Afrikakorps Luftwaffe One-Piece Cloth Cap Eagle Insignia
CATEGORY: Version
SKU: 23.GOR.03.01.03.001.001
Estimated market value:
Estimated market value:
Machine embroidered on tan linen-twill cloth backing, in near mint condition.
During the Second World War, German troops stationed in northern Africa are generally referred to as the Afrikakorps. Technically, this is not entirely correct, since some German units operating in Africa were not actually part of the DAK (Deutsches Afrikakorps), and some units of it were, in fact, Italian ones. However, for the purpose of collecting so-called “tropical” uniforms and insignia, collectors have simplified the meaning of the term.
The first German troops were sent to northern Africa in February of 1941, to support their Italian allies against the British. The climate of the African continent made it necessary to wear specialised uniforms and gear that not only supported the soldiers in serving in a hot and arid environment, but also helped them in blending in with the landscape, which, in general, presented itself as brown, olive, khaki, or sand/tan in colour. Worn over long periods of time under the blistering desert sun, some uniforms were eventually bleached to white or off-white. Uniforms and insignia in these colours are often referred to as “tropical”, and it is worth noting that they weren’t just worn by members of units stationed in Africa, but in the entire Mediterranean theatre of war, including southern France, Italy, the Balkans, and Greece, as well as in southern Russia during the summer months. Tropical uniforms were worn by members of all three branches of the Wehrmacht: the Heer (army), the Kriegsmarine (navy), and the Luftwaffe (air force). Members of the Waffen-SS stationed in southerly regions also wore tropical-style uniforms, and even though they technically have no connection to the DAK, all tropical uniforms and insignia of all branches of the German military are listed here.
General ranks wore gold-coloured insignia, while Officer ranks wore silver-coloured insignia. NCO/EM ranks wore embroidered eagles made of off-white or grey thread. General and Officer ranks had their embroidered eagles made of bullion wire.
The embroidered eagles come on a cloth backing that is in the colour of the uniform it was used on: blue-grey for the regular uniform, white for the summer uniform, tan for the tropical uniform, and white eagles on black for uniforms of members of the “Hermann Göring” Division.
On the Visored Field Caps of NCO/EM ranks a combined or “one-piece” eagle and cockade combination (without oak leaf wreath and wings) on a trapeze backing was worn.
Comments
Sign in to comment and reply.
Scroll Top