@@dickrichard5579 Not true...In the past , especially before ww2 , most of the time, high rank army officers where from nobility and wealthy families...So it didn't actually depend on your age but on your social status.
It's a little nerve-wracking at this end trying to do justice to the pronunciation. Hopefully it hasn't been mangled too terribly bad. As disrespectful as it seems to pronounce things incorrectly, it seems like it would be worse not to present the actual terms, particularly since many of the English "translations" actually obscure the true meaning of the word.
@@HandGrenadeDivision As a German to English (military) translator, I tend not to translate the German ranks into English, for precisely the reason you mention. I leave them in the original German and provide a key or footnote, if needed. As you rightly say, many attempts to translate ranks result in false equivalencies. "This guy has two stripes, ergo he must be a corporal." That sort of thing. Your summary is spot on.
Actually it is not funny. Impressive should be the word. German is just a language like any other in the 🌎 world. It is a tool or vehicle created over time by mankind and societies for communication. Words if pronounced wrongly, could be corrected or perfected by learning skills and adjustment. Nothing special.
My grandpa served trim 1939 to 1945 and was a Feldwebel at war's end. He was in the 1st Panzer Division in a Schütze regiment which were later called Panzergrenadier. He managed to survive from the Invasion Of Poland in 1939 to their division surrendering in Austria in 1945. He was wounded in the chest in early 1943 in the Rhzev meat grinder. A few months later he was back at his unit. He was quite lucky to survive the entirety of the war. My grandpa's oldest brother wasn't as lucky. He was at Stalingrad and no one knows what became of him.
@OilersRiderBlueJays:Whereas My GrandPa served in Freiwilligen SS panzer grenadier Division Wiking along with other his 3000 country fellers from Finnland, mostly they were deployed in southern Russian front and Ukraine, after their unit reconstructed late 43- he continued his army career in Finland Regular army on northern Russian FrontLine
My dad was USAAF and helped with the reconstruction of Germany during the occupation force. I say, be it western allies, wehrmacht, or red army, the vast majority were unaffiliated with the atrocities and just wanted to protect their homes and do their jobs.
You won shit, all the world were against Germany and with that it was so hard to shamely won after 6 years of ur blood and tears , be sure if it was your single country against Germany you never dream of winning so shut up .
Smile they also had Italy, And japan and most countries they invaded and took over, they made their soldiers fight for them. So don’t pull the “the whole world was against them and they were alone” type crap
@@collinbrosnan2729 Japan never fighted with Nazis in Europe , It was a more of political ally , Italy were comparing to German needs , other nations were only a burden to German more then a benefits . So in reality it was only the German and their own arms factories whom had the main effects on war progress .
What most people could benefit from I believe, is a flow chart. One for enlisted, officers, etc. A proper one, well done could be printed & sold as a poster. 😉
There are many of these online already, on pinterest for example, though as always take with a grain of salt. The most common error is transposing hellgrün and wiesengrün, the shades of green worn by mountain troops and panzergrenadiere.
@@robertsullivan4773 since history books are re-written or not taught in schools anymore, there are a lot of history buffs out there that would be interested simply as knowledge.
@@lisaholman2019 I'd purchase a book of WWII ranks (with good reviews) Like you say; to use as a reference while watching movies. The Men At Arms books may already one. The comments have given me a GREAT idea... If I make it to the Old Folk's Home, I can use a book of ranks and watch all my favorite WWII movies again and identify all the ranks of the antiheroes. Like you say; Always Learning, even in our senior years
Alpha 1 if you use the Illusionist body with the Aviator legs, you can get an ok looking uniform for the Germans. The British uniforms are the really terrible ones. Aside from the Sandman uniform, the rest are just US uniforms or variations of it.
Translation : "I am not a human being , i am not an animal, i am a Tank- Grenadier" . A poem created by mechanized Infantry crews describing the rough environment of armored warfare. That changed with the Leopard II,after that it is only the enemy that has to endure the rough environment.
My great-uncle was a Oberstabsarzt on the eastern front and had a field hospital under his command, after the war he worked as a doctor in the American military hospital in Heidelberg, they offered him to go to the US and work there in a hospital with the Chance of citizenship. My grandfathers were both lieutenants and had a company under their command, one was missed in action during the last two weeks of the war in Yugoslavia and Isnt found until today, may the soil of the east keep is corpse in eternity and let a beautiful flower grow above him, grandpa, you're not forgotten!
So, I'm a lifelong military historian and admitted uniform junkie. Let me congratulate you on an informative, helpful video for the beginner WWII historian /reenactor. Your commentary is clear, concise and well thought out. The illustrations are *excellent* , especially when describing Waffenfarbe. Reenacting can be a socially dangerous hobby... people often misunderstand the Confederate [I'm an ACW reenactor] or Axis reenactor and this can lead to some very unfortunate consequences at home or in the workplace. Providing factual information without getting lost in the moral narrative can be very helpful for someone new to the hobby.
As a Finn the German military ranks are quite easy for me to understand as our ranks are similarly based on Prussian military tradition. There are however some differences and thus I found this video helpful. Thank you!
My Grandpa served in the Invasion of Poland, He served from 1932-1954 in the German Army, His Rank was pretty high, in 1932 he graduated the Offcer training, He was very lucky in WW2, but in the end He got the rank of Oberst in the end. But he didnt told me he was in an Panzer division or Tiger.....
A gentleman, an excellent scholar, and a fine judge of dead horses. But seriously, your drive for research and acquisition of knowledge is fantastic. Looking forward to the video series.
