Virtuti Militari - Beginnings

Beginnings

Throughout its history, the Order Wojenny Virtuti Militari has shared its country's fate, and has been abolished and reintroduced several times.

The order was originally created on 22 June 1792 by King Stanisław August Poniatowski to commemorate the victorious Battle of Zieleńce. Initially, it comprised two classes: a golden medal for generals and officers, and a silver one for non-commissioned officers and ordinary soldiers. By August 1792, a statute for the decoration had been drafted, which was based on one that was created for the Austrian medal of Empress Maria Theresa. The regulation changed the shape of the decoration from a star to a cross, which has not changed substantially since then. It also introduced five classes to the order.

Virtuti Militari Ribbon Bars
Medal chapter (1792–1794)

• Lt.Gen. Józef Poniatowski, Tadeusz Kościuszko
• Maj.Gen. Michał Wielhorski, Stanisław Mokronowski, Józef Zajączek
• Brig. Eustachy Sanguszko
• Col. Józef Poniatowski, Michał Chomętowski
• Lt.Col. Ludwik Kamieniecki
• Maj. Mikołaj Bronikowski, Józef Szczutowski
Lt. Michał Cichocki, Ludwik Metzel
• Sq.L. Bartłomiej Giżycki

The first members of the decoration's chapter were also its first recipients. For the Polish-Russian War in Defence of the Constitution of 1792, a total of 63 officers and 290 NCOs and privates were awarded the Virtuti Militari. The statute was never fully implemented, however, since soon after its introduction the King acceded to the Targowica Confederation, which on 29 August 1792 abolished the decoration and prohibited its wearing. Anyone who wore the medal could be demoted and expelled from the army by Poland's new authorities.

Although on 23 November 1793 the Grodno Sejm reintroduced the decoration, it was banned again on 7 January 1794, at the insistence of Russia's Catherine the Great. Only a year later, the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth itself shared the fate of its decoration when what remained of the Commonwealth was annexed by its neighbors in the partitions of Poland. King Stanisław August Poniatowski abdicated the same year. During his reign, 526 medals had been granted: 440 Silver Medals and Crosses, 85 Golden Medals and Crosses, and 1 Commander's Cross.

Among the most famous recipients of the Virtuti Militari in this period were Prince Józef Antoni Poniatowski (1763–1813) and Tadeusz Kościuszko (1746–1817), both able military commanders during the War in Defense of the Constitution and the Kościuszko Uprising.

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