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    Dear forumites,

    I am happy to show my latest purchase... a feldschnalle of a Prussian officer.

    The awards combination could be quite unique... (Prussia, Bavaria, Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Anhalt, KuK Österreich-Ungarn)...

    Any comments or inputs are most welcome! ;)

    Ciao,

    Claudio

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    Hi Paul,

    Thank you for your reply.

    Too me it's clearly a PrKO4, the color is corn pale blue, not dark marine blue. I don't see any Centennial medal and by the Godet's Feldschnalle type here shown (dark blue/black backing with metal label), this bar was very likely assembled by Godet in the early-mid twenties. So this officer didn't serve that long in order to get a LS award for 25 years.

    Ciao,
    C

    Edited by Claudio
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    Great one, and nice you got it!

    Too me it's clearly a PrKO4, the color is corn pale blue, not dark marine blue. I don't see any Centennial medal and by the Godet's Feldschnalle type here shown (dark blue/black backing with metal label), this bar was very likely assembled by Godet in the early-mid twenties. So this officer didn't serve that long in order to get a LS award for 25 years.

    Couldn't agree more, this is definitely a Prussian junior officer's bar with KO4.

    It should be identifiable, I think. Bavarians to "foreigners" is worked on, as is Mecklenburg... KO4 is likely pre-war, so in 1914 rank list...

    Problem is we don't know what year/month the bar dates to. If WW1 era - which I'd guess - he could easily have added the one or other award, so we cannot exclude anyone with other awards, as long as we cannot check the exact award dates.

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    That's great, Paul!!!! ;)

    Meass... it's a strange German family name... it sounds almost like "my ass" in English... :whistle: Are you sure about the spelling? I can't find any family name in Germany with the spelling "Meass".

    ciao,

    Claudio

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    "The awards combination could be quite unique... (Prussia, Bavaria, Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Anhalt, KuK Österreich-Ungarn)"

    I would say so...the awards are an awesome swath across five states/countries. How does a such a junior officer get such a variety of awards? This is a question not only for this bar, but for many. It was usually just accepted before, but with more bars being identified with the history of the units, does anyone have a standing theory?

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    What about this Maenss, living in Memel in 1929?

    http://adressbuecher.genealogy.net/entry/show/248928

    It would be great to have a first name, because the family name is really quite uncommon... but I still need a first name. Problem is that Prussian Ranglisten don't really show first names... :banger: it might be difficult... but who knows? It would be great to give a story to that bar... behind a ribbon or medal bar there's always a human story...

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    There is also a Hauptmann Maenss (liason officer in Finland at the end of WWI, 1918) being mentioned in this thread http://gmic.co.uk/index.php/topic/2713-german-troops-in-finland-1918/ ... such an officer could have had the chance to get multiple awards from different German states...

    I think that is him since Walter Maenss was involved with railroads during the war.

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