| Royal and Military Order of Saint Ferdinand | |
|---|---|
| Grand Laureated star of the Order of Saint Ferdinand | |
| Awarded by the King of Spain | |
| Type | Military Order of Merit |
| Established | August 11, 1811 |
| Royal house | House of Bourbon-Anjou |
| Eligibility | Military personnel |
| Awarded for | Extraordinary military actions to protect the nation, its citizens, or the peace and security of the international community in the face of immediate risk to the bearer |
| Status | Currently awarded |
| Sovereign | Felipe VI |
| President of the Assembly | Miguel Ángel Villarroya, Gran Chancellor of the Royal and Military Order of Saint Hermenegild |
| Grades | Laureate Grand Cross Laureate Cross Laureate Medal |
| Precedence | |
| Next (higher) | None |
| Next (lower) | Military Medal [1] |
| Ribbon of the Order | |
The Royal and Military Order of Saint Ferdinand (Spanish : Real y Militar Orden de San Fernando) is a Spanish military order of chivalry, the decoration of which, the Laureate Cross of Saint Ferdinand (Spanish : Cruz Laureada de San Fernando), is Spain's highest military decoration for gallantry. Membership of the order, which is sometimes abbreviated RMOSF, is awarded in recognition of action, either individual or collective, to protect the nation, its citizens, or the peace and security of the international community in the face of immediate risk to the bearer. Those eligible are current and former members of the Spanish Armed Forces.
The Sovereign of the Order of San Fernando is the monarch of Spain, [2] who presides over the biennial chapter held in the Royal Monastery of El Escorial. The sovereign's representative in the Order is the Grand Master, [3] who governs it and is aided by the Maestranza.
Among the conditions laid out by the Royal Military Order of Saint Ferdinand for the granting of the award are:
The Royal Military Order of Saint Ferdinand was set up in 1811 by the Cortes of Cádiz –which served as a parliamentary Regency after Ferdinand VII was deposed –to honour heroic feats of arms. It was confirmed by King Ferdinand on his return to Madrid in 1815. [4] Its awardees include Marcelo Azcárraga Palmero, Juan Prim, Juan de la Cruz Mourgeón, Francisco de Albear, José Enrique Varela Iglesias (twice awarded, in 1920, and 1921), Francisco Serrano y Domínguez, Frederick Thomas Pelham, Henry Kelly (VC), Martín Cerezo, [5] Francisco Franco Bahamonde, and Mohamed Meziane.
Loosely adapted from the Spanish Wikipedia article on the same topic.