decorations of honour of all nations. London: Hurst and Blackett, 1858.

Militär-Handbuch des Königreiches Bayern 1876. München, 1876.
https://www.bavarikon.de/object/bav:BSB-MDZ-00000BSB11331549

周惠民,《德國史:中歐強權的起伏 (增訂三版)》,臺北:三民書局,2019。

指文號角工作室主編,《號角:世界經典制服徽章藝術II》,北京:中國長安出版社,2016。

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