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The West German M-56 Stahlhelm was a direct copy of the U.S. M1 helmet. It was properly called "zweiteiliger Stahlhelm" (two-piece steel helmet). In 1958 the helmet was made as a one-piece helmet and renamed Stahlhelm M1A1. The M1A1 came in three sizes: 66, 68, and 71.
The original West German copy was a "two-piece steel helmet" ("zweiteiliger Stahlhelm") designated the M-62 Stahlhelm. [72] In 1958, the M-62 was remade as a one-piece helmet and renamed the Stahlhelm M1A1, produced in three sizes: 66, 68, and 71.
Der Stahlhelm propaganda car in Berlin promoting DNVP nominee Theodor Duesterberg for president of the German Reich in the 1932 election. Although Der Stahlhelm was officially a non-party entity and above party politics, after 1929 it took on an anti-republican and anti-democratic character. Its goals were a German dictatorship, the preparation ...
Stahlhelm M16: Austria-Hungary: 1916: Austria-Hungary, German Empire, Weimar Republic, Poland, Austria, Nazi Germany, Finland Stahlhelm M18 (Armoured warfare) German Empire: 1918: German Empire, Turkey, Weimar Republic Stahlhelm M18 (Telephone and cavalry helmet) German Empire: 1918: German Empire, Weimar Republic, Nazi Germany Stahlhelm M35 ...
Based on the M35 (M40) Stahlhelm used by Nazi Germany, the M42 was of markedly lower quality, made of thinner and lower quality steel. This made it prone to dents and damage. [ 2 ] Featuring ventilation holes with stamped rims much like the German M40, and a raw edge like the M42 without the slight flaring characteristic of the German model.
The liner of Vz. 53/80. This type of lining was also used in the German Stahlhelm Czech seal of approval, manufacture date (1954), and the size (2) of the Vz. 53/80 pictured here. After World War II, the Soviet Union provided Czechoslovakia with Soviet SSh-39 and SSh-40 helmets for their newly formed military.
Tobias Wilhelm Franz Seldte (29 June 1882 – 1 April 1947) was a German reactionary and politician who served as the Reich Minister for Labour in Nazi Germany. [1] Prior to his ministry, Seldte was a founding leader of Der Stahlhelm World War I ex-servicemen's organisation from 1918 to 1934.
L'Eplattenier renounced the new model as a poor imitation of the Stahlhelm, while also filing a lawsuit against the Swiss government which brought him 30,000 swiss francs. The helmet's only deployment came on the day of the Armistice, when troops oversaw the progress of a general strike organized by revolutionary socialists. A second lawsuit ...