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China War Medal (1900)

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China War Medal 1900


Obverse (top left) and reverse (top right) of the medal.
TypeCampaign medal
DescriptionSilver disk, 36mm diameter.
EligibilityBritish and Imperial forces.
Campaign(s)Boxer Rebellion 1900.
Clasps
  • Taku Forts
  • Defence of Legations
  • Relief of Peking
Established1901
Colour version of medal and ribbon.

The China War Medal 1900 was a British campaign medal approved in 1901 for issue to British and Imperial land and sea troops who fought during the Boxer Rebellion of 1900. Issued in silver to combatants and in bronze to native, namely Indian, bearers drivers and servants, it could be issued without a clasp or with one or more of the following;

Clasps

  • Taku Forts

Awarded to naval personnel of the British contingent of the international fleet involved in the attack of the Taku forts along the Peiho River

  • Defence of Legations

Awarded to 80 Royal Marines and several 'odd' men of the British Legation Guard, who aided the defence of the Legation Quarter in Peking for 55 days.

  • Relief of Peking

Awarded to British and Indian army personnel and to men of the Royal Navy involved in the relief of the Legations in Peking as part of the international relief force commanded by Count Alfred von Waldersee or as part of Vice-Admiral Edward Seymour's Naval Brigade (see Seymour Expedition).

The medal used the same reverse as the two previous China War medals, a trophy-of-arms, with the obverse consisting of the bust of Queen Victoria.

The medal was awarded to 555 naval personnel of the Colonial navies of Australia without a clasp: 256 men with the New South Wales Contingent, 197 with the Victorian, and 102 on the South Australian gunboat Protector.