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GERMAN WEHRMACHT POLIZEI POLICE FELDGENDARMERIE GORGET NO CHAIN RELIC
GERMAN WEHRMACHT POLIZEI POLICE FELDGENDARMERIE GORGET NO CHAIN RELIC
GERMAN WEHRMACHT POLIZEI POLICE FELDGENDARMERIE GORGET NO CHAIN RELIC
GERMAN WEHRMACHT POLIZEI POLICE FELDGENDARMERIE GORGET NO CHAIN RELIC
GERMAN WEHRMACHT POLIZEI POLICE FELDGENDARMERIE GORGET NO CHAIN RELIC
GERMAN WEHRMACHT POLIZEI POLICE FELDGENDARMERIE GORGET NO CHAIN RELIC
GERMAN WEHRMACHT POLIZEI POLICE FELDGENDARMERIE GORGET NO CHAIN RELIC
GERMAN WEHRMACHT POLIZEI POLICE FELDGENDARMERIE GORGET NO CHAIN RELIC
GERMAN WEHRMACHT POLIZEI POLICE FELDGENDARMERIE GORGET NO CHAIN RELIC
GERMAN WEHRMACHT POLIZEI POLICE FELDGENDARMERIE GORGET NO CHAIN RELIC

GERMAN WEHRMACHT POLIZEI POLICE FELDGENDARMERIE GORGET NO CHAIN RELIC

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Price(USD):$225.00
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GERMAN WEHRMACHT POLIZEI POLICE FELDGENDARMERIE GORGET NO CHAIN

RELIC FOUND, GLOWING GREEN PAINT WELL VISIBLE (SIGN THAT IT'S AN ORIGINAL)

When Adolf Hitler came to power in 1933, Feldgendarmerie were reintroduced into the Wehrmacht. The new units received full infantry training and were given extensive police powers. A military police school was set up at Potsdam, near Berlin to train Feldgendarmerie personnel. Subjects included Criminal code, general and special police powers, reporting duties, passport and identification law, weapons drill, self-defence techniques, criminal police methodology, and general administration.

All prospective candidates served at a Feldgendarmerie command after the first term of examinations. Courses lasted one year and failure rates were high: in 1935 only 89 soldiers graduated from an initial intake of 219 candidates. Feldgendarmerie were employed within army divisions and as self-contained units under the command of an army corps. They often worked in close cooperation with the Geheime Feldpolizei (English: Secret Field Police), district commanders and SS and Police Leaders.

Feldgendarmerie units were generally given occupation duties in territories directly under the control of the Wehrmacht. Their duties policing the areas behind the front lines ranged from straightforward traffic control and population control to suppression and execution of partisans and the apprehension of enemy stragglers.

When combat units moved forward out of a region, the Feldgendarmerie role would formally end as control was then transferred to occupation authorities under the control of the Nazi Party and SS. But Feldgendarmerie units are known to have assisted the SS in committing war crimes in occupied areas. Author Antony Beevor explores some well-documented cases of their participation in his book Stalingrad. Also, Felgendarmerie units took active part in Jew hunting operations, including in Western Europe.

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