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Gau Warthe Commemorative Badge
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WOW!!! THE GAU WARTHE GAU BADGE IS AS YOU DESCRIBE IT-THE MOST STUNNING OF ALL OF THE GAU BADGES. WHAT A WONDERFUL PIECE TO SHARE WITH THE FORUM. IT LOOKS NOTHING LIKE THE FAKE ONES MADE IN THE 60'S. FOR THAT TIME PERIOD, THEY WERE WELL MADE. HOWEVER, NEXT TO THIS PIECE, THERE IS NO COMPARISON.
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Hi Ron,
I concur, this is a rare beast and one of the nicer designs from the period. I've never had the pleasure of handling one personally, hence my experience is limited. However this one seem to differ quite significantly from others I've seen illustrated i.g Niemann and Angolia. The major differences are the obverse design, the pin, the rivets and Nr instead of No.
Two versions are mentioned by Angolia, one with four rivets and one with eight, including a couple of other differences. Is there any info out there about the possibilty of two different versions of the 2nd type, presented in this thread and the supposed manufacturer(s)?
KR
Peter
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I have only had the opportunity to examine one of these. The wreath/backplate combination was hollow. I am saying it was made like an imperial badge with a backplate soldered to hollow wreath and eagle support backing. The entire badge was very light for it's size.
I did not undo the pin, so cannot say if it was marked or not.
Bob HritzIn the land of the blind, the one eyed man is king.
Duct tape can't fix stupid, but it can muffle the sound.
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Gau Wartheland
According to Nimmergut, three different types of badges were produced. The first one is the one which Ron shows and has solid rivets and is hallmarked silver, then there is the type I show with locking rings (possibly silver base but not hallmarked), then there is the hollow version which Bob mentions.
Nimmergut states that the manufacturer was Rudolf Souval, Wien.
Here are the larger photos.
StanAttached Files
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Stan, thanks for sharing this info . It's evident that there are two different types of the solid version (Ron's and your's) and a third hollow type, as mentioned by Bob. To complicate matters even further, here's a scan of a forth type, illustrated in The Medal Collector Feb. 1963. It's almost identical to your's, apart from the different position of the plough and the dates, which I suppose can be explained by the drilling of the rivet holes. The major difference is the lack of space between the eagle's body and wings.
I'm not in a position to rule out any of these types, but as a collector I find it difficult to believe Souval (if he indeed was the sole manufacturer) would produce 4 different designs of a Gau-badge, surpassed in rarity only by the Sudetenland Gau-badge. I have an open mind though and any logical elaboration that would prove me wrong, is more than welcomed
KR
PeterAttached Files
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