Médaille de la Gendarmerie nationale

Médaille de la Gendarmerie nationale
Obvserse of the Medal bearing the now defunct grenade device
TypeState decoration
Awarded forCourage
Presented by France
StatusActive
Established5 September 1949
Ribbon bar without device
Precedence
Next (higher)Croix de la Valeur militaire
Next (lower)Medal for the War Wounded

The Médaille de la Gendarmerie nationale (English: Medal of the National Gendarmerie or Federal Police) is a French military decoration created on 5 September 1949 on proposition of the then Minister of Defence, mister Paul Ramadier. It was originally created in a single grade for award to officiers and NCOs of the Gendarmerie nationale who were cited in the orders of the entire service. Such a citation in the orders of the entire service, and all potential subsequent ones would be denoted by a grenade device on the ribbon as the medal could, and can still only be awarded once to any potential recipient. The medal could also be exceptionally awarded to persons not members of the service for important services rendered to the gendarmerie or for help during special missions. These presentations were made without a citation and thus without any ribbon device.

The medal's statute remained unchanged until a recent 2004 review as detailed below.