De Ruyter Medal | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Type | Civil decoration, with degrees gold, silver and bronze |
Awarded for | praiseworthy acts of duty for Dutch shipping |
Description | circular medal with a picture of Michiel de Ruyter on the obverse. The medal is worn with a dark orange ribbon. |
Presented by | ![]() |
Eligibility | seamen, shipowners, and for rescues at sea |
Status | Currently awarded |
Established | 23 March 1907 |
First award | Skipper P.J.A. Kramer (1907) |
Final award | Captain Yevhenii Feshchenko, captain of the Hanze Goteborg (2023)1 |
Total | 209 (93 gold, 88 silver, 28 bronze) |
![]() Ribbon bar of the golden De Ruyter Medal | |
Precedence | |
Next (higher) | KNMI Medal |
Next (lower) | Museum Medal |
De Ruyter Medal (Dutch: De Ruyter-medaille) was created by royal decree no. 1 on 23 March 1907 by Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands, on the three hundredth birthday of Admiral Michiel de Ruyter. [1]
The medal is awarded to those members of the Dutch Merchant fleet who distinguish themselves by praiseworthy acts of duty for Dutch shipping. The medal was originally awarded in gold, silver or bronze, with only gold medals awarded since 1969. Awards are on basis by nomination of the Netherlands government and by royal decree.