I've had this card for 15-20 years. Am I correct in assuming it's some form of Christmas greeting from the commanding officer of some kreigsmarine unit to his men? Notice the embossing that I tried to show in the second photo. It reads"ETCIEAANEC", maybe something to do with the paper manufacturer or type of paper. It's an interesting and I haven't seen another like it.
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Kreigsmarine Christmas Card
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Yes, it is a "Christmas/remember your man" card. Actually , the Frau was supposed to imagine/believe he somehow was there with her and the kinder
War Holy-night = a War Christmas
"Weihnacht(Holy-Night) was the accepted NSDAP term for Christmas (as in the traditional Christmas, but just not using the term that had "Christ" in it...Weihnacht was known as a variant for Christmas before NSDAP but Hitler liked it as it did not have the religico-ideological baggage of pro-Christ term. And the ancient term Weih was used by Germans for "Holy" before ancient Germans were forced to become Christians en masse by their own rulers).
Note the looming presence of the soldier (who is far away on the front or naval boat -in this instance) even though he is not there in corporeal form.
This type of visual was typical for the war Xmas
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Hi,
Weihnachten is the right German expression and has nothing to do with NSDAP or permission
It was used before the TR and is still used today.
English: Christmas
German: Weihnachten
The term Weihnachten and its usage can be traced down in documents to the early 12th century.
An other expression is "Christfest" but this is and was used only in some areas of Germany.
Anyway a nice card !
Regards
Christian
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Why
Originally posted by Michael Fay View PostIn the old days I would have provided the citations from the academic press/university peer-reviewed books I got my information from. But it is just not worth it .
Increasingly, I am confronted by the fact that I should not share at all.
The "Xmas" card is nice.
I have not said you are wrong. You are right in the fact about the origin of "Weih" as well as it was an accepted term.
What I said is that long before the NSDAP, "Weihnachten " as a term was used commonly: much more wider than Christfest
One of the first sources used this term is the poet Sperrvogel at around 1170.
Academic source ? Des Minnesangs Frühling, herausgegeben von Karl Lachmann, 1857Attached Files
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Riddle...
Originally posted by Garry Nelson View PostINotice the embossing that I tried to show in the second photo. It reads"ETCIEAANEC".
ETCIEAANNEC...
.....ET CIE A ANNE C ?
"ET CIE" in french means "and companions" and is a legal part of a company name.
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Originally posted by Michael Fay View PostIn the old days I would have provided the citations from the academic press/university peer-reviewed books I got my information from. But it is just not worth it .
Increasingly, I am confronted by the fact that I should not share at all.
The "Xmas" card is nice.
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Agree with Christian, IMO this paper holds the watermark of the famous french paperwork company Aussedat and the full watermark that you would read if the card were not cut is "AUSSEDAT ET CIE A ANNECY
AUSSEDAT = company name
ET CIE = and companions
A = à = located in
ANNECY = city of Annecy in France, well know because of its lake, situated 20 km south of Geneva (Switzerland)
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riddle solved !
Originally posted by glaser View PostAgree with Christian, IMO this paper holds the watermark of the famous french paperwork company Aussedat and the full watermark that you would read if the card were not cut is "AUSSEDAT ET CIE A ANNECY
AUSSEDAT = company name
ET CIE = and companions
A = à = located in
ANNECY = city of Annecy in France, well know because of its lake, situated 20 km south of Geneva (Switzerland)
great work !
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