Order of Saint Anna

The Imperial Order of Saint Anna (Russian: Орден Святой Анны; also "Order of Saint Anne" or "Order of Saint Ann") was a Holstein ducal and then Russian imperial order of chivalry. It was established by Karl Friedrich, Duke of Holstein-Gottorp, on 14 February 1735, in honour of his wife Anna Petrovna, daughter of Peter the Great of Russia.

Imperial Order of Saint Anna
Орден Святой Анны
Star of the Order
Awarded by Head of the House of Romanov
TypeDynastic Order
Royal houseHouse of Romanov
Religious affiliationRussian Orthodox
MottoAmantibus Justitiam, Pietatem, Fidem
To those who Love Justice, Piety, and Fidelity
StatusRarely awarded
Grades1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th Class, with the Anna medal awarded for meritorious service.
Precedence
Next (higher)Imperial Order of St. Prince Vladimir
Next (lower)Imperial Order of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker

Ribbon of the order

Originally, the Order of Saint Anna was a dynastic order of knighthood; but between 1797 and 1917 it had dual status as a dynastic order and as a state order. The Order of St. Anna continued to be awarded after the revolution by Grand Duke Kirill Vladimirovich, Grand Duke Vladimir Kirillovich, and Grand Duchess Maria Vladimirovna. Today, the Russian Imperial Order of St. Anna, awarded by Grand Duchess Maria Vladimirovna is recognized as an order of chivalry by the privately operated ICOC[1] as a continuation of the pre-Revolutionary order, and has been approved for wear with military uniform by the Russian Federation, but not by some members of the Romanov Family Association.[2]

Membership of the Order was awarded for a distinguished career in civil service or for valour and distinguished service in the military. The Order of Saint Anna entitled recipients of the first class to hereditary nobility, and recipients of lower classes to personal nobility. For military recipients, it was awarded with swords. It is now usually awarded for meritorious service to the Imperial House of Russia.

Recipients of the Order of St. Andrew (K.A.) (including grand dukes, who received the order at baptism, and princes of the Imperial blood, who received it at their majority) simultaneously received the first class of the Order of Saint Anna. The Emperor himself was the hereditary grand master of the Order.

The motto of the Order is "Amantibus Justitiam, Pietatem, Fidem" ("To those who love justice, piety, and fidelity"). Its festival day is 3 February (New Style, 16 February). The Head of the Imperial House of Russia always is Master of the imperial Order of Saint Anna.[3]

History

At first, the Order had but one class and was named the "Order of Anna". The statutes of the Order promulgated in 1735 established as the principal insignia a red-enameled gold cross, with an image of Saint Anne imposed upon the centre of the cross; the reverse bore the initials "A.I.P.F." (for "Anna Imperatoris Petri Filia": "Anna, Emperor Peter's daughter" in Latin). The same letters also abbreviate the Latin motto (as the letter "J" did not exist in Latin, "Iustitiam" was the original spelling of the word now rendered "Justitiam").

In 1742, Karl Peter Ulrich, Duke Karl Friedrich's son, was declared the Russian heir apparent. After arriving in Russia, he presented the Order to several courtiers. On 15 April 1797, his own son, Emperor Paul I of Russia, established the Order as part of the Imperial Russian system of honours and divided it into three classes, renaming it the "Order of Saint Anna". Emperor Alexander I added a fourth class in 1815.

The title of Chekhov's well-known story Anna on the Neck refers both to the Order and to the heroine.

In Chapter IV of Crime and Punishment, Raskolnikov guesses that Luzhin must have, "...the Anna in his buttonhole and that he puts it on when he goes to dine with contractors or merchants."

Insignia

Methods of wear

  • 1st class: Cross worn at the bow of a broad ribbon (ten centimeters wide, worn over the left shoulder), on the right hip; star of the Order (about 95 millimeters in diameter) worn on the right breast
  • 2nd class: Cross worn on a neck ribbon, 45 millimeters wide
  • 3rd class: Cross worn on the left ribbon, suspended from a ribbon 28 millimeters wide
  • 4th class: Cross borne on the pommel of an edged weapon, together with a silver-tasselled sword-knot of the ribbon of the Order

The medal ribbon was red with narrow yellow edging.[4]

A recipient of higher classes of the Order would not wear the insignia of lower classes, unless he had also been awarded the fourth class (the insignia of which was borne on the hilt of a sword or other edged weapon).

Bibliography

Alan W. Hazelton, The Russian Imperial Orders; New York: The American Numismatic Society, 1932 (Numismatic Notes and Monograms, No. 51).