I owned a horse that would have the habit to laydown on it's side with it's head on the ground. He would do this at anytime and in random places. I had more than one neighbor of higher education and good manners exclaim "did your horse die?" upon seeing him. I would look at my horse with a grin and say "no, he takes naps like that", he lived to be 33 and I attribute his long life to his power naps. Germans, such attention to details and many virtues.
@@countofdownable To be fair, that’s only one less rank than the British Army. Of course the Royal Marines have the same rank structure as the British Army. Of course, if you want confusing, look no further than the RAF, which has a total of 13 other (enlisted) ranks when you combine the normal ranks and the aircrew ranks.
I really love the comment at the end about how even the average German soldier had problems keeping it all straight. Very well done video, thanks so much!
My great grandfather was a Hauptfeldwebel . He was both in the west and in the east (Stalingrad). He would have received the „eiserner Kreuz“ , he survived the war.
I like how everyone tells their stories of their grand parents. While being so respectful to each other, why isn't this a common thing? Usually when i see someone tell a story of their german uncle i see a lot of hate comments. What a world do we live in.
Nice little timeline for all those of us who come back here regularly for reference. 0:00 - 0:28 - Introduction 0:28 - 1:36 - Categories 1:36 - 1:47 - Categories of Soldiers 1:48 - 3:45 - Men (Mannschaften) and Aspirant NCOs 3:45 - 3:57 - Categories of NCOs (Unteroffiziere) 3:57 - 4:25 - Junior NCOs (Unteroffiziere ohne Portepee) 4:25 - 5:39 - Senior NCOs (Unteroffiziere mit Portepee) and "Der Speiß" 5:39 - 6:48 - Officer Candidates (Fahrenjunker/Offizierbewerber) 6:48 - 6:54 - Categories of Officers 6:48 - 7:26 - Officers 7:27 - 8:48 - General Officers 8:48 - 9:17 - Conclusion 9:18 - 9:30 - Credits ((EDIT - I TOTALLY FORGOT TO DIVIDE THE UFFZ CHAPTER INTO UFFZ MIT PORTEPEE AND UFFZ OHNE PORTEPEE THE FIRST TIME AROUND))
@@HandGrenadeDivision It's really no problem! It's a wonderful video I've come back to for reference several times and so I figured I'd make things a little easier for myself and others in the future
@@HandGrenadeDivision I just wanted to inform you that I made a mistake in my original writing of the comment, I forgot to divide the NCO category properly into junior and senior NCOs. So I've edited the message to fix it.
It might be complicated, but I really think it was a way to get the best people into the best specialty niche, which was why the German Army was so resilient to the worst punishments. I have some pictures of a relative that fought in France, Russia, and finally captured when the Afrika Korps surrendered in Tunisia. He was in the Panzer branch with the 'Death's Head' collar tabs and pink piping.
The system of ranks used in 20th Century militaries was a natural evolution of about 400 years or so, as modern standing armies developed. Most of the German Army ranks in the 3rd Reich period had existed from at least the 1800s, and most still exist in the modern day Bundeswehr.
@@alexthomas3745 marshals in the French empire were a civil title, not a military one. it is isn’t a coincidence that almost all marshals were military soldiers though
Fantastic video, I dont think theres been another proper easily accessible breakdown like this in English before. It'll be interesting to see what is produced down the line
I never knew that the Wehrmacht Heer officer candidates had to serve in ranks before they became officers, My respect and gratitude to you for uploading such an informative video explaining the various ranks and insignia of the German Army soldiers. This channel has become one of my most favourite channel on youtube,looking forward to more amazing videos like this from you.
Its still the case. Although officer candidates skip over the majority of Mannschafts and Unteroffiziers ranks, they still serve in some of them for some time
I really like the idea of that. I think it would at least make the officers understand their subordinates a bit. I’m in the armed force of my country and most of the time the officers are just an arrogant sotb who don’t know how things work. Especially those who went to the cadet academy cause they have to be there from the age of 16-18 and graduate as a lieutenant at the age of 22-23 and that make them don’t shit about the outside world
My greatgrandfather fought in the Wehrmacht. He was as every young man forced to serve his country. At that time every household had to have a picture of Adolf Hitler at home. Once it was clear that he chosen to serve the army he often stood in front of Hitlers portrait and yelled at him: "Because of you fucker I have to leave my family behind and fight a war which is not my war". He first was somewhere stationed in the western part of Germany for training. By the time he left the training camp towards the eastern front he knew he would be passing the train station of his home town. Althrough the train wasnt allowed to stop at any station he managed the train driver to slow down the train to at least to walking speed when the train entered his hometown station. He jumped off the train, ran to my greatgrandmother who was waiting for him and gave her a last kiss. (my grandmother cried when she told me the story heard from her mum). My greatgrandfather jumped back on the train and headed towards east. He never returned. A year later, in 1944 comrades reported that on the general retreat he had been ambushed by a group of czech partisans. They found his body with all his feet and hands cut off and the open wounds treated with salt for extra suffering. My greatgrandfather never saw his daughter. It was a horrible time for all humans on both sides. A tragedy for an endless count of humans.
I’m still a kid but I’m pretty sure many German soldiers were like that. That they weren’t informed of just how terrible things were and the really bad things the reich was doing. In war you can’t really classify soldiers as good or bad unless they actually have bad intentions for non-combatants or excessive malice in their actions. The bad German people were the idiot German politicians that manipulated the country’s sore feelings from ww1 and used that to cause demonic war crimes
The ranks often had a different command significance. For example a captain could be a battalion commander in the German Army, and also the Red Army, whereas it would be a lieutenant colonel in the British and American armies, or sometimes a major.
best English explanation I have seen so far. Most Anglosxons don't understand that a "Gefreiter" is NOT a lance coprptal, etc. Thanks for the video! Appreciated! greetd from Germany!
