Order of the Rose
Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The Imperial Order of the Rose (Template:Langx) was a Brazilian order of chivalry, instituted by Emperor Pedro I of Brazil on 17 October 1829 to commemorate his marriage to Amélie of Leuchtenberg.
On 22 March 1890, the order was cancelled as national order by the interim government of First Brazilian Republic. 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: the direct line called Petrópolis and a cadet branch called Vassouras.
History
It was designed by Jean-Baptiste Debret, who, as discussed by historians, would have been inspired by the motifs of roses that adorned Amélie's dress when landing in Rio de Janeiro, or when marrying, or in a portrait of the same envoy from Europe to the then Emperor of Brazil.
The order rewarded military and civilians, national and foreign, who distinguished themselves by their fidelity to the person of the Emperor and by services rendered to the State, and carried a number of degrees superior to the other Brazilian and Portuguese orders then existing.
From 1829 to 1831 Emperor Pedro I granted only 189 insignia. His son and successor, Emperor Pedro II, during the second reign, got to grace 14,284 citizens. In addition to the two emperors, only the Duke of Caxias was order-great during his term.
One of the first winners received the commendation for services rendered during an accident with the Brazilian imperial family: the small history of the court tells us that on 7 December 1829, newly married, Pedro I returned with the family of the Imperial Palace of São Cristóvão, in Quinta da Boa Vista. Like his favorite, he personally drove the carriage when, on Lavradio Street, the tow line was broken, and the horses became frightened, breaking the reins and driving the vehicle, dragged dangerously. The Emperor fractured the seventh rib of the posterior third and the sixth of the anterior third, had bruises on the forehead and dislocation in the fourth right, losing his senses. He had barely recovered them when he was picked up at the nearest house by the Marquis de Cantagalo, Joao Maria da Gama Freitas Berquó. According to the Bulletin on the Disaster of Her Imperial Majesty published in the Jornal do Commercio, Empress Amélie was the one who demanded the least care: "she did not have any sensible damage except the shock and the fright that such disaster should cause her." The Emperor's eldest daughter, the future Queen Maria II of Portugal, "received great bruising on the right cheek, comprising part of the head on the same side." Auguste de Beauharnais, Prince of Eichstätt, Duke of Leuchtenberg and of Santa Cruz, brother of the empress, "had a luxation in the ulna of the right side with fracture of the same one". Baroness Slorefeder, assistant of the Empress, "gave a very dangerous fall on the head." Several servants of livery, when dominating the animals, were bruised. The doctors of the Imperial Chamber and others, the doctors Azeredo, Bontempo, the Baron of Inhomirim, Vicente Navarro de Andrade, João Fernandes Tavares, Manuel Bernardes, Manuel da Silveira Rodrigues de Sá, Baron of Saúde converged for the house of Cantagalo. Almost restored, Pedro I decorated Cantagalo on 1 January 1830 with the insignia of the dignitary of the Order, and Empress Amélie offered him her portrait, surrounded by bright jewels, and painted by Simplício Rodrigues de Sá.
The members of the Honor Guard who accompanied the then Prince Regent on his trip to the Province of São Paulo 8 years before, witnesses of the "Grito do Ipiranga", landmark of the Independence of Brazil, were also awarded the Imperial Order of the Rose.
After the banishment of the Brazilian Imperial Family, the order was maintained by its members in private, being its grand master the head of the Brazilian Imperial House.
Characteristics
Insignia
Grand cross
- Obverse: White star with six pointed tips, joined by garland of roses. To the center, a round medallion with the letters "P" and "A" interlaced, embossed, surrounded by blue-ferret border with the caption "AMOR E FIDELIDADE" ("LOVE AND FIDELITY").
- Reverse: equal to the obverse, with change in inscription for the date of 2-8-1829, and, in the legend, for "PEDRO AND AMÉLIA".
Tape and band
- Light pink with two white edges.
