Thursday, July 9, 2026

Ritterkreuzträger in Generalsmantel and Admiralsmantel

 HEER GENERALSMANTEL


The Heer Generalsmantel, the distinctive greatcoat of the German Army generals during the Wehrmacht era of the 1930s and World War II, stood as a symbol of elite status and traditional Prussian military elegance within the ranks of Nazi Germany's armed forces. Crafted primarily from high-quality field-grey wool gabardine or fine wool fabric for a tailored, full-length double-breasted design reaching below the knee, it featured a dark green or bottle-green collar base accented by prominent scarlet-red turnback lapels that immediately identified the wearer as a general officer, contrasting with the standard enlisted or lower-officer versions that lacked these vivid red panels. Gold-colored buttons adorned the front closure, while shoulder boards with red underlay and gold embroidery displayed the specific rank, such as Generalleutnant or Generalmajor, and an internal dagger-carrying strap allowed for the secure wear of an officer's sidearm. Introduced around the M36 uniform pattern and retained with minor simplifications throughout the war, the coat provided both warmth in harsh European theaters and a commanding presence for high-ranking commanders like Generalleutnant Richard Pellengahr, whose preserved example in Norway's Forsvarsmuseet illustrates its use alongside the peaked Schirmmütze visor cap and Waffenrock tunic with ornate Kragenspiegel collar tabs. Far rarer and more luxurious than standard issue greatcoats, surviving originals today command high collector value due to their historical significance, fine tailoring, and direct association with the Wehrmacht's leadership structure during one of the 20th century's most pivotal conflicts.



Generalfeldmarschall Fedor von Bock (1880-1945), born Moritz Albrecht Franz Friedrich Fedor von Bock on 3 December 1880 in Cüstrin into a traditional Prussian military family, rose steadily through the ranks of the Imperial German Army, Reichswehr, and Wehrmacht to become one of the leading commanders of the early phases of the Second World War, earning the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 30 September 1939 as Generaloberst and Oberbefehlshaber of Heeresgruppe Nord for his decisive leadership in the Invasion of Poland. A highly motivated staff officer who had already received the Pour le Mérite in 1918 for his contributions during the German Spring Offensive on the Western Front, Bock commanded the 8. Armee during the Anschluss of Austria in 1938 and played a prominent role in the occupation of the Sudetenland before being assigned Heeresgruppe Nord for the Polish campaign. Operating from Pomerania and East Prussia, he directed the 3. Armee under General Georg von Küchler and the 4. Armee under General Günther von Kluge in a swift double envelopment that severed the Polish Corridor, achieved rapid link-ups with southern forces, executed major encirclements such as at Kutno, and secured the fall of key positions leading to the collapse of organized Polish resistance north of the Vistula within five weeks, despite determined local counterattacks, through effective coordination of infantry, panzer formations, and Luftwaffe support that maintained relentless operational tempo against an outmatched but courageous opponent. This outstanding success in the rapid conquest of Poland directly resulted in his award of the Ritterkreuz, after which he continued to command Heeresgruppe B in the 1940 Western campaign, Heeresgruppe Mitte during the early triumphs of Operation Barbarossa with its vast encirclements at Białystok-Minsk and Smolensk, and briefly Heeresgruppe Süd in 1942, until strategic disagreements with Hitler over priorities such as the advance on Moscow and the splitting of forces toward Stalingrad and the Caucasus led to his relief; the aristocratic Prussian officer, known for his professionalism and critical diary entries on the conduct of the war, was killed on 4 May 1945 along with his wife and daughter when their car was strafed by Allied aircraft near Oldenburg while traveling toward the final Reichsregierung under Großadmiral Dönitz.



Generalfeldmarschall Ernst Busch (1885-1945), born on 6 July 1885 in Essen, Prussia, rose through the ranks of the German Army to become one of the senior commanders of the Wehrmacht during World War II. A veteran of World War I where he served as an infantry officer on the Western Front, earning both classes of the Iron Cross, the Ritter des Königlicher Preussischer Hausordens von Hohenzollern mit Schwertern, and the Pour le Mérite, Busch was retained in the Reichswehr and later the Wehrmacht, advancing steadily as an ardent supporter of the Nazi regime. By the outbreak of World War II he commanded the VIII. Armeekorps during the invasion of Poland, participating in the capture of Kraków and advances to the Vistula and Lviv, for which he received Spangen to both classes of the 1914 Iron Cross. In 1940, as General der Infanterie and commander of the 16. Armee, which formed part of Army Group A and covered the left flank of XIX. Panzerkorps under Heinz Guderian during the Battle of France, Busch masterfully conducted difficult leadership actions that decisively influenced the success of attacks by the VII. Armeekorps around and south of Carignan; for these achievements he was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 26 May 1940, followed shortly by promotion to Generaloberst. Transferred east for Operation Barbarossa in 1941, the 16. Armee under his command broke through the Stalin Line along the Lithuanian and Latvian-Soviet border, thrust forward to Lake Ilmen, and in a series of brilliantly led battles destroyed much larger enemy forces south of the lake; it then endured grueling defensive fighting through the winter of 1941/42, with portions of his troops encircled in Fortress Demyansk, where Busch demonstrated skillful and energetic leadership over twelve months of combat to restore contact with the encircled units, conduct numerous defensive engagements south of Lake Ilmen, and eventually evacuate the salient, actions that earned him promotion to Generalfeldmarschall on 1 February 1943 and the Eichenlaub to his Ritterkreuz (the 274th such award) on 21 August 1943. Later commanding Army Group Centre, Busch faced dismissal after the collapse during Operation Bagration in 1944 before a brief final role with Army Group Northwest; he died in British captivity on 17 July 1945.



Generalfeldmarschall Georg von Küchler (1881-1968) was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 30 September 1939 while serving as General der Artillerie and Oberbefehlshaber of the 3. Armee for his outstanding leadership during the Polish campaign, Operation Fall Weiss; attacking from East Prussia, his forces stormed the fortress of Graudenz already on the third day, thereby clearing the path for the 4. Armee advancing from Pomerania, later broke through the Mlawa position, crossed the Narew river, and encircled Warsaw from the north and east by capturing Praga and Modlin. After commanding the 18. Armee during the 1940 campaign in the Netherlands and the opening phase of Operation Barbarossa on the Eastern Front, where his troops advanced to capture Ostrov and Pskov, reached the Narva and Kingisepp areas, and helped isolate Leningrad, von Küchler succeeded Wilhelm Ritter von Leeb as Oberbefehlshaber of Heeresgruppe Nord on 17 January 1942 and was promoted to Generalfeldmarschall on 30 June 1942; on 21 August 1943 he received the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub as Generalfeldmarschall and Oberbefehlshaber of Heeresgruppe Nord in recognition of his achievements during the French campaign as well as those accumulated during his command of Army Group North, where he resolved numerous crisis situations at Volkhov, Demyansk, and Cholm while maintaining the coherence of his frontline at a time when other German army groups were unable to do the same.



Generalfeldmarschall Wilhelm List (1880-1971), born Siegmund Wilhelm Walther List on 14 May 1880 in Oberkirchberg in the Kingdom of Württemberg, was a professional soldier who rose through the ranks of the Bavarian Army and later the Wehrmacht to become one of Nazi Germany's highest-ranking field commanders, known for his roles in several major campaigns of the Second World War. Having served as a staff officer on the Western Front in the First World War and held key training and command positions in the Reichswehr, including director of military education and commander of the Dresden Infantry School, List advanced rapidly after 1933, becoming General der Infanterie and later Generaloberst while overseeing the integration of the Austrian Federal Army following the Anschluss. At the outbreak of war he commanded the 14. Armee during the invasion of Poland in September 1939, where his forces advanced from Slovakia into southern Poland as part of the southern pincer aimed at enveloping Polish armies, successfully breaching defenses, coordinating with other German formations to capture key areas around Kraków, and linking up with armored units near Brest-Litovsk, actions that contributed decisively to the rapid defeat of Polish resistance. For his outstanding leadership and the effective execution of these operations as Oberbefehlshaber of the 14. Armee, List was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 30 September 1939. He subsequently led the 12. Armee in the invasions of France, Yugoslavia, and Greece, rose to Generalfeldmarschall in 1940, commanded Army Group A during the 1942 Caucasus offensive in Case Blue, and after the war faced conviction for war crimes in the Hostages Trial before his early release in 1952; he died in Garmisch-Partenkirchen on 17 August 1971.



Generalfeldmarschall Erwin Rommel (1891-1944), the legendary Desert Fox or Wüstenfuchs, earned his extraordinary series of high decorations through audacious leadership and rapid maneuver warfare across multiple campaigns in World War II. In the 1940 invasion of France as Generalmajor and Kommandeur of the 7. Panzer-Division, nicknamed the Gespensterdivision for its elusive advances, he received the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 27 May 1940 for spearheading breakthroughs near the extended Maginot Line southeast of Maubeuge, where his forces smashed through French defenses, captured thousands of prisoners, and drove deep toward Landrecies and the Channel coast, contributing decisively to the encirclement of Allied armies and the division's swift capture of Cherbourg after advancing over 240 kilometers in a single day. He was awarded the Eichenlaub on 20 March 1941 as Generalleutnant in recognition of the 7. Panzer-Division's sustained outstanding performance throughout the entire French campaign, including rapid advances and key victories that exemplified Blitzkrieg tactics. Transferred to North Africa in February 1941 to command the Deutsches Afrika Korps, later Panzergruppe Afrika and Panzerarmee Afrika, Rommel conducted masterful offensives against superior British Commonwealth forces despite severe supply constraints, earning the Schwerter on 20 January 1942 as General der Panzertruppe for his dynamic leadership in operations such as the recapture of Cyrenaica, the defense against Operation Crusader, and sharp armored engagements around Sidi Rezegh. Finally, promoted to Generalfeldmarschall and serving as Oberbefehlshaber of Heeresgruppe Afrika, he received the Brillanten on 11 March 1943 as only the sixth recipient for his continued exceptional accomplishments in the theater, notably the bold counteroffensive and victory over American forces at the Battle of the Kasserine Pass in February 1943 amid the challenging final phases of the North African campaign. Throughout his career, marked by personal bravery in leading from the front, innovative armored tactics, and the ability to inspire troops in harsh conditions, Rommel's awards reflected his transformation from a decorated World War I hero of the Württemberg Mountain Battalion and recipient of the Pour le Mérite at Caporetto into one of Germany's most celebrated commanders before his involvement in the 20 July plot and forced suicide in October 1944.



