Cross of Honour of the German Mother

Cross of Honour of the German Mother
Ehrenkreuz der Deutschen Mutter
TypeCivil state decoration
Awarded for"...exceptional merit to the German nation" (to Reichsdeutsche and Volksdeutsche mothers who exhibited probity, exemplary motherhood, and who conceived and raised four or more children in the role of a parent)
Presented byNazi Germany
EligibilityReichsdeutsche mothers – eligibility later extended to include Volksdeutsche mothers
StatusInactive
Established16 December 1938
First award21 May 1939
Final awardup until 8 May 1945 (cessation date)
Precedence
Next (higher)None
Next (lower)None
RelatedNone

The Cross of Honour of the German Mother (German: Ehrenkreuz der Deutschen Mutter), referred to colloquially as the Mutterehrenkreuz (Mother's Cross of Honour) or simply Mutterkreuz (Mother's Cross), was a state decoration conferred by the government of Nazi Germany to honour a German-citizen mother for exceptional merit to the German nation. Eligibility later extended to include ethnic German ('Volksdeutsche') mothers from, for example, Austria and Sudetenland, that had earlier been incorporated into the German Reich. Under the Nuremberg laws, German Jews and those of partial Jewish ancestry were not considered full citizens (Reichsbürger) and were not eligible for the Cross of Honour.

The decoration was conferred from 1939 until 1945 in three classes: bronze, silver, and gold, to Reichsdeutsche mothers who exhibited probity, exemplary motherhood, and who conceived and raised at least four children in the role of a parent.

A similar practice, that continues to this present day, was already established in France since 1920, by conferring the Médaille d'honneur de la famille française (Medal of the French Family), a tribute to the French mother who raised several children appropriately.