Thursday, June 25, 2026

Ritterkreuzträger of 3. Panzer-Division


The 3rd Panzer Division (3. Panzer-Division), one of the original three tank divisions of the Wehrmacht formed on 15 October 1935 in Berlin from elements of cavalry and other units, emerged as a formidable armored formation that played a significant role across nearly every major theater of World War II. Initially the strongest Panzer division with 391 tanks during the 1939 Invasion of Poland, it advanced from Pomerania through Toruń to Brest-Litovsk, showcasing the aggressive combined-arms tactics of Blitzkrieg. In 1940, it spearheaded operations in Belgium via the Albert Canal to Brussels and into France, though it later lost one tank regiment to help form new divisions. Diverted from a planned North Africa deployment, it joined Operation Barbarossa in June 1941 as part of Army Group Center, seizing key bridges and contributing to the massive encirclements at Bialystok-Minsk and Kiev before pushing toward Moscow and Tula; under commanders like Walter Model and later Hermann Breith, it endured the brutal Soviet winter counteroffensive of 1941–42 as a mobile fire brigade. In 1942, during Case Blue, the division drove deep into the Caucasus toward Mozdok, suffering heavy losses in intense fighting before narrowly escaping encirclement by crossing the frozen Sea of Azov. It fought prominently in the 1943 Battle of Kursk west of Belgorod, achieving local successes amid the largest tank battle in history, only to join the grueling defensive retreats through Ukraine, Romania, Poland, and Hungary as Soviet forces advanced. Reorganized with Panzer-Grenadier regiments, Panzer Regiment 6, and supporting artillery and reconnaissance units, the "Bear Division" (from its Berlin mascot) remained on the Eastern Front until early 1945, when it shifted to Styria in Austria. There, it evaded the Red Army and surrendered to American forces on or around 8 May 1945, with most surviving personnel released by July; its long service exemplified the Wehrmacht's armored elite, marked by high mobility, repeated heavy casualties, and adaptation from offensive triumphs to desperate rearguard actions.

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EICHENLAUBTRÄGER


Oberstleutnant im Generalstab Ernst-Georg Buchterkirch (1914-1971) was a German Heer officer who began his military career in 1935 with the Reiter-Regiment in Potsdam, transferred to Panzer-Regiment 6 in 1937 as Leutnant, and later served with the Condor Legion in Spain before rising to Oberstleutnant im Generalstab. During the Battle of France he served as Zugführer in the 2./Panzer-Regiment 6 and distinguished himself by capturing several Seine bridges near Paris while his platoon and company destroyed a significant number of enemy tanks, for which he received the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 29 June 1940 as Oberleutnant. In Operation Barbarossa, now as Chef der 2./Panzer-Regiment 6, he led his company on 23 June 1941 in the destruction of twelve Soviet tanks at Buchowiecze and the immediate formation of a bridgehead at Minicze the following day; these actions earned him the 44th award of the Eichenlaub zum Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 31 December 1941. He was additionally mentioned by name in the Wehrmachtbericht of 6 July 1941 for exemplary bravery during the early fighting in the Panzer-Regiment alongside other officers. After these exploits Buchterkirch was transferred to instructor duties in the Heimat in August 1941, attended the Kriegsakademie, and later served on the Generalstab des OKH before ending the war in staff positions with Panzergruppe West.



Source :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3rd_Panzer_Division_(Wehrmacht)

Ritterkreuzträger of 1. Infanterie-Division


The 1. Infanterie-Division of the Wehrmacht was one of the oldest and most storied infantry formations of Nazi Germany's army, tracing its roots to the Reichswehr era and embodying a distinctly Prussian military tradition. Formed in October 1934 under the cover name Artillerieführer I in Königsberg, East Prussia (with headquarters later moving between Insterburg and Königsberg), it was officially designated the 1st Infantry Division on 15 October 1935 and drew its personnel primarily from East Prussian recruits, organized around Infantry Regiments 1, 22, and 43, plus Artillery Regiment 1. Its insignia—a black-and-white quartered shield inspired by the Hohenzollern coat of arms—reflected this heritage. Under early commanders like Georg von Küchler, Walther Schroth, and Joachim von Kortzfleisch, the division participated in the 1939 occupation of the Memelland before spearheading the Invasion of Poland as part of the XXVI Army Corps and 3rd Army, where it fought in the Battle of Mława, crossed the Bug and Narew rivers, helped capture Ostrów Mazowiecka, and joined the Siege of Warsaw. In 1940, it saw limited action in the Battle of France with I Army Corps before returning to East Prussia. During Operation Barbarossa in 1941, attached to the 18th Army of Army Group North, it advanced toward Leningrad, engaging in heavy fighting around Pskov, Lake Peipus, and the Siege of Leningrad through 1943, with regiments later redesignated as Grenadier Regiments 1 and 43 and Fusilier Regiment 22. Transferred south in 1944, it broke out of the Kamenets-Podolsky pocket with the 1st Panzer Army before returning to defend its homeland in East Prussia, participating in Operation Doppelkopf and fierce defensive actions around Königsberg and the Samland peninsula. In February 1945, elements led a counteroffensive using a captured T-34 to reopen the route to Pillau for evacuations. Trapped in the Königsberg pocket, the division—under final commanders including Philipp Kleffel, Martin Grase, Ernst-Anton von Krosigk, Henning von Thadden, and Egon Overbeck—fought until the city's fall on 9 April 1945, with survivors retreating to Pillau; most surrendered to the Soviets, while some were evacuated by sea to British forces in Schleswig-Holstein by war's end on 8 May 1945. Renowned for its resilience on the Eastern Front, the division exemplified the Wehrmacht's blend of traditional Prussian discipline and the brutal attritional warfare of the Second World War.

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EICHENLAUBTRÄGER


Generalmajor Franz Scheidies (1890-1942) was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes along with its Eichenlaub for outstanding personal bravery and decisive leadership in major combat operations. After earlier service in the Prussian Army and police, he rejoined the military in 1935 and rose through the ranks; during the 1940 Western Campaign in France, as Oberstleutnant and Kommandeur of Infanterie-Regiment 127 within the XII. Armee-Korps of the 1. Armee under Heeresgruppe C, he commanded the division’s Vorausabteilung in the pursuit battles from the Maginot Line to the Mosel river, where he was always at the forefront of the fiercest fighting and repeatedly guided his detachment through the most trying situations thanks to his personal courage, bold initiative, and clear orders, actions especially distinguished during the engagements at Languimberg on 17 June 1940, at Bého and Gélacourt on 18 June 1940, and the assault on Azerailles on 19 June 1940, when he was severely wounded while personally leading the foremost riflemen, for which he received the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 5 August 1940. After recovering from his wounds and promotion to Oberst, he took command of Infanterie-Regiment 22 of the 1. Infanterie-Division under the XXXVIII. Armee-Korps; on 9 September 1941 his regiment advanced as far as Kainelaisi during the breakthrough that made the 1. Infanterie-Division the first German unit to penetrate the outer defensive ring around Leningrad, enabling the corps to thrust to the Gulf of Finland and tighten the encirclement of the city, for which he was awarded the Eichenlaub zum Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 31 December 1941 as the 43rd recipient. He subsequently led Infanterie-Regiment 22 in heavy defensive battles near Ladoga during the winter of 1941/42 before being appointed commander of the 61. Infanterie-Division in late March 1942, a post he held until he was killed by a Soviet sniper near Gluschitza on 7 April 1942.