I live in Silesia and so was my grandpa, Ernest - back then both Poland and Germany thought of Silesia as their part. He got called up to Wehrmacht. On the eve of the war he was living with his two brothers. One of them (I don't remember the name) got called up to Polish army (Armia Krajowa), the other one (Franciszek) didn't want to fight, but Nazis caught him and put him in the Auschwitz, where he got into Christianity and as he survived the camp, after war he became a controversial priest in Poland. Then he emigrated to post-war Germany (Carlsberg, near Mainheim) followed there by a married couple (Andrzej and Jolanta Gontarczyk) who later were revealed as communist spies who were working undercover to destroy his organization, Ruch Światło-Życie, from inside. When Franciszek learned about it, he invited them and after a few hours of talking he was found dead with a foam on his mouth - it was/is assumed he got poisoned, but the case was closed because lack of proofs. Gontarczyks later served a high position in post-communist government in Poland. Their deeds were discovered in 2005 and they were expelled from their positions - or rather moved into shadow, because Jolanta made her come back to mainstream politics very soon. Oh, history. It's never simple or obvious.
There was a British comedy about German occupation of France with an inept General. In one scene 5 different officers arrive one at a time at his HQ, and no one knew who was in charge among the 6.
Exemplary video. This is an individual who knows their field extremely well and does not get caught out by elementary mistakes, which could easily happen with such a topic. I thought it was explained concisely and clearly and I learned from something which I thought I already understood. Thank you.
@@David-eh9le Go away! Adidas has only 3 stripes! That would be a simple lowly Stabsgefreiter, not a full Zebra! Perfect score is of course Oberstabsgefreiter Unteroffiziersanwärter mit bestandenem Lehrgang!
@@stefanb6539 i know that the Adidas-Gefreiter is a Hauptgefreiter. Imo it is Just more funny then the Zebragefreiter. I know all of the Ranks of the Heer/ Luftwaffe. I just struggle at the Medics and the clusterfuck the Marine got.
The OSG (Oberstabsgefreiter) is also known as "Gott-Anwärter" because everybody else (except old NCOs) can learn from him and he usually shows the way, even most fresh NCOs secretly look up to him
oh I like your video a lot, many years I had difficulties to explain my former rank in the german military in english to foreign personel. My english it not bad, but definetly not perfect. so, your video and choice of words came in very handy. THX a lot.
08:50 Funny fact. When Paulus learned that he was promoted to Feldmarschall there were no appropriate epaulettes available. So he just added a 4th star literally creating a phantasy insignia! (Report came from the russian/german interpreter who encountered him after his captivation)
@@herrwagnerianer1739 There were very few field marshals in the Kaiser's army. Hitler promoted more, which had a slightly cheapening effect on the title, and it would be in character for the Kaiser's army to have a "field marshal but not quite" grade.
@Ranulf They wanted proof that he was a field marshal. Strict military protocol might have dictated that he only surrender to another field marshal but I don't think there was a Soviet one in the immediate vicinity.
German Field Marshalls had tree signs. A special Epaulette, the Marschallstab/ Marshalls rod, and the Interimsstab. The Marschallstab was the thing for important ceremonies, while the Interimsstab was the everyday rank item. Fieldmarshall Paulus got a pair of epaulettes ( neutral turkish diplomats seem to be involved), Fieldmarshall Schörner had epaulettes and Interimsstab, and the last officer, who became Fieldmarshall, i have forgotten the name, got nothing.
field gray is green. you are the first person to show videos with german heer and ss soldiers in the proper green colour, not grey. thankyou so much for accuracy.
Thank you for such a clear and concise explanation of WW2 German ranks. I had 4 uncles who fought for the U.S.(2 in the Army, 1 Marine and 1 Sailor) 2 in Europe, 2 in the South Pacific. They each had stories about their time and how it changed their lives. Keep up the great work, best of luck 🍀.
Mein Urgrossvater war ein Feldwebel bei der 9. Armee. Er war beim Polen Feldzug und spāter an der Ostfront. Er hat das eiserne kreuz 1 klasse und ein verwundetes Abzeichen bekommen. Er hat als einziger von seinen verwandten ūberlebt.
Fantastic! Actually helped me as a living history reenactor put the correct rank title and insignia on my German Wehrmacht and Medical Officer uniforms
Thank you for that Video, I have an old Wehrmachtsuniform from my grandfather I always wondered what rank he had, now I know is was an Senior NCO or a Feldwebel in the Infantry
My Opa was a Stabsgefreiter in the 8th PD. He was in from 40 to 45. He was a Panzerjager. His best friend was his CO Maj Amsel. He was in combat most of the time and never injured. He was captured in Brno in 45
It's interesting your video explaining each Wehrmacht patent, the colors, anyway... Very interesting. A suggestion for you: make a separate video showing the Luftwaffe and Kriegsmarine patents. In the Luftwaffe, for example, they have that color scheme like in Heer. It would be cool if you did. Greetings from Brazil 🇧🇷
Good video!! Thought I pretty knowledgeable about WWII German rank structure, but definitely ;earned quite a bit from this short video. How about a video about German WWII decorations????? They had a decoration for just about anything.
Hermann Goering held the rank of Reichsmarschall, which was newly created for him; this was the highest military rank in Nazi Germany. A custom uniform went with it.
