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Indeed, as John says the Edelweiss was not implemented until 2 May 1939 (HV 39B, No. 196). The Waffenrock was tailored by a company in Munich and is dated 14 August 1936. In 1937, this Hauptmann was assigned to the German Military Attache in Spain as a Liaison Officer to the Italian Expeditionary Korps. From there, he went to Rome for three years, and finally as a Liaison Officer (the German word is "Verbindungsoffizier") in the Italian headquarters in Libya. After that, back to Italy again.
Before making such comments, it is necessary to have the full story of the tunic. Had you known the tunic was dated 1936, you would have known that no Edelweiss was authorized at that time and after that, this Officer bounced around quite a bit and did not return to Regiment 99.
As far as the photo is concerned, it is a copy of an image a friend found on the internet. There is a website on Gebirgsjaeger with several photos of this unit in Garmisch-Partenkirchen including a parade. These were likely taken in the mid-1930's. There is not an Edelweiss to be seen. The portraits from that album can be easily downloaded, copied, and sold to anyone on eBay. I also imagine the photos of the officers of the Regiment may have been available to the men as so many stock photos were.
Homework is everything. Having as much information on hand as possible before calling something "rubbish" -- quite a strong word in English, my friend -- is necessary before drawing conclusions.
Enjoy your hobby.
Mike
Indeed, as John says the Edelweiss was not implemented until 2 May 1939 (HV 39B, No. 196). The Waffenrock was tailored by a company in Munich and is dated 14 August 1936. In 1937, this Hauptmann was assigned to the German Military Attache in Spain as a Liaison Officer to the Italian Expeditionary Korps. From there, he went to Rome for three years, and finally as a Liaison Officer (the German word is "Verbindungsoffizier") in the Italian headquarters in Libya. After that, back to Italy again.
Before making such comments, it is necessary to have the full story of the tunic. Had you known the tunic was dated 1936, you would have known that no Edelweiss was authorized at that time and after that, this Officer bounced around quite a bit and did not return to Regiment 99.
As far as the photo is concerned, it is a copy of an image a friend found on the internet. There is a website on Gebirgsjaeger with several photos of this unit in Garmisch-Partenkirchen including a parade. These were likely taken in the mid-1930's. There is not an Edelweiss to be seen. The portraits from that album can be easily downloaded, copied, and sold to anyone on eBay. I also imagine the photos of the officers of the Regiment may have been available to the men as so many stock photos were.
Homework is everything. Having as much information on hand as possible before calling something "rubbish" -- quite a strong word in English, my friend -- is necessary before drawing conclusions.
Enjoy your hobby.
Mike
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