File:Gestapo room Lofoten Krigsminnemuseum WWII museum Norway. Nazi Germany Feldgendarmerie Military police uniform Fehmer boxing gloves Reichsdienstflagge SS cap daggers SEAM pistol baton leash torture etc IMG 8150.jpg

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English: Photo taken in the "Gestapo room/office" at the Lofoten War Memorial Museum (Norwegian: Lofoten Krigsminnemuseum) in Svolvær, Norway's largest exhibition of uniforms and smaller items related to the Second World War and the German occupation of Norway 1940 – 1945:
  • Misc. German World War II uniform items and equipment used by the Schutzstaffel (SS) of the Nazi Party NSDAP, etc.:
    • Nazi Germany State Service Flag (Reichsdienstflagge) was used from 7 November 1935, to be used on all public service buildings, German state railways, the Reichsautobahn and Reichsbank authorities. A smaller version was also permitted for display on service vehicles.
    • Boxing gloves, portrait photo and remains of the uniform cap of Siegfried Wolfgang Fehmer, SS-Hauptsturmführer and Gestapo leader in Oslo from February 1945:
      • The cap is claimed to have belonged to Siegfried Fehmer. As a member of Abteilung IV in Oslo Fehmer wore an SS uniform with Sicherheitsdienst badges, and apparently he made a dashing figure walking around Oslo with his german shepherd by his side. After the war ended on the 8th of May, 1945, Fehmer made an unsuccessful dash for freedom, fleeing towards Sweden but he was arrested and convicted of war crimes, and sentenced to death by the Supreme Court of Norway. He was subsequently executed on 16 March 1948.
    • NSDAP flagpole topper (decorative finial) with a Nazi style Reichsadler (German imperial eagle) and a swastika
    • Cufflinks with swastikas, belonged to Josef Terboven, Reichskommissar in German occupied Norway
    • German Red Cross (Deutsches Rotes Kreuz) Lebensborn printed on textile as emblem of the SS-initiated, state-supported Nazi association for helping mostly unmarried mothers giving birth to 'racially pure' Aryan children at maternity homes
    • Cloth patch with the SS bolts runic insignia (doppelte Siegrunen)
    • Geheime Staatspolizei (Gestapo) personal metal number tag
    • High-fronted peaked visor cap (Schirmmütze) of the SS (Schutzstaffel).
      • SS style silver Hoheitszeichen/Hoheitsadler, SS' version of the Nazi Germany imperial eagle, the German national emblem featuring an art deco Reichsadler with expanded wings clutching a swastika inside a circular oak wreath
      • SS' silver skull and crossbones/death's head (Totenkopf) cap insignia, adopted from the Totenkopfhusaren, the 5th Hussar/Life-Guard Cavalry Regiment of Prussia
      • Officer's chin strap cord in silver
      • Piping around the cap crown and cap band in corps colour (Waffenfarbe, white for 'Infantry')
    • Two SS honour daggers (SS-Ehrendolch), with the SS slogan ("Meine Ehre heißt Treue", "My honour is loyalty") etched on the blade. The dagger on the wall was awarded to a Norwegian volunteer serving as a soldier in the Waffen-SS who buried the dagger to hide it after the war.
    • SS uniform belt; metal buckle with the "Nazi Party eagle" (German: Parteiadler) and the SS motto Meine Ehre heißt Treue, "My honor is called loyalty" (SS Koppelschloß mit "Meine Ehre heißt Treue")
    • S. E. A. M. Taschenpistole (Fabrica de Armas S.E.A.M. ), semi-automatic cal. 6.35mm pocket pistol belonged to Gestapo officer Gross in Svolvær, Norway, with holster
    • SS red swastika armband (Hakenkreuzarmbinde), with a black stripe along the edges. (Without the red swastika armband, its place on the left uniform sleeve was taken by an SS style eagle-and-swastika patch.)
    • Miniature figurine model of a Gestapo officer in SS uniform, with a German Shepherd dog, etc.