It should be pointed out that the ranks Wachtmeister, Oberwachtmeister and Hauptwachtmeister were not only applied to NCO's of "horsed units", see for example Sturmgeschuetz (StuG) Abteilung 191 which was newly formed in 1940 and equipped initially with the StuG III Sd.Kfz 142 assault gun (7.5-cm L/24 cannon in a casemate on a Panzer III chassis.)
It should be pointed out that Unterfeldwebel was mostly an inter-war rank that was already on its way out in the late 30s and was generally skipped in promotions.
Truth be told I didn't know about the algorithm until just now. There have been a couple of comments about "10 minutes" which I've found mystifying. I just figured the time frame fit the content. Thanks for the like.
@@HandGrenadeDivision yeah you earn more money if the video is 10 minutes or longer, bcs you can add extra ads. Which makes everybody stretch their videos...
Thanks for a most instructive video -I I have a correction, though. the gereral grades general mjor, leutnant, geneal and general obers all hade the same collar tabs, but the fieldmarchall had larger collar tabs. Shoulder tabs are correct. Keep up the good work. Regards Gunleik Gerde, Norway
it is my understanding that if a German officer didn't have a scar someplace on their face they would not command respect. Some deliberately scarred their own face just to fit in.
@@nunyabiznez6381 They got their facial scar from duelling as a member of a "Corps" at a German university. Even today, these boys' fraternities organise duels to maximise the chance of a facial wound. They also arrange for the wound to be sewn up without anaesthetic by a medical student: so it won't be done skillfully and will leave a permanent scar.
As you pointed out, the rank of Gefreiter is not an NCO rank. Hitler has consistently been referred to as a corporal in English due to his service in WWI. However he was never promoted beyond Gefreiter. I prefer to use the US Army rank of private first class as the correct translation of Gefreiter to emphasize that it isn't an NCO position.
I like that the guy gets old when he becomes a general. Nice touch, my dude
Same with colonel.
The monocle brings a nice Prussian touch to it
@@splendiferousfinch2656 Monocle brings Walter Model
AngRepublika _ I’ve never seen a young general
@@dickrichard5579 Not true...In the past , especially before ww2 , most of the time, high rank army officers where from nobility and wealthy families...So it didn't actually depend on your age but on your social status.
As a native german speaker its such a funny thing listening to english speakers pronoucing german words. Good job buddy btw
It's a little nerve-wracking at this end trying to do justice to the pronunciation. Hopefully it hasn't been mangled too terribly bad. As disrespectful as it seems to pronounce things incorrectly, it seems like it would be worse not to present the actual terms, particularly since many of the English "translations" actually obscure the true meaning of the word.
You did a great job
@@HandGrenadeDivision As a German to English (military) translator, I tend not to translate the German ranks into English, for precisely the reason you mention. I leave them in the original German and provide a key or footnote, if needed. As you rightly say, many attempts to translate ranks result in false equivalencies. "This guy has two stripes, ergo he must be a corporal." That sort of thing. Your summary is spot on.
Actually it is not funny. Impressive should be the word. German is just a language like any other in the 🌎 world. It is a tool or vehicle created over time by mankind and societies for communication. Words if pronounced wrongly, could be corrected or perfected by learning skills and adjustment. Nothing special.
Unglaublich!
My grandpa served trim 1939 to 1945 and was a Feldwebel at war's end. He was in the 1st Panzer Division in a Schütze regiment which were later called Panzergrenadier. He managed to survive from the Invasion Of Poland in 1939 to their division surrendering in Austria in 1945. He was wounded in the chest in early 1943 in the Rhzev meat grinder. A few months later he was back at his unit. He was quite lucky to survive the entirety of the war. My grandpa's oldest brother wasn't as lucky. He was at Stalingrad and no one knows what became of him.
@OilersRiderBlueJays:Whereas My GrandPa served in Freiwilligen SS panzer grenadier Division Wiking along with other his 3000 country fellers from Finnland, mostly they were deployed in southern Russian front and Ukraine, after their unit reconstructed late 43- he continued his army career in Finland Regular army on northern Russian FrontLine
@@paulthescandinavian4992 interesting!
congrats on your old man surviving the war. First panzer division got hit hard.
My grand father fought against the Japanese and survivor of Death March
My dad was USAAF and helped with the reconstruction of Germany during the occupation force. I say, be it western allies, wehrmacht, or red army, the vast majority were unaffiliated with the atrocities and just wanted to protect their homes and do their jobs.
We won the war but they won the fashion show.
Hmmmm.
You won shit, all the world were against Germany and with that it was so hard to shamely won after 6 years of ur blood and tears , be sure if it was your single country against Germany you never dream of winning so shut up .
You're right.
Smile they also had Italy, And japan and most countries they invaded and took over, they made their soldiers fight for them. So don’t pull the “the whole world was against them and they were alone” type crap
@@collinbrosnan2729 Japan never fighted with Nazis in Europe , It was a more of political ally , Italy were comparing to German needs , other nations were only a burden to German more then a benefits . So in reality it was only the German and their own arms factories whom had the main effects on war progress .
What most people could benefit from I believe, is a flow chart. One for enlisted, officers, etc. A proper one, well done could be printed & sold as a poster. 😉
There are many of these online already, on pinterest for example, though as always take with a grain of salt. The most common error is transposing hellgrün and wiesengrün, the shades of green worn by mountain troops and panzergrenadiere.
A list of references was included in the video description above.
No offence but who would buy it. I see it's core demographic being white supremacists. No a page in a history book would suffice.
@@robertsullivan4773 since history books are re-written or not taught in schools anymore, there are a lot of history buffs out there that would be interested simply as knowledge.
@@lisaholman2019
I'd purchase a book of WWII ranks (with good reviews)
Like you say; to use as a reference while watching movies.
