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  2. 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]

  3. 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.

  4. 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]

  5. Badge of shame - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Badge_of_shame

    Later, under the Lex Julia, women convicted of prostitution were forced to wear a toga muliebris, as the prostitute's badge of shame. [ 14 ] Starting in the 8th century Jews and Christians living under the Abbasid Caliphate were frequently compelled to wear distinctive markings on their clothes to signify their status as a follower of a dhimmi ...

  6. 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 ...

  7. 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.

  8. Nazi songs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_songs

    Panzerlied ("Tank song") was a German military march of the Wehrmacht armored troops (Panzerwaffe), composed in 1933. [16] The NSKK (Nationalsozialistisches Kraftfahrkorps) also made their own take on the Panzerlied, but with a different variation called the Panzerwagenlied ("Armored car song").

  9. Women in Nazi Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_Nazi_Germany

    The mobilisation of women in the war economy always remained limited: the number of women practising a professional activity in 1944 was virtually unchanged from 1939, being about 15 million women, in contrast to Great Britain, so that the use of women did not progress and only 1,200,000 of them worked in the arms industry in 1943, in working ...