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WW2 GERMAN IRON CROSS 2ND CLASS BY KLEIN & QUENZER, IDAR OBERSTEIN #65
44mm wide iron and nickel silver cross pattée with a magnetic core, with a blackened cross pattée within a hatched border imposed, with loop and original ring for ribbon suspension, the ring with maker’s mark ‘65’ (Klein & Quenzer, Idar, Oberstein); the face with central cross (swastika), the date ‘1939’ below; the reverse with the date ‘1813’ on the lower arm; good central enamel overall, generally very good overall; on correct original ribbon. The Iron Cross was instituted on 10 March 1813 by King Friedrich Wilhelm III of Prussia during the War of Liberation against the Napoleonic French forces. It...
$295.00
SOLD
44mm wide iron and nickel silver cross pattée with a magnetic core, with a blackened cross pattée within a hatched border imposed, with loop and original ring for ribbon suspension, the ring with maker’s mark ‘65’ (Klein & Quenzer, Idar, Oberstein); the face with central cross (swastika), the date ‘1939’ below; the reverse with the date ‘1813’ on the lower arm; good central enamel overall, generally very good overall; on correct original ribbon.
The Iron Cross was instituted on 10 March 1813 by King Friedrich Wilhelm III of Prussia during the War of Liberation against the Napoleonic French forces. It was reinstated in 1870-1871 for the Franco-Prussian War, in 1914 for World War I and again, as in this example, on 1 September 1939, the day of the German invasion of Poland that led to the outbreak of World War II.It was awarded for bravery. In spite of its iconic image and fame, it has always been made of modest materials and issued in relatively large numbers. It was designed by the neo-classical architect Karl Friedrich Schinkel and reflects the cross of the Teutonic Knights in the late Middle Ages which was also the emblem of Frederick the Great.
Weight | 0.1 kg |
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Dimensions | 15 × 8 × 8 cm |