Jump to content
News Ticker
  • I am now accepting the following payment methods: Card Payments, Apple Pay, Google Pay and PayPal
  • Latest News

    Request for help in identifying the unit (1918 Italian Front)


    preemxx

    Recommended Posts

    Welcome Preemxx,

    You’re in the right place.

    This is indeed the section on GMIC for all things Austro Hungarian…

    We are a bit low in numbers in this section but hopefully we’ll help you add to what you know about your Grandfathers service.

    May I suggest you turn on notifications so you get an email if someone replies, it won’t be always be an overnight answer so stick with it.

     

    I too had a Grandfather that served in the AH army, I know there is information to be found if you stick with it, maybe about the unit & maybe specifically about your GF if you’re lucky 🤞 There is more to find if you speak German, which I don’t sadly, but with his unit identified you can find out when and where they were at least.


    ——-

    The picture is a beauty!

    ——-

     

    And yes… Please post the other pictures you have, front and also the backs especially if annotated or marked, & particularly the writing you mention.

     

    Also do you know any details about your GFather?

    Name or Date of Birth?

    & importantly his ‘place of birth’ if you know it or can find it out.
    The Austro Hungarian Army recruited locally, so the answer to your initial question ‘which unit was he in’ may be as simple as that to answer, 🤞

     

    For example - My GFather was born in Zalaegerszeg, Hungary so was in Infanterie regiment 83 (IR83), the local regiment with a garrison there.

     

    ——-

     

    We look forward to seeing the pictures and hearing what you know. There’s no time pressure from us, whenever you are ready, you’ve taken the first step, stick with it…

     

    Best wishes

    tony

     

     

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

     

    Felix - I spent a while looking the other night in various ways… I really wish I spoke German. 


    Preemxx - The studio picture of your GF shows they have edelweiss collar badges which confirms he was a mountain trooper.

    I know Infantry Regiments were split into 4 battalions, each with 4 companies, numbered in order.

    So I believe it’s likely that komp 13 would have been in the 4th battalion of his regiment.
    The fact he is in a jaeger battalion is, apart from being ‘cool’ in itself, helpful by narrowing the options.


     

    On 18/05/2023 at 15:47, Felix Echt von Eleda said:

    I'm going to search more information this evening.


    I’m really glad to see 👆this Felix 👍

     

     

    tony 🍻

     

    Edited by Farkas
    Totally confused myself - rewrite needed.
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    His name was Stanisław Szczepaniak Krupowski, if i remember correctly, he was born in 1899, maybe it will help.

    I'll try to find more photos and data when I'll return home

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    • 3 weeks later...

    I am very sorry for the long absence, unfortunately I did not find anything else at home, thank you very much for your time and help, but if I find any things from my great-grandfather, I will post them here

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Hello!

    There are different ways to wear the Edelweiß-Badge.

    It is was worn only at the cap, it was XIV.Army Corps Innsbruck. If it was worn at the cap and at the collar it was Tiroler Landesschützen (since 1917 "Kaiserschützen"). If it was worn only at the collar it was Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment 4 or 27 (since 1917 Gebirgsschützen-Regiment 1 and 2)

    Heiterwang is a place in Tyrol. There was the 44th Inf.Div. In 1918 it included the 88th Schützen-Brigade with Mountain-Regiments 1 and 2, earlier "Tiroler Landesschützen", see above..

    So probably the guys have an Edelweiß at the cap too.

    Later in the war there wered dirfferent "Bergführer-Companies".

    Mountain Guide Companies

    In order to provide the troops deployed in the high mountains, which often consisted mainly of soldiers who were not used to the mountains, with competent advisors and guides, so-called mountain guide companies were set up from 1916 onwards. However, these were only administrative units, as the mountain guides were assigned to the respective troops on a patrol basis. Ice axe, climbing rope and climbing shoes were obligatory parts of their equipment. If necessary, they also had skiing equipment at their disposal.

    For the training of military mountain guides, there were separate mountain guide replacement and instruction companies. Soldiers from various regiments or other troops, most of whom had already acquired mountaineering skills before the war through civilian practice of mountain sports, were trained there as mountain guides. Authorised Alpine Club mountain guides often acted as instructors. Analogous to the mountain guide courses of the Alpine Club, the lessons of the military alpine courses comprised the practical subjects: rock and ice technique, first aid, map reading and orientation in the terrain, rope use and learning or perfecting skiing. War-related innovations included the insurance of alpine climbs, blasting and storm training. The aim was to enable the military mountain guides to carry out militarily and alpinistically difficult undertakings themselves, on the one hand, and to teach the troops the most elementary alpine principles as instructors, on the other. In contrast to individual mountain guides who had already been assigned to various troops or districts since the beginning of the war, and who were often members of the Imperial and Royal Landsturm or the Tauern. Landsturm or the Tyrolean Standschützen, members of the mountain guide companies administratively belonged to the regiment of a Tyrolean Kaiserjäger regiment or an Kaiserschützen regiment.

     

    In 1918 there were 10 mountain-guide-companies identified. They had the numbers 1-4, 7-12. Unfortunately no 13.

    Bergf. also means the rank: Bergführer

    Maybe here we have the Alpine-Company N°13. There were Alpine-Companies 1-4, 6-7, 9-33, 35, 37 and 40.