The Men At Arms books may already one.
The comments have given me a GREAT idea...
If I make it to the Old Folk's Home, I can use a book of ranks and watch all my favorite WWII movies again and identify all the ranks of the antiheroes.
Like you say; Always Learning, even in our senior years
More research than the CoD:WW2 and BFV dev teams did
Never played those games, is the (german) soldier's representation really that bad?
Lord Helmchen yes, some stuff is historically inaccurate and a mess in the world of realism.
@@lordhelmchen3154 The US and Japanese uniforms in BfV are good from what I've seen, the Germans look really bad but they might fix it
Alpha 1 if you use the Illusionist body with the Aviator legs, you can get an ok looking uniform for the Germans. The British uniforms are the really terrible ones. Aside from the Sandman uniform, the rest are just US uniforms or variations of it.
I liked COD World at War much better!
Ich bin kein Mensch,
Ich bin kein Tier,
Ich bin Panzer-Grenadier
Panzergrenadiere.... Dran, Drauf, Drueber !!!
Halb Mensch, halb Tier, ein ......
Translation : "I am not a human being , i am not an animal, i am a Tank- Grenadier" . A poem created by mechanized Infantry crews describing the rough environment of armored warfare. That changed with the Leopard II,after that it is only the enemy that has to endure the rough environment.
@@nichderjeniche Ich bin Soldaten in betzungzarme.
@@pieterweatherall2826 was meinst Du damit?
My great-uncle was a Oberstabsarzt on the eastern front and had a field hospital under his command, after the war he worked as a doctor in the American military hospital in Heidelberg, they offered him to go to the US and work there in a hospital with the Chance of citizenship.
My grandfathers were both lieutenants and had a company under their command, one was missed in action during the last two weeks of the war in Yugoslavia and Isnt found until today, may the soil of the east keep is corpse in eternity and let a beautiful flower grow above him, grandpa, you're not forgotten!
so basically youre a traitor!
I doubt flowers would grow over a German soldier's grave in Yugoslavia but anything is possible
Auf der Heide blüht ein kleines Blümelein
So, I'm a lifelong military historian and admitted uniform junkie.
Let me congratulate you on an informative, helpful video for the beginner WWII historian /reenactor. Your commentary is clear, concise and well thought out. The illustrations are *excellent* , especially when describing Waffenfarbe.
Reenacting can be a socially dangerous hobby... people often misunderstand the Confederate [I'm an ACW reenactor] or Axis reenactor and this can lead to some very unfortunate consequences at home or in the workplace. Providing factual information without getting lost in the moral narrative can be very helpful for someone new to the hobby.
I wore a Soviet - Russian MVD uniform for a Halloween and some girl thought I was dressed as Hitler.
As a Finn the German military ranks are quite easy for me to understand as our ranks are similarly based on Prussian military tradition. There are however some differences and thus I found this video helpful. Thank you!
Hail to the Finn
elakoon suomi!!!!
@@daweedbekhemm8549 kuule saatana me ei kestetä h sanaa mutta aina voi sanoa KAUAN ELÄKÖÖN MANNERHEIM! Vaikka hän onkin kuollut.
Torille
Prussia is a German Kingdom and German State
You produced a video with exactly the info I was looking for, thanks.
My Grandpa served in the Invasion of Poland, He served from 1932-1954 in the German Army, His Rank was pretty high, in 1932 he graduated the Offcer training, He was very lucky in WW2, but in the end He got the rank of Oberst in the end. But he didnt told me he was in an Panzer division or Tiger.....
A gentleman, an excellent scholar, and a fine judge of dead horses.
But seriously, your drive for research and acquisition of knowledge is fantastic. Looking forward to the video series.
I owned a horse that would have the habit to laydown on it's side with it's head on the ground. He would do this at anytime and in random places. I had more than one neighbor of higher education and good manners exclaim "did your horse die?" upon seeing him. I would look at my horse with a grin and say "no, he takes naps like that", he lived to be 33 and I attribute his long life to his power naps. Germans, such attention to details and many virtues.
Of course the Germans had to over engineer their rank structures 😆
They over engineered everything
Tbh
@@taxidermypolarbear1724 Kinda reminds me of the US ranking system.
@@Kingpin_Gaming_UK true
@@Kingpin_Gaming_UK
Look at the Royal Navy it only needs:
Able Rate
Leading Rate
Petty Officer
Chief Petty Officer
Warrant Officer 2
Warrant Officer 1
@@countofdownable To be fair, that’s only one less rank than the British Army. Of course the Royal Marines have the same rank structure as the British Army. Of course, if you want confusing, look no further than the RAF, which has a total of 13 other (enlisted) ranks when you combine the normal ranks and the aircrew ranks.
I really love the comment at the end about how even the average German soldier had problems keeping it all straight. Very well done video, thanks so much!
I took notes on every signal rank you listed besides officer candidates. Yet I had to watch it again to fix spelling. Very helpful
My great grandfather was a Hauptfeldwebel . He was both in the west and in the east (Stalingrad).
He would have received the „eiserner Kreuz“ , he survived the war.
I like how everyone tells their stories of their grand parents. While being so respectful to each other, why isn't this a common thing? Usually when i see someone tell a story of their german uncle i see a lot of hate comments. What a world do we live in.
something called internet
Here before your channel blows up
Literally, careful with those hand grenades.
Nice little timeline for all those of us who come back here regularly for reference.
