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  2. Nazi concentration camp badge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_concentration_camp_badge

    Black triangle – people who were deemed asocial elements (asozial) and work-shy (arbeitsscheu), including the following: Roma and Sinti. They wore the black triangle with a Z notation (for Zigeuner, meaning Gypsy) to the right of the triangle's point. Roma were later assigned a brown triangle. [8]

  3. Black triangle (badge) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_triangle_(badge)

    An inverted black triangle, as used in badges. The inverted black triangle (German: schwarzes Dreieck) was an identification badge used in Nazi concentration camps to mark prisoners designated asozial ("a(nti-)social") [1] [2] and arbeitsscheu ("work-shy"). The Roma and Sinti people were considered asocial and tagged with the black triangle.

  4. Uniforms and insignia of the Sturmabteilung - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniforms_and_insignia_of...

    The original pip system used by the SA in the 1920s. The brown shirted stormtroopers of the Sturmabteilung gradually come into being within the Nazi Party beginning in 1920. . By this time, Adolf Hitler had assumed the title of Führer of the Nazi Party, replacing Anton Drexler who had been known as the more democratically elected Party Chairm

  5. Uniforms and insignia of the Schutzstaffel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniforms_and_insignia_of...

    2nd pattern SS Totenkopf, 1934–45. While different uniforms existed [1] for the SS over time, the all-black SS uniform adopted in 1932 is the most well known. [2] The black–white–red colour scheme was characteristic of the German Empire, and it was later adopted by the Nazi Party.

  6. Yellow badge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yellow_badge

    He also has to wear a belt round his waist. The women have to wear one red and one black shoe and have a small bell on their necks or shoes. [6] In the late twelfth century, the Almohads forced the Jews of North Africa to wear yellow cloaks and turbans, [7] [8] a practice the subsequent Hafsid dynasty continued to follow. [9]

  7. Fascist symbolism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fascist_symbolism

    The color brown was the identifying color of Nazism (and fascism in general), due to its being the color of the SA paramilitaries (also known as Brownshirts). Other historical symbols that were already in use by the German Army to varying degrees prior to the Nazi Germany, such as the Wolfsangel and Totenkopf , were also used in a new, more ...

  8. Badge of shame - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Badge_of_shame

    Many women who fraternized with the occupiers in German-occupied Europe had their heads shaved by angry mobs of their peers after liberation by the Allies of World War II. [12] During World War II, the Nazis also used head shaving as a mark of shame to punish Germans like the youthful non-conformists known as the Edelweiss Pirates. [13]

  9. Political uniform - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_uniform

    Members of the Sturmabteilung (SA), the paramilitary street thugs of the German Nazi Party, were called "brown shirts" after the color of the party uniform.Propaganda poster showing SA uniforms from the Freikorps movements after World War I, through the party ban 1923–25, the uniform ban 1930–1931 up to 1933 when Hitler became Chancellor.