Source :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1st_Infantry_Division_(Wehrmacht)

Ritterkreuzträger of 28. Infanterie-Division / 28. Jäger-Division

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The 28th Infantry Division, later redesignated as the 28th Jäger Division (also known as the Eisernes Kreuz Schlesische Division or "Iron Cross Silesian Division"), was one of the longest-serving units of the German Wehrmacht, formed on 1 October 1936 in Breslau, Silesia (modern-day Wrocław, Poland). Initially structured as a standard infantry division with regiments including the 49th and 83rd, it earned its enduring nickname through veteran leadership and personnel drawing from World War I traditions, such as the Hirschberg Hunters. It saw early combat in the 1939 invasion of Poland as part of the 4th Army, advancing from Katowice toward Kraków, the Vistula, and Lwów, before shifting westward for the 1940 campaign in Belgium and France. Transferred east for Operation Barbarossa in 1941 with the 9th Army, it pushed through Lida toward Smolensk and participated in the drive on Moscow, suffering heavy losses near Yartsevo that necessitated its withdrawal to France for reconstitution. In December 1941, it was reorganized as the 28th Light Infantry Division, then formally redesignated the 28th Jäger Division on 1 July 1942, adopting a lighter, more mobile structure optimized for rough terrain: two Jäger regiments (49 and 83), an artillery regiment, pioneers, Panzerjäger, reconnaissance, and support units, emphasizing elite skirmish tactics, superior training, and coordination suited to forests, hills, and urban fighting rather than massed assaults. Deployed to the Crimea with the 11th Army, it endured brutal fighting in the final assault on Sevastopol before transferring to Army Group North, where it engaged in prolonged operations around the Volkhov River, the Leningrad siege lines (with Finnish and Italian allies), Demyansk, and Lake Ladoga through 1943–early 1944. As Soviet offensives intensified, the division shifted southward through Latvia and Belarus, attempting to relieve encircled forces during Operation Bagration in 1944, then retreated into East Prussia with the rebuilt 4th Army. By late 1944 and early 1945, it fought defensive actions in the Heiligenbeil Pocket, absorbing remnants of other units like elements of the 102nd Infantry Division before being largely destroyed or captured; the survivors under final commander Colonel Hans Tempelhoff surrendered to Soviet forces in the Samland Peninsula in May 1945 after nearly nine years of continuous service across multiple fronts. Commanded successively by figures such as Hans von Obstfelder, Johann Sinnhuber, Friedrich Schulz, Hans Speth, Gustav Heistermann von Ziehlberg, and Ernst König, the division exemplified the Wehrmacht's Jäger ethos—elite light infantry prized for adaptability in adverse conditions—yet ultimately shared the fate of attrition and defeat on the Eastern Front.

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RITTERKREUZTRÄGER


Generalmajor Franz Scheidies (1890-1942) was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes along with its Eichenlaub for outstanding personal bravery and decisive leadership in major combat operations. After earlier service in the Prussian Army and police, he rejoined the military in 1935 and rose through the ranks; during the 1940 Western Campaign in France, as Oberstleutnant and Kommandeur of Infanterie-Regiment 127 within the XII. Armee-Korps of the 1. Armee under Heeresgruppe C, he commanded the division’s Vorausabteilung in the pursuit battles from the Maginot Line to the Mosel river, where he was always at the forefront of the fiercest fighting and repeatedly guided his detachment through the most trying situations thanks to his personal courage, bold initiative, and clear orders, actions especially distinguished during the engagements at Languimberg on 17 June 1940, at Bého and Gélacourt on 18 June 1940, and the assault on Azerailles on 19 June 1940, when he was severely wounded while personally leading the foremost riflemen, for which he received the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 5 August 1940. After recovering from his wounds and promotion to Oberst, he took command of Infanterie-Regiment 22 of the 1. Infanterie-Division under the XXXVIII. Armee-Korps; on 9 September 1941 his regiment advanced as far as Kainelaisi during the breakthrough that made the 1. Infanterie-Division the first German unit to penetrate the outer defensive ring around Leningrad, enabling the corps to thrust to the Gulf of Finland and tighten the encirclement of the city, for which he was awarded the Eichenlaub zum Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 31 December 1941 as the 43rd recipient. He subsequently led Infanterie-Regiment 22 in heavy defensive battles near Ladoga during the winter of 1941/42 before being appointed commander of the 61. Infanterie-Division in late March 1942, a post he held until he was killed by a Soviet sniper near Gluschitza on 7 April 1942.



Source :
https://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/Gliederungen/Infanteriedivisionen/28ID.htm

Ritterkreuzträger with Disabilities

 FACIAL DEFORMITY


General der Panzertruppe Heinrich Eberbach (1895-1992). The most striking and defining aspect of Eberbach’s face was his prosthetic nose—a consequence of a devastating wound sustained on the Western Front in September 1915, when artillery or a bullet carried away much of his original nose during World War I combat, leading to his capture by French forces. Surgeons later constructed an artificial replacement, often described as a rubber prosthesis, which, while restoring basic function and contour, left subtle asymmetries and a slightly rigid, unnatural bridge that was noticeable upon close inspection. This injury, which he carried for the rest of his long life until his death in 1992 at age 96, lent his countenance a weathered, asymmetrical quality that blended seamlessly with the stern, no-nonsense expression typical of high-ranking German officers: thin lips often set in a neutral line, clean-shaven skin showing the faint lines of age and stress from commanding armored formations in Poland, France, Russia, and Normandy.



Source :
https://alifrafikkhan.blogspot.com/2011/08/album-foto-invalid-nazi-jerman.html

Ritterkreuzträger of 4. Panzer-Division


The 4th Panzer Division, formed on 10 November 1938 in Würzburg as one of the Wehrmacht's second-wave armored units, became a veteran formation that fought across multiple major campaigns of World War II, embodying the aggressive combined-arms doctrine of Blitzkrieg while suffering the attritional realities of prolonged conflict on the Eastern Front. Initially equipped with around 341 tanks—predominantly light Panzer I and II models alongside a handful of Panzer IVs and command vehicles—it spearheaded the 1939 invasion of Poland under Army Group South, crossing the border early, clashing with Polish cavalry at Mokra, attempting a bold but costly assault on Warsaw's western districts (repulsed by anti-tank guns, barricades, and improvised defenses like flaming turpentine), and later participating in the Battle of the Bzura before withdrawal. In the 1940 Battle of France, assigned to Erich Hoepner's XVI Panzer Corps, it advanced rapidly through Belgium toward the Channel coast, engaging British forces near Dunkirk (halted by Hitler's stop order), then sweeping south to Grenoble. Reorganized afterward, the division joined Operation Barbarossa in June 1941 with XXIV Panzer Corps, achieving deep penetrations to Kobryn, contributing to the massive encirclements at Minsk and Kiev, and pushing toward Moscow as part of Army Group Center's southern pincer under Guderian—capturing Orel but suffering devastating ambushes by superior Soviet T-34s near Mtsensk, grinding to Tula amid autumn mud and winter cold that immobilized its under-equipped tanks and troops, before a desperate defense against the Soviet counteroffensive that reduced its armor to just 25 operational vehicles by early 1942. Throughout 1942–1943 it endured grueling defensive and counter-attacking actions around Orel and the failed Operation Citadel at Kursk, followed by retreats along the Desna River and stabilization near Bobruysk. In 1944, it countered Soviet advances during Operation Bagration, notably helping halt the Red Army's III Tank Corps at the Battle of Radzymin/Wołomin alongside the 19th Panzer Division, before transfer north where elements were trapped in the Courland Pocket, fighting defensive battles until evacuation by sea to West Prussia in early 1945. Under a succession of commanders including Georg-Hans Reinhardt, Willibald von Langermann und Erlencamp, Heinrich Eberbach, and Dietrich von Saucken (among others), the division—transitioning from Panzer regiments 35/36 and Schützen brigades to Panzergrenadier formations with supporting artillery, pioneers, and Flak—continued rearguard actions in East Prussia and around Danzig until its final surrender to the Red Army on 8 May 1945, its once-formidable panzer strength eroded by relentless Soviet superiority in numbers, armor, and logistics.