0:00 - 0:28 - Introduction
0:28 - 1:36 - Categories
1:36 - 1:47 - Categories of Soldiers
1:48 - 3:45 - Men (Mannschaften) and Aspirant NCOs
3:45 - 3:57 - Categories of NCOs (Unteroffiziere)
3:57 - 4:25 - Junior NCOs (Unteroffiziere ohne Portepee)
4:25 - 5:39 - Senior NCOs (Unteroffiziere mit Portepee) and "Der Speiß"
5:39 - 6:48 - Officer Candidates (Fahrenjunker/Offizierbewerber)
6:48 - 6:54 - Categories of Officers
6:48 - 7:26 - Officers
7:27 - 8:48 - General Officers
8:48 - 9:17 - Conclusion
9:18 - 9:30 - Credits
((EDIT - I TOTALLY FORGOT TO DIVIDE THE UFFZ CHAPTER INTO UFFZ MIT PORTEPEE AND UFFZ OHNE PORTEPEE THE FIRST TIME AROUND))
Great idea, I will add this to the video description - thanks for taking the time to do this.
@@HandGrenadeDivision It's really no problem! It's a wonderful video I've come back to for reference several times and so I figured I'd make things a little easier for myself and others in the future
@@HandGrenadeDivision I just wanted to inform you that I made a mistake in my original writing of the comment, I forgot to divide the NCO category properly into junior and senior NCOs. So I've edited the message to fix it.
@@wolfthegreat87 very good, I applaud your diligence. Will edit the description, thanks again.
I should be sleeping but here i am watching a video on the german army rank structure from 1939 to 1945
teacher: the test wont be that difficult
the test:
Try saying a rank right now after seeing this,
Excellent info. Keep this kind of content coming.
Very well done and acurate, as far as I can tell from a German perspective! Even small details as "Hauptfeldwebel" and Spieß" included.
It might be complicated, but I really think it was a way to get the best people into the best specialty niche, which was why the German Army was so resilient to the worst punishments. I have some pictures of a relative that fought in France, Russia, and finally captured when the Afrika Korps surrendered in Tunisia. He was in the Panzer branch with the 'Death's Head' collar tabs and pink piping.
This is the most convoluted rank structure I think I've ever seen. Interesting.
Okay so how simplistic are we going to rank our soldiers
Hitler: Nein
The system of ranks used in 20th Century militaries was a natural evolution of about 400 years or so, as modern standing armies developed. Most of the German Army ranks in the 3rd Reich period had existed from at least the 1800s, and most still exist in the modern day Bundeswehr.
Lt George St Barleigh: nine??
@@HandGrenadeDivision as i know, german rank system was similar of Napoleon's army: for example, Feld Marshall: Germany only had this rank.
@@alexthomas3745 marshals in the French empire were a civil title, not a military one. it is isn’t a coincidence that almost all marshals were military soldiers though
My dad was with the US Army Air Force in WW2. This video was very well researched and I learned A LOT!
Thanks! :)
Mine too, he would turn 103 this year were he alive RIP Dad
Fantastic video, I dont think theres been another proper easily accessible breakdown like this in English before. It'll be interesting to see what is produced down the line
"Der Spiess"
some old memories about my time in the Bundeswehr start with these 2 words
not many pleasant ones :D
I had commented but I misunderstood. You must be Austrian.
I never knew that the Wehrmacht Heer officer candidates had to serve in ranks before they became officers,
My respect and gratitude to you for uploading such an informative video explaining the various ranks and insignia of the German Army soldiers.
This channel has become one of my most favourite channel on youtube,looking forward to more amazing videos like this from you.
It's still like that in the german army.
Its still the case. Although officer candidates skip over the majority of Mannschafts and Unteroffiziers ranks, they still serve in some of them for some time
I really like the idea of that. I think it would at least make the officers understand their subordinates a bit. I’m in the armed force of my country and most of the time the officers are just an arrogant sotb who don’t know how things work. Especially those who went to the cadet academy cause they have to be there from the age of 16-18 and graduate as a lieutenant at the age of 22-23 and that make them don’t shit about the outside world
Wow thanks! I learned a lot more about ranks.
My greatgrandfather fought in the Wehrmacht. He was as every young man forced to serve his country. At that time every household had to have a picture of Adolf Hitler at home. Once it was clear that he chosen to serve the army he often stood in front of Hitlers portrait and yelled at him: "Because of you fucker I have to leave my family behind and fight a war which is not my war". He first was somewhere stationed in the western part of Germany for training. By the time he left the training camp towards the eastern front he knew he would be passing the train station of his home town. Althrough the train wasnt allowed to stop at any station he managed the train driver to slow down the train to at least to walking speed when the train entered his hometown station. He jumped off the train, ran to my greatgrandmother who was waiting for him and gave her a last kiss. (my grandmother cried when she told me the story heard from her mum). My greatgrandfather jumped back on the train and headed towards east. He never returned. A year later, in 1944 comrades reported that on the general retreat he had been ambushed by a group of czech partisans. They found his body with all his feet and hands cut off and the open wounds treated with salt for extra suffering. My greatgrandfather never saw his daughter.
It was a horrible time for all humans on both sides. A tragedy for an endless count of humans.
I’m still a kid but I’m pretty sure many German soldiers were like that. That they weren’t informed of just how terrible things were and the really bad things the reich was doing. In war you can’t really classify soldiers as good or bad unless they actually have bad intentions for non-combatants or excessive malice in their actions. The bad German people were the idiot German politicians that manipulated the country’s sore feelings from ww1 and used that to cause demonic war crimes
I sympathize with you, and then they say we are civilized.
@@tartarsauce6142 same goes for America Britain and every superpower
Не забывай, кто устроил эту трагедию и детям своим накажи
@@tartarsauce6142не болтай чепухи. Все понимали что происходит. Это отговорки. Все немцы виновны в развязывании войны.
