Luftwaffe Paratrooper Badge, by Brüder Schneider

SKU: 01.GTR.0707.101.03

Estimated market value:

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  • Luftwaffe Paratrooper Badge, by Brüder Schneider Obverse
  • Luftwaffe Paratrooper Badge, by Brüder Schneider Reverse
  • Luftwaffe Paratrooper Badge, by Brüder Schneider Obverse
  • Luftwaffe Paratrooper Badge, by Brüder Schneider Reverse
  • Luftwaffe Paratrooper Badge, by Brüder Schneider Detail
  • Luftwaffe Paratrooper Badge, by Brüder Schneider Detail
  • Luftwaffe Paratrooper Badge, by Brüder Schneider Detail

Attributes

  • country
    Germany
  • date of institution
    November 5, 1936

History


The Luftwaffe Paratrooper Badge was instituted by Hermann Göring on November 5, 1936. It is a qualification badge that was awarded for those that successfully passed the tests to become a paratrooper. In order to do that, a soldier had to have six confirmed parachute jumps to his name.

Later regulations state that officially every owner of a Paratrooper Badge had to repeat this feat inside every 12 months period, otherwise they were to return their badge. However, there is no evidence that this was actually enforced. In fact, in the later years of the war the Luftwaffe Paratrooper Badge could be awarded to any soldier that was part of a paratrooper unit, even those that did not receive parachutist training, but were merely assigned to the unit as a medic or driver.

The initial regulations stated that the wreath of the badge was to be made of oxidized Neusilber. Neusilber, also known as nickel silver, is an alloy of brass and nickel, and does not in fact contain actual silver. Oxidizing nickel silver darkens it and gives it an antique look. The eagle was to be made of gilded brass.

In September of 1937, this was changed. Now, the entire badge was to be made of aluminum, with the wreath still in an antique silver look and the eagle still gilded. Some companies also experimented with cupal, which is not an alloy, but a composite material of an aluminum base with a thin copper plating.

With material shortages worsening as the war went on, by 1942 most badges were now made from a lower quality and abundant material, zinc.

Since most companies produced a plethora of different variants and variations, not necessarily all of them can and will be displayed here.

Badges by Brüder Schneider are very rare. So far, they have only been encountered in a single material combination, a nickel silver wreath and a brass eagle.

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Versions

  • Price

    $1200 USD

  • Composition

    Brass gilt/Nickel Silver

  • Inscription

  • Size

    41.5x53mm

  • Maker

    Brüder Schneider A.G., Wien

  • Version Remarks

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