Czech Annexation Medal

$70.00

Condition: Near Mint

Base Material: Tombak

SKU: JW5317 Category: Tags ,

In stock

Product Description: This Czech Annexation Medal is a nice example of this early commemorative award. It is made of Tombak, a brass alloy. Virtually all of the original bronze finish is intact on both the obverse and reverse of this medal. Appealing light gold shades at the high points contrast with darker tones in the recesses. Both sides of the medal show attractive, smooth surfaces, with only minimal contact marks and a couple of tiny spots. The lettering on the reverse is crisp and well-defined. All of the original detail is intact. The original suspension ring is present, and is unmarked. There is no ribbon. It’s likely this award was never issued. This Czech Annexation Medal remains in near mint condition.

 

 

Historical Description: In 1938 and 1939, a triumphant, ascendant Germany used a combination of political/diplomatic pressure and military operations/threats to annex and occupy (or re-occupy) areas that were to become part of the Greater German Reich. To recognize these successes, the German government instituted a series of three medals, known as the German Occupation Medals (or “Flower War Medals”). There were three of these awards, all with the same obverse design. They were designed by Professor Richard Klein of Munich, and featured two nude men, one bearing a Nazi flag, ascending a podium with the German eagle and swastika emblem. Each of the three different awards had a different date on the reverse (the date of the event each commemorated), and each had a different ribbon. The first of these medals to be instituted was the medal for the Austrian Anschluss, which appeared on May 1, 1938, and bore the date “13. März 1938.” It had a silver finish, and a red ribbon with white-black-white stripes at the edges. The next “Flower War” medal to be instituted, and the one awarded in the greatest numbers, came on October 18, 1938, to commemorate the occupation of the Sudetenland on October 1. It had a bronze finish and a red and black ribbon. The reverse of each of these bore the lettering “Ein Volk, Ein Reich, Ein Führer” (One People, One Nation, One Leader” with German swastika emblems and the date of institution of the award. The last of these medals, the “Memel Medal,” was authorized on May 1, 1939, and commemorated the return of the Memel Territory on March 22, 1939. This medal had a different reverse, a bronze finish, and a ribbon with white, red, and green stripes. This medal was only awarded 31,322 times (compared to 318,689 awards of the Anschluss medal and 1,162,617 awards of the Sudetenland medal). Issue of “Flower Wars” medals ceased at the end of 1940.

 

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