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Order of the Crown of Italy / Ordine della Corona d'Italia / Itaalia Krooni orden

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  • Major General Robert Emmet Callan (1874 - 1936)
    Major General Robert Emmet Callan (March 24, 1874 – November 20, 1936) was a distinguished United States Army Coast Artillery officer who served in the United States and overseas in places such as Pu...
  • Lieutenant General Thomas B. Larkin (1890 - 1968)
    Lieutenant General Thomas Bernard Larkin (December 15, 1890 – October 17, 1968) was a military officer who served as the 32nd Quartermaster General of the United States Army.
  • Robert Gysae (1911 - 1989)
    Robert Karl Friedrich Gysae (14 January 1911 – 26 April 1989) was a German U-boat commander in the Kriegsmarine during World War II. He was a recipient of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oa...
  • Samuel Reading Bertron, Jnr (1865 - 1938)
    Bertron was born on February 26, 1865, in Port Gibson, Mississippi. His father was a Philadelphia-born and Princeton University-educated Presbyterian minister, Samuel Reading Bertron Sr. (1806–1878),...
  • Aksel Kristian (1900 - 1985)
    Aksel Kristian ( 26. oktoober 1900 Tartumaa – 03. august 1985 Stockholm) oli Eesti sõjaväelane (major, 1938). Esimene abielu - Laulatus Tartu Pauluse EELK 03.02.1923 (UKJ): 01.1930 ...

The Order of the Crown of Italy (Italian: Ordine della Corona d'Italia or OCI) was founded as a national order in 1868 by King Vittorio Emanuele II, to commemorate the unification of Italy in 1861. It was awarded in five degrees for civilian and military merit. Today the Order of the Crown has been replaced by the Order of Merit of Savoy and is still conferred on new knights by the current head of the house of Vittorio Emanuele, Prince of Naples.

Compared with the older Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus (1572), the Order of the Crown of Italy was awarded more liberally and could be conferred on non-Catholics as well; eventually, it became a requirement for a person to have already received the Order of the Crown of Italy in at least the same degree before receiving the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus.

The order has been suppressed by law since the foundation of the Republic in 1946. However, Umberto II did not abdicate his position as fons honorum and it remained under his Grand Mastership as a dynastic order. While the continued use of those decorations conferred prior to 1951 is permitted in Italy, the crowns on the ribbons issued before 1946 must be substituted for as many five pointed stars on military uniforms.