By Sebastián Bianchi
Throughout the
Third Reich period the Wehrmacht bestowed on its members a very detailed
set of identity documents and licenses. The military system was influenced by a German national tradition
of comprehensive (and often redundant) documentation, a tradition that the
Nazi infrastructure took to new levels. Because these document contained essential information, a certain
degree of familiarity with them is key for collectors and historians of
the period. It is not
the goal of these pages to cover these papers items in great depth, but
rather to introduce the main documents and the roles they fulfilled.
By the middle of the 19th century, the German Imperial Army had
instituted the Identity Tag (Erkennungsmarke) and the Military Pass (Militarpass),
to identify and record careers of military men.
The rearmament decrees of the 1930’s expanded on this foundation. In particular, the May 1935 Defense Law (Wehrgesetz) and
March 1936 Decree Concerning Recruitment and Conscription (Verordnung
Ueber die Musterung und Aushebung) added to the repertoire of identity
documents, with the last decree including the institution of a Wehrpass that contained more
information than any similar document had in the past.
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