Order of Christian VII
The Order of Christian VII, also called "Tessera Concordiæ" was a Danish Order of Knighthood that flourished for some time during the 18th. century. The Danes call it "Christian VIIs Orden" or "Ordenen Tessera Concordiæ".
![](../I/m/De_Orde_van_Christiaan_VII_van_Denemarken_1774.png)
![](../I/m/Luise_Auguste_von_Augustenburg_met_de_Orde_van_Christiaan_VII_door_Jens_Juel_in_1784.gif)
After the banishment of the adulterous Queen Caroline Mathilde on 17 January 1772 the Royal Danish Court needed a new decoration to replace the Mathilde-Order. King Christian VII of Denmark founded this order on the 21st. of Oktober 1774 as a new decoration that was solely meant for the Danish Royal Family. It was awarded to gentlemen and ladies. The men wore the insignia detached from a ribbon on the left side of the breast. The ladies wore the same insignia on a bow of the same ribbon on their left shoulder.
The painter Jens Juel the Danish princess Princess Louise Auguste of Denmark[1] in 1784. She wore the order of her presumed father Christian VII on a blue ribbon with three silver stripes, almost equel to the earlier Danish Ordre de l'Union Parfaite.
After the death of Queen-Dowager Juliana Maria of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel in 1796 the order fell into disuse
Literature
- H.F. Grandjean, "De Kongelige Danske Ridderordener" (1903)
- Lars Stevnsborg, "Kongeriget Danmarks Ordener, Medaljer og Hæderstegn" (2005
External links
- ↑ Louise Auguste of Denmark, Duchess of Augustenborg or Louise Augusta, (7 July 1771 – 13 January 1843)