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Everything posted by Bernd_W
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Hello gents, anybody got additional Information about Paymaster or Quartermaster Wilhelm Hechler in the 2nd Hessian cavalryman regiment? It became in 1872 the 24th Dragoon regiment. Found him as a Paymaster in the "Königlich preussische Ordensliste 1877 pt.3" as a recipient of the non-combatant IC2 1870: https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015049878856&seq=1161&q1=Hechler Kind regrets
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I managed to download the pictures and the plain text. But I cant merge it into a .pdf because these page dont use a proper format like hOCR. Anyway I merged the pictures into a pdf, but its not searchable. So I provide the _fulltext.txt file in which you can search, and find the page number to go to in the .pdf file or pictures folder Note that I did not inlude the first and last two pages because they are empty. pdf: https://rapidgator.net/file/e72e2e6381b851b3b6c5d991deacc0ee/pdf.zip.html pictures: https://rapidgator.net/file/ccfce5785eb7c4abd659f37a5df780d0/images.zip.html I saw there is plenty of intersting stuff on this side (Thanks for the link), and is pretty easy to dowload the pictures and text. Will look out for a solution to merge it proper. But, anyway I cant uploade directly here, because the files are to big.
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So the flag received the award and not all or some individuals in a regiment. You should have asked this in first. Language would not be a problem then. Some examples are mentioned in this books: 1807-1890: https://ordensmuseum.de/Regimentsgeschichten/Standarten1.pdf 1807-1898: https://ordensmuseum.de/Regimentsgeschichten/Standarten2.pdf Example (Page 6 in first book): Unfortunately I dont know about WW1 or if it was still done in WW1.
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Translated it, but cant find the example. I guess, you talking about something like this (fictional example)?: For the capture of Fort Douaumont, Cordt von Brandis received the PLM, the entire regiment received the Iron Cross second class, the officers received the first class and the company commanders received the HOH. Stuff like this way done in Germany at Regimental anniversaries, but of course not with combat award, but with house orders and stuff like this. And afaik not down to enlisted man level.
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Hello Andy, Its Wismar, Sturmabteilung Roßbach, after Kapp-Putsch related. Its 21.3.20. The date its mentioned in the Text where it's better to read: That's what I thought, because the Sturmabteilung Roßbach participated in the Kapp-Putsch in Wismar. But now looking at the Town's name, it looks more like Wissmar. Also, the second mentioning in the Text: The one besides the signature: But Wißmar would be in the Gießen area, and the Sturmabteilung Roßbach was in the Mecklenburg and Ruhr area during and after the Kapp-Putsch. Not sure if it's a strange writing or another town. And there is also a Wismar/Wißmar in Pomerania. https://gov.genealogy.net/item/show/WISMA2JO73MO The headquarters of the Arbeitsgemeinschaft Roßbach in Pomerania was at "Gut Sadow, Kreis Pyritz". Pyritz (Pyrzyce) is ~60km away from Wismar/Wißmar (Wyszomierz, West Pomeranian Voivodeship) in Pomerania. Would be a better match compared to the Gießen one. But its strange, its written with ss and not ß, especially when Roßbach is written with the ß: It's a Passport, saying he is now a Member of the Sturmabteilung Roßbach. My guess would be its Lieutenant Koepke, Roßbachs adjutant. But I wanted an unbiased answer about the name, because my thoughts are biased. See Wismar vs. Wissmar. Thanks, for asking me about the Town, leads to some thought about Wismar being right. If it's not Wismar, I'm not sure about Koepke. Because I think he was present in the Mecklenburg and Ruhr area during this time. Could also be some "Werbeoffizier". It's stamped with a "Briefstempel" from the Sturmabteilung, and the "Briefstempel" is crossed out. But I don't know if they even had regular stamps, especially in this banned and unbanned times. Kind regrets
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Sometimes I think about it would be an easy way to laundry Money for some made Men. Sure there might be some uniformed collectors, but they are imo more in the price range of buying fake EKs. If you spend a couple grands, you likely do your homework or got fooled by someone like Kujau, who also use the social component for fooling you. It's a little bit different compared with an anonymous eBay offer.
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It's more like a digital forgery-proof expertise. Where it's 100% proof that the piece belongs to the expertise. Not useful for spotting fakes in the wild. The same Technic, a little less picky, could be useful for identifying fakes. A little less picky means, the used unique details are not so unique how used to identify something as unique, more likely to identify all e.g. AWS 1870 IC1. But IMO that is nothing for what you would need the Bosch software. Because the USP of this Software is the depth of detail which make it possible to identify everything as unique. IMO you could do the little less picky fake identifier software, by training a KI with enough pictures and the knowledge like, what is a hanging nine. If accelerator mass spectrometry driven radiocarbon dating is getting cheaper, it could be also very interesting. There might be fakes out there which were judged as real for decades. Just think of the Type 22 fakes. https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.1901540116 But even speaking openly about this, is nothing which makes you friends. This kind of revolutions and also the thoughts about, are not liked by collectors with the state-of-the-art knowledge (which then is partly obsolete) and the then maybe questionable pieces in their collections.