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Pour le Mérite (Military Class)

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    Thomas Ludwig Werner Freiherr von Fritsch (4 August 1880 – 22 September 1939) was a member of the German High Command. He was Commander-in-Chief of the German Army from February 1934 until Febr...
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  • Fyodor Sergeyevich Panyutin (1790 - 1865)
    790 г. Родился Панютин Федор Сергеевич. Российский государственный и военный деятель, генерал от инфантерии. Окончил Пажеский корпус (1809). Служил в лейб-гвардии Семеновском полку. Участник Отечествен...
  • Иван Терентьевич Потулов (1782 - 1852)
    крещен 29 октября в с. Чернобаево Пронского у. Генерал-майор. Георгиевский кавалер. В службу вступил портупей-юнкером в Астраханский Гренадерский полк 15.09.1797; пожалован в прапорщики 3.10.1800; в по...
  • Лев Александрович Нарышкин (1785 - 1846)
    Lev Alexandrovitch Narychkine (Cyrillic - Лев Александрович Нарышкин; often also known as Léon Narychkine) was a Russian aristocrat who fought in the Napoleonic Wars.

The Pour le Mérite ( 'For Merit') is an order of merit (German: Verdienstorden) established in 1740 by King Frederick II of Prussia. The Pour le Mérite was awarded as both a military and civil honour and ranked, along with the Order of the Black Eagle, the Order of the Red Eagle and the House Order of Hohenzollern, among the highest orders of merit in the Kingdom of Prussia. The order of merit was the highest royal Prussian order of bravery for officers of all ranks. After 1871, when the various German kingdoms, grand duchies, duchies, principalities and Hanseatic city states had come together under Prussian leadership to form the federally structured German Empire, the Prussian honours gradually assumed, at least in public perception, the status of honours of Imperial Germany, even though many honours of the various German states continued to be awarded.

The Pour le Mérite was an honour conferred both for military (1740–1918) and civil (1740–1810, after 1842 as a separate class) services. It was awarded strictly as a recognition of extraordinary personal achievement, rather than as a general marker of social status or a courtesy-honour, although certain restrictions of social class and military rank were applied. The order was secular, and membership endured for the remaining lifetime of the recipient, unless renounced or revoked.

During the First World War, the Pour le Mérite was known informally as the Blue Max (German: Blauer Max), in honour of flying ace Max Immelmann, the first recipient during the war. Immelmann was also the first aviator to receive the award.

New awards of the military class ceased with the end of the Prussian monarchy in November 1918. The civil class was revived as an independent organization in 1923 (Pour le Mérite für Wissenschaften und Künste). Instead of the King of Prussia, the President of Germany acted as head of the order. After the Second World War, the civil class was re-established in 1952. This version of the Pour le Mérite is still active today. The Pour le Mérite is still an order into which a person is admitted into membership, like the United Kingdom's Order of the British Empire, and is not simply a medal or state decoration. German author Ernst Jünger, who died in 1998, was the last living recipient of the military class award.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pour_le_M%C3%A9rite