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H107462 EM/NCO’S BELT BUCKLE.
(Koppelschloß)BACKGROUND: Military belts and their corresponding buckles date back centuries and were initially designed for attaching swords and daggers. In 1847 Prussian Hauptmann Virschow introduced a new, innovative, box buckle with a quick release catch and corresponding belt for EM/NCO’s ranks and initiated a new method of carrying personal equipment with the belt and shoulder straps supporting the majority of the weight. This system, with modifications, remains in use in most of the armies in the world to this day. During the Third Reich era, (1933-1945), there was a prescribed form of wear of the belt and buckle with the buckle being positioned on the right side and the corresponding buckle catch on the left side. On January 24TH 1936 a new pattern EM/NCO’s belt buckle was officially introduced to replace the previously worn Weimar Reichswehr era, (National Defence Force, Circa 1919-1933), belt buckle. The basic design of the Reichswehr buckle was retained with the addition of the new Wehrmacht, (Armed Forces), style national eagle. This pattern buckle was worn through-out the Third Reich period with minor manufacturing variations and different colored finishes. The colored finish was determined by regulations depending on what form of uniform it was to be worn with, with silver for dress wear and field-grey for field wear. Originally military buckles produced under government contract had the addition of a leather, (canvas web for tropical buckles), tabs which were designed to help support the ammunition pouches and prevent slippage but regulations in 1942 discontinued the tabs to preserve leather although the directive was not completely adhered to. The standard issue belt buckles were roughly, 4.5cm-4.7cm, (roughly 1 3/4"-1 7/8"), tall, while private purchase belt buckles were generally a little smaller ranging from 3.5cm-4cm, (1 3/8"-1 5/8"), tall.
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION: Roughly, 1 7/8", (4.7cm), tall, early, (Circa 1936-1940), field-grey painted, injection molded, aluminum construction box buckle with a pebbled background field and a slightly domed, embossed central motif. The central motif features a high relief, embossed Wehrmacht, (Armed Forces), style eagle with down swept wings, clutching a canted swastika in it’s talons, on a subtly pebbled field to the center, encompassed by an embossed oak-leaf cluster to the bottom and script, "Gott Mit Uns", (God With Us), to the top. The oak-leaf cluster and script are on a ribbed, background field and are encircled by both an inner and outer simulated twisted rope border. The obverse of the buckle only retains hints of its field-grey paint and shows some light to moderate chafe wear which has resulted in loss of detail to the eagle. The reverse of the buckle is a crude mirror image of the obverse, excluding the pebbled background field and retains about 20% of it’s field-grey paint. The reverse has the integral, raised, drill slotted, buckle catch and separate prong bar mostly intact but the prongs are absent. The reverse of the buckle is also well marked with the embossed, manufacturer’s initials, "R S & S.", indicating manufacture by Richard Sieper & Söhne of Lüdenscheid. The buckle shows areas of moderate to heavy pitting resulting in a few small holes and it appears to have had a silver finish applied over the pitting.
GRADE **3/4 PRICE $70.00
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