     

     

    Edited by The Prussian
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    • 2 weeks later...
    On 11/06/2023 at 21:45, preemxx said:

    I am very sorry for the long absence, unfortunately I did not find anything else at home, thank you very much for your time and help, but if I find any things from my great-grandfather, I will post them here

    You are honouring the memory and service of your family, no one else will.

    There is no rush preemxx, don’t lose interest or hope, we won’t!

     🍻 tony 

    ———//

     

    Hi Gents,

    I had another look for him tonight.
    There are a lot of matches for his name on this site 👇

    696E321E-0A98-432B-8F89-B628198B3EE9.thumb.png.954b808d19cf6dfb1d3466a9d9c69884.png

    Preemxx, try to take a look at the list on the site, perhaps you’ll be able to find one with names of children/relatives that you recognise as family 👍

     

    On 22/05/2023 at 10:05, preemxx said:

    His name was Stanisław Szczepaniak Krupowski, if i remember correctly, he was born in 1899, maybe it will help.

    I'll try to find more photos and data when I'll return home

    I may be wrong but I’m tempted to say on his service record he is known as ‘Stanisław Szczepaniak’…

    Turns out that Krupowski/a is an area in Zakopane, it seems to have often been adopted as an additional name but then not used consistently in some other cases I’ve been seeing.

     

    The two cards addressed to ‘Stara Polana 15a’ use it but the other does not. Possibly it was of use locally but not when elsewhere, also possibly they are addressed to his father or someone other than him?

    ———//

     

    This 1917 card is surely taken during/after training as a new recruit, I doubt the uniform is even his…5758E770-2150-468E-9176-C6F98CE47CE2.thumb.png.cfe5caf45f18bda73ef423c838f1791d.png

     

    This great photo with his unit shows him in a more basic uniform.

    He noticeably still lacks any medals at this point 👇5395707C-B426-4224-9754-7725AED7D123.thumb.png.94e422c20967b96efef046f16ee28841.png

     

    23EA31AA-AF6E-4B2B-A6A4-567FEE12D200.thumb.png.cabd13a93807382d62b73529a47acec0.png

     

    This equally great photo 👇 from 1918 shows a different environment and he is in a prominent position this time…FBEC4078-D16B-47E6-98CA-57F753D3A629.thumb.jpeg.a45bbc2ae5696506af7e1d4d2b35ef02.jpeg

    He is ‘front & centre’ with the officers…

    AFF9BED2-997E-449F-A7E5-FA0446C952D2.thumb.png.1cfdfa8616e480a0e958de1aa823eff9.png


    That’s it for now…
    It’s 5.58am & ZZzz time now.

     

    tony 🍻
     

     

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    17 hours ago, Farkas said:

    You are honouring the memory and service of your family, no one else will.

    There is no rush preemxx, don’t lose interest or hope, we won’t!

     🍻 tony 

    ———//

     

    Hi Gents,

    I had another look for him tonight.
    There are a lot of matches for his name on this site 👇

    696E321E-0A98-432B-8F89-B628198B3EE9.thumb.png.954b808d19cf6dfb1d3466a9d9c69884.png

    Preemxx, try to take a look at the list on the site, perhaps you’ll be able to find one with names of children/relatives that you recognise as family 👍

     

    I may be wrong but I’m tempted to say on his service record he is known as ‘Stanisław Szczepaniak’…

    Turns out that Krupowski/a is an area in Zakopane, it seems to have often been adopted as an additional name but then not used consistently in some other cases I’ve been seeing.

     

    The two cards addressed to ‘Stara Polana 15a’ use it but the other does not. Possibly it was of use locally but not when elsewhere, also possibly they are addressed to his father or someone other than him?

    ———//

     

    This 1917 card is surely taken during/after training as a new recruit, I doubt the uniform is even his…5758E770-2150-468E-9176-C6F98CE47CE2.thumb.png.cfe5caf45f18bda73ef423c838f1791d.png

     

    This great photo with his unit shows him in a more basic uniform.

    He noticeably still lacks any medals at this point 👇5395707C-B426-4224-9754-7725AED7D123.thumb.png.94e422c20967b96efef046f16ee28841.png

     

    23EA31AA-AF6E-4B2B-A6A4-567FEE12D200.thumb.png.cabd13a93807382d62b73529a47acec0.png

     

    This equally great photo 👇 from 1918 shows a different environment and he is in a prominent position this time…FBEC4078-D16B-47E6-98CA-57F753D3A629.thumb.jpeg.a45bbc2ae5696506af7e1d4d2b35ef02.jpeg

    He is ‘front & centre’ with the officers…

    AFF9BED2-997E-449F-A7E5-FA0446C952D2.thumb.png.1cfdfa8616e480a0e958de1aa823eff9.png


    That’s it for now…
    It’s 5.58am & ZZzz time now.

     

    tony 🍻
     

     

    Nice work Tony

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    • 1 month later...

    Thank you very much for your commitment, I have to show my mother the results you sent and ask for more information, By the way "Krupowski" is a nickname to distinguish one highlander from another, there are many "Szczepaniaks" so it may come from some location in Zakopane. Thanks again and when I have less work I will try to find out more on my own

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Create an account or sign in to comment

    You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

    Create an account

    Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

    Register a new account

    Sign in

    Already have an account? Sign in here.

    Sign In Now
    ×
    ×
    • Create New...

    Important Information

    We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.