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3:5;
image by Olivier Vercammen
Flag adopted February 1938, abolished 1945
See also:
Actual flags usually had on the border a small eagle with a circled
swastika with an 'M' underneath (the mark of the Reichszeugmeister)
and a size such as '200 � 335' stamped on it.
Norman Martin, 1 Jun 2000
This scan shows the war ensign construction
sheet as it appears in Flaggenbuch 1939 [neu39].
Santiago Dotor, 5 Jun 2000
Two different patterns of this flag existed:
There were no two variants of this flag, [but two consecutive flags].
The first Reichskriegsflagge was introduced 7th
November 1935. Flaggenbuch 1939 [neu39]
shows the later flag which replaced the first in February 1938.
Ralf Stelter, 13 Jan 2001
Here are both the 1st and the 2nd patern flags. They came in a few popular
sizes: 80x135 / 100x170 / 150x250 / 200x335 / 300x500 ( all centimeters
). They have normaly all a stamp of the constructor and size ( in cm or
in meter e.g. 0.80x1.35 ).
Most of them (but not all) have a marking with an eagle over a kapital
M, which means the flag was Kriegsmarine approved.
Normaly the small flags have two looped rope lanyards while the larger
examples have a looped lanyard at the top and a large rope at the bottom.
Olivier Vercammen, 13 Oct 2002
Actually the Austro-Hungarian war ensign was
used during World War Two as well! It was flown by the German heavy cruiser
Prinz Eugen �though only once due to the war� that took over the
tradition of the Austro-Hungarian Navy by an order dated 12 June 1940.
Source: John R. Angola and Adolf Schlicht, Die Kriegsmarine: Uniforms
& Traditions Vol 3.
Marcus Wendel, 16 Oct 2000