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EICHENLAUBTRÄGER


General der Panzertruppe Heinrich Eberbach (1895-1992) was a Wehrmacht general who played a significant role in armored operations during World War II, commanding units such as Panzer-Regiment 35 and the 5. Panzer-Brigade before rising to lead the 4. Panzer-Division and eventually the 5. Panzerarmee. He received the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 4 July 1940 while serving as Oberstleutnant and Kommandeur of Panzer-Regiment 35 in the 4. Panzer-Division under XVI. Armeekorps of Gruppe Kleist for his decisive actions during the Battle of France, where on 13 June 1940 he led the capture of the heavily defended Seine bridges near Romilly, enabling the continuation of the German advance through exceptional bravery and devotion to duty, followed the next day by the seizure of 5,000 prisoners along with 39 aircraft, 5 artillery pieces, 8 armored fighting vehicles and considerable additional war materiel. Subsequently, during the German offensive toward Moscow in the autumn of 1941, Eberbach earned the Eichenlaub zum Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 31 December 1941 as Oberst and Kommandeur of the 5. Panzer-Brigade within the 4. Panzer-Division of XXIV. Armeekorps in the 2. Armee of Heeresgruppe Mitte through a series of bold maneuvers and engagements, including being ordered by Guderian on 1 October 1941 to capture Dmitrowsk and continue on to Orel, which he secured on 3 October after a 180-kilometer advance that yielded 4 aircraft, 13 tanks, 21 artillery pieces, 24 anti-aircraft guns, 22 tractors and 345 trucks captured or destroyed, then overcoming a Soviet tank brigade featuring T-34 and KV-1 tanks to take Mzensk on 10 October amid a snowstorm with additional booty of 38 tanks, 18 artillery pieces, 7 Katyushas, 45 trucks and tractors plus 366 prisoners, executing a night attack on 22 and 23 October to seize Tschern, and later conducting a coup-de-main capture of Uslowaja on 21 November along with taking Wenew and thrusting toward Kaschira, some 60 kilometers south of Moscow, on 24 November, achievements that featured clean breakthroughs, relatively light German losses and the disruption of Soviet defenses and industrial relocation efforts.



Source :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/4th_Panzer_Division
http://www.old.axishistory.com/axis-nations/150-germany-heer/heer-divisionen/3960-knights-cross-holders-of-4-panzer-division

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Ritterkreuzträger with Unusual Wardrobes

 OFFICER WEARING SOLDIER'S BELT


Oberleutnant Viktor Lindemann (1916-1942) was born on 23 November 1916 in Koblenz in the Rhine Province of Germany and served as an officer in the Heer during the Second World War. As Leutnant and Adjutant of the III. Bataillon of Infanterie-Regiment 124 he was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 21 September 1941 for his conduct during operations on the Eastern Front in the opening phase of the German campaign against the Soviet Union. He later received promotion to Oberleutnant and was appointed Chef of the 4. Schwadron of Radfahr-Abteilung 72 in the 72. Infanterie-Division. In addition to the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes he was decorated with the Eisernes Kreuz 1. Klasse and the Eisernes Kreuz 2. Klasse. Lindemann was killed in action on 9 September 1942 near Dubakino on the southern sector of the Eastern Front while serving in his command role with the bicycle reconnaissance unit. The precise action or series of actions that led to the award of his Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes is not described in detail in the available biographical entries on the internet, which record only the date, his rank and his assignment at the time of the bestowal.



Source :
https://alifrafikkhan.blogspot.com/2014/12/foto-seragam-di-luar-regulasi-langka.html

Ritterkreuzträger with Ushanka (Russian fur hat)


During World War II, the Ushanka—a classic Russian winter hat with a rounded fur or sheepskin crown and oversized ear flaps that could be tied up on top or secured under the chin—unexpectedly became part of the equipment of many German soldiers on the Eastern Front, despite being an iconic symbol of Soviet forces. The Wehrmacht and Waffen-SS entered the Soviet Union in 1941 with inadequate winter clothing, and the catastrophic first winter of 1941–42 brought temperatures plunging to −40 °C (−40 °F), causing widespread frostbite and non-combat casualties because standard German field caps and helmets offered little protection against the extreme cold and wind. As a result, frontline troops routinely scavenged or captured Soviet winter gear from battlefields, supply dumps, and prisoners; among the most sought-after items were authentic Ushankas made of rabbit fur, sheepskin, or heavy felt, which provided far superior insulation and comfort. These captured hats were frequently modified to avoid confusion with the enemy: Soviet red stars or cockades were removed and replaced with German insignia such as the Wehrmacht eagle, branch-specific emblems (for example, artillery crossed cannons), or even Waffen-SS runes, with surviving examples—including 1940-dated enlisted Ushankas bearing period-applied Heer artillery badges—now preserved in museums and private collections. Historical photographs from the battles around Moscow, the Rzhev salient, and early Stalingrad frequently show German infantrymen, artillerymen, and panzer crews wearing these altered Ushankas alongside their greatcoats or captured Soviet padded jackets, demonstrating both the dire supply shortages faced by the German army and the practical resourcefulness of its soldiers in one of the most brutal theaters of the war.

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HEER

Oberleutnant Viktor Lindemann (1916-1942) was born on 23 November 1916 in Koblenz in the Rhine Province of Germany and served as an officer in the Heer during the Second World War. As Leutnant and Adjutant of the III. Bataillon of Infanterie-Regiment 124 he was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 21 September 1941 for his conduct during operations on the Eastern Front in the opening phase of the German campaign against the Soviet Union. He later received promotion to Oberleutnant and was appointed Chef of the 4. Schwadron of Radfahr-Abteilung 72 in the 72. Infanterie-Division. In addition to the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes he was decorated with the Eisernes Kreuz 1. Klasse and the Eisernes Kreuz 2. Klasse. Lindemann was killed in action on 9 September 1942 near Dubakino on the southern sector of the Eastern Front while serving in his command role with the bicycle reconnaissance unit. The precise action or series of actions that led to the award of his Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes is not described in detail in the available biographical entries on the internet, which record only the date, his rank and his assignment at the time of the bestowal.



