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Mint Black Wound Badge – 4 Steinhauer & Lück, Lüdenscheid

Condition: Near Mint

Maker: 4 Steinhauer & Lück, Lüdenscheid

 

SKU: C11475 Category: Tags ,

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Product Description: This Mint Black Wound Badge is an outstanding piece and is extremely tough to find in this condition nowdays. It’s the black grade, awarded for 1 or 2 wounds in wartime. This is a late war type that seems to be stamped from steel. Nearly all of the original black paint finish is still present on the front and back. It’s a really nice strike, with all the detail you would expect, and crisp pebbling. It’s also very clean. The reverse of this WW2 Black Wound Badge has its original hardware setup, fully intact and functional. It’s got a wire pin with a sheet metal catch. There is a number 4 on the back for  Steinhauer & Lück, Lüdenscheidno maker marking. Also no sign that it was ever issued. It would be tough to find a better example of this Mint Black Wound Badge pattern.

 

Historical Description: The German Wound Badge was instituted during the First World War to recognize those wounded in the conflict. It was designed using a World War One style Imperial German helmet as the main motif. The helmet was set on top two crossed swords against a pebbled background and surrounded by a laurel leaves wreath.

During the Spanish Civil War the Third Reich reinstated the Wound Badge for a short period to honor those who were wounded during the conflict from 1936 to 1939. These German units participating in the assistance of the Spanish Fascists were deemed the “Condor Legion”. The pattern of the World War One Wound Badge was again used, except this time with a raised swastika on the center of the World War One era helmet.

At the outbreak of war in September 1939 with Poland, Adolf Hitler once again reinstated the Wound Badge Award. Again the pattern of the badge was similar to that of the earlier style except the new design was freshened up a bit by using an M35 pattern German helmet and a slightly softer looking wreath. This pattern was used until the end of the war in 1945. It is impossible to know the exact numbers of wound badges awarded during the course of the Second World War due to the vast scale and countless individuals who were wounded or killed in the conflict.

The Wound Badge Awards came in three different types of grades representing the amount , or severity, of wounds received. The first grade, the Black Wound Badge was awarded for 1 to 2 wounds received in combat. The Silver Grade was awarded for 3 to 4 wounds, and finally the Gold Grade for 5 or more wounds, total disability, or death.

 

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