and one section that i never expected to see anything interesting to me that invariably has caught my eye was the section on dress knives and daggers, and dress swords made for the officers of various military and civil branches of nazi germany, two models ive fallen in love with two examples from the wide variety of blades, one is the dress sword for luftwaffe officers the other is the form of the dress dagger for the german SA and SS
with hitlers election to power in 1933, it seems germany sought to reinvent itself which is why alot of german stuff, uniforms, and the like from that era are so unique and often VERY stylish the daggers, othen they use new materials for fittings (the luftwaffe swords crossguard is made of aluminium in many cases rather than steel.
http://www.snyderstreasures.com/eBay/Images/2...CN3457.JPG
the luftwaffe dress sword takes the form of a medieval arming sword with wheel pommel
the SS and SA daggers on the other hand are based off of the holbein dagger aka the baselard.
http://www.historicalimagebank.com/gallery/ma...agger.html
the dress dagger for the SA is more or less the same design as the one for the SS, with the organisational emblems being different except its more an earthy brown/ natural wood-grain look on the handle.
which is a refreshing change from the endless sea of smallswords, cutlasses, basket hilts, plus cavalry and mamluke sabres that dominate the swords worn by the officers of western armies during that time.
aside from japan who in ww2 replaced the more western sabre with a more traditional japanese sword for their officer class.
by the way i should point out the examples of german dress daggers that look stunning doesnt end there, all in all it seems that the 3rd reich definately had a great seat sense of style and grandeur when it came to these matters.
and luckily my local flea market has a vendor who among the wallhanger katanas and cheapy 'helicopter fantasy sword knockoffs, the stall has a ffairly wide selection of knockoffs of german dress daggers at a fairly cheap price, around 30-35-40 dollars im not pretending that these are even neccesarily GOOD replicas and definately not antiques but they still look amazing , in fact she has pretty much every example listed in tobias capwells book on knives and daggers, which i like.
the only probblem with having and buying and displaying such items is the hefty amount of infamy associated with the nazis would invariably result in people giving you wierd looks.
but im curious if anyone has any examples in their collection of either antiques or reproductions, and whether those whoes interest in militaria extends to the 2nd world war have had any uissues getting/ having stufff from the germans, whether repros or antiques.


SS dress dagger, model from 1933

GTRS-13
German World War Two Early Silver Luftwaffe F. & A. Helbig / Gaefler Marked Officers Sword [ Download ]