The large badge at left was worn on the left upper sleeve by "command and senior command" (officers and generals) of the NKVD Militia--the civil public order police-- between 1939 and 1943. The same ranks wore matching visor cap star at upper left--with a 1930s-early WW2 two piece Red Army officer's cap star for size comparison.
It is believed that this size of Militia cap badge was reduced to matching the army size in 1943. Unfortunately, police uniforms remain under-researched, and the pioneer study by L. Tokar has some serious errors for the wartime period. Certainly, by 1947 the police cap stars (with M1946 state seal) were of the smaller size.
The sleeve badge should have been designed with pairs of holes to have been sewn on and off for cleaning-- instead, with the typical Soviet destructive system of jamming screwposts and thick metal tabs through clothing, it originally had three split flat prongs for attachment. These have broken off, probably at the time of wear, due to inferior brittle steel, and been replaced by a single long steel wire. Note that the "potato" in the center of the globe is typical of the random blobs that will be found-- it is supposed to be a map of the Soviet Union, but the clear enamel covering it and the pale blue of the rest of the globe often ran together like this. It is NOT chipped--there is clear enamel over the copper colored metal finish.
Insignia of this period is almost invariably gilt steel, not brass.
It is believed that this size of Militia cap badge was reduced to matching the army size in 1943. Unfortunately, police uniforms remain under-researched, and the pioneer study by L. Tokar has some serious errors for the wartime period. Certainly, by 1947 the police cap stars (with M1946 state seal) were of the smaller size.
The sleeve badge should have been designed with pairs of holes to have been sewn on and off for cleaning-- instead, with the typical Soviet destructive system of jamming screwposts and thick metal tabs through clothing, it originally had three split flat prongs for attachment. These have broken off, probably at the time of wear, due to inferior brittle steel, and been replaced by a single long steel wire. Note that the "potato" in the center of the globe is typical of the random blobs that will be found-- it is supposed to be a map of the Soviet Union, but the clear enamel covering it and the pale blue of the rest of the globe often ran together like this. It is NOT chipped--there is clear enamel over the copper colored metal finish.
Insignia of this period is almost invariably gilt steel, not brass.
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