The ranks often had a different command significance. For example a captain could be a battalion commander in the German Army, and also the Red Army, whereas it would be a lieutenant colonel in the British and American armies, or sometimes a major.
I'm setting up some historical table top battles and this helps with painting and planning greatly thank you
Decoding the enigma code machines work was a walk in the park compared to this system of military ranking. Thank you for your hard work, well done.
best English explanation I have seen so far. Most Anglosxons don't understand that a "Gefreiter" is NOT a lance coprptal, etc. Thanks for the video! Appreciated! greetd from Germany!
Noice, This guy made the german ranks so beautifully, Thanks for this awesome info!! Keep up the great work!
Thanks very interesting, haven't ever been able to find a video with this much info!
That's very very well put togheter, theres everything one needs to know about WW2 German land army rank, many thanks for making it 👌🏼👍
This video helped me identifying the rank on one of my grandfathers pictures, thanks a lot.
I live in Silesia and so was my grandpa, Ernest - back then both Poland and Germany thought of Silesia as their part. He got called up to Wehrmacht. On the eve of the war he was living with his two brothers. One of them (I don't remember the name) got called up to Polish army (Armia Krajowa), the other one (Franciszek) didn't want to fight, but Nazis caught him and put him in the Auschwitz, where he got into Christianity and as he survived the camp, after war he became a controversial priest in Poland. Then he emigrated to post-war Germany (Carlsberg, near Mainheim) followed there by a married couple (Andrzej and Jolanta Gontarczyk) who later were revealed as communist spies who were working undercover to destroy his organization, Ruch Światło-Życie, from inside. When Franciszek learned about it, he invited them and after a few hours of talking he was found dead with a foam on his mouth - it was/is assumed he got poisoned, but the case was closed because lack of proofs. Gontarczyks later served a high position in post-communist government in Poland. Their deeds were discovered in 2005 and they were expelled from their positions - or rather moved into shadow, because Jolanta made her come back to mainstream politics very soon. Oh, history. It's never simple or obvious.
There was a British comedy about German occupation of France with an inept General. In one scene 5 different officers arrive one at a time at his HQ, and no one knew who was in charge among the 6.
Exemplary video. This is an individual who knows their field extremely well and does not get caught out by elementary mistakes, which could easily happen with such a topic. I thought it was explained concisely and clearly and I learned from something which I thought I already understood. Thank you.
Interesting proposal.... I see it's your first video... What are u planning to do? I will.subs
In the Bundeswehr Oberstabsgefreite are commonly known as NATO Zebra, because of their impressive looking shoulder pieces.
Well i prefer the Adidas-Gefreiten
@@David-eh9le Go away! Adidas has only 3 stripes! That would be a simple lowly Stabsgefreiter, not a full Zebra!
Perfect score is of course Oberstabsgefreiter Unteroffiziersanwärter mit bestandenem Lehrgang!
@Choki Senpai Argh, I miscounted. Well, Bundeswehr definitely needs to invent Hauptstabsgefreiter or better Stabsstabsgefreiter!
@@stefanb6539 i know that the Adidas-Gefreiter is a Hauptgefreiter. Imo it is Just more funny then the Zebragefreiter. I know all of the Ranks of the Heer/ Luftwaffe. I just struggle at the Medics and the clusterfuck the Marine got.
The OSG (Oberstabsgefreiter) is also known as "Gott-Anwärter" because everybody else (except old NCOs) can learn from him and he usually shows the way, even most fresh NCOs secretly look up to him
oh I like your video a lot, many years I had difficulties to explain my former rank in the german military in english to foreign personel. My english it not bad, but definetly not perfect. so, your video and choice of words came in very handy. THX a lot.
Really interesting! Hope to see many more of this,. I love the detail as well, not a lot can be found on youtube as extensive as this. Keep it up!
Thanks for all of the complex information you researched.
I left this feeling even more confused. Think I might need another watch or two, but great work.
I'm happy you bothered to include different variations of the same rank like the gebirgsjäger ranks.
08:50 Funny fact. When Paulus learned that he was promoted to Feldmarschall there were no appropriate epaulettes available. So he just added a 4th star literally creating a phantasy insignia!
(Report came from the russian/german interpreter who encountered him after his captivation)
@Ranulf do clarify.
In the Imperial army there was actually an honorary title "Generaloberst with the rank of Generalfeldmarschall" whose epaulettes showed four stars.
@@herrwagnerianer1739 There were very few field marshals in the Kaiser's army. Hitler promoted more, which had a slightly cheapening effect on the title, and it would be in character for the Kaiser's army to have a "field marshal but not quite" grade.
@Ranulf They wanted proof that he was a field marshal. Strict military protocol might have dictated that he only surrender to another field marshal but I don't think there was a Soviet one in the immediate vicinity.
German Field Marshalls had tree signs. A special Epaulette, the Marschallstab/ Marshalls rod, and the Interimsstab. The Marschallstab was the thing for important ceremonies, while the Interimsstab was the everyday rank item. Fieldmarshall Paulus got a pair of epaulettes ( neutral turkish diplomats seem to be involved), Fieldmarshall Schörner had epaulettes and Interimsstab, and the last officer, who became Fieldmarshall, i have forgotten the name, got nothing.
Very good video. Sehr gut gemacht. Danke.
Wow, pretty complex rank structure!
Well, Germans have never been simple
Excellent video, HGD. Well done.
Piano Music: "Ein Helller und ein Batzen"
Wow! This is amazing research on your part! Well done sir!