Generalfeldmarschall Gerd von Rundstedt (1875-1953) received the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 30 September 1939 as Generaloberst and Oberbefehlshaber Heeresgruppe Süd for his leadership during the 1939 invasion of Poland, where his southern army group executed rapid advances that culminated in the decisive ten-day Battle of the Bzura (9–19 September), destroying the bulk of the Polish army and preventing an organized retreat beyond the Weichsel, followed by the capture of Warsaw on 27 September. On 1 July 1944, while serving as Generalfeldmarschall and Oberbefehlshaber West, he was awarded the Eichenlaub to his Ritterkreuz in recognition of the determined German defensive operations along the invasion front in Normandy after the Allied landings of 6 June 1944, together with his earlier successes commanding Heeresgruppe Süd in Operation Barbarossa, including the major encirclement battles at Uman and Kiev as well as the capture of the strategically vital Donez basin. Finally, on 18 February 1945, still as Oberbefehlshaber West, von Rundstedt received the Schwerter to the Ritterkreuz mit Eichenlaub from Adolf Hitler for his distinguished overall conduct of operations on the western front following the Normandy battles, notably his role in the planning and oversight of the Ardennes offensive (Battle of the Bulge) launched in December 1944. These decorations, presented amid a long career that also included command of Heeresgruppe A during the 1940 campaign in France and repeated appointments as supreme commander in the West, reflected specific operational achievements recognized at the highest levels despite the ultimate course of the war.



Generalfeldmarschall Ferdinand Schörner (1892-1973), born on 12 June 1892 in Munich and one of the most controversial and ruthless commanders in the Wehrmacht, rose from Einjährig-Freiwilliger through the ranks to become the last German soldier promoted to this exalted position and the final Commander-in-Chief of the German Army in Hitler's testament. A dedicated Nazi known as Blutiger Ferdinand for his merciless discipline, including summary executions of perceived deserters, Schörner earned the full hierarchy of the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes through successive feats of aggressive leadership and defensive tenacity on multiple fronts. He received the Ritterkreuz on 20 April 1941 as Generalmajor and commander of the 6. Gebirgs-Division in the Balkans campaign, where, before dawn on 6 April, his troops overran enemy outposts on the snow-covered Belaaica mountain in a surprise thrust, penetrating two bunker lines of the Metaxas Line; on 8 April he launched an independent surprise attack on the northern Krusa mountain, ejecting defenders and advancing toward Salonika in coordination with the 2. Panzer-Division, actions that significantly contributed to the rapid fall of Greece and Macedonia. The 398th Oak Leaves followed on 17 February 1944 as General der Gebirgstruppe commanding XXXX. Panzerkorps, awarded for his steadfast defense and skillful evacuation of the Nikopol bridgehead since late November 1943 amid relentless Soviet assaults, terrible roads, and harsh terrain; his personal presence at critical sectors enabled the successful withdrawal of his forces despite overwhelming odds during the Dnieper-Carpathian Offensive. The 93rd Swords were conferred on 28 August 1944 as Generaloberst and Oberbefehlshaber of Heeresgruppe Nord for his command in the Courland region, where, despite being cut off, his troops repelled massive Soviet surges for weeks, embodying resolute defense as a cornerstone of the Eastern Front through incessant battles. Finally, the 23rd Diamonds were awarded on 1 January 1945 as Generaloberst commanding Heeresgruppe Nord for orchestrating the orderly withdrawal from Estonia and northeastern Latvia under heavy Soviet assault beginning 14 September 1944 with minimal losses, followed by directing the first three Battles of the Courland Pocket, where Soviet advances were limited to minor gains only at enormous cost, showcasing his iron resolve, frontline leadership, and one of the last notable German defensive triumphs of the war. Schörner later commanded Heeresgruppe Mitte in the final desperate struggles, remaining a favorite of Hitler until the collapse, though he ultimately deserted his post before capture, facing postwar convictions for war crimes.



Generaloberst Johannes Blaskowitz (1883-1948) earned the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 30 September 1939 as General der Infanterie and Oberbefehlshaber der 8. Armee for his leadership during the Invasion of Poland, where his army conducted heavy fighting against the Polish counteroffensive in the Battle of the Bzura near Leczyca and Lodz before participating in the siege of Warsaw and accepting the formal surrender of Polish forces under General Tadeusz Kutrzeba on 27 September 1939 after extended negotiations, making him one of the first recipients of the award and coinciding closely with his promotion to Generaloberst; he later received the Eichenlaub zum Ritterkreuz as the 640th recipient on 29 October 1944 as Generaloberst and Oberbefehlshaber der Heeresgruppe G for his skillful direction of a fighting withdrawal of Army Group G from southern France into the Alsace region following the Allied Operation Dragoon landings on 15 August 1944, during which he stabilized defensive positions in the Vosges mountains and launched a limited counterattack near Arracourt despite resource shortages and mounting pressure from U.S. forces; finally, he was awarded the Schwerter zum Ritterkreuz as the 146th recipient on 25 April 1945 as Generaloberst and Oberbefehlshaber Niederlande for his competent combat leadership of Army Group H (later redesignated elements of the 25. Armee and Festung Holland) during the final months of the war, overseeing a prolonged fighting retreat against the British 2nd Army while facilitating Allied humanitarian airdrops of food and supplies under Operation Manna to ease the Dutch famine in the occupied western Netherlands.



Generaloberst Heinz Guderian (1888-1954), a prominent advocate of mechanized and armored warfare within the German Heer, was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 27 October 1939 while serving as General der Panzertruppe and Kommandierender General of the XIX. Armee-Korps (mot.) for his outstanding leadership during the Polish campaign of 1939, in which his corps carried out a rapid advance from Pomerania through the Polish Corridor and East Prussia, reaching and capturing Brest-Litovsk in just over two weeks against determined resistance, advancing some 330 kilometers with only minimal armored losses and employing concentrated panzer thrusts supported by effective radio communications and forward command from the front lines to achieve deep operational penetrations. During the initial stages of Operation Barbarossa in June and early July 1941, Guderian commanded Panzergruppe 2 as Generaloberst within Heeresgruppe Mitte and played a decisive role in the massive encirclement battles, notably contributing to the Kesselschlacht bei Białystok und Minsk where his forces helped trap and destroy large elements of the Soviet Western Front, resulting in the capture of over 300,000 prisoners, followed by continued rapid advances that set the stage for the subsequent fighting around Smolensk; these successes as Befehlshaber of the Panzergruppe earned him the Eichenlaub zum Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 17 July 1941 as the 24th recipient of this distinction, honoring his effective command of armored forces in delivering the early decisive victories on the Eastern Front.



Generaloberst Josef Harpe (1887-1968), born on 21 September 1887 in Buer and who died on 14 March 1968 in Nuremberg, was a German career officer and highly decorated Panzer commander whose service extended from the First World War through the campaigns of the Second World War, rising to command major formations on the Eastern Front. Enlisting as a Fahnenjunker in Infanterie-Regiment „Vogel von Falckenstein“ (7. Westfälisches) Nr. 56 in 1909, he fought on the Western Front, earning both classes of the Eisernes Kreuz and the Verwundetenabzeichen in Schwarz before transitioning postwar into the Reichswehr, where he gained early expertise in armored warfare through secret training at the Panzerschule Kama in the Soviet Union and later commanded Panzer-Regiment 3 and the 1. Panzer-Brigade during the invasion of Poland. Promoted to Generalmajor, he assumed command of the 12. Panzer-Division in January 1941 and led it with distinction during Operation Barbarossa as part of Heeresgruppe Mitte, particularly in the Kesselschlacht bei Białystok und Minsk; for his division’s effective armored thrusts, breakout actions, and defensive successes against Siberian units along the Wop River sector in July 1941—where superior leadership and Luftwaffe coordination annihilated enemy forces—he was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 13 August 1941. Continuing in command, Harpe’s division advanced toward and captured Tichwin in November 1941 despite fierce resistance, then conducted a skillful and orderly withdrawal under his personal direction even after he was wounded, preserving the formation and enabling the retreat of multiple German divisions with minimal losses, actions that earned him the Eichenlaub on 31 December 1941 as the 55th recipient. Later promoted to General der Panzertruppe and placed in command of the XXXXI. Panzerkorps in January 1942, he achieved further notable successes in both offensive and defensive operations south of Orel in July 1943, smashing Soviet assembly areas and inflicting heavy losses through bold Panzer maneuvers, which led to the award of the Schwerter on 15 September 1943; he subsequently commanded the 9. Armee, the 4. Panzerarmee, Heeresgruppe Nordukraine (later redesignated Heeresgruppe A), and finally the 5. Panzerarmee in the Ruhrkessel before his capture by American forces in April 1945, after which he was released in 1948 without facing prosecution for wartime actions.



Generaloberst Gotthard Heinrici (1886-1971), renowned as one of the Wehrmacht’s foremost defensive specialists during the Second World War, received the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 18 September 1941 while serving as General der Infanterie and Kommandierender General of the XXXXIII. Armee-Korps attached to the 2. Armee of Heeresgruppe Mitte during Operation Barbarossa; his aggressive and precisely timed leadership enabled the corps to advance far more rapidly than planned, reaching the Berezina River at Schazilki on 10 August 1941 three days ahead of schedule, crossing the Dnieper the next day, and cutting the vital Gomel–Shlobin railway line, thereby blocking Soviet reinforcements and directly contributing to the encirclement and destruction of the Soviet 21st Army. He was subsequently awarded the Eichenlaub to the Ritterkreuz on 24 November 1943 as Generaloberst and Oberbefehlshaber of the 4. Armee in Heeresgruppe Mitte for his outstanding defensive command along the Panther-Stellung east of Orsha, where his forces, despite being heavily outnumbered, successfully prevented every Soviet breakthrough attempt during prolonged and intense fighting that inflicted severe losses on the attacking Red Army formations. Finally, on 3 March 1945 Heinrici received the Schwerter to his Ritterkreuz mit Eichenlaub while serving as Generaloberst and Oberbefehlshaber of the 1. Panzer-Armee; this highest decoration recognized his skillful leadership in February 1945, when he halted a powerful Soviet offensive and prevented the enemy from overrunning the last intact coalfield in the Mährisch Ostrau area, thereby preserving a critical industrial resource for the German war effort even as the Eastern Front collapsed. These successive awards reflected Heinrici’s consistent ability to achieve disproportionate results through superior defensive tactics, rapid maneuver, and resolute leadership under increasingly adverse conditions.



