saschaw Posted July 12, 2008 Author Posted July 12, 2008 (edited) This one looked very interresting so I bought it - but I have no idea what for exactly it is. A Bavarian in the Imperial navy, a Prussian to get the Bavarian, and is it rather a MVO4 than a MVK2? What for is that blue ribbon?! I think that is a difficult one without the medal bar... PS: any more information someone comes to mind with the other stuff in this thread? Thanks in advance for any help. =) Edited July 12, 2008 by saschaw
Guest Rick Research Posted July 12, 2008 Posted July 12, 2008 Last one is easy. It's a Prussian with the Bavarian Kriegsverdienst ribbon MVK2X or MVO4X and some Prussian long service. But LD2? LD1? XXV? XV? Who knows.These ribbon bars are too troublesome. I think you should stop worrying (it makes your hair turn gray) and send them all to me. :catjava:
saschaw Posted July 13, 2008 Author Posted July 13, 2008 Mh yes, thanks. That's as far as I came, hoped we could precise this. Apparently we cannot and this is why I dont's like this buttons that much, I really prefer bars. That's again a rather nice and rare one but again, as my two matching 8 place buttons with MVO3aX or MVK1aX we don't know much about them... =(How about that one? Prussian Allgemeines Ehrenzeichen or Red Eagle order 4, or is that Hamburg?! Followed by Baden long service or anything else? He does have another long service in last place... oooh, I get lost in all my ribbon stuff... :speechless:
Guest Rick Research Posted July 13, 2008 Posted July 13, 2008 :love: wartime bar with the flat "popsicle stick" pin. I would think a General Decoration because of the Baden long service ribbon. He had some sort of double service, so his foreign Prussian stuff is tucked on the end. maybe an IX and LD2 or some such combination...an old soldier from baden in Reichs civil service (Alsace-Lorraine?) who wasn't home in 1902 for the Baden jubilee?
saschaw Posted July 13, 2008 Author Posted July 13, 2008 I guess we both wartime bars. Thanks, I think that makes the sense I couldn't come to with it. The Baden 1902 medal was not given to any soldier but only to the elderly served (think those who yet had 8 or 9 years of service). It doesn't seem he had and though "qualified" in 1897 for the Prussian "Erinnerungsmedaille" - this is quite common, many soldiers/NCOs missed the Baden 1902 medal due to some years of service. But: any Baden officer in service got it, no matter if he was in Baden at that point or was "anywhere" in the Reich! ;)
Chris Boonzaier Posted March 21, 2014 Posted March 21, 2014 Now a five place bar, similar "international" to the second one. Once more war time I think, and from the needle system made by Godet - riiight? The combination of war time awards, amung these the SEHO 3aX suggests a higher ranking officer, leaving out his pre war awards? Tell me if you think I'm wrong... In details, it's - Preu?en, Eisernes Kreuz 1914 II. Klasse; - Hessen, Allgemeines Ehrenzeichen wohl "F?r Tapferkeit"; - Anhalt, Friedrich-Kreuz; - S?chsische Herzogt?mer, Ernestinischer Hausorden, Ritterkreuz I. Klasse mit Schwertern; - Braunschweig, Kriegsverdienstkreuz II. Klasse. Are there certain units more likey to have gotten a Anhalt Friedrich Cross and a Braunschweig cross together? Thanks Chris
Dave Danner Posted March 21, 2014 Posted March 21, 2014 Are there certain units more likey to have gotten a Anhalt Friedrich Cross and a Braunschweig cross together? Thanks Chris The only infantry unit with contingents from both Anhalt and Braunschweig was Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 93. It was formed on 2.8.15 by IV.Armeekorps with two Landsturm battalions, one from Bernburg and one from Altenburg. Landw.Brig.Ers.Btl. Nr. 38, a Hannoverian/Braunschweig battalion, joined LIR 93 on 7.7.16 as III/LIR 93. But an Anhaltiner serving in a Braunschweig regiment, or vice versa, might be more likely. Or an Anhaltiner in the Zieten'sche Husaren, since Duke Ernst August awarded the BrK2 to his old regiment as if it were a native Braunschweig regiment. Dave
Dave Danner Posted August 22, 2017 Posted August 22, 2017 On 3/21/2014 at 11:25, Dave Danner said: The only infantry unit with contingents from both Anhalt and Braunschweig was Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 93. It was formed on 2.8.15 by IV.Armeekorps with two Landsturm battalions, one from Bernburg and one from Altenburg. Landw.Brig.Ers.Btl. Nr. 38, a Hannoverian/Braunschweig battalion, joined LIR 93 on 7.7.16 as III/LIR 93. But an Anhaltiner serving in a Braunschweig regiment, or vice versa, might be more likely. Or an Anhaltiner in the Zieten'sche Husaren, since Duke Ernst August awarded the BrK2 to his old regiment as if it were a native Braunschweig regiment. Dave Hi, Revisiting an old topic to correct/supplement what I wrote above. Having compiled the entire Anhalt rolls, I would say that the combination with Anhalt, Braunschweig and a Saxon Duchy most likely points to a staff officer with the Magdeburg-based IV.Armeekorps. All of Anhalt belonged with the IV.AK area, as did most of Sachsen-Altenburg, and IR 93 and IR 153 belonged to the same division. The Duchy of Braunschweig had several exclaves in the IV.AK area, most notably Blankenburg am Harz, where II./IR 165 was garrisoned.
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