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Brazilian honorary order From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Imperial Order of Dom Pedro I (Portuguese: Imperial Ordem de Pedro Primeiro or Imperial Ordem de Pedro Primeiro, Fundador do Império do Brasil) is a Brazilian order of chivalry instituted by Emperor Pedro I of Brazil on 16 April 1826. It is considered by many numismatists as the rarest of the Brazilian imperial orders.
Imperial Order of Pedro I | |
---|---|
Awarded by the Head of the Brazilian Imperial Family | |
Type | Dynastic order |
Established | 16 April 1826 – 22 March 1890 (National Order) 15 November 1889 – present (House Order) |
Royal house | House of Orleans-Braganza |
Grand Master | Disputed:[1] Prince Bertrand of Orléans-Braganza Prince Pedro Carlos of Orléans-Braganza |
Grades | Grand Cross Commander Knight |
Precedence | |
Next (higher) | Imperial Order of the Southern Cross |
Next (lower) | Imperial Order of the Rose |
Ribbon bar of the order |
On 22 March 1890, the order was cancelled as national order by the interim government of United States of Brazil. Since the deposition in 1889 of the last Brazilian monarch, Emperor Pedro II, the order continues as a house order being awarded by the Heads of the House of Orleans-Braganza, pretenders to the defunct throne of Brazil. The current Brazilian Imperial Family is split into two branches Petrópolis and Vassouras, and the Grand Mastership of the Order is disputed between those two branches.
Created by a short decree of 16 April 1826, the order initially consisted of one grade and was only awarded to reigning monarchs.[2] It was only regularized by Decree No. 228 of 19 October 1842, which would finally establish its degrees, number of holders and establish the design of the insignia. In that time, it was characterized as a strictly personal award of Emperor Pedro I, its grand master, which awarded only one person: his father-in-law Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor. It was Emperor Pedro II who most distributed the order, being, nevertheless, the Brazilian order that had fewer holders.
It would be intended for both nationals and foreigners, who, as well as members of the Imperial Family (who were Grand Crosses of the Order from birth),[2] would not need to take oath or respect the maximum number of members of each degree.
Despite what some sources cite, the creator of the project was not Jean-Baptiste Debret, so he himself does not know how to accurately describe the insignia in his Voyage pittoresque.
Many authors point out the similarities of this with the insignia of the French Order of the Iron Crown
Grand cross
Tape and band
Officially, Luís Alves de Lima e Silva, Duke of Caxias was the only Brazilian awarded the commendation. There are discussions as to whether Felisberto Caldeira Brant, the Marquis of Barbacena, would have been honored as a knight or great cross. It is supposed, however, that it is a confusion, for the Marquis of Barbacena was in fact the bearer of the Grand Cross granted to Francis I of Austria, the latter being the first to be awarded. From what can be found in records, only these holders of the Order are considered official outside of any recent conferrals by either branch of the family:
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