Generaloberst Hermann Hoth (1885-1971), born on 12 April 1885 in Neuruppin, was a highly regarded Wehrmacht panzer commander during World War II who rose through the ranks as a proponent of motorized and armoured warfare, serving initially as commander of the XV Motorised Corps in the invasions of Poland and France before leading major formations on the Eastern Front. He received the Ritterkreuz on 27 October 1939 for his leadership of the XV Motorised Corps during the Polish campaign, where his forces, including the 2. and 3. Leichte Division, played a key role in the rapid advance, the encirclement of Polish units at the Bzura, and the relentless pursuit that contributed to the swift defeat of Army Krakau, demonstrating his hard-charging style and the effectiveness of motorized operations despite the light divisions suffering notable losses. Promoted to Generaloberst after further successes in France, where his XV Army Corps secured Meuse crossings near Dinant, broke through French lines, repelled counterattacks at Arras, and supported the encirclement at Dunkirk and advances into Normandy and Brittany, Hoth assumed command of the 3. Panzergruppe for Operation Barbarossa in 1941. He earned the Eichenlaub on 17 July 1941 for the 3. Panzergruppe's pivotal contributions to the massive encirclements at Minsk and Smolensk in Byelorussia, where hundreds of thousands of Soviet troops were captured, showcasing his skill in deep thrusts and exploitation despite logistical challenges and pauses to await infantry. Later commanding the 17. Armee and then the 4. Panzerarmee during Case Blue, the relief attempt at Stalingrad (Operation Wintergewitter), the Third Battle of Kharkov, and Operation Citadel at Kursk—where his forces formed the southern armoured spearhead with units including II. SS-Panzerkorps and XLVIII. Panzerkorps—Hoth conducted effective defensive withdrawals and counterattacks in Ukraine that inflicted heavy Soviet losses even as the front deteriorated. These achievements, particularly the recapture of Kharkov and Belgorod and the resilient actions in the face of superior Soviet forces, led to the award of the Schwerter on 15 September 1943. Hoth, known for his tactical brilliance in armoured operations amid increasingly difficult conditions, was relieved of command in November 1943 after the loss of Kiev but later contributed to final defenses; he was convicted of war crimes in the High Command Trial postwar and died in 1971.



Generaloberst Lothar Rendulic (1887-1971), born on 23 October 1887 in Wiener Neustadt into a family of Croatian origin as Lothar Rendulić, was an Austrian-born officer who rose to high command in the Wehrmacht during the Second World War after serving in the Austro-Hungarian Army in the First World War, earning a doctorate in law, and joining the Austrian Bundesheer before transferring to German service following the Anschluss in 1938. He commanded the 14. Infanterie-Division briefly before taking charge of the 52. Infanterie-Division in late 1940, leading it through operations on the Eastern Front where, as Generalleutnant, he received the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 6 March 1942 for the division’s determined ten-day defensive and counterattacking actions southwest of Juchnow in February 1942, during which it repelled 33 Soviet assaults without yielding ground, destroyed significant enemy forces, and reopened critical supply routes for the 4. Armee. Promoted further, Rendulic assumed command of the XXXV. Armeekorps and was awarded the Eichenlaub on 15 August 1943 as General der Infanterie for his outstanding leadership in the defensive battles on the eastern edge of the Orel salient after Operation Citadel, where his corps and attached Kampfgruppen under his foresightful direction destroyed hundreds of Soviet tanks and thwarted multiple breakthrough attempts toward Archangelskoje between mid-July 1943. Later commanding the 2. Panzerarmee in Yugoslavia and then the 20. Gebirgsarmee in Finland and Norway from June 1944, he oversaw the challenging withdrawal of German forces from Finland during the Lapland War; as Generaloberst and Oberbefehlshaber of the 20. Gebirgsarmee he received the Schwerter on 18 January 1945 in recognition of this successful large-scale evacuation and orderly retreat under pressure, preserving combat effectiveness amid shifting alliances and harsh northern conditions. Subsequent commands included Heeresgruppe Kurland, Heeresgruppe Nord, and finally Heeresgruppe Ostmark in the war’s final weeks before his surrender to American forces in May 1945; postwar he faced trial in the Nuremberg Hostages Case, was convicted on certain charges, served a reduced sentence, and later authored memoirs until his death in 1971.



Generaloberst Eugen Ritter von Schobert (1883-1941), born Eugen Schobert on 13 March 1883 in Würzburg, Bavaria, was a German officer who began his military service in the Royal Bavarian Army in 1902, served as a frontline infantry leader in World War I on the Western Front, and advanced through the ranks of the Reichswehr and Wehrmacht, commanding the 17th Infantry Division from 1935 to 1936 and the 33rd Infantry Division from 1936 to 1938 before his appointment on 4 February 1938 as Kommandierender General of the VII. Armeekorps; during the 1940 campaign in the West, as General der Infanterie his VII. Armeekorps formed part of the 16. Armee within Army Group A and played a decisive role in forcing a breakthrough of the Maginot Line followed by the rapid capture of Nancy and Toul, leadership that directly earned him the award of the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 29 June 1940, after which he was promoted to Generaloberst on 19 July 1940 and in September 1940 assumed command of the 11. Armee, which he led during the opening phase of Operation Barbarossa until his death on 12 September 1941 when the Fieseler Storch observation aircraft in which he was flying crashed into a Soviet minefield near Mykolaiv in Ukraine.



General der Infanterie Werner Freiherr von und zu Gilsa (1889-1945) was born on 4 March 1889 in Berlin and died on 8 May 1945 in Leitmeritz, where he committed suicide while serving as military commandant of Dresden and Führer of Korps “Gilsa” with the rank of General der Infanterie; having entered the Royal Prussian Army in 1908, served with distinction in World War I, and remained a career officer in the Reichswehr before rising in the Wehrmacht, he commanded Infanterie-Regiment 9 as Oberst during the campaigns in Poland and France, and it was for the regiment’s outstanding bravery and his own personal leadership during the Western offensive of 1940, when the unit broke through an important enemy bridgehead position and then executed a swift, bold thrust across the Maas to seize the only bridge still intact in the sector, with Gilsa himself leading at the head of his III. Bataillon in a success that greatly facilitated the continued rapid advance of Gruppe Haase, that he was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 5 June 1940; later promoted to Generalmajor and appointed commander of the 216. Infanterie-Division, which was committed to the Eastern Front in the winter of 1941/42, he earned the Eichenlaub to the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 24 January 1942 as the 68th recipient for his outstanding defense of the Fortress Suchinitschi against heavy Soviet pressure during the general German retreat from Moscow, after which he went on to command the LXXXIX. Armeekorps until late 1944.



General der Infanterie Joachim von Kortzfleisch (1890-1945) was a German career officer born on 3 January 1890 in Braunschweig into an aristocratic Westphalian family, who entered the Prussian Army as a Fahnenjunker in 1907, served in a machine gun unit during World War I earning both classes of the Iron Cross, continued in the Reichswehr, and rose steadily in the Wehrmacht to command the 1. Infanterie-Division as Generalleutnant at the outbreak of World War II before taking charge of the XI. Armeekorps in April 1940. He received the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 4 September 1940 as General der Infanterie and Kommandierender General of the XI. Armeekorps for his distinguished leadership during the Western Campaign in May and June 1940, where his corps formed part of the decisive thrust through Belgium and northern France, contributing to rapid breakthroughs, the encirclement of Allied forces near Lille and Dunkirk, and the exploitation of tactical opportunities in fast-moving combined-arms operations that helped collapse French resistance and secure victory in the Low Countries and France within weeks. His earlier effective command of the 1. Infanterie-Division in the Polish campaign provided a strong foundation, showcasing his ability to maintain cohesion and momentum under operational pressure. Later he commanded Military District III in Berlin, where he played a notable role in suppressing the 20 July 1944 plot by rejecting Valkyrie orders and remaining loyal to the regime, continued in various staff and command roles including the Rhine defenses under Army Group B, and was killed on 20 April 1945 at Schmallenberg-Wulwesort in the Sauerland when he refused to surrender to an American patrol and was shot.



General der Infanterie Walter Lichel (1885-1969) began his military career as a Fahnenjunker in the Preußische Armee in 1903, served throughout the First World War, remained in the Reichswehr during the interwar period, and rose to high command in the Wehrmacht during the Second World War. Having previously commanded Infanterie-Regiment 22 and then the 3. Infanterie-Division during the campaign in Poland and the Battle of France, he assumed command of the newly formed 123. Infanterie-Division on 5 October 1940 as Generalleutnant and led it into Operation Barbarossa in June 1941 as part of XXVIII. Armeekorps under 16. Armee in Heeresgruppe Nord. Advancing from East Prussia through the Sebesch area toward the Demjansk region, the division under his leadership engaged in intense offensive operations, conducting rapid breakthroughs against Soviet defenses, securing key terrain despite logistical strains and repeated enemy counterattacks, and maintaining cohesion during the grueling early phases of the invasion in the northern sector. For his exceptional command performance, personal leadership under fire, and the division’s significant contributions to the German advance in these critical weeks, Lichel was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 18 September 1941, even though he had been severely wounded on 5 August 1941 near the Lovat River area and had already been evacuated for medical treatment. He later recovered, attained the rank of General der Infanterie, and continued service until surrendering to Allied forces in 1945, after which he was held until his release in 1947 before living quietly until his death in Bärnau.



