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Decoration of Honour for Officers and Other Ranks for Wounds and Injuries | |
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Awarded for | wound or injury in action against an enemy in defence of the country |
Presented by | Republic of Poland |
Eligibility | military |
Campaign(s) | Polish struggle for independence (1914–1921) Polish–Soviet War (1918–1921) II World War |
Established | July 14, 1920 |
The Decoration of Honour for Officers and Other Ranks for Wounds and Injuries (Polish: Odznaka honorowa dla Oficerów i Szeregowych za Rany i Kontuzje) – a Polish military award, established by the Council of National Defense on July 14, 1920, at the peak of the Polish–Soviet War and awarded to any military, irrespective of rank or branch of service for a wound or injury sustained in action against an enemy in defence of the country.
Eligible were all Polish military wounded or injured after November 1, 1918 or before that date, provided that the wound or injury had taken place while serving in the Polish Legions, 1st, 2nd or 3rd Polish Corps in Russia, Polish Army in France or in another Polish military formation recognized by the Republic. It was chronologically the second military honour of independent Poland, after the Order Virtuti Militari and before the Cross of Valour, which would be established a month later.