By nostrils do you mean beak? Since originals were produced right up to the 1960s for purchase by those eligible for them, variations on the enamel exist. There's a well-known early 1960s catalogue from orders supplier Friedrich Sedlaczek Nachfolger offering this cross for sale along with all the other major WWI merit crosses. As I understand it, red talons, tongue and beak denote WWI and early post-WWI issue. While black talons, tongue and beak denote later issue through to the 1960s. However, I've also seen black beaks with red talons and red beaks with black talons, which might be earlier post WWI variations. Then there's the whole issue around the flat vs. the round suspension ring.
At 8-10,000 awarded (compared to 20,000 from Bremen and more than 50,000 for Hamburg) it is the rarest of the three. While issue version are comparatively harder the find, given the longevity of production and the propensity of German veterans to 'bling out', especially during the Weimar and Third Reich periods, the numbers of these around in all forms is greater than one would normally expect.
At 8-10,000 awarded (compared to 20,000 from Bremen and more than 50,000 for Hamburg) it is the rarest of the three. While issue version are comparatively harder the find, given the longevity of production and the propensity of German veterans to 'bling out', especially during the Weimar and Third Reich periods, the numbers of these around in all forms is greater than one would normally expect.
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