Last year while visiting Volgograd/Stalingrad, I bought this German cup from a local digger friend. As can be seen, there is an inscription on it. The finder unfortunately did not remember the exact location of discovery, because it was only long after finding it that he noticed the inscription. It had however been found within the limits of the Stalingrad Pocket, in a former German dug out, with any body associated with it.
It is common to find named American fieldgear, that is very easy to research as numerous online databases are availlable and each soldier had a unique serial number. German field gear is less often named, and since only names of killed soldiers can be found online and there was no unique serial number, research usualy yiealds no results. If one is lucky and the name is rare or the context of discovery is known, research can also be successfull however (for example http://dev.wehrmacht-awards.com/foru...ghlight=sputek ). Considering the very large percentage of soldiers involved at Stalingrad who died, it is however particularly likely that items found there can be matched with names of casualties.
The case of this cup at first seemed rather hopeless to me as the inscription looked very difficult to read. With a bit of concentration I figured that it must be: JohLöwenstädt 2206?.
So the name must have been Johann Löwenstädt. As for the numbers, 2206?, it was perhaps 22 June 1941, the day of the invasion of Russia,? But the 41 seemed very unclear, looking more like a 7. My next idea was that it may be a Feldpostnummer, and after checking it indeed turned out that Feldpostnummer 22067 correspondes to 1st Company of Panzergrenadier Regiment 26, of the 24th Panzer Division, that was destroyed at Stalingrad.
It is common to find named American fieldgear, that is very easy to research as numerous online databases are availlable and each soldier had a unique serial number. German field gear is less often named, and since only names of killed soldiers can be found online and there was no unique serial number, research usualy yiealds no results. If one is lucky and the name is rare or the context of discovery is known, research can also be successfull however (for example http://dev.wehrmacht-awards.com/foru...ghlight=sputek ). Considering the very large percentage of soldiers involved at Stalingrad who died, it is however particularly likely that items found there can be matched with names of casualties.
The case of this cup at first seemed rather hopeless to me as the inscription looked very difficult to read. With a bit of concentration I figured that it must be: JohLöwenstädt 2206?.
So the name must have been Johann Löwenstädt. As for the numbers, 2206?, it was perhaps 22 June 1941, the day of the invasion of Russia,? But the 41 seemed very unclear, looking more like a 7. My next idea was that it may be a Feldpostnummer, and after checking it indeed turned out that Feldpostnummer 22067 correspondes to 1st Company of Panzergrenadier Regiment 26, of the 24th Panzer Division, that was destroyed at Stalingrad.
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