✚8081✚ German pre WW1 Warrior League Membership Badge Hermannsburg Veteran Cross

£49.99

Original German / Lower Saxony pre WW1 Warrior League Membership Badge of the German Warrior / veteran League with the Membership Cross of the local Hermannsburg Organisation (Hermannsburg is a village and a former municipality in the Celle district, in Lower Saxony). These combined Veteran League badges / crosses normally contain two parts: the umbrella association's (Warrior League) badge was the same for all local organisations but they attached their local membership crosses on it. THE AWARD IS IN NICE CONDITION, GOOD EXAMPLE WITH ATTRACTIVE TARNISH, GENUINE RIBBON, WORKING PIN DEVICE, THE CROSS SHOWS A SMALL CRACK, THE BADGE IS MAKER MARKED: "HEINRICH TIMM - BERLIN", THE CROSS IS ALSO MARKER MARKED: "PAUL KUST - BERLIN", OVERALL A VERY NICE EXAMPLE, SIZE: cca 70 mm 

HISTORY OF THE AWARD:

Deutscher Kriegerbund (German Warrior League) was a War Veterans' and reservists' Association in Germany. It was established in April 1873 in Weißenfels. Its origins lie in a Warrior Association established in 1786 by fusiliers of Frederick II of Prussia's army in Wangerin/Pomerania. The original purpose of the War Veterans' Associations was to provide their members and former soldiers with proper burial arrangements. Former soldiers felt the need of commemorative tombs that would preserve the dignity of their former comrades-in-arms and honor them even after their death. This type of association received a considerable boost after Prussia's victorious battles against the Danish (1864), Austrian (1866), and French armies in 1871. A number of these veterans' associations established the "Deutscher Kriegerbund" by joining efforts for a common cause in 1873. In April 1897 the Deutscher Kriegerbund became the "Prussian Country's Warrior League" (Preußischer Landeskriegerverband). Its former name "Deutscher Kriegerbund" was kept, however, for certain economic and social dealings. In this form it was a forerunner of later German military social welfare provisions, like the NSKOV. Since it was initially dominated by groups of soldiers of the former Prussian army, local veterans' associations of Bavaria, Saxony, Württemberg, Hessen and Baden preferred to remain out of its circle. The Deutscher Kriegerbund began the efforts to build a memorial that would honor and represent the German warriors in 1888. This monument, located on top of the 473 m high Kyffhäuser mountain was finally inaugurated on the 16th June 1896. The building of the memorial pleased and inspired the other German war veterans' associations, who had been reticent to join the Deutscher Kriegerbund. As a result of this change of attitude, the steps to form a wider organization were taken in 1900 and the Kyffhäuserbund was formed. This inclusive organization integrated the formerly scattered German war veterans' associations, which had been one of the main aims of the Deutscher Kriegerbund.