Source :
https://alifrafikkhan.blogspot.com/2012/11/album-foto-tokoh-nazi-jerman-yang.html

Ritterkreuzträger with Whistle (Signalpfeife)


During World War II, German Wehrmacht soldiers—particularly officers and non-commissioned officers—relied on the simple yet effective signal whistle (known as the Signalpfeife or Trillerpfeife) as a vital low-tech tool for issuing rapid tactical commands amid the chaos and noise of battle. Typically made of durable black Bakelite (chosen specifically because it would not freeze to the lips in harsh winter conditions), the whistle measured about 5 cm long and featured a single-chamber design containing a small wooden ball that produced its signature sound when air was blown through it; it included a molded ring at the end for attaching a lanyard. Worn tucked into the right breast pocket of the field-gray tunic with its distinctive braided herringbone-pattern cord (roughly 35 cm long) looped to the second tunic button for quick access and a visible splash of color, the device allowed leaders to coordinate infantry without shouting orders that could be drowned out by gunfire or exposing themselves by standing up and waving arms, which made them prime targets for enemy snipers. Its blast was notably harsh, grating, and piercing—loud enough to carry several hundred meters—while its unique tone set it apart from Allied whistles (British dual-pitched models or American high-trilling ones), with some accounts vividly describing the sound as resembling “a robin being castrated.” German infantry units used a standardized system of pre-arranged whistle signals for battlefield control: a continuous blast meant ALARM; three long blasts signaled ASSEMBLE; one long blast ordered MOVE OUT or ATTACK; two long blasts (often repeated) indicated WITHDRAW; combinations such as one long and one short blast directed RIGHT FLANK PULL IN, one short and one long for LEFT FLANK PULL IN, two short and one long for SHIFT LEFT, or one long and two short for SHIFT RIGHT; four short blasts meant REGROUP; and a long-short-long pattern called troops to ASSEMBLE ON LEADER. This unassuming piece of equipment proved invaluable across the war’s many fronts—from the early Blitzkrieg campaigns through the grueling fighting in Russia, North Africa, and Western Europe—helping maintain unit cohesion and execute maneuvers efficiently when radios were scarce, jammed, or impractical in close-quarters combat, highlighting how even basic signaling devices remained essential in the era of industrialized total war.

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Oberstleutnant im Generalstab Ernst-Georg Buchterkirch (1914-1971) was a German Heer officer who began his military career in 1935 with the Reiter-Regiment in Potsdam, transferred to Panzer-Regiment 6 in 1937 as Leutnant, and later served with the Condor Legion in Spain before rising to Oberstleutnant im Generalstab. During the Battle of France he served as Zugführer in the 2./Panzer-Regiment 6 and distinguished himself by capturing several Seine bridges near Paris while his platoon and company destroyed a significant number of enemy tanks, for which he received the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 29 June 1940 as Oberleutnant. In Operation Barbarossa, now as Chef der 2./Panzer-Regiment 6, he led his company on 23 June 1941 in the destruction of twelve Soviet tanks at Buchowiecze and the immediate formation of a bridgehead at Minicze the following day; these actions earned him the 44th award of the Eichenlaub zum Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 31 December 1941. He was additionally mentioned by name in the Wehrmachtbericht of 6 July 1941 for exemplary bravery during the early fighting in the Panzer-Regiment alongside other officers. After these exploits Buchterkirch was transferred to instructor duties in the Heimat in August 1941, attended the Kriegsakademie, and later served on the Generalstab des OKH before ending the war in staff positions with Panzergruppe West.



Oberleutnant Viktor Lindemann (1916-1942) was born on 23 November 1916 in Koblenz in the Rhine Province of Germany and served as an officer in the Heer during the Second World War. As Leutnant and Adjutant of the III. Bataillon of Infanterie-Regiment 124 he was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 21 September 1941 for his conduct during operations on the Eastern Front in the opening phase of the German campaign against the Soviet Union. He later received promotion to Oberleutnant and was appointed Chef of the 4. Schwadron of Radfahr-Abteilung 72 in the 72. Infanterie-Division. In addition to the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes he was decorated with the Eisernes Kreuz 1. Klasse and the Eisernes Kreuz 2. Klasse. Lindemann was killed in action on 9 September 1942 near Dubakino on the southern sector of the Eastern Front while serving in his command role with the bicycle reconnaissance unit. The precise action or series of actions that led to the award of his Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes is not described in detail in the available biographical entries on the internet, which record only the date, his rank and his assignment at the time of the bestowal.



Source :
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/133791631116

Ritterkreuzträger of 1. SS-Panzer-Division "Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler" (LSSAH)


The Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler, abbreviated as LSSAH and formally known as the 1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler, was an elite Waffen-SS armored formation that originated as Adolf Hitler's personal bodyguard and evolved into one of the most combat-effective yet notoriously brutal units of Nazi Germany during World War II. Its modern incarnation began on 17 March 1933 when Josef "Sepp" Dietrich formed the SS-Stabswache Berlin with 117 hand-picked men to guard the Reich Chancellery; the unit underwent several name changes in 1933, becoming the Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler (LAH) in November and the Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler on 13 April 1934. It gained prestige by participating in the Night of the Long Knives purge of SA leaders in June-July 1934. By the outbreak of war it had grown into a motorized infantry regiment that fought in the 1939 invasion of Poland (committing early atrocities including civilian and Jewish massacres), led advances in the 1940 campaigns in the Netherlands and France (including the Wormhoudt massacre of British and French POWs), and took part in the 1941 Balkans campaign before joining Operation Barbarossa. Upgraded to SS Panzergrenadier Division status in mid-1942 and a full panzer division by late 1943, the LSSAH fought in the Third Battle of Kharkov (March 1943), where it recaptured the city amid house-to-house combat and further atrocities such as the Yefremovka and Semyonovka massacres, and in the Battle of Kursk (July 1943) as part of II SS Panzer Corps, suffering heavy casualties while destroying many Soviet tanks. In 1944 it defended Normandy (notably around Caen), participated in the failed Operation Lüttich at Mortain, and was encircled in the Falaise pocket before spearheading the Ardennes Offensive, during which Kampfgruppe Peiper committed the Malmedy massacre of 84 American prisoners on 17 December 1944. Commanded primarily by Sepp Dietrich until August 1944 and later by Theodor Wisch, Wilhelm Mohnke, and Otto Kumm, the unit received preferential equipment and recruits, swore a personal oath of loyalty to Hitler, and maintained a reputation for fanatical combat effectiveness across multiple rebuilds despite enormous losses. It was also responsible for thousands of murders of POWs and civilians in Poland, France, the Soviet Union, Italy, and Belgium. In its final phase the division fought in the failed Operation Spring Awakening in Hungary (March 1945), retreated through Austria, and saw remnants defend Berlin in April-May 1945 before the surviving force of fewer than 1,600 men surrendered to U.S. troops near Steyr on 8 May 1945. Many of its personnel were later tried and convicted for war crimes in postwar proceedings, leaving the LSSAH as a stark symbol of both the military elite and the criminal nature of the Waffen-SS.

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SCHWERTERTRÄGER


SS-Oberstgruppenführer Josef "Sepp" Dietrich (1892-1966), who rose to the rank of Panzer-Generaloberst der Waffen-SS, had built a long career in the elite formations of the Waffen-SS, beginning with his command of the Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler in the campaigns in Poland, France, the Balkans, and the Soviet Union before taking higher responsibilities. He had already received the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 4 July 1940 for his independent initiative in securing a bridgehead over the Aa canal during the Battle of France, the Eichenlaub on 31 December 1941 for offensive successes at the Sea of Azov and the capture of Rostov, and the Schwerter on 14 March 1943 for the outstanding role of his division in the recapture of Kharkov. The final and rarest upgrade, the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub, Schwertern und Brillanten, was conferred on him on 6 August 1944 while he served as Kommandierender General des I. SS-Panzerkorps; this highest distinction recognized his achievements during the Battle of Normandy, where his forces kept the British and Canadian troops in check around the key city of Caen for two months of hard combat and prevented an early Allied breakout from the beachhead despite intense defensive fighting. This prolonged stand in the Caen sector, achieved through resolute leadership and tactical direction of his armored and motorized units amid heavy Allied pressure, was the specific action and performance that earned Dietrich the Brillanten zum Ritterkreuz, one of only twenty-seven such awards made during the entire war.