General der Infanterie Hermann Recknagel (1892-1945), born on 18 July 1892 in Strauchmühle near Hofgeismar, was a seasoned German officer who rose through the ranks of the Wehrmacht during the Second World War, ultimately commanding major formations on the Eastern Front before being killed in action by Polish partisans near Piotrków Trybunalski on 23 January 1945. Having served as a Leutnant and Oberleutnant in Infanterie-Regiment 83 during the First World War, where he earned both classes of the Eisernes Kreuz, Recknagel returned to active duty in the 1930s and by 1940 commanded Infanterie-Regiment 54 of the 18. Infanterie-Division as Oberst, earning the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 5 August 1940 for his bold leadership of the regiment’s lead elements in the fierce fighting for Dunkirk, where his troops overcame determined enemy resistance to help secure the city on 4 June 1940. Promoted through Generalmajor and Generalleutnant, he took command of the 111. Infanterie-Division and distinguished himself further in the southern sector of the Eastern Front; on 6 November 1943 he received the Eichenlaub as Generalleutnant for his masterful direction of Korpsgruppe Recknagel in August 1943, during which his forces destroyed 273 Soviet tanks around Kamyschewacha, Many, and Uspenskaja and successfully executed a breakout with Kampfgruppe 111./336. Infanterie-Division from encirclement near the Azov Sea coast toward Mariupol and Melitopol, preventing total annihilation of elements of the XXIX. Armee-Korps. As General der Infanterie and Kommandierender General of the XXXXII. Armee-Korps he was awarded the Schwerter on 23 October 1944 for his exceptional command during the Soviet summer offensive against Heeresgruppe Mitte, skillfully extricating his corps from imminent encirclement amid the collapse of the army group and subsequently stabilizing the frontline in the great bend of the Vistula through determined defensive actions and counterattacks, including notable stands by the 88. Infanterie-Division and 72. Infanterie-Division that helped contain Soviet bridgeheads west of Baranov. His career exemplified resolute infantry leadership across multiple theaters, earning him additional honors such as the Deutsches Kreuz in Gold and multiple mentions in the Wehrmachtbericht.



General der Panzertruppe Traugott Herr (1890-1976), born on 16 September 1890 in Weferlingen as Traugott Johannes Gustav Otto Herr, was a seasoned German officer whose career from the Imperial Army through the Wehrmacht exemplified adaptability from infantry roots to armored warfare leadership across multiple theaters. Joining as a Fahnenjunker in Fusilier-Regiment Prinz Heinrich von Preußen (Brandenburgisches) Nr. 35 in 1911, he served with distinction in the First World War as adjutant and company leader, earning both classes of the Eisernes Kreuz and the Ritterkreuz des Königlichen Hausordens von Hohenzollern mit Schwertern before transitioning into the Reichswehr and later commanding Schützen-Regiment 66 during the campaigns in Poland and France. In the invasion of the Soviet Union with the 13. Panzer-Division as part of Panzergruppe 1, Herr, then Oberst and Kommandeur of the 13. Schützen-Brigade, received the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 2 October 1941 for his decisive actions in expanding and securing the German bridgehead at Dnepropetrovsk despite grave tactical challenges, successfully relieving cut-off friendly forces and preventing their annihilation amid intense Soviet counterattacks. Promoted to Generalmajor and given full command of the 13. Panzer-Division in early 1942, he earned the 110th award of the Eichenlaub on 9 August 1942 for the division’s bold capture of Rostov-on-Don during summer operations in the southern sector, stabilizing the front through aggressive armored thrusts and effective coordination that contributed significantly to the advance toward the Caucasus. Severely wounded by shrapnel to the head on the Terek River in October 1942, Herr recovered to assume command of the LXXVI. Panzerkorps in Italy in 1943, rising to General der Panzertruppe; there he directed tenacious defensive battles against Allied offensives, notably from late August to mid-November 1944 near Rimini where his corps withstood three major breakthrough attempts by superior forces, inflicting heavy losses including over 650 claimed Allied tanks while conducting an orderly withdrawal that preserved the integrity of the German front in Italy, actions for which he was awarded the 117th Schwerter on 18 December 1944. Later briefly commanding the 14. Armee and then the 10. Armee until the final surrender in May 1945, Herr exemplified resolute leadership in both offensive panzer operations on the Eastern Front and grueling defensive campaigns in the Mediterranean theater before his postwar release from captivity.



General der Artillerie Maximilian Felzmann (1894-1962), born on 22 April 1894 in Zwittau, Mähren, was an Austrian-born officer who began his military career in the Austro-Hungarian Army and rose through the ranks to become a highly decorated commander in the Wehrmacht during the Second World War, known for his steadfast defensive leadership on the Eastern Front. Entering service as a Fähnrich in Festungsartilleriebataillon Nr. 5 in 1913, he served as a battery commander and in various artillery roles through the First World War and the interwar Austrian Bundesheer before transferring to the Wehrmacht in 1938, where he commanded Artillerie-Regiment 251 of the 251. Infanterie-Division from 1939 onward, earning the Deutsches Kreuz in Gold as Oberst in January 1942 for his artillery support during intense combat operations. Promoted to Generalmajor, he assumed command of the 251. Infanterie-Division in March 1943 and received the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 28 November 1943 for his division’s resolute defense on 25 September 1943, when, reduced to just 5,000 men positioned 120 km south of Gomel, it prevented a major Soviet breakthrough, an action that earned special mention in the Wehrmachtbericht. Later, as Generalleutnant commanding Korps-Abteilung E (also known as Gruppe Felzmann), he was awarded the Eichenlaub (643rd recipient) on 3 November 1944 for his determined defense of the fortress of Brest-Litovsk in July 1944, where his forces held the city for three days against overwhelming attacks by two-and-a-half Soviet armies before executing a successful breakout that saved approximately 75 percent of his troops amid the collapse of Heeresgruppe Mitte. Felzmann subsequently led the XXXXVI. Panzerkorps temporarily and then the XXVII. Armeekorps as General der Artillerie from January 1945, continuing defensive operations in East Prussia until the final weeks of the war, after which he was held in US captivity until 1947 and lived quietly in Austria until his death on 8 June 1962 in Seefeld in Tirol.



General der Artillerie Max Pfeffer (1883-1955), born on 7 June 1883 in Geldern and who died on 31 December 1955 as a Soviet prisoner of war in Camp Woikowo near Ivanovo, was a career artillery officer who had served in the Imperial German Army during the First World War and later rose through the ranks of the Reichswehr and Wehrmacht; after commanding Artillerie-Regiment 26 and serving as Artillerie-Kommandeur, he took command on 5 April 1940 of the newly formed 297. Infanterie-Division, which he led until 16 January 1943, and it was in this role as Generalleutnant that he earned the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 4 December 1941 for his leadership during the division’s intense combat operations on the Eastern Front in 1941, beginning with its first major engagement in the Panzerschlacht bei Dubno-Luzk-Riwne in June 1941 and continuing through successful advances that included the capture of Shitomir in July 1941, Uman in August 1941, Kharkov in November 1941, and Rostov in November and December 1941, actions that contributed to the rapid German progress through Ukraine and into the Don region before Pfeffer was promoted to General der Artillerie in December 1942 and assumed command of the IV. Armeekorps, only to be taken prisoner with the remnants of his corps at the conclusion of the Battle of Stalingrad in late January 1943.



Generalleutnant Hans Bergen (1890-1957), born on 5 March 1890 in Munich and who died on 17 February 1957 in Landshut, was a German officer who rose through the ranks of the Wehrmacht during World War II, eventually commanding divisions such as the 323. Infanterie-Division, the 299. Infanterie-Division, and the 390. Sicherungs-Division. A veteran of the First World War where he earned both classes of the Eisernes Kreuz, Bergen returned to military service and by June 1941 served as Oberst and Kommandeur of Infanterie-Regiment 187 within the 87. Infanterie-Division. It was his leadership during the opening phase of Operation Barbarossa that earned him the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 9 July 1941. On the afternoon of 22 June 1941, Bergen demonstrated outstanding personal bravery and decisive command during the assault on commanding high ground northeast of Nowogrod and in the subsequent fighting between Nowogrod and the Bobr river. Then, on 25 June 1941, under his direction, his regiment successfully crossed the more than 10-kilometer-wide Biebrza (Bobr) river and its extensive wetlands, establishing a vital bridgehead south of the Osowiec fortress on the eastern bank. This action pinned down strong Soviet forces and compelled the enemy high command to abandon the fortress of Osowiec itself, significantly contributing to the rapid German advances in the sector. Bergen’s later career included further promotions to Generalmajor in 1941 and Generalleutnant in 1943, along with commands in security and training roles, before he was captured by Allied forces in late March 1945.



Generalleutnant Walter von Boltenstern (1889-1952) was a German general in the Wehrmacht of Nazi Germany during World War II who commanded several divisions, most notably the 29. Infanterie-Division (mot.), and earned the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes for his decisive leadership in the early phases of Operation Barbarossa. Born in Breslau, he joined the Royal Prussian Army in 1910, served as a junior officer in World War I where he received the Iron Cross 1st and 2nd Class among other decorations, and continued in the Reichswehr during the interwar period before rising through the ranks in the expanding German army. By July 1940 he had taken command of the 29. Infanterie-Division (mot.), which he led into the Soviet Union in June 1941 as part of the 2. Panzergruppe under Generaloberst Guderian. On 13-14 July 1941, as Generalmajor and divisional commander, Boltenstern personally led his formation in a bold drive across the Dnieper river near Kopek, then pressed forward with great energy and determination through fierce enemy resistance, advancing his troops all the way to the gates of Smolensk by midday on 14 July and thereby achieving a significant operational success that helped encircle large Soviet forces and accelerate the German thrust toward Moscow. For this action he was awarded the Ritterkreuz on 13 August 1941. He later commanded the 179. Reserve Panzer Division, was placed in reserve in early 1945, fell into Soviet captivity at the end of the war, and died in the Voikovo prison camp in 1952.



