I had noticed this postcard on Ebay.de, and I knew that there was something odd about it. The cuff title was to be guessed as being made up of a short word followed by a long one, which matches "Nva Wachregiment" and the white piping on the shoulder boards made me certain that it was either the Engels or the Eberlein regiments. And yet there was something I could not quite account for....
I received it today...
The occasion is obviously a swearing in ceremony or Vereidigung. The cuff title is obviously the one I had guessed, so no surprises there. But if one looks carefully one notices that the belts must be the grey ones. These were indeed used for parades too for a certain period in the 1960s before they saw the errors of their ways ... but what I found most striking were the trousers: these are not Stiefelhose, but long trousers.
The fold with which the trousers is pulled at the back crease and folded towards the front and outwards before being stuffed into the Knobelbecher is just about visible. The boots too look like EM ones, but the trousers are the main evidence. Now all these things put together militate towards the entire uniform being made of Filz and not gabardine, that is in its being idenbtical to that of any other ordinary enlisted man in the NVA... EXCEPT... for the addition of the cuff-title
I had a suspicion that something like this had happened for the Felixe at some stage. Indeed David_H had even provided examples of removable cuff titles, but this one looks a bit more securely attached.
Why was this done? Perhaps soldiers wore these uniforms during their basic training and only switched to the finer gabardine ones later on. hard to tell now. I have a suspicion that these must be from the Eberlein regiment, but it is merely a suspicion...
Well there you are... another pointless detail about the Wachregiment
I received it today...
The occasion is obviously a swearing in ceremony or Vereidigung. The cuff title is obviously the one I had guessed, so no surprises there. But if one looks carefully one notices that the belts must be the grey ones. These were indeed used for parades too for a certain period in the 1960s before they saw the errors of their ways ... but what I found most striking were the trousers: these are not Stiefelhose, but long trousers.
The fold with which the trousers is pulled at the back crease and folded towards the front and outwards before being stuffed into the Knobelbecher is just about visible. The boots too look like EM ones, but the trousers are the main evidence. Now all these things put together militate towards the entire uniform being made of Filz and not gabardine, that is in its being idenbtical to that of any other ordinary enlisted man in the NVA... EXCEPT... for the addition of the cuff-title
I had a suspicion that something like this had happened for the Felixe at some stage. Indeed David_H had even provided examples of removable cuff titles, but this one looks a bit more securely attached.
Why was this done? Perhaps soldiers wore these uniforms during their basic training and only switched to the finer gabardine ones later on. hard to tell now. I have a suspicion that these must be from the Eberlein regiment, but it is merely a suspicion...
Well there you are... another pointless detail about the Wachregiment
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