Anhalt Labour Service Belt Buckle
SKU: 80.GOR.02.01.02.01.03.001
Estimated market value:
Estimated market value:
Attributes
History
The RAD (Reichsarbeitsdienst = Reich Labour Service) was officially established on June 26, 1935 as the sole, and compulsory, labour service of Germany. Its purposes were to help the economy, curb unemployment, and indoctrinate its members with the NSDAP ideology, as well as play its part in militarising the German population.
The FAD (Freiwilliger Arbeitsdienst = Voluntary Labour Service) was the precursor of the RAD in the early 1930s. Official uniform regulations were first introduced on October 1, 1933, with modifications made in July 1934. It is also known as NSAD (Nationalsozialistischer Arbeitsdienst = National Socialist Labour Service).
The earliest uniforms were a not entirely successful attempt at standardisation. They gave way to a second wave of FAD uniforms that, when the RAD was established, experienced no significant changes.
The Anhalt Labour Service (Anhalt Arbeitsdienst, AAD) was established in July of 1932 as a regional precursor of the RAD. The belt buckle was worn by all members, and discontinued with the founding of the RAD.
The belt buckle is rectangular, a one-piece stamped steel buckle with a pebbled field, featuring a motif of a flat-edged spade with vertical wheat ears inside a circle.
Versions
$550 USD
Nickel-Silver
65x50mm
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