Generalleutnant Max Fremerey (1889-1968), born on 5 May 1889 in Köln and who passed away on 20 September 1968 in Krün, was a German officer in the Wehrmacht during World War II who rose through the ranks from his early service as a Fahnenjunker in the Westfälisches Dragoner-Regiment Nr. 7 before World War I, through various Reichswehr cavalry commands including the Reiter-Regiment 17, to leading motorized and panzer formations in the Second World War. He commanded the Infanterie-Regiment 480 of the 260. Infanterie-Division at the outbreak of war, later the 18. Schützen-Brigade of the 18. Panzer-Division, and from September 1941 until late September 1942 served as Kommandeur of the 29. Infanterie-Division (motorisiert), during which time the division fought in the battles around Moscow and participated in the advance toward Stalingrad. On 28 July 1942 he was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes as Generalmajor and Kommandeur 29. Infanterie-Division for decisive leadership in the summer offensive operations; under his orders the division executed a bold thrust on 14 July 1942 without regard for its flanks, penetrating into Morosowskaja and ejecting Soviet forces from the city, while continued aggressive advances secured Moschkoff and Morosowskaja, actions of critical importance in pushing the enemy away from the Don river during the broader pursuit operations. Fremerey later commanded the 155. Reserve Panzer Division in France and the 233. Reserve-Panzer-Division (later 233. Panzer-Division) in Germany and Denmark until the end of the war, after which he was held in Allied captivity until his release in July 1947.



Generalleutnant Ferdinand Heim (1895-1971), born on 27 February 1895 in Reutlingen, Wuerttemberg, served as a professional soldier through both world wars, rising through the ranks of the German Army with distinguished staff and command roles. A veteran of World War I where he earned the Iron Cross 1st and 2nd Class as an artillery officer, Heim transitioned into the Reichswehr and later the Wehrmacht, holding key General Staff positions including Chief of the General Staff of the 6th Army under Field Marshal Walther von Reichenau during the planning of Operation Barbarossa and subsequent operations on the Eastern Front. On 1 July 1942 he assumed command of the 14. Panzer-Division as Generalmajor, leading it during the summer offensive toward Stalingrad. It was for his actions in mid-August 1942 that Heim received the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 30 August 1942: at the head of his Panzer-Division he personally directed and fought through a 40 km deep and heavily defended Soviet defensive position in a storm of uninterrupted heavy combat, inspiring his troops by personal example to achieve breakthroughs of great operational importance for the continued advance in that sector, coordinating armored spearheads with supporting infantry to shatter successive fortified lines despite intense resistance, artillery fire, and counterattacks, thereby securing key terrain and contributing significantly to the broader offensive momentum against Stalingrad. Later promoted to Generalleutnant, Heim went on to command XXXXVIII Panzer Corps during the Battle of Stalingrad before subsequent assignments, including the defense of the Boulogne fortress in 1944, and he died in Ulm on 14 November 1971.



Generalleutnant Friedrich-Wilhelm von Loeper (1888-1983), born on 3 August 1888 in Prieborn, Silesia, and who passed away on 7 October 1983 in Bückeburg, was a seasoned German officer who began his military career in 1906 and served through the German Empire, Weimar Republic, and Third Reich periods. A veteran of the First World War where he earned both classes of the Iron Cross, he held various commands in the interwar years including Infanterie-Regiment 64 and Kavallerie-Schützen-Regiment 4, led the 1. leichte Division in the Polish campaign and the 81. Infanterie-Division in the Westfeldzug, before taking charge of the 10. Infanterie-Division which he guided through its motorization into the 10. Infanterie-Division (mot.). During the early stages of Operation Barbarossa in 1941 as part of Army Group Center, von Loeper demonstrated outstanding leadership by directing his motorized division in swift advances deep into Soviet territory, capturing critical river crossings including bridgeheads over the Dnieper, and playing a key role in large-scale encirclement battles that shattered multiple Soviet armies despite fierce resistance, difficult terrain, and supply challenges. His division's ability to sustain offensive momentum, exploit breakthroughs, and support wider operational objectives under intense combat conditions highlighted his tactical skill and decisiveness. For these actions Generalleutnant von Loeper was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 29 September 1941 while commanding the 10. Infanterie-Division (mot.). He subsequently commanded Panzer Division Nr. 178 and Panzer Division Tatra before leaving active duty in early 1945, was briefly interned by the Allies after the war, and was released in 1947.



Generalleutnant Hermann Meyer-Rabingen (1887-1961) was a German general in the Wehrmacht who rose through the ranks after service in the Imperial German Army and Schutztruppe in Deutsch-Ostafrika during the First World War, where he reached the rank of Hauptmann. Following the war he served in the Reichswehr, commanding companies and later battalions, before being promoted to Oberst and taking command of Infanterie-Regiment 109 in Karlsruhe in 1937. In the Second World War he briefly commanded the 431. Infanterie-Division before assuming command of the 197. Infanterie-Division on 1 December 1939 as Generalmajor, leading it through the Westfeldzug in the Netherlands and France and then, after promotion to Generalleutnant on 1 November 1941, through Operation Barbarossa with Army Group Centre in the battles of Białystok–Minsk, Smolensk and Vyazma and the advance toward Moscow. For his effective leadership of the 197. Infanterie-Division during the intense fighting on the Eastern Front, particularly the advance on Moscow and the subsequent heavy defensive battles west of the city amid the Soviet winter counteroffensive from December 1941 into January 1942, he was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 12 January 1942 while still serving as its Kommandeur; he relinquished command on 1 April 1942 and was later appointed Kommandeur of the 159. Reserve-Infanterie-Division in September 1942, followed by Division Nr. 404 and ultimately the post of Kommandant of Frankfurt an der Oder in early 1945 before becoming a prisoner of war at the end of hostilities.



Generalleutnant Otto-Ernst Ottenbacher (1888-1975), born on 18 November 1888 in Esslingen and died on 7 January 1975 in Stuttgart, was a seasoned German officer who rose through the ranks of the Wurttemberg army before serving in the Wehrmacht during the Second World War. Having entered service as a Fahnenjunker in 1907 and gaining experience in the First World War, he commanded the 36. Infanterie-Division (mot.) from October 1940, leading it effectively through the Battle of France and into Operation Barbarossa as part of XXXXI. Armeekorps under Army Group North. On 13 August 1941, as Generalleutnant and divisional commander, he was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes for his outstanding leadership during the rapid advance into the Soviet Union, where the motorized division distinguished itself in fierce engagements, securing key objectives, maintaining momentum amid heavy resistance, and contributing decisively to the encirclement battles and breakthroughs that characterized the early phases of the campaign on the northern sector of the Eastern Front. His command emphasized aggressive yet coordinated maneuvers with the division's infantry regiments, artillery, and supporting elements, enabling it to overcome stubborn Soviet defenses and logistical challenges while exemplifying the professional soldierly qualities that earned him this high honor. Later wounded and severely burned when his plane was shot down by Soviet fighters during the opening stages of the Battle of Kalinin in October 1941, Ottenbacher was invalided home after briefly leading XXXXI. Armeekorps and subsequently held further corps commands, including XIII. Armeekorps, before the war's end.



Generalleutnant Erwin Rauch (1889-1969), born on 19 October 1889 in Berlin and died on 26 February 1969 in Gallspach, Austria, was a German career officer who entered the army as Fahnenjunker in 1908, served with distinction in World War I, and returned to active duty in the 1930s, rising steadily through the ranks of the Wehrmacht. As Oberst he commanded Infanterie-Regiment 422, and on 6 August 1941, shortly after his promotion to Generalmajor, he assumed command of the 123. Infanterie-Division within Heeresgruppe Nord during Operation Barbarossa. In the harsh winter fighting of late 1941, as Soviet counteroffensives pressed hard against German lines east of the Lovat River and around the developing area that would become the Kessel von Demjansk, Rauch led his division with exceptional resolve amid freezing temperatures, severe supply shortages, and repeated Red Army assaults, skillfully organizing defensive positions, conducting timely counterattacks, and maintaining unit cohesion to hold critical sectors and prevent potentially decisive enemy breakthroughs. For this outstanding leadership and tactical skill in sustaining the division's fighting strength during these defensive battles, he was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 22 December 1941. He continued commanding the 123. Infanterie-Division through the encirclement and breakout operations in the Demjansk Pocket, later earning the Deutsches Kreuz in Gold, before taking command of the 343. Infanterie-Division in the West and surrendering to American forces following the fall of Brest in September 1944.



Generalleutnant Karl-Wilhelm von Schlieben (1894-1964), born on 30 October 1894 in Eisenach into an old Saxon noble family with a strong military tradition as the son of Major Wilhelm von Schlieben, entered the Prussian Army as a Fahnenjunker on 11 August 1914 and served with distinction during World War I in the 3. Garde-Regiment zu Fuß, where he was commissioned Leutnant in 1915, wounded twice, and earned the Eisernes Kreuz 1. and 2. Klasse along with other decorations. Continuing his career seamlessly in the Reichswehr and later the Wehrmacht, he advanced through the ranks to Oberst by 1941 and saw action as commander of Schützen-Regiment 108 in the 14. Panzer-Division during the early phases of the Eastern Front campaign, earning the Deutsches Kreuz in Gold in July 1942. In early 1943, as Kommandeur of Brigade Stab z.b.V. 4 and Führer of the 208. Infanterie-Division, von Schlieben demonstrated exceptional leadership amid intense defensive fighting on the Eastern Front, actions for which he was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 17 March 1943. He subsequently commanded the 18. Panzer-Division through the Battle of Kursk before taking charge of the 709. Infanterie-Division in December 1943, a static coastal defense unit stationed in Normandy. Following the Allied D-Day landings in June 1944, he was appointed Kommandant der Festung Cherbourg on 23 June, organizing a desperate but ultimately futile defense of the vital port against overwhelming American forces; on 26 June 1944 he surrendered the fortress along with over 800 troops to U.S. forces, an act that drew sharp criticism from Hitler despite the hopeless situation. Held as a prisoner of war first at Trent Park and later Island Farm until his release in October 1947, von Schlieben lived quietly in Gießen thereafter and died there on 18 June 1964 at the age of 69.



