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Royal Order of Crown of Rwanda

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Order of the Crown (Rwanda), Commander

Royal Order of the Crown of Rwanda (Ikamba in the native Kinyarwandan language), the second-highest, non-religious, decoration/order for merit in the De jure Kingdom of Rwanda.[1][2][3] It is the inheritor of ancient pagan tradition (the Gucana Uruti) envisioned by H.M. King Mutara III of Rwanda[4][5] in 1950 and it was formally instituted by his successor, Kigeli V,[6][7] in 1959.

This distinction granted the honoree the right to be treated as a member of the family of the reigning king. The decorated hero that had undergone Gucana Uruti was allowed to wear the crown of the Mwami (King) when the Mwami was seated and not using it.

The Order may be granted as a hereditary award or as a non-hereditary honor. Nobility is conferred upon the grantee.

There are three ranks in the Order. The highest is the Grand Collar, followed by the Grand Cross, and the lowest rank is Commander. A recipient at the ranks of Grand Collar or Grand Cross is entitled to the style of “Son Excellence”. A recipient at the rank of Commander is entitled to the style of “L’honorable”.[8]

The original recipient was H.M. Baudouin the King of the Belgians[9] gifted by H.M. King Mutara III in 1950. This gift was a physical precedent for the Order, and it was also a prelude to its official introduction years later.

The order has been rarely awarded by the last sovereign ruler of Rwanda HM Kigeli V[10] and the most notable recipients include, among others, the socialist/communist affiliation leaders[11] like Nobel prize winner and the former president of South Africa Nelson Mandela (the rank of Grand Cross, 1999)[12] and the first Prime Minister of the independent Democratic Republic of the Congo (then Republic of the Congo) Patrice Lumumba (posthumously handed over to the family, the rank of Grand Cross, 1966).[13]

As a hereditary award in the rank of Grand Cross, it was granted to the pioneer of the New Ink Art movement[14] a freethinker[15] artist Alfred Freddy Krupa in 2013[16] and reconfirmed in 2016.[17]

References

[change | change source]
  1. "Orders, decorations, and medals of Rwanda". Military Wiki.
  2. "Royal Order of the Crown of Rwanda - H.M. Yuhi VI".
  3. "Augustan Society, Inc. - —Dynastic Honors". Archived from the original on 2020-11-30. Retrieved 2020-12-22.
  4. "Généalogies de la noblesse (Les Batutsi) du Ruanda : Dans l'Afrique centrale, région du Lac Kivu, une des sources du Congo and du fleuve Kagera, la source du Nil". 1950.
  5. Twagilimana, Aimable (6 November 2015). Historical Dictionary of Rwanda. ISBN 9781442255913.
  6. "File:King Kigeli V of Rwanda meets with King Hussein.JPG - New World Encyclopedia".[permanent dead link]
  7. Roberts, Sam (22 October 2016). "Kigeli V, the Last King of Rwanda, Dies at 80". The New York Times.
  8. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2021-01-21. Retrieved 2020-12-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  9. "De Belgique, Baudouin | AfricaMuseum - Archives".
  10. "Time summer 1996". 1996.
  11. Keller, Bill (7 December 2013). "Opinion | Nelson Mandela, Communist". The New York Times.
  12. Cotto, Joseph Ford (7 January 2019). Under the Crown and Stripes. ISBN 9780359343461.
  13. "Beneath the Eye of God Part I".[permanent dead link]
  14. "Alfred Freddy Krupa - Monoskop".
  15. https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/freethinker
  16. "Alfred Freddy Krupa Hereditary Knighthood Document by European&GlobalArt - Issuu".
  17. "Alfred Freddy Krupa - confirmation of the baronial grant of Baron de Krupa 31st August 2016 by European&GlobalArt - Issuu".