File:Third Reich Nazi Party Political Leader local level Uniform tunic visor cap Swastika armband (NSDAP Politische Leiter Amtsleiter Ortsgruppen 1934-38 Jacke Hakenkreuzbinde Schimrmütze) Forsvarsmuseet Army Museum Oslo Norway 2021-07-31.jpg

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English: Uniform for a political leader (Politischer Leiter) in the paramilitary organized National Socialist German Workers' Party (German: Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei, NSDAP) in Nazi Germany:
  • Party official's paramilitary tunic
    • Open lapel cut, single-breasted service jacket for the political leadership corps, in typical brown/tan textile, with four-button front closure, two side pockets, two box-pleated patch breast pockets with stylised (scalloped) button-down flaps, turned up cuffs, and two vertical scalloped flaps/slits (vents) with two buttons in the lower rear of the garment.
    • Embroidered bars/double braids (Doppellitze) on collar patches/tabs (Kragenspiegel) as rank insignia reflecting a second pattern (1934-1939) design of Amtsleiter (Office Leader).
    •    Collar and rank insignia lined with light blue piping indicating the organizational local level of Ortsgruppe (for German towns and cities).
    • Golden buttons decorated with Parteiadler emblem ("Party Eagle", an Art Deco style German Imperial Eagle clutching a swastika).
    • Standard NSDAP membership Swastika armband (brassard) (Hakenkreuzarmbinde, Kampfbinde) sewn on left sleeve.
  • Peaked cap made of tan-coloured webbed fabric, with a traditional high peak.
    • Cap band constructed of khaki coloured doeskin wool.
    • Piping (Paspel, Paspelierung, trim) along the top of the crown and cap band in colours (similiar to Waffenfarbe) indicating administrative level:
      •   Ortsgruppe: light blue
      •   Kreis: white (originally black)
      •   Gau: red
      •   Reich: bright lemon yellow )
    • Cap insignia (Mützenabzeichen) consisting of a gilt NSDAP eagle-and-swastika (Hoheitszeichen, Hoheitsadler, Parteiadler, "Party Eagle"), with a gilt oak leaf wreath (Mützen-Eichenlaub, Eichenlaubkranz, Mützenkranz) and a separate tri-colour cockade (Kokarde) with a black enameled swastika in the center. The eagle was in the shape of a standard Nazi style German imperial eagle (Reichsadler, "National Eagle"), with open wings and a mobile swastika within an oak wreath (see Nazi Germany visor cap insignia guide at Germandaggers.com).
    • Visor made of dark brown vulkanfibre
    • Chin strap cord (Mützenkordel) made of synthetic golden threading.
Photo taken in July 2021 at the Norwegian Armed Forces Museum (Forsvarsmuseet) at Akershus fortress in Oslo, Norway.


Norsk bokmål: Uniform for for en «politisk leder» (politischer Leiter) i det tyske nazistpartiet NSDAP. Det tredje riket (Tyskland1933–1945) var gjennomuniformert etter militære forbilder. Personell i både militære, sivile og offentlige organisasjoner og virksomheter brukte uniform. Partifunksjonærer og medlemmer i noen av de paramilitære underorganisasjonene bar. Vanlige partimedlemmer bar imidlertid sivile klær med partinål på jakkeslaget.
  • Brun uniformsjakke
    • Rangmerker på kragespeilene for tjenestegraden «amtsleder» (i bruk fra 1934 til 1939 da det kom nye gradbetegnelser og distinksjoner).
    • Armbind med partiets hovedsymbol: svart hakekors i hvit sirkelflate på rød bunn.
    • Knappene er dekorert med «partiørnen», en tysk keiserørn med rette vinger plassert over et hakekors, eventuelt med klørne omkring en eikeløvskrans. Det heraldiske symbolet ble «riksørn», nasjonalt riksvåpen, fra 1935, da med ørnehodet vendt motsatt vei.
  • Høylue for partifunksjonær
    • Hakekorsørn. «Partiørnen» (Parteiadler) var som Det tredje rikets riksvåpen, men med hodet vendt mot høyre
    • Hakekors-kokarde med eikeløvsdekor
Foto tatt i juli 2021 av utstilte gjenstander i Forsvarsmuseet på Akershus festningsområde i Oslo.
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Nazi symbol Legal disclaimer
This image shows (or resembles) a symbol that was used by the National Socialist (NSDAP/Nazi) government of Germany or an organization closely associated to it, or another party which has been banned by the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany.

The use of insignia of organizations that have been banned in Germany (like the Nazi swastika or the arrow cross) may also be illegal in Austria, Hungary, Poland, Czech Republic, France, Brazil, Israel, Ukraine, Russia and other countries, depending on context. In Germany, the applicable law is paragraph 86a of the criminal code (StGB), in Poland – Art. 256 of the criminal code (Dz.U. 1997 nr 88 poz. 553).

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