Source :
https://military-history.fandom.com/wiki/List_of_Knight%27s_Cross_recipients_1st_SS_Division_Leibstandarte_SS_Adolf_Hitler

Ritterkreuzträger of Waffen-SS


The Waffen-SS, the armed combat branch of Nazi Germany's Schutzstaffel (SS), was formally established in 1933 as the SS-Verfügungstruppe (SS-VT) under Heinrich Himmler and Adolf Hitler’s direct authority as an elite, ideologically driven paramilitary force intended to serve as the Nazi Party’s personal army, distinct from the regular Wehrmacht. Initially composed of carefully screened “racially pure” Aryan volunteers who underwent rigorous physical and political indoctrination, it expanded dramatically during World War II, evolving into a multi-division force that fought on every major front from the invasion of Poland in 1939 through the final battles in 1945, participating in operations such as the blitzkrieg in the West, the invasion of the Soviet Union, the defense of Normandy, and the Battle of the Bulge. By 1945 it had grown to nearly one million personnel across more than 38 divisions, incorporating not only German conscripts but also large numbers of foreign volunteers and later forced recruits from occupied Europe, including Scandinavians, Dutch, Belgians, French, Balts, Ukrainians, and even small numbers from non-European regions, though its leadership remained committed to Nazi racial hierarchy. Renowned for superior training, equipment, and fanatical combat motivation—often fueled by SS propaganda and the promise of elite status—the Waffen-SS units frequently operated with greater independence and ruthlessness than regular army formations, earning a reputation for both tactical effectiveness and extreme brutality. Numerous divisions, including the Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler, Das Reich, Totenkopf, and Wiking, were directly implicated in systematic war crimes such as the massacre of civilians at Oradour-sur-Glane in France, the Malmedy massacre of American prisoners in Belgium, widespread reprisal killings during anti-partisan campaigns in the East, and the execution of Soviet commissars and Jews under the ideological banner of fighting “Judeo-Bolshevism.” While primarily a frontline combat organization, elements of the Waffen-SS also provided guards for concentration camps and participated in the broader machinery of the Holocaust and ethnic cleansing. At the Nuremberg Trials after the war, the entire SS—including the Waffen-SS—was declared a criminal organization responsible for crimes against peace, war crimes, and crimes against humanity, leading to the prosecution of many of its leaders and members, although post-war debates have continued over the degree to which ordinary soldiers were aware of or complicit in the regime’s genocidal policies versus their role as conventional combatants.

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BRILLANTENTRÄGER

SS-Oberstgruppenführer Josef "Sepp" Dietrich (1892-1966), who rose to the rank of Generaloberst der Waffen-SS, had built a long career in the elite formations of the Waffen-SS, beginning with his command of the Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler in the campaigns in Poland, France, the Balkans, and the Soviet Union before taking higher responsibilities. He had already received the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 4 July 1940 for his independent initiative in securing a bridgehead over the Aa canal during the Battle of France, the Eichenlaub on 31 December 1941 for offensive successes at the Sea of Azov and the capture of Rostov, and the Schwerter on 14 March 1943 for the outstanding role of his division in the recapture of Kharkov. The final and rarest upgrade, the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub, Schwertern und Brillanten, was conferred on him on 6 August 1944 while he served as Kommandierender General des I. SS-Panzerkorps; this highest distinction recognized his achievements during the Battle of Normandy, where his forces kept the British and Canadian troops in check around the key city of Caen for two months of hard combat and prevented an early Allied breakout from the beachhead despite intense defensive fighting. This prolonged stand in the Caen sector, achieved through resolute leadership and tactical direction of his armored and motorized units amid heavy Allied pressure, was the specific action and performance that earned Dietrich the Brillanten zum Ritterkreuz, one of only twenty-seven such awards made during the entire war.



Source :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Knight%27s_Cross_of_the_Iron_Cross_recipients_of_the_Waffen-SS

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Ritterkreuzträger with NSDAP Golden Party Badge (Goldenes Parteiabzeichen der NSDAP)


The NSDAP Golden Party Badge (Goldenes Parteiabzeichen der NSDAP), officially known as the Goldenes Ehrenzeichen der NSDAP, stood as one of the most prestigious political awards of Nazi Germany, authorized by Adolf Hitler via decree on 13 October 1933 and first bestowed on 9 November 1933 during the 10th anniversary of the Beer Hall Putsch. Reserved exclusively for the earliest members of the party—those with unbroken membership and registration numbers from 1 to approximately 100,000 as of late 1933—it symbolized the elite status of the so-called "Old Fighters" (Alte Kämpfer) who had joined before the Nazi Party's rise to power, distinguishing them from later, often opportunistic recruits. Crafted in two sizes—a larger 30–30.5 mm version for wear on military or service uniforms and a smaller 24–25 mm variant for civilian attire—the circular badge featured a central black swastika on a white field encircled by a gold wreath, with the recipient's unique number engraved on the reverse along with the maker's mark (primarily Deschler & Sohn or Josef Fuess of Munich). Wehrmacht officers and soldiers who qualified through prior party membership proudly displayed the large version on the left breast pocket of their tunics, positioned below or alongside military decorations like the Iron Cross, reflecting the regime's fusion of political loyalty with military service; meanwhile, SS members, particularly in the Waffen-SS and Allgemeine SS, wore it more liberally on both uniforms and civilian clothing, as the SS embodied the party's paramilitary vanguard and allowed greater integration of political insignia. Worn by high-ranking figures including Reinhard Heydrich and various decorated frontline commanders, the badge not only conferred prestige and preferential treatment but also served as a visible marker of ideological purity and early devotion to National Socialism amid the total war effort of World War II, until its public display was banned following Germany's defeat in 1945.