Guy Stair Sainty (Ed.) “World Orders of Knighthood and Merit” London: Burke's Peerage, 2006.

Notable recipients

List of recipients by class
1st Class
2nd Class
3rd Class
  • Adrian Nepenin
  • Alexander Afanasyev
  • Ilyas bey Aghalarov
  • Prince Albert of Saxe-Altenburg
  • Nikolai Anderson
  • Vladimir Arsenyev
  • Jaques Bagratuni
  • Aleksei Baiov
  • Andrei Bakich
  • Edward Bamford
  • Alexander Barclay de Tolly-Weymarn
  • Vasily Baumgarten
  • Daniel Bek-Pirumian
  • Vasily Biskupsky
  • Georgy Bobrikov
  • Woldemar von Boeckmann
  • Petro Bolbochan
  • Vasily Boldyrev
  • Fyodor Bronnikov
  • Jonas Budrys
  • Nikolai Ilyich Bulatov
  • Grigori Chernozubov
  • Seraphim Chichagov
  • Grigory Choglokov
  • Christopher Courtney
  • Nikolai Dimitrievich Dabić
  • Hubert Edward Dannreuther
  • Alexander Alexandrovich Dushkevich
  • Harold Edward Elliott
  • Nikolai Epanchin
  • Gunther von Etzel
  • Sergei Fyodorov (surgeon)
  • Nikolai Filatov
  • Vladimir Nikolayevich Filipov
  • Vasily Flug
  • Lev Galler
  • Ivan Ganetsky
  • Hamilton Gault
  • Alexander Gertsyk
  • Vladimir Gorbatovsky
  • Hovhannes Hakhverdyan
  • John Hearson
  • Dmitry Horvat
  • Oleksander Hrekov
  • Karol Hutten-Czapski
  • Alexander Ievreinov
  • Nikolai Ignatev
  • Arnolds Indriksons
  • Platon Ioseliani
  • Anton Irv
  • Ismayil bek Kutkashensky
  • Leonard Jaczewski
  • Alan Jerrard
  • Jonas Juška
  • Alexey Kaledin
  • Kyprian Kandratovich
  • Vladimir Kappel
  • Dmitry Karbyshev
  • Boris Khreschatitsky
  • Alexander Khristiani
  • Konstantinas Kleščinskis
  • Nikolai Kolomeitsev
  • August Kork
  • Nikolai Kravkov
  • Vasily Kravkov
  • Alexander J. Kravtsov
  • Petr G. Kravtsov
  • Julius Kuperjanov
  • Ants Kurvits
  • Aglay Dmitriyevich Kuzmin-Korovaev
  • Vladimir Kuzmin-Karavayev
  • Hans Leesment
  • Leonid Lesh
  • Alexander Mikhailovich Lermontov
  • Nikolai Linevich
  • Antoni Listowski
  • Ivan Loiko
  • Einar Lundborg
  • Donat Makijonek
  • Safarbek Malsagov
  • Karim bey Mehmandarov
  • Feofil Egorovich Meyendorf
  • Alfred Meyer-Waldeck
  • Sergei Mezheninov
  • Ivan Vladimirovich Michurin
  • Mikhail Mirkovich
  • Syla Mishchenko
  • Stefan Mokrzecki
  • Dmitry Nadyozhny
  • Jan Nagórski
  • Jafargulu Khan Nakhchivanski
  • Jamshid Nakhchivanski
  • Tovmas Nazarbekian
  • Danail Nikolaev
  • Vasily Fedorovich Novitsky
  • Nikolai Obolensky
  • Vladimir Olderogge
  • Alexey Fyodorovich Orlov
  • David Ivanovich Orlov
  • Vasily Perfilyev
  • Mikhail Mikhailovich Pleshkov
  • Georgy Polkovnikov
  • Peter Polovtsov
  • Alexander Stepanovich Popov
  • Mikhail Promtov
  • Feyzullah Mirza Qajar
  • Fyodor Radetsky
  • Evgeny Aleksandrovich Radkevich
  • Alexander Ragoza
  • Yuri Rall
  • Kirill Razumovski
  • Alexander Rodzyanko
  • Friedrich von Rüdiger
  • Carl Rustad
  • Adam Rzhevusky
  • Vladimir Saitov
  • Vladimir Viktorovich Sakharov
  • Victor Zaharevich Savelyev
  • Pavel Savvich
  • Sergei Sheydeman
  • Yakov Schkinsky
  • Shafi Khan Qajar
  • Rodion Shchedrin
  • Dmitry Shcherbinovsky
  • Pyotr Shchetinkin
  • Aliagha Shikhlinski
  • Javad khan Shirvanski
