Medal: Difference between revisions

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<gallery>
File:Portrait_medal_of_Cecilia_Gonzaga_(obverse);_Innocence_and_a_Unicorn_in_a_Moonlit_Landscape_(reverse)_MET_DP-1241-015_(cropped).jpg|Portrait medal of Cecilia Gonzaga
File:Pisanello,_medaglia_di_cecilia_gonzaga.JPG|Pisanello, medaglia di Cecilia Gonzaga
File:Dupont_KBS-FRB(2).jpg|Dupont KBS-FRB
File:Medals.jpg|Medals
File:Peter_Flötner_Vanitas_BNM.jpg|Peter Flötner Vanitas
File:GCRomano3.jpg|GCRomano3
File:7a_1572.jpg|7a 1572
File:Pisanello,_medaglia_di_giovanni_paleologo,_I_esemplare_del_bargello.JPG|Pisanello, medaglia di Giovanni Paleologo
File:Medalsofhonor2.jpg|Medals of Honor
File:Paasikivi-medal-by-Haivaoja.jpg|Paasikivi medal by Haivaoja
File:Kur_Fraternity,_Krakow.jpg|Kur Fraternity, Krakow
File:1896_Olympic_medal.jpg|1896 Olympic medal
</gallery>

Latest revision as of 21:19, 23 February 2025

Medal

A medal or medallion is a small portable artistic object, a thin disc, normally of metal, carrying a design, usually on both sides. They typically have a commemorative purpose of some kind, and many are given as awards. They may be intended to be worn, suspended from clothing or jewellery in some way. They are traditionally struck like a coin by dies.

History[edit]

The first known instances of medals were the Eleusinian Mysteries which were small, thin, terracotta pieces in the shape of people. The first known instances of real medals made from valuable metals were issued by the Greeks of Alexander the Great.

Types of Medals[edit]

There are several types of medals, including:

See Also[edit]

References[edit]

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