Generalleutnant Otto Schmidt-Hartung (1892-1976), born on 9 February 1892 in Weinheim an der Bergstraße and deceased on 19 February 1976 in Tübingen, was a German officer who rose through the ranks of the Wehrmacht during the Second World War, ultimately attaining the rank of Generalleutnant after distinguished service that began with his enlistment as a Fahnenjunker in 1910 and included combat in the First World War where he sustained a severe injury. Having returned to active duty after interwar police service, he assumed command of Infanterie-Regiment 35 on 10 November 1938 within the 25. Infanterie-Division. During the Westfeldzug in spring 1940, as Oberst, Schmidt-Hartung led his regiment with exceptional bravery and tactical skill despite the lingering effects of his earlier wound, excelling particularly in operations along the Aisne and Oise canals and during the decisive crossing of the Marne river; his regiment's aggressive advances and effective exploitation of breakthroughs contributed substantially to the rapid successes of the division in the mobile campaign through France. For these actions he was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 29 June 1940, along with the 1939 Spange zum Eisernen Kreuz 1. Klasse. He later commanded the motorized version of the regiment, the 14. Schützen-Brigade, and held various staff and occupation posts, including as Befehlshaber der Operationszone Alpenvorland in the final months of the war.



Generalleutnant Hans Traut (1895-1974), born on 25 January 1895 in Saargemünd and who passed away on 9 December 1974 in Darmstadt, was a highly decorated German officer in the Wehrmacht who rose through the ranks during World War II, ultimately commanding units such as the 10. Infanterie-Division, the 263. Infanterie-Division, and the 78. Sturm-Division. As Oberstleutnant and Kommandeur of I./Infanterie-Regiment 90 of the 20. Infanterie-Division within XXXI. Armeekorps during the 1940 Western Campaign, he earned the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 5 August 1940 as the 153rd recipient for his bold leadership on 16 June 1940, when he thrust from Langres toward Vesoul to seize a vital railroad junction and block French retreat routes; despite threats from the north, his reinforced Bataillon fought hard to secure the river crossing at Pont-sur-Saône and, in a late-evening assault personally rallied by Traut amid heavy machine-gun fire on the overlooking mountain, eliminated enemy resistance nests one by one to capture the heights by dawn, sealing Vesoul's fate. Later, as Oberst and Kommandeur of Infanterie-Regiment 41 (mot.) while serving as Führer of the 10. Infanterie-Division (motorisiert) under 4. Armee and Heeresgruppe Mitte during Operation Barbarossa, Traut received the Eichenlaub on 23 January 1942 as the 67th recipient for his regiment's outstanding performance across multiple critical actions, including the fight for Shlobin and Dnieper crossing on 6 July 1941, the stubborn defense of Propoisk from 19 to 25 July, repelling a Soviet battalion incursion at Novosybkov on 24 August with improvised supply troops and a Flak Zug, holding positions north of the Desna against elements of four Soviet divisions on 27 August, a four-day offensive at the Glukhov bridgehead that captured 1,700 prisoners and significant materiel by 29 September, the contested seizure of Negino on 11 October, the storming of Yefremov from 17 to 22 November while subordinated to 18. Panzer-Division, and the successful 8 December counterattack at Klekotki that freed 39 German prisoners and reopened key roads near Gorlovo. Traut continued to serve with distinction, earning the Deutsches Kreuz in Gold in December 1943, before surrendering to Soviet forces during the 1944 Vitebsk–Orsha Offensive, enduring imprisonment as a convicted war criminal until his release in 1955.



Generalleutnant Martin Unrein (1901-1972), born on 1 January 1901 in Weimar, served as a capable German Army officer throughout World War II, rising through the ranks from his enlistment in the final stages of the First World War to command key armored formations on the Eastern Front. After various staff and regimental roles in the Reichswehr and early Wehrmacht, he took command of Panzergrenadier-Regiment 4 of the 6. Panzer-Division in 1943, where his leadership during the grueling defensive operations following the Battle of Kursk earned him the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 10 September 1943 as Oberst; particularly noteworthy were his regiment's determined actions at Alexejevka on 19 July 1943, where it helped stabilize the line amid heavy Soviet pressure, and at Taranovka during the Fourth Battle of Kharkov on 23 August 1943, alongside earlier distinguished service such as the successful attack at Sytschevka in May 1942. Promoted to Generalmajor, Unrein assumed command of the 14. Panzer-Division in late October 1943 and led it through intense defensive battles around Ingulez and Adshamka from mid-November 1943 to early January 1944, the Battle of Kirovograd in January, relief efforts at Cherkassy in early 1944, and the subsequent retreat toward Romania, actions for which he received the 515th Eichenlaub to the Ritterkreuz on 26 June 1944 as commander of the division under III. Armee-Korps and 6. Armee. He later commanded the III SS Panzer Corps briefly and the newly formed Panzer Division Clausewitz before the war's end, embodying the experienced panzer leadership that sustained German forces in increasingly desperate circumstances until his death in Munich on 22 January 1972.



Generalleutnant Hans Wagner (1896-1967), born on 11 March 1896 in Saarbrücken in the German Empire and who died on 13 May 1967 in Ulm, West Germany, was a highly experienced German artillery officer who served in both world wars and rose through the ranks of the Wehrmacht to command the 269. Infanterie-Division during the later stages of World War II. A veteran of the First World War where he began as a Kriegsfreiwilliger in Feld-Artillerie-Regiment "von Holtzendorff" (1. Rheinisches) Nr. 8 and earned both classes of the Iron Cross, Wagner transitioned to police service in the interwar period before rejoining the Heer in 1935. By August 1940 he had become Kommandeur of Artillerie-Regiment 5, initially with the 5. Leichte-Division and later the 5. Jäger-Division, distinguishing himself on the Eastern Front with the Deutsches Kreuz in Gold in late 1941 and the Winterschlacht im Osten medal in 1942. On 18 April 1943, as Oberst and commander of Artillerie-Regiment 5, he was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes for his decisive leadership during defensive battles south of Lake Ilmen, where strong enemy forces had broken through the neighboring division’s sector; Wagner rapidly formed a Kampfgruppe composed of artillerymen and drivers from his regiment, personally directing them to intercept and halt the Soviet advance, thereby stabilizing the front and preventing a potentially catastrophic penetration. He later led Grenadier-Regiment 411 and briefly the 32. Infanterie-Division before taking command of the 269. Infanterie-Division in late 1943, participating in intense fighting including the defense of the Brückenkopf Ohlau west of the Oder near Breslau in early 1945, and after the war he was involved in the clandestine Schnez-Truppe shadow army preparations against potential Soviet threats.



Generalmajor Franz Schlieper (1905-1974) was a German officer who began his military career as a Fahnenjunker on 1 October 1925, progressed through the ranks to Oberst by February 1943, and was promoted to Generalmajor on 1 December 1944, serving primarily in staff roles and infantry commands on the Eastern Front during World War II as the younger brother of Generalleutnant Fritz Albert Otto Schlieper; after early wartime assignments including service as Ia of the 253. Infanterie-Division and Ic of the 9. Armee, he took command of Infanterie-Regiment 94 (redesignated Grenadier-Regiment 94) in the 32. Infanterie-Division in August 1942, earning the Deutsches Kreuz in Gold on 10 January 1944 for his leadership during sustained defensive fighting, followed by temporary command of the 32. Infanterie-Division in early 1944, and later appointment on 27 July 1944 as Kommandeur of the newly formed Grenadier-Brigade 1132; his most distinguished recognition came on 21 September 1944 when, as Oberst and Kommandeur of Grenadier-Brigade 1132 while simultaneously acting as Führer (and from 27 September as mdFb) of the reconstituted 73. Infanterie-Division, he received the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes for his decisive leadership during intense urban and riverine defensive combat along the Vistula River line near Warsaw-Praga in September 1944 amid the final stages of the Warsaw Uprising and Soviet offensives, where he coordinated improvised grenadier and infantry elements to repel repeated assaults, hold key positions against numerically superior Soviet forces despite severe supply shortages, prevent encirclement, and inflict substantial losses on enemy armored units, thereby contributing to the stabilization of the sector before he assumed full command of the 73. Infanterie-Division, led it through subsequent retreats including actions in East Prussia, briefly commanded the 12. Luftwaffe-Feld-Division from April 1945, and surrendered to Soviet forces in May 1945, remaining in captivity until 1955.



Generalmajor Richard Schmidt (1899-1977), born on 29 April 1899 in Butschkowa in the province of Posen and who died on 7 November 1977 in Bad Ems, rose through the ranks after interwar police service to become a professional Wehrmacht officer, commanding the III. Bataillon of Infanterie-Regiment 473 within the 253. Infanterie-Division from August 1939 onward; as Major and Kommandeur of that battalion he received the Ehrenblattspange des Heeres und Waffen-SS for actions in Lithuania between 22 and 25 June 1941 and the Deutsches Kreuz in Gold in December 1941, before promotion to Oberstleutnant and assumption of command of the entire Infanterie-Regiment 473 in February 1942. In mid-September 1942, while serving as Kommandeur of Infanterie-Regiment 473 of the 253. Infanterie-Division near Rzhev, Oberstleutnant Schmidt personally directed the successful defeat of a major Soviet breakthrough attempt, an achievement that earned him the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 6 November 1942; he later held further regimental commands including Grenadier-Regiment 290 and Grenadier-Regiment 1037, assumed leadership of the 254. Infanterie-Division in December 1944, and was promoted to Generalmajor on 1 March 1945.Generalmajor Richard Schmidt, born on 29 April 1899 in Butschkowa in the province of Posen and who died on 7 November 1977 in Bad Ems, rose through the ranks after interwar police service to become a professional Wehrmacht officer, commanding the III. Bataillon of Infanterie-Regiment 473 within the 253. Infanterie-Division from August 1939 onward; as Major and Kommandeur of that battalion he received the Ehrenblattspange des Heeres und Waffen-SS for actions in Lithuania between 22 and 25 June 1941 and the Deutsches Kreuz in Gold in December 1941, before promotion to Oberstleutnant and assumption of command of the entire Infanterie-Regiment 473 in February 1942. In mid-September 1942, while serving as Kommandeur of Infanterie-Regiment 473 of the 253. Infanterie-Division near Rzhev, Oberstleutnant Schmidt personally directed the successful defeat of a major Soviet breakthrough attempt, an achievement that earned him the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 6 November 1942; he later held further regimental commands including Grenadier-Regiment 290 and Grenadier-Regiment 1037, assumed leadership of the 254. Infanterie-Division in December 1944, and was promoted to Generalmajor on 1 March 1945.