    • Leather baton used as torture instrument by Gestapo in Oslo, Norway
    • Torture chain for wrists
    • Leash used by a "SS dog"
    • Die Deutsche Polizei – Taschenkalender für die Schutzpolizei des Reiches und der Gemeinden und die Verwaltungspolizei, wartime German pocket calendar book
  • Mannequin dressed in a Feldgendarm uniform of the Feldgendarmerie, the German Military Police part of the Ordnungstruppen within the Wehrmacht, the armed forces of Nazi Germany 1933–1945:
    • Standard Waffenrock (military tunic) of the paramilitary Ordnungspolizei ("order Police", OrPo, grüne Polizei, "green police"). 8-button closed-collar grey-green service tunic (Dienstrock) with contrasting dark brown collar and cuff facings, turn-back cuffs with two buttons, two pleated patch breast pockets and two unpleated skirt pockets, all with three-point flaps fastened with single aluminium buttons, and decorative double fly at back.
    • Bright ‘police-green’ Truppenfarbe indicating the branch of Schutzpolizei (protection police). The collar patches and shoulderboards on OrPo tunics were backed, and the sleeve eagle (below the rank of Leutnant) was embroidered (except for a black swastika), in the Truppenfarbe, a colour code equivalent to the military Waffenfarbe indicating the police branch. Tunics and caps also had piping (Paspelierung) in these branch colours.
    • Rank insignia of Meister on shoulder straps (Schulterklappen). Diagonal interwoven central cords, facing colour and silver/chevron fleck, outer cords silverchevron fleck.
    • Collar patches/tabs (Kragenspiegel) with silvergrey thread Litzen, the traditional German Army "Guard lace" bars for all enlisted ranks, woven on a base of the Truppenfarbe colour identifying the wearer’s branch.
    • Polizei Ärmeladler, police type sleeve eagle cloth patch. Enlisted ranks wore a machine-embroidered Polizeiadler, "police eagle", Policestyle national emblem of a wreathed Nazi eagle-and-swastika (Hoheitsabzeichen, Reichsadler mit Hakenkreuz) on the left upper sleeve. This was in the Truppenfarbe for their branch, except for a black swastika, and worked on a backing of their uniform colour.
    • Ribbons (Ordensband) of the Iron Cross and the Eastern Front Medal (Medaille Winterschlacht im Osten 1941/42 or Ostmedaille) on ribbon bar over breast pocket
    • DRL (Deutscher Reichsbund für Leibesübungen) sport badge (Deutsches Reichssportabzeichen, German National Sports Badge)
    • SS cloth badge for SS members on tunic. Members of the German Police who were also members of the Schutzstaffel were authorized to display a set of embroidered SS-runes (Sig- oder Siegrunen, doppelte Siegrune) low on the left breast, in silver-grey or silver on a uniform-coloured backing.
    • Feldgendarmerie gorget (Ringkragen, metallene Plakette).
    • Sam Browne crossbelt| (Leibriemen mit Schultergurt, braunes Leder)
    • Police belt buckle (Koppelschloß, Gürtelschnalle) decorated with Nazi swastika and Gott mit uns inscription. The rectangular silver-coloured buckle resembled that of the Army, but in place of the national emblem the wreath and motto ‘Gott Mit Uns’ surrounded a large ‘mobile’ swastika.
    • Steel helmet (Stahlhelm) with police decals (Abziehbilder für die Polizeistahlhelm): national swastika flag on right side, Hoheitsabzeichen (Polizeiadler, "police eagle", Polizei Adlerschild für Stahlhelme) on left side (see Helmet Decal Guide at www.germandaggers.com)
www.grenadier352nd.com/html_pages/feldgendarmerie: The primary function of the German Field Police was traffic control and orderly direction of both soldiers and materials with regard to regulations and discipline. This was especially so with large troop movements, bad conditions and heavy supply route traffic. The Feldgendarmerie were known as 'Kettenhunde', "chained dogs". As a military organization they had received full infantry training and also had extensive police powers.
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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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