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Everything posted by Glenn J
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Paul Julius Hans Tieschowitz v. Tieschowa
Glenn J replied to David M's topic in Deutsche Kaiserreich: Man spricht Denglish
Genau! Glenn -
Matt, on the bar: EK2 Hohenzollern House Order Knight (HOH3X) Prussian Crown Order 4th Class (KO4) Prussian Long service decoration (DA) Prussian Centenary Medal 1897 Mecklenburg Military Merit Cross 2nd Class (MMV2) Mecklenburg Order of the Wendish Crown Knights' Cross (MK3) Lübeck Hanseatic Cross (LüH) Bavarian Military Merit Order 4th Class (BMV4) Sachsen Ernestine House Order Knights' Cross 1st Class with Swords EK1 and a Mecklenburg Military Merit Cross 1st Class on the breast Regards Glenn
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Weimar Police and medals / orders? Question
Glenn J replied to ArHo's topic in Germany: Weimar Republic & Deutsche Freikorps
Hi Arho, unfortunately. I do not have an earlier Weimar period Bekleidungsvorschrift. I was just looking through Erich Radecke's "Ordnungshüter 1919 bis 1939 in Deutschland". There are numerous photos of policemen wearing orders in the 1920s although as you say not all. I think it is possible that most of the older policemen in the 1920s actually never served at the front and remained in their towns and cities and did not receive any awards! Presumably, only those members of the Landgendarmerie who served as Feldgendarmen received awards whilst in a police role. Of course, military veterans who later joined the police would have had and could wear their awards. Regards Glenn -
Weimar Police and medals / orders? Question
Glenn J replied to ArHo's topic in Germany: Weimar Republic & Deutsche Freikorps
Dear ArHo, Please find below a scan from the 1932 edition of the Bekleidungsvorschrift für die Polizei und Landjägerei in Preußen. As can be seen all wartime awards including wound badges and flight badges were explicitly permitted to be worn on duty as were life-saving and long service awards. Peacetime awards were allowed off-duty. Regards Glenn -
Hi Laurentius, Dr. Ahles does not appear to have reached the equivalent of general officer rank. It is possible that the engraving was a much later rendition of Dr. Eichheimer. He was still serving in 1842 with exactly the same decorations as shown in your portrait. He served as the General-Stabsarzt of the Bavarian Army from 1826 to 1847. I can't find anyone else with those exact decorations at this rank. He was only awarded a Military Merit order 3rd Class on 1 January 1843 Regards Glenn
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I found this picture dated 1833 of Friedrich Eichheimer. The likeness is not immediately apparent. In 1832 only two serving medical officials are listed with a Militär-Sanitäts-Ehrenzeichen in Gold. The other is a Divison Stabsarzt Dr. Carl Ahles. He is shown with the same orders by 1836. Regards Glenn
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Oberst Boeckh (18.11.37-4.11.1908) spent much of his career with the corps of cadets from early 1866 onwards. Although he returned to his regiment, the Kaiser Franz Garde-Grenadier-Regiment for the campaign in Bohemia in 1866 (fighting at Alt-Rognitz and Königgrätz), he remained at the cadet school in Wahlstatt during the Franco-German war. He served at Plön for numerous years, starting in 1873, becoming the commander there on 22 January 1880 as a Major. He left some ten years later as a charakterisierter Oberst on 18 October 1890 to become the director of the military orphanage in Potsdam. Retiring on 27 September 1893, he died in Berlin in 1908. Regards Glenn