Trajan Posted July 18, 2016 Posted July 18, 2016 Chip, Would you explain your reasoning please for those of us not well versed in these matters? That is to say, why bayr.6.Feld Artillerie Regiment?
Chip Posted July 19, 2016 Posted July 19, 2016 (edited) Trajan, Sure. First, this is a M1915. You can tell that, because of the width (4,5cm) and the field gray backing material. For the M15, red became the Waffenfarbe of the Feldartillerie for shoulder straps. All Feldartillerie units, with the exception of the Bavarian units, had a flaming bomb along with the unit number. Bavarians had the unit number only. Red was also the color for the Ulans, but they used their regimental facing color as piping on their red straps (except for the regiments that had red as their facing color, in which case, they had no piping). The sixth Ulans had no piping, but they had a royal cypher and not a number. Chip Edited July 19, 2016 by Chip
Trajan Posted July 19, 2016 Posted July 19, 2016 Thanks! I knew there would be a simple answer, nd it would be something along these lines, so glad to have it spelled out. These epaulettes never appear in Turkey and so I have never really looked into them. Trajan
Militaria Hunter Posted July 12, 2017 Posted July 12, 2017 Hello, Another example of M15 Bay FAR shoulder boards but Friedensuniform (without button hole) with the bavarian specific design for the "1" number David
Chip Posted July 12, 2017 Posted July 12, 2017 (edited) David, Private purchase, probably for the M1908 overcoat, thus the gray, not feldgrau backing material. Private purchase strap widths could vary widely, so in this instance, I think we have a prewar overcoat strap. Chip Edited July 12, 2017 by Chip
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