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WAFFEN-SS

SS-Obersturmbannführer Vinzenz Kaiser (1904-1945), born on 28 February 1904 in Waltersdorf near Judenburg in Styria, Austria, and killed in action on 20 April 1945 near Nuremberg in Bavaria, Germany, was an Austrian SS officer whose military career in the Waffen-SS spanned from the pre-war SS-Verfügungstruppe through major campaigns on the Eastern Front, culminating in the award of the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes for his decisive leadership during the Third Battle of Kharkov. After early involvement in the Austrian Nazi movement, including founding SA troops and SS units in Styria, arrests by the Austrian authorities, and flight to Germany as a political refugee in 1933, he completed training with the Austrian SS Legion at Lechfeld and advanced through various SS training and leadership roles before the war, eventually serving as a company commander in SS-Panzergrenadier-Regiment 4 "Der Führer" of the 2. SS-Panzergrenadier-Division "Das Reich". On 12 March 1943, as SS-Hauptsturmführer and Führer of the III.(gepanzerten) Bataillon of SS-Panzergrenadier-Regiment 4 "Der Führer", during the bitter fighting to retake Kharkov, he found himself in a critical sector where the I. Bataillon of SS-Panzergrenadier-Regiment "Deutschland" had established a bridgehead in the first rows of houses in the Zalyutino suburbs after the 16. Kompanie breached a deep Soviet anti-tank ditch, only for heavy enemy counterattacks to threaten its collapse in the early morning hours. Rather than simply reinforcing the defensive line as initially planned while awaiting the arrival of tanks, Kaiser proactively decided to launch an immediate attack from the bridgehead with his SPW-equipped battalion to relieve the hard-pressed I. Bataillon "Deutschland" and expand the foothold; his bold initiative and personal leadership turned the situation completely, enabling his forces to push the Soviets back, advance to the railway station area, link up with reconnaissance elements of the SS-Panzergrenadier-Division "Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler" near the Red Square, and then pursue the retreating enemy in a Kampfgruppe of armored personnel carriers that inflicted heavy losses and captured approximately forty artillery pieces in the woods southwest of the city. Kaiser himself personally destroyed four enemy tanks at close range with handheld weapons during the fighting, earning him four silver Tank Destruction Badges, and his tremendous personal bravery, tactical decisiveness, and proven combat leadership were singled out in the recommendation submitted by acting divisional commander SS-Standartenführer Kurt Brasack, leading to the award of the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 6 April 1943 (the 1684th such award). He later rose to the rank of SS-Obersturmbannführer, commanded units in formations including the 17. SS-Panzergrenadier-Division "Götz von Berlichingen", and met his end during a reconnaissance mission in the final defensive battles around Nuremberg in April 1945.



Source :
https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q640988

Ritterkreuzträger with Substitute Medal


During World War II, the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes (Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross), instituted on 1 September 1939 as Nazi Germany's prestigious award for exceptional battlefield bravery or leadership, was not always immediately available to recipients on the front lines due to disrupted supply chains, intense combat, or remote theaters like the Atlantic or Eastern Front. As the war progressed, particularly from 1943 onward amid Allied bombing, encirclements, and logistical collapse, units improvised substitute or "Ersatz" Ritterkreuz medals in the field to allow proud soldiers to wear the honor without delay, often until the official silver-framed piece with its 45mm neck ribbon arrived weeks or months later. These field-made versions typically started with a standard Iron Cross 2nd Class (EK2), enlarged or modified by adding a side-loop suspension ring for neck wear (instead of the EK2's ribbon ring), and featured hand-crafted oak leaves, swords, or other higher-grade elements fashioned from available metals, silver wire, brass, tin, or even carved materials by unit craftsmen, jewelers, or fellow soldiers. U-boat crews were especially known for such improvisations, creating "crew-made" crosses aboard submarines using onboard workshops to celebrate a captain's award while still at sea, while infantry and panzer units in pockets like Stalingrad or Normandy produced cruder examples from battlefield scrap. Though unofficial and varying widely in quality, from crude hand-beaten approximations to surprisingly detailed replicas, these substitutes held deep personal significance, sometimes cherished more than the factory version; period photos show recipients wearing them proudly, and surviving examples today command collector interest as tangible symbols of wartime ingenuity and the chaos of total war. Postwar, many veterans retained or de-nazified these pieces alongside official awards, underscoring how necessity truly became the mother of invention on the battlefields of WWII.

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KRIEGSMARINE

In the vast, unforgiving expanses of the South Atlantic during the height of World War II, on December 22, 1940, Kapitän zur See Ernst-Felix Krüder, the resolute commander of the German auxiliary cruiser Hilfskreuzer Pinguin (HSK-5, formerly the merchant ship Kandelfels), stood at the center of an extraordinary yet improvised award ceremony aboard his disguised raider. Far from any German naval base or formal Reich chancery, with the ship riding at anchor in a remote rendezvous point near the "Andalusien" grid square southwest of St. Helena—where it had linked up with the heavy cruiser Admiral Scheer, the raider Thor, and supply vessels for provisions including captured British meat and eggs from the Duquesa—Krüder received the prestigious Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes (Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross) for his outstanding leadership in commerce raiding. By then, the Pinguin had already sunk or captured multiple enemy vessels totaling around 79,000 gross register tons, including the British freighter Domingo de Larrinaga, Norwegian tankers like Filefjell, and others disrupted in the Indian Ocean approaches, while laying devastating minefields off Australia that claimed further Allied tonnage. Since no official medal could be delivered across thousands of nautical miles of hostile seas, the crew fashioned a substitute Ritterkreuz from available shipboard materials—likely a meticulously crafted replica using polished metal, ribbon from uniform stores, and hand-engraved details—to maintain the solemnity of the tradition. Assembled on the deck amid the ship's cleverly concealed armament and under tropical skies, the ceremony unfolded with naval precision: officers and ratings in their best uniforms formed ranks, the Kriegsmarine ensign fluttered proudly, and Krüder, a seasoned Hamburg-born officer who had transformed the 7,766 GRT vessel into a highly effective "ghost" raider capable of disguising itself as neutral shipping while deploying seaplanes, mines, and guns, accepted the honor with characteristic stoicism. This makeshift presentation symbolized not only personal valor and tactical brilliance in evading superior Allied forces but also the indomitable spirit of the Kriegsmarine's commerce warfare, sustaining morale on a grueling 357-day voyage that ultimately claimed 32 ships before the Pinguin's fiery demise against HMS Cornwall in May 1941. Krüder's posthumous Eichenlaub (the 40th award) further cemented his legacy as one of the war's most successful raider captains, even as the substitute medal served as a poignant testament to the resourcefulness required in distant, isolated operations.



Source :
https://alifrafikkhan.blogspot.com/2011/03/album-foto-medali-tempelan-edit-dengan.html
https://www.militarytrader.com/militaria-collectibles/the-iconic-iron-cross

Ritterkreuzträger in Fliegerbluse (Flight Blouse)


The Luftwaffe Fliegerbluse, the iconic blue-grey wool flight blouse introduced in the mid-1930s and refined through models such as the M35 and especially the M40, served as the standard service tunic for virtually all Luftwaffe personnel—from aircrew and fighter pilots to paratroopers, ground crews, and field divisions—throughout World War II. Designed for practicality in the cramped cockpits of aircraft and the rigors of combat, this hip-length, single-breasted garment featured a streamlined fly-front closure with concealed buttons hidden behind a vertical French-fly panel, eliminating snags or protrusions that could interfere with parachute harnesses, safety belts, or instrumentation. Constructed from high-quality Luftwaffe blue-grey wool (often with subtle variations in shade depending on production batches and wear), it included an open or closable collar, internal pockets for documents and personal items, and later patterns added external flap pockets for greater utility; removable shoulder boards piped in branch-specific Waffenfarbe—typically golden yellow for flight personnel—along with a machine-embroidered national eagle on the right breast and rank insignia completed its distinctive appearance. Unlike more formal tunics like the Tuchrock, the Fliegerbluse emphasized functionality over parade aesthetics, with its soft construction, partial linings, and lack of external embellishments making it ideal for both operational flying and everyday wear, while its widespread issue and adaptability allowed it to evolve with wartime material shortages, appearing in everything from pristine early-war examples to heavily field-modified late-war versions. This versatile blouse not only defined the visual identity of the German air force but also symbolized the blend of engineering precision and martial efficiency that characterized Luftwaffe uniforms during the conflict.

