Kriegsmarine Line Officer Oberleutnant Shoulder Boards

CATEGORY: Version

SKU: 21.GOR.03.02.02.02.005.000

Estimated market value:

$80 USD

  • Kriegsmarine Line Officer Oberleutnant Shoulder Boards Obverse
  • Kriegsmarine Line Officer Oberleutnant Shoulder Boards Reverse
  • Kriegsmarine Line Officer Oberleutnant Shoulder Boards

Estimated market value:

$80 USD

Attributes

  • Country
    Germany
  • Size
    110x30mm

Physical Description and Item Details


A set of Kriegsmarine Oberleutnant shoulder boards, each constructed of cardboard-reinforced black wool, bearing four bands of silver aluminum wire piping, pinned with a gilded bronze rank pip and gilded magnetic metal button with a raised anchor, both unmarked and measuring 32 mm (w) x 110 mm (l), in near extremely fine condition.

History


The headgear, uniforms, and insignia worn by members of the Kriegsmarine were based upon the designs utilized by the Kaiserliche Marine (Imperial Navy) and the Reichsmarine of the Weimar Republic. The official regulations governing the uniforms of the Reichsmarine were issued on April 5, 1921, and they were embraced, with a few alterations, as the Kriegsmarine uniforms in 1935.

The first regulations concerning the shoulder boards of officers were issued in 1933, but they were altered several times throughout the interim years and during the war.

Shoulder boards or straps were first and foremost used to identify a soldier’s rank. In certain cases they would also identify the soldier’s branch and unit, and potentially his specific role/career.
Shoulder straps were worn by lower ranks, whereas shoulder boards were worn by higher ranks. The difference lies in the quality of the material, the more elaborate look of the shoulder boards, and the fact that shoulder boards were padded and therefore more stiff, while shoulder straps generally were not. For the sake of simplicity, the terms will be used interchangeably.
Shoulder straps differ in size due to varying production methods and materials, the amount of pips and cyphers they have to hold, and even the wearer’s shoulder size.
The Kriegsmarine shoulder boards were manufactured in three distinct styles, sew-in, slip-on, and pass-through. The boards on the tropical uniform were generally button-on.

The Kriegsmarine used four different uniform types, distinguishable by colour. The shoulder boards will differ from each other depending on what type of uniform they were intended for. The main uniform was navy blue in colour and features shoulder boards with a dark blue underlay. Shoulder boards for the white uniform are very similar, except that they have a white underlay. The brown tropical uniform and the field-grey uniform used mostly by Coastal Artillery units came with shoulder boards that somewhat differed from those of the blue and white uniforms, and will be covered towards the end of this description.

In the Kriegsmarine, shoulder boards were used by soldiers of every rank. An exception were the lowest ranks, the Enlisted Men (EMs), known collectively as Matrosen (seamen), who were only issued shoulder boards with the field-grey uniform and, on occasion, the tropical brown uniform.

Shoulder boards for officer ranks were made of silver, grey, or gold-coloured cords. The underlay was the same colour as that of the uniform. The cords of admirals usually had a dark blue underlay. Exceptions have been observed, for example admiral rank shoulder boards with a field-grey underlay for the field-grey uniform, but this is very uncommon.
Shoulder boards of other, lower than admiral officer ranks were influenced by the colour of the uniform. On the blue and white uniforms officers wore bright silver cords, while on the field-grey uniform they wore matte silver or matte grey cords, and on the brown tropical uniform they wore matte grey cords until April of 1942, after which the cords worn on the blue uniform were also allowed.

Shoulder board career insignia cyphers for officers were made of metal. They were silvered for admiral ranks and gold-coloured for all other officers, which is the opposite of what was used on epaulettes.
The shoulder board career insignia cyphers for officers were as follows:
Administration: a mercurian staff
Artillery Ordnance: two crossed gun barrels
Communications: a lightning bolt
Communications Engineering: a lightning bolt with a superimposed cog wheel
Defensive Ordnance: a mine
Engineering: a cog wheel
Line Officers: a star, or no cypher at all
Medical: a caduceus
Naval Artillery: a winged flaming shell
Torpedo Technicians: a cog wheel with a superimposed torpedo

The shoulder boards of field grade officers consist of two parallel flat cords intertwined with five bends at the sides and two at the bottom. The shoulder boards for the rank of Kapitän zur See have two pips, one above and one below the career insignia cypher. Those for Fregattenkapitän have one pip below the cypher. Those for the rank of Korvettenkapitän have no pips.

The shoulder boards of company grade officers consist of four parallel cords that are rounded at the end. The innermost cord forms the buttonhole. The shoulder boards for the rank of Kapitänleutnant have two pips, one above and one below the career insignia cypher. Those for the rank of Oberleutnant have one pip below the cypher. Those for the rank of Leutnant have no pips.

Shoulder boards for the brown tropical uniform were in the style of the field-grey uniform shoulder boards, but with a brown underlay. Officers’ boards were made of matte grey cords. NCO tress is cornflower blue. By April of 1942, the shoulder boards of the blue uniform were prescribed for the brown tropical uniform in order to save material.

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