Reenactor Guy sent me here
Same
Same here
Nice, great job, keep it up.
my great grandfather was Hauptmann, may he rest in peace
field gray is green. you are the first person to show videos with german heer and ss soldiers in the proper green colour, not grey. thankyou so much for accuracy.
So many ranks has left me a "Headwobble ".
🤣🤣🥰
Thank you for such a clear and concise explanation of WW2 German ranks. I had 4 uncles who fought for the U.S.(2 in the Army, 1 Marine and 1 Sailor) 2 in Europe, 2 in the South Pacific. They each had stories about their time and how it changed their lives.
Keep up the great work, best of luck 🍀.
Prepare for the boom of this channel,keep going!
Mein Urgrossvater war ein Feldwebel bei der 9. Armee. Er war beim Polen Feldzug und spāter an der Ostfront. Er hat das eiserne kreuz 1 klasse und ein verwundetes Abzeichen bekommen. Er hat als einziger von seinen verwandten ūberlebt.
Fantastic! Actually helped me as a living history reenactor put the correct rank title and insignia on my German Wehrmacht and Medical Officer uniforms
5:09 It should say "die Mutter der Kompanie", not "die Kompanie", since in that case it's in the genitive.
Danke
Thank you for that Video, I have an old Wehrmachtsuniform from my grandfather I always wondered what rank he had, now I know is was an Senior NCO or a Feldwebel in the Infantry
We
Here before the channel explodes. Hope it's going to be a blast!
Very detailed and well illustrated. Outstanding you get my sub
Always pondered this subject. Could never really get my head around it. Appreciate the clarification. Thank you sir.
Boy, finally some information that I can use day-to-day !!!!!
Wow, the work you have put into this! Amazing, thank you very much..
This is a great video, very interesting and informative. Excellent work!
German soldiers: "...how many ranks do we have to learn?"
Whoever created the system: *"Yes"*
My Opa was a Stabsgefreiter in the 8th PD. He was in from 40 to 45. He was a Panzerjager. His best friend was his CO Maj Amsel. He was in combat most of the time and never injured. He was captured in Brno in 45
Great video.
It's interesting your video explaining each Wehrmacht patent, the colors, anyway... Very interesting.
A suggestion for you: make a separate video showing the Luftwaffe and Kriegsmarine patents. In the Luftwaffe, for example, they have that color scheme like in Heer. It would be cool if you did.
Greetings from Brazil 🇧🇷
Good video!! Thought I pretty knowledgeable about WWII German rank structure, but definitely ;earned quite a bit from this short video. How about a video about German WWII decorations????? They had a decoration for just about anything.
Amazing stuff, hope to see more, top-notch informative material. GL.
This video was informative and well presented. Thank you.
Good video. Helped clear a lot up.
My old father was a Rittmeister serving in a panzer unit.
Great compilation of rank distinctions !
Hermann Goering held the rank of Reichsmarschall, which was newly created for him; this was the highest military rank in Nazi Germany. A custom uniform went with it.
I like how you change the hat to suit the year! I love how much work you put into this for us! Thank you!
Bloody great format. Love it! Keep it! Greetings from Germany :)
It should be pointed out that the ranks Wachtmeister, Oberwachtmeister and Hauptwachtmeister were not only applied to NCO's of "horsed units", see for example Sturmgeschuetz (StuG) Abteilung 191 which was newly formed in 1940 and equipped initially with the StuG III Sd.Kfz 142 assault gun (7.5-cm L/24 cannon in a casemate on a Panzer III chassis.)
This is very well done, Greetings from Germany!
Thank you! Great job! Keep it up. Weighting for the next video
Great video but i think if you lower the music we can hear you more clearly
A good point, thank you for taking the time to comment.
It should be pointed out that Unterfeldwebel was mostly an inter-war rank that was already on its way out in the late 30s and was generally skipped in promotions.
Ty for this
That's why they call them a kernal general .
That was interesting. Thank you.
Great info, thanks for putting this video together. Take care, -Scott
You get a like because you didn't make the video 10 min, you're a true one
Truth be told I didn't know about the algorithm until just now. There have been a couple of comments about "10 minutes" which I've found mystifying. I just figured the time frame fit the content. Thanks for the like.
@@HandGrenadeDivision yeah you earn more money if the video is 10 minutes or longer, bcs you can add extra ads. Which makes everybody stretch their videos...
I always figured 10 minutes was about the upper limit for people's attention spans (myself very much included).
Thanks for a most instructive video -I I have a correction, though. the gereral grades general mjor, leutnant, geneal and general obers all hade the same collar tabs, but the fieldmarchall had larger collar tabs. Shoulder tabs are correct. Keep up the good work. Regards Gunleik Gerde, Norway
Field Marshals wore the regular general tabs until mid-way through the war. This is shown in the video. Thank you for the kind words.
Attention! Ober is another word for waiter!
That was complicated but well delivered, thank you
The grey hair, monocle, and scar are nice little touchs!
it is my understanding that if a German officer didn't have a scar someplace on their face they would not command respect. Some deliberately scarred their own face just to fit in.
@@nunyabiznez6381 They got their facial scar from duelling as a member of a "Corps" at a German university. Even today, these boys' fraternities organise duels to maximise the chance of a facial wound. They also arrange for the wound to be sewn up without anaesthetic by a medical student: so it won't be done skillfully and will leave a permanent scar.
As you pointed out, the rank of Gefreiter is not an NCO rank. Hitler has consistently been referred to as a corporal in English due to his service in WWI. However he was never promoted beyond Gefreiter. I prefer to use the US Army rank of private first class as the correct translation of Gefreiter to emphasize that it isn't an NCO position.