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LUFTWAFFE KLEINER ROCK


The Luftwaffe Kleiner Rock, often described as the Luftwaffe general's distinctive service tunic or "little coat," was a specialized double-breasted garment reserved exclusively for generals of the Luftwaffe along with medical officers, officials, and engineers of general rank, functioning as an elegant variant of the Waffenrock worn in lieu of the standard Tuchrock for formal and semi-formal occasions including the kleiner Dienstanzug, Ausgehanzug, and kleiner Gesellschaftsanzug. Made from premium Luftwaffe-blue or blue-grey gabardine cloth, this sophisticated piece featured a double-breasted cut with prominent large lapels typically white-lined or faced, deep turned-up cuffs, two pockets on the skirt, white piping in the generals' Waffenfarbe along the covered fly front and cuffs, gilded buttons, and a requirement for a white shirt beneath it, while being further adorned with a hand-embroidered gold bullion Luftwaffe breast eagle (Brustadler) above the right breast pocket as well as general-appropriate shoulder boards (Schulterstücke) and collar tabs (Kragenspiegel) such as those denoting Generaloberst. It contrasted sharply with the more utilitarian single-breasted or fly-fronted Fliegerbluse worn by flying personnel and the four-pocket Tuchrock of other officers, offering instead a refined undress service dress, walking-out dress, and informal evening full dress option that highlighted the wearer's elevated status through luxurious detailing and white piping accents. Typically paired with matching blue-grey trousers displaying broad white stripes known as Lampassen edged in white piping corresponding to the wearer's Waffenfarbe, the Kleiner Rock embodied the hierarchical and aesthetic distinctions in Luftwaffe uniform regulations from 1935 to 1945, providing a coat-like formality distinct from the longer grey-blue Mantel greatcoat—which shared some elements like Waffenfarbe breast-flap linings for generals but served primarily as outerwear—while allowing high-ranking officers a practical yet prestigious alternative for daily duties, parades, and social functions.



Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring (1893-1946), who held the position of Supreme Commander of the Luftwaffe, became the only recipient of the Großkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes during the Second World War when Adolf Hitler personally awarded him this decoration on 19 July 1940 during the Field Marshal Ceremony, in direct recognition of his leadership in directing the Luftwaffe to victory in the Battle of France as part of the broader Westfeldzug. Under Göring’s overall command the Luftwaffe secured decisive air superiority over the Low Countries and northern France, delivered intensive close air support to the advancing Panzer divisions and motorized infantry of the Heer, conducted targeted strikes against Allied airfields, troop concentrations, and supply lines, and played a major role in the encirclement and defeat of French and British forces including the operations that trapped Allied troops at Dunkirk, all of which contributed to the rapid collapse of organized resistance and the Fall of France in May and June 1940. On the same occasion Hitler simultaneously promoted Göring to the newly created rank of Reichsmarschall des Großdeutschen Reiches, placing him above every other German field marshal and confirming his pre-eminent status within the Wehrmacht hierarchy as a reward for these operational successes.



Generalfeldmarschall Robert Ritter von Greim (1892-1945) was a senior Luftwaffe officer who rose to command key air formations on both the Western and Eastern Fronts during the Second World War and earned the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes, the Eichenlaub and the Schwerter for his leadership in delivering effective close air support and coordinated operations in direct aid of ground forces. As Generalleutnant and Kommandierender General of the V. Flieger-Korps he directed intensive low-level attacks and tactical air support that materially assisted German army units in breaking through the heavily fortified Maginot Line during the 1940 campaign in France, actions for which he received the Ritterkreuz on 24 June 1940 as the 76th recipient. Transferred to the Eastern Front, he later served as Generaloberst and Befehlshaber of Luftwaffenkommando Ost (redesignated Luftflotte 6 on 6 May 1943) where he oversaw large-scale air operations in support of Heeresgruppe Mitte, including the commitment of roughly 730 aircraft during Operation Citadel at Kursk in July 1943; despite mounting attrition these sustained efforts earned him the Eichenlaub on 2 April 1943 as the 216th recipient. Continuing in command of Luftflotte 6 through the following year he maintained critical air-ground coordination and close support for Heeresgruppe Mitte amid increasingly difficult conditions and dwindling resources, achievements recognised by the award of the Schwerter on 28 August 1944 as the 92nd recipient, confirming his central role in sustaining Luftwaffe effectiveness on the central sector of the Eastern Front.



Generalfeldmarschall Erhard Milch (1892-1972), who rose through the ranks of the Luftwaffe after serving as Staatssekretär im Reichsluftfahrtministerium and playing a central role in its pre-war expansion and rearmament, received the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 4 May 1940 in recognition of his command performance during the opening weeks of the Second World War. Appointed Generaloberst and Befehlshaber Nord, Milch assumed command of Luftflotte 5 on 12 April 1940 and directed its air operations in support of Operation Weserübung, the German invasion of Denmark and Norway that began on 9 April. Under his leadership, Luftflotte 5 conducted coordinated strikes, airborne troop transports, and fighter protection despite severe weather and Allied naval opposition, rapidly securing key Norwegian airfields including Fornebu near Oslo and Sola near Stavanger as well as vital ports and supply routes. These efforts enabled the swift deployment of ground forces, neutralized early Allied counter-moves, and guaranteed control over Scandinavia’s northern flank together with uninterrupted access to Swedish iron-ore shipments essential for the German war economy. Milch’s effective integration of air power with the overall campaign plan produced the quick and decisive success of the operation, for which he was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes while still serving as chief of Luftflotte 5 and Befehlshaber Nord; this distinction came only weeks before his promotion to Generalfeldmarschall on 19 July 1940 following the fall of France.



Generalfeldmarschall Wolfram Freiherr von Richthofen (1895-1945), who rose through the ranks of the Luftwaffe to become one of its highest commanders during the Second World War, earned his Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes and subsequent Eichenlaub zum Ritterkreuz through exemplary leadership of the VIII. Fliegerkorps in providing close air support to ground operations. As Generalmajor and Kommandierender General of the VIII. Fliegerkorps, he received the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 17 May 1940 for the outstanding performance of his Fliegerkorps during the first days of the Battle of France, where its aircraft supported the Heer magnificently and played a major contribution to the German operational success, including crucial interventions that aided the capture of Calais and the encirclement efforts leading to Dunkirk. Later, as General der Flieger and still commanding the VIII. Fliegerkorps, he was awarded the Eichenlaub zum Ritterkreuz on 17 July 1941 for the distinguished service of his corps during the fighting in the Balkans and at Crete, where it was critical in delivering ground support to the beleaguered Fallschirmjäger of the airborne invasion and in launching devastating attacks on the British fleet surrounding the island, sinking or damaging several Royal Navy vessels and helping secure the success of the operation despite heavy losses. These awards recognized Richthofen's innovative integration of air power with fast-moving ground offensives, an approach he had refined earlier with the Condor Legion in Spain, which proved instrumental in the Wehrmacht's early victories and marked him as one of the Luftwaffe's foremost practitioners of tactical close air support before his later commands of larger formations and eventual promotion to Generalfeldmarschall.



Generalfeldmarschall Hugo Sperrle (1885-1953) was a senior Luftwaffe officer who began his military career in the Imperial German Army in 1903, served as an observer and pilot in World War I rising to the rank of Hauptmann, and later commanded the Condor Legion during the Spanish Civil War before taking command of Luftflotte 3 in February 1939 as General der Flieger and Oberbefehlshaber. In this role during the opening phase of the German offensive in the West that began on 10 May 1940, Sperrle directed Luftflotte 3's large-scale air operations in support of Army Groups A and C, employing over 1,700 aircraft to establish air superiority over the battlefield, conduct interdiction strikes against rail and road networks, and deliver close air support that enabled rapid ground advances including the decisive breakthrough at Sedan and the encirclement of Allied forces in Belgium and northern France. For these successes achieved under his command in the Battle of France, he was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 17 May 1940 while still serving as General der Flieger and Oberbefehlshaber of Luftflotte 3. Sperrle was promoted to Generalfeldmarschall on 19 July 1940 shortly after the French capitulation, continued to lead Luftflotte 3 through the Battle of Britain, the Blitz, and later defensive operations in the West until his dismissal in August 1944, and was ultimately acquitted of war crimes charges following his capture in 1945.



Generaloberst Alfred Keller (1882-1974) was a senior Luftwaffe officer whose long military career spanned the Imperial German Army, the interwar period, and the Second World War. Born in Bochum, he began service as a cadet in 1897, qualified as a pilot in 1913, and during the First World War rose to command bomber units including Bombengeschwader der Obersten Heeresleitung BG 1, pioneering night bombing tactics against targets such as Dunkirk and Paris; these operations earned him both classes of the Iron Cross, the House Order of Hohenzollern with Swords, and the Pour le Mérite on 4 December 1917. In the interwar years he contributed to the secret rebuilding of German aviation and, after the Nazi seizure of power, helped organize the new Luftwaffe, commanding early bomber units before rising to Generalleutnant and then General der Flieger by 1939. At the outbreak of war he took command of the IV. Fliegerkorps on 13 October 1939 and led it through the Polish Campaign; during the subsequent Westfeldzug the corps, operating primarily in the Netherlands and Belgium as part of Luftflotte 2, delivered decisive close air support, achieved air superiority, and enabled rapid ground advances through coordinated strikes on enemy airfields, fortifications, and supply lines. For these achievements and the superlative performance of the units under his command as Kommandierender General des IV. Fliegerkorps, Keller was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 24 June 1940; he was promoted to Generaloberst on 19 July 1940. He went on to command Luftflotte 1 from August 1940, directing operations in the Battle of Britain, the Balkans, and the opening phases of Operation Barbarossa in support of Heeresgruppe Nord, before retiring from frontline command in June 1943 and later serving as Korpsführer of the NSFK until the end of the war. Captured by British forces in 1945, he was held as a prisoner until 1947 and in later years became a prominent figure among recipients of the Ritterkreuz.



