Manchurian Incident Commemorative Badges and Watch Fobs/満州事変記念章

2nd type (different design of reverse).


満洲派遣従軍記念章 Manchuria Dispatch Campaign Commemorative Badge1.jpg満洲派遣従軍記念章 Manchuria Dispatch Campaign Commemorative Badge2.jpg

Obverse

満洲派遣 - Manchuria Dispatch
従軍記念章 - Military Service Commemorative Badge

reverse (above)

満州事變 - Manchurian Incident 昭和六年九月十八日 - September 18, 1932

(in the center from right to the left)

March 1, 1932 - Establishment of the Manchukuo State

September 15, 1932 - Signing of the Japan-Manchukuo Protocol

May 30, 1933 - Japan-China Cease-Fire Agreement

March 1, 1934 - Establishment of the Empire of Manchuria

満洲派遣従軍記念章 Manchuria Dispatch Campaign Commemorative Badge---.jpg
 
Manchuria Dispatch Commemorative Watch Fob in the form of tsuba.


満洲派遣 - Manchuria Dispatch 従軍記念章 - Military Service Commemorative Badge.jpg
満洲派遣 - Manchuria Dispatch 従軍記念章 - Military Service Commemorative Badge (2).jpg


Obverse

満洲派遣 - Manchuria Dispatch
従軍記念章 - Military Service Commemorative Badge

reverse (above)

満州事變 - Manchurian Incident 昭和六年九月十八日 - September 18, 1932

(in the center from right to the left)

March 1, 1932 - Establishment of the Manchukuo State

September 15, 1932 - Signing of the Japan-Manchukuo Protocol

May 30, 1933 - Japan-China Cease-Fire Agreement

March 1, 1934 - Establishment of the Empire of Manchuria

(at the bottom)

北鉄譲渡調印 - North Manchuria Railway Signing a Transfer Agreement (i.e. selling of Chinese Eastern Railway/KVZhD by USSR)

昭和十年三月二十三日 - March 23, 1935


IMG1094.jpg


Watch fobs with same design and even the very same reverse insciptions


 
Most likely this "tsuba design" was borrowed from 1934 army maneuvers badge


00.JPG
 
満洲慰霊使 Manchurian memorial service.jpg 満洲慰霊使 Manchurian memorial service2.jpg

Obverse

満洲慰霊使 - Manchurian [Incident] Memorial Service [for the fallen soldiers]

reverse

千葉縣 - Chiba Prefecture

派遣 - Dispatch
 
歩兵第十聯隊 第九中隊 2594 出征記念.jpg
歩兵第十聯隊 第九中隊 2594 出征記念-.jpg


Obverse

出征記念 - Dispatch Commemorative

reverse

歩兵第十聯隊 - 10th Infantry Regiment

第九中隊 - 9th Company

2594年 - 1934
 
Photo courtesy of the owner.

満州駐箚記念章.jpg
満州駐箚記念章..jpg


Reverse

満州駐箚記念 - Manchuria Garrison Commemorative

昭和六年 - 1931

新潟県 - Niigata Prefecture
 
Photo courtesy of the owner.

Manchurian Incident Commemorative Badge.jpg
Manchurian Incident Commemorative  Badge.jpg



Obverse

武動 - Martial [Arts] Training

In the sun

- Sincere, Honest; True

In the rays five principles of military ethics from Emperor Meiji's Imperial Rescript to Soldiers:

信義 - Faithful
禮儀 - Courteous
忠節 - Loyal
武勇 - Brave
質素 - Frugal

reverse

满洲出動記念 - Manchuria Dispatch Commemoration

昭和九.十年 - 1934-35

北海道廳 - Hokkaido Government Office

Watch fob with similar design of obverse https://asiamedals.info/threads/army-shooting-badges-and-watch-fobs.24169/page-2#post-351508

Cased specimen.