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UNTEROFFIZIERE

Oberfeldwebel der Reserve Heinrich Hoffmann (1913-1941) was a German Luftwaffe fighter ace born on 8 March 1913 in Pfiffigheim near Worms and killed in action or listed as missing in action on 3 October 1941 near Shatalovo in the Soviet Union after a low-level engagement with several Ilyushin Il-2 ground-attack aircraft while flying a Messerschmitt Bf 109F-2 of the 12. Staffel. He was credited with a total of 63 aerial victories in 261 combat missions, one during the Battle of Britain and 62 on the Eastern Front during Operation Barbarossa, and he flew frequently as Rottenflieger or wingman to Staffelkapitän Heinrich Bär of the 12. Staffel in IV. Gruppe of Jagdgeschwader 51 "Mölders". Serving as Oberfeldwebel der Reserve and Flugzeugführer, Hoffmann achieved his first victory on 7 September 1940 over a Royal Air Force aircraft during the Battle of Britain while with the 3. Staffel of Jagdgeschwader 77, which was later redesignated as the 12. Staffel of Jagdgeschwader 51; his most prolific period came in the summer of 1941 on the Eastern Front, where he claimed 20 victories in July and around 19–25 in August, becoming an expert at destroying the heavily armored Ilyushin Il-2 Shturmovik by targeting its non-retractable oil cooler and also destroying three locomotives and ten trucks during ground-attack sorties in support of hard-pressed Wehrmacht troops. He earned the distinction of becoming an "ace-in-a-day" on two occasions—first on 2 August 1941 with five victories including three Polikarpov R-5s, one Polikarpov I-15, and two Neman R-10s, and again on 16 September 1941 with five more victories comprising two Il-2s, one Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-1, and two Tupolev SBs—and after reaching his 40th aerial victory he was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 12 August 1941 as Oberfeldwebel der Reserve and pilot in the 12. Staffel of Jagdgeschwader 51 for having outstandingly distinguished himself as the wingman for his Staffelkapitän through many tirelessly executed missions in which he had shot down a total of 34 enemy aircraft while also conducting numerous successful ground-attack missions against the Soviets. Hoffmann continued scoring, reaching 55 victories by early September before his unit relocated south, and he was posthumously awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub on 19 October 1941—the 36th such award overall—as the first non-commissioned officer in the Wehrmacht and the first recipient of the decoration to be honored posthumously, in recognition of his accumulation of 63 aerial victories by the time of his death.



Source :
https://www.weitze.net/wassuchensie/Fliegerbluse.html#s=alle,

Monday, June 22, 2026

Ritterkreuzträger of Hilfskruizer (Auxiliary Cruiser)


German auxiliary cruisers, known in the Kriegsmarine as Hilfskreuzer or Handelsstörkreuzer (HSK), were fast merchant vessels converted into disguised commerce raiders and deployed by Nazi Germany during the Second World War to wage asymmetric warfare against Allied shipping. Between 1940 and 1943 the Kriegsmarine commissioned nine principal vessels—Orion (HSK-1 / Schiff 36), Atlantis (HSK-2 / Schiff 16), Widder (HSK-3 / Schiff 21), Thor (HSK-4 / Schiff 10), Pinguin (HSK-5 / Schiff 33), Stier (HSK-6 / Schiff 23), Komet (HSK-7 / Schiff 45), Kormoran (HSK-8 / Schiff 41), and Michel (HSK-9 / Schiff 28)—with additional ships such as Coronel and Hansa prepared but achieving little or no operational success; these raiders averaged roughly 7,000 tons, featured hidden armament of six 15 cm guns, torpedo tubes, anti-aircraft weapons, mines, and one or two seaplanes (typically Arado Ar 196), and relied on elaborate camouflage, false flags, and improvised silhouettes to approach targets undetected before revealing their firepower. Operating across the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific Oceans on cruises lasting up to 602 days, they sank or captured prizes, laid minefields (notably off Australia), replenished U-boats and other raiders at sea, and occasionally dispatched captured vessels as supply ships or minelayers back to occupied Europe, collectively accounting for approximately 142 Allied merchant ships totaling around 870,000 gross register tons over nearly 3,800 days at sea at an average daily rate far exceeding many U-boat patrols. Standout operations included Atlantis under Kapitän zur See Bernhard Rogge, which completed the longest surface-raider cruise in history while sinking or capturing 22 ships of more than 144,000 GRT before being sunk by the British heavy cruiser HMS Devonshire on 22 November 1941; Pinguin under Kapitän zur See Ernst-Felix Krüder, which achieved the single most successful individual cruise by capturing much of the Norwegian whaling fleet intact and destroying 26–28 vessels before being sunk by HMS Cornwall on 8 May 1941 following a mine-magazine explosion; and Kormoran, which in a dramatic November 1941 engagement off Western Australia sank the Australian light cruiser HMAS Sydney at the cost of her own destruction. Although highly cost-effective—achieving results at roughly one percent the expense of a battleship such as Bismarck—the Hilfskreuzer program ultimately proved vulnerable once Allied intelligence, radar, and cruiser-hunting groups improved after 1941, with most raiders lost when their disguises were penetrated; nevertheless they forced the Allies to divert significant naval resources to convoy protection and raider-hunting while demonstrating the enduring value of deception and long-range surface commerce raiding in modern naval warfare.

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EICHENLAUBTRÄGER


Kapitän zur See Ernst-Felix Krüder (1897-1941) was an officer of the Kriegsmarine who commanded the Hilfskreuzer „Pinguin“ (Schiff 33 / HSK 5), one of the most successful German auxiliary cruisers and commerce raiders of the Second World War. After distinguished service in the First World War aboard the SMS König at the Battle of Jutland and later as Funkentelegraphie-Offizier on the SMS Goeben, followed by post-war roles in the Reichsmarine including command of minesweepers and as Chef der 1. Minensuchflottille, he took command of the converted freighter Pinguin on 6 February 1940 (promoted Kapitän zur See the same day) and sailed from Gotenhafen on 15 June 1940 for a 357-day cruise in the South Atlantic and Indian Ocean. Under his leadership the Pinguin sank or captured 32 Allied merchant vessels totaling 154,619 GRT through gunfire, torpedoes, scuttling, and minefields it laid, notably sinking the British freighter Domingo de Larrinaga on 31 July 1940 near Ascension Island, capturing the bulk of the Norwegian whaling fleet in January 1941 (including the factory ships Ole Wegger and Pelagos plus numerous whalers dispatched as prizes), and laying mines off Australia that destroyed several additional ships. For these cumulative successes—specifically 11 ships of 78,947 GRT sunk or captured plus three more vessels of 17,781 GRT destroyed by his Australian minefield—he was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 22 December 1940; posthumously, on 15 November 1941 as the 40th recipient, he received the Eichenlaub zum Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes for a further 18 ships of 57,891 GRT sunk, captured or destroyed by mines (with one additional vessel damaged). The Pinguin was finally sunk on 8 May 1941 in the Indian Ocean east of Somaliland and northwest of the Seychelles by the British heavy cruiser HMS Cornwall; a direct hit detonated the ship’s mine magazine, killing Krüder and most of the crew along with many prisoners of war.



