tallies of German pre-45 Navy's
Let me post some examples of tallies of the different German Navy's. I will try to explain the basic characteristics. To keep it simple for now I will take the most common ones: ships.
Shore based units of the Kaiserliche Marine (Imperial German Navy) and latin script type Reichsmarine are sometime very difficult to distinct and it is then down to the knowledge when this particular unit was active. Same applies to the ships/boats of the named tallies of Kriegsmarine and early (Gothic script type) Bundesmarine - knowing what ship was at what time is the key factor here.
First the different types of Kaiserliche Marine.
Gold for "Seemännisches Personal" (all deck-related personnel).
Silver for "Schiffstechnisches Personal" (all technical personnel. also administrative staff wore silver)
Red for "Schiffsjungen" (I would like to translate this with "cadets" - maybe another member has a better translation)
Cotton thread was introduced in early 1917. Yellow cotton was the substitute for Gold, white cotton for silver. Note: in the case of Emden the yellow cotton tally belonged to the 2nd Emden (1916-1919).
The ships of the KaiMarine had the prefix "S.M.S.", meaning "Seiner Majestäts Schiff", similar to the H.M.S. on British ships. The S.M.S. tallies were worn from 1890 - 1918. Prior 1890 without S.M.S. but just the ship's name.
With a very few excemptions, there was no ship's type mentioned on Imperial tallies but just "S.M.S. [ship's name]".
There are no well made copies with metall thread known so far, so it is pretty safe to buy such tallies. The reverse side looks exactly as the latin Reichsmarine tally from reverse - see the post below.
Let me post some examples of tallies of the different German Navy's. I will try to explain the basic characteristics. To keep it simple for now I will take the most common ones: ships.
Shore based units of the Kaiserliche Marine (Imperial German Navy) and latin script type Reichsmarine are sometime very difficult to distinct and it is then down to the knowledge when this particular unit was active. Same applies to the ships/boats of the named tallies of Kriegsmarine and early (Gothic script type) Bundesmarine - knowing what ship was at what time is the key factor here.
First the different types of Kaiserliche Marine.
Gold for "Seemännisches Personal" (all deck-related personnel).
Silver for "Schiffstechnisches Personal" (all technical personnel. also administrative staff wore silver)
Red for "Schiffsjungen" (I would like to translate this with "cadets" - maybe another member has a better translation)
Cotton thread was introduced in early 1917. Yellow cotton was the substitute for Gold, white cotton for silver. Note: in the case of Emden the yellow cotton tally belonged to the 2nd Emden (1916-1919).
The ships of the KaiMarine had the prefix "S.M.S.", meaning "Seiner Majestäts Schiff", similar to the H.M.S. on British ships. The S.M.S. tallies were worn from 1890 - 1918. Prior 1890 without S.M.S. but just the ship's name.
With a very few excemptions, there was no ship's type mentioned on Imperial tallies but just "S.M.S. [ship's name]".
There are no well made copies with metall thread known so far, so it is pretty safe to buy such tallies. The reverse side looks exactly as the latin Reichsmarine tally from reverse - see the post below.
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