Category
page 1Orders of chivalry of Germany
Order of the Black Eagle
highest order of chivalry in the Kingdom of Prussia
Order of the Red Eagle
Prussian Order of Merit (1705-1918)
House Order of Hohenzollern
dynastic order
Military Order of Max Joseph
military award of the Kingdom of Bavaria
Royal Guelphic Order
Hanoverian order of chivalry
Order of the Crown
Prussia's ranking order of chivalry
Order of Louise
Prussian chivalric order for women
Order of the Crown
Württembergian order
Merit Order of the Bavarian Crown
Bavarian award
Order of Olga
Württemberg distinction (1871)
Order of the Crown of Westphalia
Cross of Merit for Women and Girls
Order of Merit of the Prussian Crown
award of Prussian Crown (1901-1918)
Order of Saint Elisabeth
Order of Theresa
order of noblewomen in the Kingdom of Bavaria
Order of Sidonie
chivalric order for women instituted by the Kingdom of Saxony
House Order of the Golden Lion

Order of Wilhelm I
The Imperial and Royal Order of Wilhelm (in English "William-Order") was instituted on 18 January 1896 by the German Emperor and King of Prussia Willhelm II as a high civilian award, and was dedicated to the memory of his grandfather Emperor William I "the Great".
Order of St. George
founded by King Ernest Augustus I of Hanover in 1839
Order of the Four Emperors
historic chivalric order
Order of Ludwig I
order of the Grand Duchy of Hesse
Royal Order of Saint George for the Defense of the Immaculate Conception
order
Wilhelmsorden
The Wilhelm Order ("Wilhelmsorden") of Hesse-Kassel (or Hesse-Cassel) was instituted by the Elector Friedrich Wilhelm I on 20 August 1851 as a civil and military Order of Merit. It was composed of the three lower grades of the Order of the Golden Lion and a Grand Cross was added.
In total the order was awarded more than 450 times in the 16 years of its existence.
Pour la Vertu Militaire
Order of St Philip of the Lion of Limburg
Order of Ernst August
Hanoverian Royal Order of Knighthood in five classes and an associated cross of merit in two classes (1865–1900)
Ladies Merit Cross
two-class Ladies Order
Ordre de la Sincérité
Johanniter-Unfall-Hilfe
Johanniter-Unfall-Hilfe e.V. (JUH; German for "St. John Accident Assistance"), commonly referred to as Die Johanniter, is a voluntary humanitarian organisation affiliated with the Brandenburg Bailiwick of the Order of St John, the German Protestant descendant of the Knights Hospitaller. The organisation was founded in 1952 in Hanover under the leadership of Rudolf Christoph Freiherr von Gersdorff. One of the main reasons for its creation was the rise in injuries and deaths from road traffic accidents (hence the word "accident" in its name). JUH participates in international aid efforts togethe
Order of Saint George
European Order of the House of Habsburg-Lorraine