Generaloberst Ernst Udet (1896-1941) was a distinguished German aviator who first gained fame as a fighter pilot in the Imperial German Air Service during the First World War, where he scored 62 confirmed aerial victories to become the second-highest-scoring German ace after Manfred von Richthofen, serving in units such as Jasta 37 and Jasta 4 under commanders including von Richthofen and later Hermann Göring, and earning decorations such as the Pour le Mérite before transitioning in the interwar years to stunt flying, barnstorming, and aircraft manufacturing; upon the formation of the Luftwaffe he joined the Nazi Party in 1933 and rose rapidly through its ranks, becoming a key advocate for dive-bombing tactics and the development of the Junkers Ju 87 Stuka, eventually appointed Generalluftzeugmeister responsible for aircraft procurement, armament, and supply across numerous departments, a role in which his organizational influence contributed significantly to the Luftwaffe's early operational effectiveness. On 4 July 1940 he was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes in recognition of his outstanding leadership and contributions to the Luftwaffe's successes in the opening campaigns of the Second World War, particularly the rapid victories achieved during the Western Campaign that culminated in the fall of France, after which he was promoted to the rank of Generaloberst; however, the immense administrative pressures of his position, combined with production shortfalls and internal conflicts, led to personal difficulties including alcoholism, and he died by suicide on 17 November 1941 in Berlin.

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KRIEGSMARINE ADMIRALSMANTEL


The Kriegsmarine Admiralsmantel, or Admiral’s greatcoat or overcoat, was the formal heavy outer garment worn by flag officers of Nazi Germany’s navy from 1935 to 1945. Crafted from high-quality dark navy-blue wool in a heavy officer-grade fabric, it was typically double-breasted with two rows of six gilt anchor-embossed gold buttons, a knee-length or seven-eighths cut for practicality aboard ship or in harsh maritime conditions, fully lined often in black rayon, with slash side pockets, French cuffs in many examples, and built-in dagger hangers concealed under one pocket flap. Its most distinctive feature, regulated under the 1936 Kriegsmarine uniform directives and rooted in longstanding German naval tradition, was the bright cornflower-blue or light-blue wool lapel facings, which immediately identified the wearer as an admiral (Konteradmiral and above) and set the coat apart from those of lower-ranking officers or other Wehrmacht branches. Officers usually acquired these coats privately for superior tailoring and fit; they were worn over the service tunic or frock coat for protection against cold, wind, and rain during operations, inspections, or formal duties, and featured sew-in shoulder boards displaying the appropriate rank insignia such as interwoven silver cords and pips. Rare surviving originals, such as those once displayed in museums, often bear 1940-dated buttons and show signs of wartime use, underscoring their role as both functional protective clothing and potent symbols of authority within the Kriegsmarine’s rigid hierarchy, worn by leaders including Grand Admirals Erich Raeder and Karl Dönitz.



Großadmiral Karl Dönitz (1891-1980), who would later serve as Oberbefehlshaber der Kriegsmarine, first received the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 21 April 1940 while holding the rank of Konteradmiral and serving as Befehlshaber der U-Boote, an award granted specifically for the outstanding successes of the U-boats under his command against the British fleet and Allied merchant shipping in the opening months of the war, including notable early sinkings that demonstrated the effectiveness of his centralized control and tactical innovations such as coordinated submarine operations from French bases after the fall of France. Building on these foundations, Dönitz was awarded the Eichenlaub zum Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 6 April 1943 as the 223rd recipient while serving simultaneously as Großadmiral, Oberbefehlshaber der Kriegsmarine, and Befehlshaber der U-Boote, in recognition of his overall achievements as leader of the U-Boat arm and the cumulative successes of his forces, particularly during the height of the Battle of the Atlantic where wolfpack tactics enabled U-boats to inflict heavy losses on Allied convoys in periods known as the First and Second Happy Times, sinking hundreds of thousands of gross register tons through persistent pressure on merchant shipping lanes despite increasing Allied countermeasures. These decorations highlighted Dönitz’s pivotal role in transforming the U-boat service into a strategic weapon capable of challenging Allied naval supremacy through disciplined training, radio-directed pack attacks, and relentless operational focus, even as the broader conflict evolved and resources strained under the demands of total war.


Generaladmiral Rolf Carls (1885-1945), who had entered naval service as a Seekadett in April 1903 and distinguished himself during the First World War first as an artillery officer aboard the cruiser Breslau operating with the Ottoman Navy in the Black Sea and later as commander of the submarines U-9 and U-124, rose through the interwar ranks of the Reichsmarine and Kriegsmarine to reach the position of Admiral and Oberbefehlshaber of Marinegruppenkommando Ost on 31 October 1939, succeeding Vizeadmiral Conrad Albrecht as Commanding Admiral of the Naval Station of the Baltic Sea and Commander-in-Chief East. In the months leading up to and during the opening phase of the Second World War he played a central part in the naval planning for Operation Weserübung, the German invasion of Denmark and Norway launched in April 1940; according to the official press announcement of 15 June 1940 he served as director of the operational leadership staff of the Marinegruppen-Kommando West, where his swift and energetic action laid the groundwork for the subsequent fleet operations and created the essential preconditions for the coordinated combined operation of the three Wehrmacht branches in Norway while ensuring the secure logistical transport of troops and supplies without major losses. These achievements were recognised when he was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 14 June 1940 while still serving as Admiral and Oberbefehlshaber of Marinegruppenkommando Ost. He was promoted to Generaladmiral on 19 July 1940, assumed command of the re-designated Marinegruppenkommando Nord, and continued in senior operational roles until his honourable retirement from active service on 31 May 1943; he was killed together with many civilians during a British air raid on Bad Oldesloe on 24 April 1945.



Generaladmiral Otto Schniewind (1887-1964) was a German naval officer who rose through the ranks of the Kaiserliche Marine, Reichsmarine, serving with distinction in both world wars and playing a pivotal role in high-level naval planning during the early years of the Second World War. Born in Saarlouis, he entered the Imperial German Navy in 1907 as a Seekadett, saw extensive action in World War I aboard torpedo boats including as Wachoffizier on S 24 and later as Kommandant of a destroyer with the rank of Kapitänleutnant, participated in the Scuttling of the German fleet at Scapa Flow as squadron commander, and endured British captivity before continuing his career in the interwar period with commands such as the light cruiser Köln and staff positions including Chef des Stabes der Seekriegsleitung. Promoted to Vizeadmiral on 1 January 1940, Schniewind earned the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 20 April 1940 (sometimes cited as 21 April) primarily for his outstanding contributions as chief of staff of the Seekriegsleitung in the Oberkommando der Marine, where his strategic expertise and leadership were instrumental in the meticulous planning and successful execution of Unternehmen Weserübung, the audacious German invasion of Denmark and Norway in April 1940 that secured vital northern flanks and resources despite fierce Allied opposition and demonstrated the Kriegsmarine's ability to coordinate complex amphibious operations under wartime pressures. He later succeeded Günther Lütjens as Flottenchef after the loss of the Bismarck, commanded Marinegruppenkommando Nord, was promoted to Generaladmiral in March 1944, and was relieved of active duty later that year; postwar he faced trial in the High Command Trial for his involvement in Weserübung but was acquitted, subsequently contributing to naval historical work before passing away in Linz am Rhein.
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SS-GENERALSMANTEL


The SS-Generalsmantel was the specialized greatcoat, or Mantel, worn by general-rank officers of the Schutzstaffel from Brigadeführer to Oberst-Gruppenführer, serving as both a practical outer garment and a symbol of elite status within the Allgemeine-SS and Waffen-SS during the 1930s and World War II. In the Allgemeine-SS it typically took the form of a long, elegant, double-breasted black wool or gabardine coat reaching calf length with a contrasting collar facing, French cuffs, silver buttons, and full lining including internal pockets, while the Waffen-SS variant adopted a field-grey gabardine or wool construction modeled on Wehrmacht M36 or M40 patterns but distinguished by SS-specific details such as buff wool collar facings in some styles or light grey lapels. Rank was prominently displayed through collar tabs revised in 1942 to feature three straight oak leaves with zero to three pips for the various general grades, Wehrmacht-style gold shoulder boards (replacing earlier narrow silver-braided SS patterns except for Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler), a left-upper-arm sleeve eagle, and frequently cuff titles or branch markings, all sewn onto the garment which also included belt hooks, side slits for daggers or sabers, and options for leather or rain-protection variants in bad weather. Introduced as part of the evolving SS uniform regulations in the early 1930s under Heinrich Himmler and refined through the pre-war and wartime periods, the SS-Generalsmantel was worn over service tunics for formal parades, inspections, staff duties, and field command in Waffen-SS units, underscoring the organization's paramilitary prestige and distinction from standard Wehrmacht greatcoats while allowing for seasonal adaptations such as summer capes for officers.



SS-Obergruppenführer Erich von dem Bach-Zelewski (1899-1972), born Erich Julius Eberhard von Zelewski on 1 March 1899, was a high-ranking SS officer who advanced to SS-Obergruppenführer und General der Polizei and later General der Waffen-SS, serving as Higher SS and Police Leader for Russia-Mitte and chief of the Bandenkampfverbände responsible for anti-partisan operations across occupied Eastern Europe. In early August 1944 he assumed command of German forces suppressing the Warsaw Uprising, establishing and leading Korpsgruppe "von dem Bach" that incorporated battle groups under officers including Heinz Reinefarth and notorious units such as the SS-Sonderregiment Dirlewanger. Through personal bravery and prudent yet successful leadership of his subordinated units, he directed the swift encirclement and reduction of the Polish insurgents amid more than two months of intense urban combat that culminated in the near-total destruction of Warsaw and the deaths of roughly 200,000 civilians. This operation decisively influenced the operational situation of the Armee engaged in the sector and enabled him to accept the surrender of General Tadeusz Bór-Komorowski on 4 October 1944. For these achievements as Kommandierender General of Korpsgruppe "von dem Bach", he was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 30 September 1944, as recorded in the official press notice that praised SS-Obergruppenführer und General der Polizei Erich von dem Bach for his distinguished service in the fighting for Warsaw.



Source :
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