Source :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auxiliary_Cruiser_Badge

Sunday, June 21, 2026

Ritterkreuzträger of 12. Infanterie-Division / 12. Volksgrenadier-Division


The 12. Infanterie-Division was established in October 1934 in Schwerin as Infanterie-Division Schwerin and formally redesignated the 12. Infanterie-Division on 15 October 1935 as part of the Wehrmacht expansion, initially organized with three Infanterie-Regimenter, an Artillerie-Regiment, and supporting Aufklärungs-, Panzerjäger-, Pionier-, and Nachrichten-Abteilungen in the standard pre-war Infanterie-Division structure; it participated in the Invasion of Poland in September 1939 and the Battle of France in 1940 before being committed to Operation Barbarossa in June 1941 as part of Army Group Center, where it fought in the battles of Smolensk, the advance on Moscow, the Rzhev salient, and subsequent defensive operations on the Eastern Front, enduring heavy casualties that necessitated multiple reorganizations and reductions in manpower and equipment over the following years; following further severe losses in 1944, the division was withdrawn to Germany and reformed in September–October 1944 as the 12. Volksgrenadier-Division, a late-war infantry formation typically featuring a simplified two-Grenadier-Regiment structure with enhanced automatic weaponry, younger conscripts, and Volkssturm reinforcements, and it was then deployed to the Western Front where it fought in the Battle of the Hürtgen Forest and the Ardennes Offensive under the 5. Panzer-Armee before retreating into central Germany and ultimately being destroyed or captured during the final collapse of the Reich in the spring of 1945.

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EICHENLAUBTRÄGER

Generalleutnant Kurt-Jürgen Freiherr von Lützow (1892-1961) was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 15 August 1940 as Oberst and Kommandeur of Infanterie-Regiment 89 within the 12. Infanterie-Division for his outstanding leadership during the campaign in France, where, despite having been wounded by a shell splinter in the earlier Polish campaign, he personally led his Bataillone from the foremost line with exceptional boldness and disregard for enemy fire, most notably during the successful attack across the Scarpe river at Monchy east of Arras on 23 May 1940 that enabled his regiment to achieve its objectives rapidly and with minimal losses. He received the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub on 21 October 1941, the 37th such award, still serving as Oberst and Kommandeur of Infanterie-Regiment 89 now subordinated to the 16. Armee of Heeresgruppe Nord, for his decisive actions during the opening phase of Operation Barbarossa, including breaking through the Soviet border fortifications east of Schoßbach and leading his regiment on a rapid 65-kilometre advance to reach the objective at Szeszupa, forming a bridgehead over the Njemen during the assault on Kowno while capturing two forts against determined resistance from Soviet Kyrgyzstani and Tatar regiments, distinguishing his unit in hard fighting near Putoschka on 15–16 July 1941, and subsequently securing the line Nikitina–Kokotschina from which he repelled repeated Soviet tank-supported breakthrough attempts, thereby contributing significantly to the encirclement of several enemy divisions near Newel. Lützow later commanded the 12. Infanterie-Division and was taken prisoner by Soviet forces during Operation Bagration near Bobruysk in 1944.



Source :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/12th_Infantry_Division_(Wehrmacht)

Ritterkreuzträger with Mecklenburg-Schwerinsches Militärverdienstkreuz (Mecklenburg-Schwerin Military Merit Cross)


The Mecklenburg-Schwerinsches Militärverdienstkreuz, formally known as the Militärverdienstkreuz des Großherzogtums Mecklenburg-Schwerin, was a military decoration established on 5 August 1848 by Großherzog Friedrich Franz II. of Mecklenburg-Schwerin and awarded in two classes for bravery or distinguished military merit in wartime without regard to rank; the 1. Klasse was a Steckkreuz worn as a pinback decoration while the 2. Klasse was suspended from a ribbon, both consisting of a bronze gilt cross pattée modeled on the Prussian Iron Cross but featuring a crown on the upper arm, the intertwined initials “FF” in the center, and the campaign year on the lower arm of the obverse, with the reverse of the 2. Klasse inscribed “Für Auszeichnung im Kriege”; the standard combatant ribbon was light blue with narrow yellow and red edge stripes, while a variant red ribbon with light blue and yellow edges was used for non-combatant recipients, and the cross was issued in dated versions for campaigns including the First and Second Wars of Schleswig, the German-Danish War of 1864, the Austro-Prussian War of 1866, the Franco-Prussian War of 1870, the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878, the Boxer Rebellion of 1900–1901, various colonial conflicts, and especially World War I with the prominent 1914 version reauthorized in 1915; it remained in use until the abdication of the last grand duke in November 1918 and continued to be worn during the Weimar Republic and the Third Reich, serving as one of the smaller German states’ equivalents to the higher Prussian awards and recognizing the contributions of Mecklenburg soldiers as well as allied personnel across multiple conflicts of the 19th and early 20th centuries.

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HEER


Generalleutnant Karl von Graffen (1893-1964) was a German officer born on 6 June 1893 in Plön who rose through the ranks of the artillery in the Imperial German Army, Reichswehr and Wehrmacht to achieve the rank of Generalleutnant by January 1943 and who commanded the 58. Infanterie-Division as Generalmajor and Führer from late March 1942 before assuming full command in July of that year; he received the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 13 August 1942 in recognition of his exemplary leadership of the 58. Infanterie-Division during intense and prolonged defensive fighting and protracted retreats on the Eastern Front that summer, where his effective command contributed to maintaining unit cohesion under heavy pressure; earlier in the war he had served as Artillery-Commander 18 with the 129. Infanterie-Division and was awarded the Deutsches Kreuz in Gold on 24 December 1941 for prior service, while his later career included appointment as Höherer Artillerie-Kommandeur 316 and brief leadership of the LXXVI. Panzer-Corps in April 1945 before his capture by American forces near Belluno in Italy in May 1945 and release from captivity in March 1948, after which he lived until his death on 1 November 1964 in Grödersby.



Generalleutnant Kurt-Jürgen Freiherr von Lützow (1892-1961) was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 15 August 1940 as Oberst and Kommandeur of Infanterie-Regiment 89 within the 12. Infanterie-Division for his outstanding leadership during the campaign in France, where, despite having been wounded by a shell splinter in the earlier Polish campaign, he personally led his Bataillone from the foremost line with exceptional boldness and disregard for enemy fire, most notably during the successful attack across the Scarpe river at Monchy east of Arras on 23 May 1940 that enabled his regiment to achieve its objectives rapidly and with minimal losses. He received the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub on 21 October 1941, the 37th such award, still serving as Oberst and Kommandeur of Infanterie-Regiment 89 now subordinated to the 16. Armee of Heeresgruppe Nord, for his decisive actions during the opening phase of Operation Barbarossa, including breaking through the Soviet border fortifications east of Schoßbach and leading his regiment on a rapid 65-kilometre advance to reach the objective at Szeszupa, forming a bridgehead over the Njemen during the assault on Kowno while capturing two forts against determined resistance from Soviet Kyrgyzstani and Tatar regiments, distinguishing his unit in hard fighting near Putoschka on 15–16 July 1941, and subsequently securing the line Nikitina–Kokotschina from which he repelled repeated Soviet tank-supported breakthrough attempts, thereby contributing significantly to the encirclement of several enemy divisions near Newel. Lützow later commanded the 12. Infanterie-Division and was taken prisoner by Soviet forces during Operation Bagration near Bobruysk in 1944.



Source :
https://alifrafikkhan.blogspot.com/2022/12/foto-tokoh-third-reich-peraih-medali.html