File:2012. День Победы в Донецке 283.jpg

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Русский: День Победы в Донецке
Deutsch: Tschako der deutschen Ordnungspolizei im Museum in Donetsk
English: Polizei-Tschako, Police Shako of Nazi Germany
  • Most German police forces adopted a version of the Jäger shako, after World War I, which replaced the spiked leather helmet (Pickelhaube) identified with the previous Imperial regime. This new "bump hat" was worn by the civilian police forces of the Weimar Republic, Nazi Germany, East Germany, and West Germany into the 1970s.
  • "World War II German Police Units" by Gordon Williamson: The normal service dress headgear for the Schutzpolizist was a shako with a stiff fibre body covered in grey-green cloth (greener than the Army feldgrau), with black lacquered front and rear peaks (visors) and a flat black lacquered crown; on either side of the body were two mesh ventilation holes, and a black leather chin strap was fitted. The insignia were a large aluminium alloy Police-pattern wreathed eagle national emblem, below an elongated oval cockade in the national colours. Officers wore metal chin scales in place of the leather chin strap, and a cockade embroidered in metallic thread. General officers wore gilt rather than silvered metal fittings. For parade dress, a long black horsehair plume was worn with the shako (later changed to white for officers).
  • See Shako, M1936: O/RS, Schutzpolizei (SchuPo, the regular police) in the collections of The Imperial War Museum, UK
Date  Edit this at Structured Data on Commons
Source Own work Edit this at Structured Data on Commons
Author Andrew Butko Edit this at Structured Data on Commons

|Source=Own work |Date=2012-05-09

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Andrey Butko  (1978–)  wikidata:Q108287599 s:ru:Андрей Викторович Бутко
 
Andrey Butko
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Русский: Андрей Викторович Бутко
Description Russian-Soviet Wikipedian, Wikimedian and photographer
Date of birth 18 July 1978 Edit this at Wikidata
Location of birth Snizhne
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creator QS:P170,Q108287599
This picture has been taken by Andrew Butko. Contact e-mail: abutko@gmail.com. Do not copy this image illegally by ignoring the terms of the СС-BY-SA or GNU FDL licenses, as it is not in the public domain. Other photos see here.

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Andrew Butko, the copyright holder of this work, hereby publishes it under the following licenses:
GNU head Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled GNU Free Documentation License.
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Attribution: Andrew Butko
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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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current04:22, 12 May 2012Thumbnail for version as of 04:22, 12 May 20124,928 × 3,264 (7.17 MB)Butko (talk | contribs)

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