Wednesday, August 23, 2017

German police unit Brands 19201937

Tim Allen: Be conservative in Hollywood is like being a Jew in the 1930s in Germany



The following tables show the basic shapes for the marks of the police unit found in German Small Arms Marking from authentic sources J Goertz and D Bryans, Walsworth Publishing Co Marceline MO, USA, 1997 This book contains English translations of the actual regulations issued by the German authorities of imperial times and Weimar, and is an invaluable source of information on the often obscure marks found on German weapons and equipment until 1937, when the material marking unit was officially abandoned.
Unit brands have been applied to many types of military equipment and the German police during the imperial eras and Weimar A full discussion of the interpretation of the marks of German unity is out of the scope of the information presented here, but they indicate the presence of the unit were issued for more information, visit the Imperial German regimental marking revised edition by Jeff Noll, PO Box 7184, Ventura, CA 93006, USA Knowing that and having history military units and German police, you can sometimes get information on where these equipment were such that the First World war battles Thus, unit brands give some history on the points on which they are located.
A few letters letters or letters or number number.
The first set of letters on the line tells the military unit or police that the article was published There are many possible combinations of letters and numbers, and addresses the information presented here as those relating to units German police in Weimar and early Nazi era.


The latest figures on the line indicates the item number of the item that was delivered to a unit; e g gun P08 351st issued Schutzpolizei Stettin.
As always, I am not responsible for errors in the data, just for the transcript Please report any errors to me.
This information is lifted almost verbatim from Weimar and early Nazi Lugers and accessories by Jan C Still, printed by Walsworth Publishing Co Marceline, MO 64658 USA.
The IMKK, Inter-Alliierte Militaer-Kontroll-Kommission Allied Military Control Commission was established to implement the provisions of the Treaty of Versailles on German soil He worked in various subcommittees and left Germany in January 1927.



The Treaty of Versailles by the Weimar IMKK restricted the size of the police force to their level in 1914, namely 150,000 police weapons men had a similar restriction The German state depended on the stabilizing influence of the police during violence and disorder of the Weimar period and evaded the restrictions imposed on them the military and weapons of the police force were a source of comflict with IMKK, which fears that an expanded police force would become a ready reserve for the German army report dated 1925 IMKK noted non-compliance and violations of the Versailles Treaty by German police cites that the German police has exceeded the limit of 150 000 per 30,000 men and that had Schutzpolizei a military character.
During the Weimar era, the power of the German police remained decentralized It was centered in the states of Prussia, Bavaria, Baden Wuerttemberg, Hesse, Saxony, and other latter consisted of city ​​and the following groups of the rural police.
Schutzmannschaft former royal imperial police, unable to control civil disobedience at the beginning of the era of Weimar.
Sicherheitspolizei created by the Prussian government in 1919 to control civil violence and disorder prohibited by IMKK because of its military and dissolved October 6, 1920 With Schutzmannschaft it was reformed in Schutzpolizei the early 1920s.
Schutzpolizei large police squads city and riot In 1932, it consisted of 92.306 men, 54,921 of whom were Prussian.



Landjaegerei gendarmerie rural police in 1932, it consisted of 16,532 men, 8929 of whom were Prussian.
Kommunalpolizei Gemeindepolizei independent small town police in 1932, it consisted of 18.876 men, 15,000 were Prussian.
The detective police force Kriminalpolizei In 1932, it consisted of 10,856 men.
The Einwohnerwehr was a paramilitary police force formed by order of the Interior Ministry of Prussia dated April 15, 1919, to enable citizens to protect themselves against looters, armed gangs and revolutionaries has been submitted to the control local Reichswehr regiments supplied its guns it was forbidden by the Treaty of Versailles, and after repeated demands IMKK, June 29, 1921, the Berlin government dissolved the Einwohnerwehr the Einwohnerwehr had a membership of hundreds of thousands and was formed mainly of former military Many of its members, for example the captain Ernst Roehm, future head of the Sturmabteilung SA, aka the brown shirts finally joined the Nazi party.



II Defense Force of the Bavarian police Polizeiwehr Bayern 1920.
The basic forms of unit markings for this police force are contained in the regulations issued in 1920, and are presented in the following table.








German police unit Brands 19201937, German police unit.