Degrees
The degrees in descending order are:
- Grand Cross (styled "Excellency" and limited to 16 recipients);
- Grand Dignitary (styled "Senhor" and limited to 16 recipients);
- Dignitary (styled "Senhor" and limited to 32 recipients);
- Commander (styled "Senhor" and unlimited number of recipients);
- Official (styled an honorary Colonel and unlimited number of recipients);
- Knight (styled an honorary Captain and unlimited number of recipients);
Gallery
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Emperor Pedro I, founder and first Grand Master of the Order, wearing the collar and the insignia of the Imperial Order of the Rose and other orders and decorations
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The Duke of Caxias wearing the collar and insignia of the Order and other orders and decorations
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Emperor Pedro II wearing the collar of the order and elements of the Imperial Regalia. Detail from a portrait by Pedro Américo
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The Count of Eu wearing the collar of the order and other orders and decorations
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Prince Luís of Orléans-Braganza wearing the insignia of the order and other orders and decorations
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Prince Pedro Henrique of Orléans-Braganza, then Head of the Imperial House of Brazil wearing the collar of the order and other orders and decorations
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Details of the insignia
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Coat of arms of Isabel, Princess Imperial
Recipients
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- Template:Flagicon Afonso, Prince Imperial of Brazil
- Template:Flagicon Alexander, Crown Prince of Yugoslavia
- Template:Flagicon Grand Duke Alexei Alexandrovich of Russia
- Template:Flagicon José Ferraz de Almeida Júnior
- Template:Flagicon Luís Alves de Lima e Silva, Duke of Caxias
- Template:Flagicon Amélie of Leuchtenberg
- Template:Flagicon Prince Antônio Gastão of Orléans-Braganza
- Template:Flagicon Prince August Leopold of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha
- Template:Flagicon José Luís Mena Barreto
- Template:Flagicon Henry Walter Bates
- Template:Flagicon Emil Bauch
- Template:Flagicon John Bramley-Moore
- Template:Flagicon James Brunlees
- Template:Flagicon Ernesto Burzagli
- Template:Flagicon Louis Buvelot
- Template:Flagicon Peter Christophersen
- Template:Flagicon Jules d'Anethan
- Template:Flagicon Warren De la Rue
- Template:Flagicon Rudolf von Delbrück
- Template:Flagicon John Hay Drummond Hay
- Template:Flagicon Ferdinand II of Portugal
- Template:Flagicon Antônio Ferreira Viçoso
- Template:Flagicon Marcos Christino Fioravanti
- Template:Flagicon Princess Francisca of Brazil
- Template:Flagicon Annibale de Gasparis
- Template:Flagicon Gaston, Count of Eu
- Template:Flagicon Friedrich Heinrich Geffcken
- Template:Flagicon Antônio Carlos Gomes
- Template:Flagicon Gaspare Gorresio
- Template:Flagicon John Pascoe Grenfell
- Template:Flagicon Heinrich Halfeld
- Template:Flagicon Joaquim José Inácio, Viscount of Inhaúma
- Template:Flagicon Isabel, Princess Imperial of Brazil
- Template:Flagicon William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin
- Template:Flagicon Princess Leopoldina of Brazil
- Template:Flagicon Augusto Leverger, Baron of Melgaço
- Template:Flagicon Prince Ludwig August of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha
- Template:Flagicon Ferdinand I of Bulgaria
- Template:Flagicon Luís I of Portugal
- Template:Flagicon Prince Luiz of Orléans-Braganza
- Template:Flagicon Joseph Luns
- Template:Flagicon Machado de Assis
- Template:Flagicon Gonçalves de Magalhães, Viscount of Araguaia
- Template:Flagicon Manuel Antônio Farinha
- Template:Flagicon Princess Maria Amélia of Brazil
- Template:Flagicon Clements Markham
- Template:Flagicon Victor Meirelles
- Template:Flagicon Cândido Mendes de Almeida
- Template:Flagicon John Miers (botanist)
- Template:Flagicon Ângelo Moniz da Silva Ferraz, Baron of Uruguaiana
- Template:Flagicon Firmino Monteiro
- Template:Flagicon Carlos de Morais Camisão
- Template:Flagicon José Antônio Moreira, Count of Ipanema
- Template:Flagicon Robert Stirling Newall
- Template:Flagicon Alfred Nobel
- Template:Flagicon Sir Andrew Noble, 1st Baronet
- Template:Flagicon George O'Kelly
- Template:Flagicon Joseph O'Kelly
- Template:Flagicon Olav V of Norway
- Template:Flagicon Henrique O'Neill, 1st Viscount of Santa Mónica
- Template:Flagicon Jorge Torlades O'Neill I
- Template:Flagicon Prince Bertrand of Orléans-Braganza
- Template:Flagicon Honório Hermeto Carneiro Leão, Marquis of Paraná
- Template:Flagicon José Paranhos, Viscount of Rio Branco
- Template:Flagicon Louis Pasteur
- Template:Flagicon Pedro I of Brazil
- Template:Flagicon Pedro II of Brazil
- Template:Flagicon Prince Pedro Augusto of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha
- Template:Flagicon Pedro Carlos of Orléans-Braganza
- Template:Flagicon Prince Pedro Gastão of Orléans-Braganza
- Template:Flagicon Prince Pedro Luiz of Orléans-Braganza
- Template:Flagicon Manuel de Araújo Porto-Alegre, Baron of Santo Ângelo
- Template:Flagicon James-Ferdinand de Pury
- Template:Flagicon Antônio Ricardo dos Santos
- Template:Flagicon Manuel Silvela y Le Vielleuze
- Template:Flagicon Lafayette Rodrigues Pereira
- Template:Flagicon Pedro Luís Pereira de Sousa
- Template:Flagicon Maximilian von Speidel
- Template:Flagicon Félix Taunay, Baron of Taunay
- Template:Flagicon Charles d'Ursel
- Template:Flagicon Louis van Houtte
- Template:Flagicon Duarte Pio, Duke of Braganza
- Template:Flagicon Afonso, Prince of Beira[1]
- Template:Flagicon Adrià Espineta Arias
- Template:Flagicon Albert I, Prince of Monaco[2]
External links
- Original appointment to the Order of the Rose signed by Emperor Dom Pedro II, 1887 - Arquivo Público do Estado de São Paulo
References
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- Poliano, Luís Marques. Heráldica. Ed. GRD. Rio de Janeiro, 1986.
- Poliano, Luís Marques. Ordens honoríficas do Brasil.
- Brazil - The Imperial Order of the Rose [1]