満洲出動記念メダル 軍人勅諭 木箱 昭和9年.jpg


満洲出動記念 メダル 軍人勅諭 木箱 昭和9年.jpg


出動記念 - Dispatch Commemorative

北海道廳 - Hokkaido Government Office

満洲出動記念メダル 軍人勅諭  木箱 昭和9年.jpg
 
Photo courtesy of the owner.

Victorious Return from Manchuria Watch Fob.jpg
Victorious Return from Manchuria  Watch Fob.jpg


Obverse

凱旋 - Victorious Return

reverse

昭和八年一月 - January 1933

福島縣學童生徒教職員一同 - Fukushima County School Pupils and Teachers


Marked

大勝堂 - Taishodo [Taishodo Watch Shop, Tokyo]

純銀 - pure silver

7.jpg


Stamp inside the case 庭球部 - Tennis Club

Victorious Return from  Manchuria Watch Fob.jpg
 
1st variation.

Photo courtesy of the owner.

Manchuria Incident Commemorative Watch Fobs with Shigeru Honjou.jpg
Manchuria Incident Commemorative Watch Fobs with Shigeru  Honjou.jpg


Obverse

滿洲事変紀念 - Manchuria Incident Commemorative

Reverse

関東軍司令官 - Kwantung Army Commander

本庄繁中将 - Lieutenant General Shigeru Honjō

General Baron Shigeru Honjō /本庄 繁, Honjō Shigeru, 10 May 1876 – 30 November 1945/ was a general in the Imperial Japanese Army during the early period of the Second Sino-Japanese War. He was considered an ardent follower of Sadao Araki's doctrines.​

Lieutenant General Shigeru Honjo.jpg


Honjō was born into a farming family in Hyōgo prefecture, and attended military preparatory schools as a youth. He graduated from the 9th class of the Imperial Japanese Army Academy in 1897, and was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the infantry. Among his classmates were future Prime Minister Abe Nobuyuki, and generals Sadao Araki and Iwane Matsui. In 1902 he graduated from the 19th class of the Army Staff College.
Honjō served with distinction during the Russo-Japanese War in the IJA 20th Infantry Regiment, and was promoted to captain during that conflict. After the war, he was assigned to a number of staff positions with the Imperial Japanese Army General Staff.
In 1907-1908, Honjō was dispatched to Beijing and Shanghai as a military attaché, and the following year was promoted to major. After serving more staff positions, including a stint as instructor at the Army Staff College, he was promoted to lieutenant colonel in 1917, and sent to Europe as a military attache in the aftermath of World War I. In 1919, he accompanied Japanese forces during the Siberian Intervention against the Bolshevik Red Army in eastern Russia.
Honjō was the commanding officer of 11th Regiment from 1919 to 1921. He served as adviser to Chang Tso-lin, in Manchuria, from 1921 to 1924. He was promoted to major general in 1922, and in 1924 was given command of the IJA 4th Infantry Brigade.
In 1927 Honjō was promoted to lieutenant general and became commander of the IJA 10th Division in 1928. In 1931 he was made commander in chief of the Kwantung Army in Manchuria, commanding the forces during the Mukden Incident and invasion of Manchuria.
When Honjō was relieved of command in 1932 for insubordination, he returned to Japan as a national hero, and was made a member of the Supreme War Council from 1932 to 1933. He was accorded the highest decorations and honors, and was elevated to the title of danshaku (baron) under the kazoku peerage system.
Honjō later became Chief aide-de-camp to Emperor Hirohito until 1936, when his suspected involvement in the February 26 Incident led to his retirement. He kept an extensive diary during his time as aide-de-camp, which was published by the University of Tokyo Press in 1983.
Towards the end of World War II, he emerged from retirement to serve as a Privy Councilor. After the surrender of Japan in 1945 he was accused of war crimes by SCAP and arrested; however, he committed suicide before the trial began. His grave is at the Tama Cemetery in Fuchu, Tokyo.
 
2nd variation.

Photo courtesy of the owner.