  • Volodymyr Sikevych
  • Alexander Sirotkin
  • Boris Skibine
  • Arkady Skugarevsky
  • Ivan Smirnov (aviator)
  • Vladimir Vasilyevich Smirnov
  • Mikhail Sokovin
  • Viktor Spiridonov
  • Georgy Stepanov
  • Mykola Stsiborskyi
  • Sylvester Stankievich
  • Pavel Sytin
  • Marceli Tarczewski
  • Alexander von Taube
  • Vasily Tchernetzov
  • Pyotr Telezhnikov
  • Valentin Ternavtsev
  • Vyacheslav Tkachov
  • Fyodor Tolbukhin
  • John Tovey, 1st Baron Tovey
  • Hugh Trenchard, 1st Viscount Trenchard
  • Vyacheslav Troyanov
  • Ivan Trutnev
  • Konstantin Tsiolkovsky
  • Georgy Tumanov
  • Leonid Ustrugov
  • Konstantin Vakulovsky
  • Sergei Vasilchikov
  • Georgy Vasmund
  • Vladimir Vitkovsky
  • Tom Webb-Bowen
  • Pyotr Wrangel
  • Ivan Iosifovich Yakubovsky
  • Alexander Zelenoy
  • Mikhail Zoshchenko
  • Silvestras Žukauskas
4th Class
  • Mikhail Alafuso
  • Alexei Arbuzov (general)
  • Tarlan Aliyarbayov
  • Vladimir Arsenyev
  • Jaques Bagratuni
  • Alexander Barclay de Tolly-Weymarn
  • Mikhail Batorsky
  • Daniel Bek-Pirumian
  • Vasily Biskupsky
  • Petro Bolbochan
  • Seraphim Chichagov
  • Nikolai Epanchin
  • Ivan Fullon
  • Yury Gilsher
  • Hovhannes Hakhverdyan
  • Arnolds Indriksons
  • Ismayil bek Kutkashensky
  • Aleksander Jaakson
  • Mykola Kapustiansky
  • Valentin Kataev
  • Boris Khreschatitsky
  • Konstantinas Kleščinskis
  • Nikolay Kokorin
  • Konstantin Poltoratsky
  • August Kork
  • Sergey Kravkov (explorer)
  • Alexander J. Kravtsov
  • Yevgraf Kruten
  • Julius Kuperjanov
  • Ants Kurvits
  • Johan Laidoner
  • Ernst Leman
  • Ivan Loiko
  • Donat Makijonek
  • Safarbek Malsagov
  • Evgeny Messner
  • Sergei Mezheninov
  • Aleksandr Mirkovich
  • Syla Mishchenko
  • Sava Mutkurov
  • Jan Nagórski
  • Jamshid Nakhchivanski
  • Vladimir Nikolayevich Nikitin
  • Garegin Nzhdeh
  • David Ivanovich Orlov
  • Ivan Orlov (aviator)
  • Aleksandr Pishvanov
  • Georgy Polkovnikov
  • Feyzullah Mirza Qajar
  • Alexander Ragoza
  • Yuri Rall
  • Kirill Razumovski
  • Aleksandr Vladimirovich Razvozov
  • Alfred Saalwächter
  • Mikhail Safonov (pilot)
  • Pavel Savvich
  • Sergei Sheydeman
  • Yakov Schkinsky
  • Alexander Sedyakin
  • Aliagha Shikhlinski
  • Fyodor Shubin
  • Volodymyr Sikevych
  • Alexander Sirotkin
  • Georgy Stepanov
  • Vladimir Strzhizhevsky
  • Mykola Stsiborskyi
  • Jan Syrový
  • Pavel Sytin
  • Vasily Tchernetzov
  • Leo Tolstoy
  • Vyacheslav Troyanov
  • Konstantin Vakulovsky
  • Johannes Vares
  • Vladimir Vitkovsky
  • Vasili Yanchenko
  • Mikhail Zoshchenko
  • Silvestras Žukauskas
  • Dmitry Zuyev
  • Franciszek Żwirko
Other or Unknown Classes

References

  1. "Dynastic Orders". International Commission on Orders of Chivalry. Retrieved 3 March 2014.
  2. Sainty, Guy Stair (2006). World Orders of Knighthood and Merit. London: Burke's Peerage. ISBN 0971196672.
  3. "Official site of Imperial Order of St.Anna, by Chancellery of Imperil House of Russia". Archived from the original on 2019-04-26. Retrieved 2010-09-28.
  4. "Imperial Russia: Order of St Anne". Retrieved 27 April 2010.
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