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Honoria

Medal

King's Volunteer Reserves Medal (KVRM)

Awarded for exemplary service in the volunteer reserve forces.

KVRM
Ribbon of the King's Volunteer Reserves Medal
Ribbon · Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 2.5 au)

The King's Volunteer Reserves Medal (KVRM), originally the Queen's Volunteer Reserves Medal (QVRM), was created by Royal Warrant of Queen Elizabeth II on 29 March 1999. Only 13 King's Volunteer Reserves Medals may be awarded in a year. The medal is presented only to members of the Volunteer Reserves of the British Armed Services for exemplary meritorious service in the conduct of their duties. The KVRM is a Level 3 award and ranks in military order of wear immediately after the British Empire Medal. It is the first exclusive award to Volunteer Reserves that is presented at an investiture. The first awards were announced in the 1999 Queen's Birthday Honours with these first awards presented at an investiture on 5 November 1999.

Background from Wikipedia (CC BY-SA 4.0).

At a glance

Established
1999 by Queen Elizabeth II
Awarding body
The British Crown
Rank
King's Volunteer Reserves Medal
Formal title
None

Overview

Recognises long service or meritorious contribution in reserve forces.

Eligibility

Volunteer reserve service members

  • Reserve service
  • Leadership
  • Meritorious contribution

Long-term reserve service

Rank & Precedence

King's Volunteer Reserves Medal — Medal for reserve forces

  1. Above: None
  2. Below: Higher military honours

Entitlements

Post-nominal letters
KVRM
Formal title
None
Insignia
Medal and ribbon

Award Process

  • Military nomination
  • Defence honours committee
  • Approved by the Sovereign

Announced: New Year Honours and King's Birthday Honours

Royal ceremony

Significance

Exemplary reserve service

  • Commitment
  • Service
  • Duty

Sources & further reading

Honoria is an independent reference. Awards are described from public sources; it is not an official or royal body.

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