Manchuria Incident Commemorative Watch Fob.jpg
Manchuria Incident  Commemorative Watch Fob.jpg
 
3rd variation.

香月清司中将 - Lieutenant General Kiyoshi Katsuki.jpg
香月清司中将  Lieutenant General Kiyoshi Katsuki.jpg


Reverse

香月清司中将 - Lieutenant General Kiyoshi Katsuki

支那駐屯軍司令官 - Commander of Japanese China Garrison Army


Kiyoshi Katsuki /香月 清司, Katsuki Kiyoshi, 6 October 1881 – 29 January 1950/ was a general in the Imperial Japanese Army in the Second Sino-Japanese War.​

Lieutenant General Kiyoshi  Katsuki.jpg


Katsuki was a native of Saga prefecture. He graduated from the 14th class of the Imperial Japanese Army Academy in 1902 and from the 24th class of the Army Staff College in 1912. Promoted to colonel in the infantry in 1923, he became commander of the IJA 60th Infantry Regiment the following year, and commander of the IJA 8th Infantry Regiment in 1925. In 1929, Katsuki was promoted to major general and given command of the IJA 30th Infantry Brigade.

After being promoted to lieutenant general in 1933, he served as Deputy Commandant of the War College until 1935. Katsuki was commander of the IJA 12th Division from 1935 to 1936, and then commander of the Imperial Guards Division from 1936-1937.

In early 1937, he became Deputy Inspector-General of Military Training until 12 July 1937, when he was called to replace Lieutenant General Kanichiro Tashiro, commander of Japanese China Garrison Army, had suddenly died a few days after the Marco Polo Bridge Incident.

As commander of the IJA 1st Army from 26 August 1937, Katsuki presided over the early fighting in north China in the Second Sino-Japanese War, including the Peiking – Hankow Railway Operation. He remained IJA 1st Army commander until 30 May 1938, when he was recalled to the Imperial Army General Staff Office in Tokyo. He retired from active military service two months later.


China Garrison Army /支那駐屯軍, Shina Chutongun/ was formed 1 June 1901 as the Chinese Empire Garrison Army (清国駐屯軍, Shinkoku Chutongun), as part of Japan's contribution to the international coalition in China during the Boxer Rebellion. It took the name China Garrison Army from 14 April 1912 and onward, though was typically referred to as the Tianjin Garrison. The China Garrison Army was abolished on 26 August 1937 and its forces redistributed between the Japanese First Army, Japanese Second Army and Japanese Northern China Area Army. Garrison duties for the Tianjin area were assigned to the IJA 27th Division.​
 
4th variation.

Photo courtesy of the owner.

満洲事変記念 -Manchurian Incident Commemorative.jpg
満洲事変記念  Manchurian Incident Commemorative.jpg


Reverse

満洲事変記念 - Manchurian Incident Commemorative
 
17th Division Manchuria Garrison Commemorative Badge 章第十七師滿洲團駐屯紀念章.jpg
17th Division Manchuria Garrison Commemorative Badge  章第十七師滿洲團駐屯紀念章.jpg


Obverse

滿洲駐屯紀念章 - Manchuria Stationing Commemorative Badge

reverse

第十七師團 - 17th Division
 
Size 23 x 31 mm.

満洲派遣軍慰問記念章 メダル .jpg
満洲派遣軍慰問記念章  メダル .jpg


Reverse

昭和八年 - 1933

満洲派遣軍 - Manchuria Expeditionary Army

慰問記念 - Consolation Commemorative

関西學生護國連盟 - Kansai [Area] Student Country Protection Union
 
満洲駐屯記念章  第十三師団徽章.jpg


満洲駐屯記念章 第十三師団 徽章.jpg


滿洲 - Manchuria

駐屯紀念章 - Stationing Commemorative Badge

満洲駐屯記念章 第十三師団徽章.jpg


第十三師團 - 13th Division

振武 - Shimbu = "military might" or, in the narrow sense, "sublime martial moral power".
 
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