2 John 1, chapter 7
An Act Regarding National Honours, Awards, Decorations, And Peerages Of Baustralia
Preface
- This Act shall be known as Orders, medals, and decorations of Baustralia Act, 2019.
Definitions
- Class 1 awards shall encompass orders of Baustralia.
- Class 2 awards shall encompass high honours of Baustralia.
- Class 3 awards shall encompass medals of Baustralia.
- Class 4 awards shall encompass military decorations of Baustralia.
- Class 4A awards shall be high military decorations, while class 4B shall encompass campaign medals.
- Class 5 awards shall be campaign awards, such as a mention in despatch.
Order of Wear
- Royal Family orders shall be worn first, in order of succession.
- Class 1 awards shall follow, with commonwealth orders worn in their order of precedence after the Order of the Provinces, and before the Order of the Kingdom of Baustralia.
- Class 2 awards shall follow.
- Class 3 awards shall then follow.
- Class 4 awards shall follow.
- Class 5 awards shall be worn last.
- Defunct awards may be worn after a similar award of that class.
Methods of Wear
- Bow-mounted medals may only be worn by females.
- In naval-dress, two neck badges and two bow mounted medals may be worn.
- In other dress, one neck badge may be worn, and two bow mounted medals may be worn.
- In military dress, medals may only be worn neck, court, or bow-mounted.
- A maximum of four breast stars may be worn.
Baustralian Order of Precedence
- Medals shall be worn in this order:
- Royal Family Order of John I
- Order of the Gadus
- Order of the Baustralian Empire
- Order of Merit
- Order of Baustralia
- Combined Order of the Provinces
- John Cross
- Medal of Merit
- Medal of Advancement
- King’s Wounded Cross
- Medal of Military Merit
- King’s Service Medal
- Baustralian Forces Decoration
- Baustralian War Medal
- Aide-de-camp
Regarding the Revocation of Peerages
- That no person that hath any Honour of him and a Peer of this Realm, may alien or transfer the Honour to any other Person.
- That no Peer of this Realm can drown or extinguish his Honour, but that it descends to his descendants, neither by Surrender, Grant, Fine, nor any other conveyance to the King.