Website Updated: 10.07.2026 - FREE World Wide Shipping - Lifetime Guarantee on Originality!

Showing 37–45 of 1445 resultsSorted by latest

  • WWII German Luftwaffe Flugzeugführerschein - Claus Petersen - Flying Licence

    WWII German Luftwaffe Flugzeugführerschein – Claus Petersen – Flying Licence

    $145.00
  • WWII German Arbeitsbuch für Ausländer - Ukrainian Bonderenko

    WWII German Arbeitsbuch für Ausländer – Ukrainian Bonderenko

    $95.00
  • WWII German Wehrmacht Wehrpass KIA Grouping - Leutnant Reichart - Artillerie Regiment 77 - Grave Map - KIA Moldova 1941

    WWII German Wehrmacht Wehrpass KIA Grouping – Leutnant Reichart – Artillerie Regiment 77 – Grave Map – KIA Moldova 1941

    Reichart served with AR 77 During the push towards the Ukrainian border he was killed, the maps detailing the place he still rests as according to the German Archive he was never reburied. A quick look on google maps show that this is just a field at the side of the road. This is a big grouping of documents and is really detailing everything about his death. He was awarded the Iron Cross Second Class in July 1940, and the German Westwall Medal in 1940.

  • WWII German Luftwaffe Large Wehrpass Grouping - Uffz Kühler - Africa Korps - Leichte Flak Abteilung 733 - Huge Grouping IDs & Photos!

    WWII German Luftwaffe Large Wehrpass Grouping – Uffz Kühler – Africa Korps – Leichte Flak Abteilung 733 – Huge Grouping IDs & Photos!

    $365.00

    Here we have a very large grouping to Kühler. Many photos, many documents, including his Wartime documents and his postwar documents, and a large lot of Post he sent to his wife when fighting/away from home. Interestingly he served with the Afrikakorps with Leichte Flak Abteilung 733 According to his Wehrpass he was in Africa protecting the Ground troops with his flak unit. He made it back and can be seen in the many photos with his wife wearing the Africa Korps Cuftitle. Included is his War Merit Cross Cert. This is a huge group! Not all is photographed individually  as its too many things! See the last few photos for an idea!   

  • WWII German Ausweis - Karl Anther - Siemens & Halske AG - Frankfurt am Main (Sold)

    WWII German Ausweis – Karl Anther – Siemens & Halske AG – Frankfurt am Main (Sold)

  • General Franz Halder Archive

    Premium Auction – General Franz Halder Archive – Hitlers Chief War Planner – Auction Ends April 21st 2026

    Probably the best items we have put on offer from our archive! Franz Halder was a senior German officer during World War II, best known for serving as Chief of the Army General Staff from 1938 to 1942. In this role, he was deeply involved in planning major military operations, including the invasion of France and Operation Barbarossa. Although initially supportive of the regime’s military ambitions, Halder grew increasingly critical of Adolf Hitler’s strategic decisions, which often overruled professional military advice. He was eventually dismissed in 1942. After the war, Halder was held by the Allies and later contributed to U.S. Army historical studies, playing a key role in shaping postwar narratives about the German military. His legacy remains controversial due to both his involvement in Nazi military campaigns and his influence on how those events were later interpreted. His items will be auctioned on April 21st in the USA with Alexander Historical Auctions. To view the catalog and bid now click the link below: https://www.alexautographs.com/auction-catalog/115-general-franz-halder-historic-militaria-auct_FP44OY7EJV

  • WWII German Wehrmacht Soldbuch - Hauptmann Gehrke - 246 Volksgrenadier Division - Aachen - Iron Cross First Class Aachen Battles against US Troops - Captured  Rare

    WWII German Wehrmacht Soldbuch – Hauptmann Gehrke – 246 Volksgrenadier Division – Aachen – Iron Cross First Class Aachen Battles against US Troops – Captured Rare

    The pay book belonged to customs inspector Richard Gehrke, who was born in 1904, and was issued on January 26, 1943 by the Grenadier Replacement Battalion 110. Interestingly, it bears the number 1. At this time Gehrke was a first lieutenant in the reserve. The Gren.Ers.Btl. represented the replacement for the 79th Infantry Division, which was on the Eastern Front at the time, so that Gehrke’s presumably first deployment to the front took him to the 886 Grenadier Regiment of this very division. During his deployment on the Eastern Front, he contracted typhoid fever in September 1943, which kept him busy for a good two months, led him to various hospitals and finally to the Truscawiecz army convalescent home (presumably located in Poland). However, the infection seems to have healed without any consequences and Gehrke returned to his troops, because on February 4, 1944 he was awarded the EK2 by the 79th ID. He also changed units within the division at an unspecified point in time and was deployed to Grenadier Regiment 212 for a while (coming from Grenadier Replacement Battalion 212). At the end of April 1944, Gehrke was admitted to a hospital with an injury that he must have sustained in an accident (code 34). On July 1, 1944, Gehrke was promoted to captain in the reserve, and here an inconsistency occurs: The promotion was carried out by the unit with the field post number 23353 (if I deciphered the number correctly), which is assigned to the field replacement battalion 246. However, this unit does not appear on page 4 as a replacement unit, especially since the 246th ID no longer existed at that point. However, I can’t imagine that this could be a coincidence or wrong. Perhaps he was briefly intended for the division’s re-formation as the 246th VGD? Be that as it may, his stay with the 149th Staff and Grenadier Regiment of the 49th Infantry Division is assured. This division was a ground-based, non-mobile unit in the Boulogne area and did NOT take part in the fighting there after the landing in Normandy. Instead, it withdrew to the area west of Paris and had initial enemy contact in the defense of the Seine crossings. The bulk of the division was captured in the Mons pocket. Gehrke was not one of them; he appears to have been one of only around 1,500 men to escape the cauldron. With regular enemy contact, the division withdrew further towards Reich territory via Belgium and Holland and crossed the border at Aachen. At the end of September, on the eve of the 2nd Battle of Aachen, the division was reorganized and fresh troops were added to it. On October 1st it had a combat strength of around 5,100 men (9,400 total) and was fighting on the northern edge of Aachen (Alsdorf, Merkstein, Palenberg, Kohlscheid for those who know their way around) against the American 29th US Infantry -Division. Gehrkte probably experienced these fights first hand. At Aachen the division was again almost completely wiped out. It lost so much of its fighting strength that it virtually ceased to exist and on October 23rd the pitiful remnants were incorporated into the 246th VGD, which had also been badly beaten near Aachen, on the arbitrary orders of Field Marshal Models. Gehrke’s unit, the Grenadier Regiment 149, was probably incorporated into the Grenadier Regiment 689. Once again, as in Mons, Gehrke must have been one of the few in his unit who survived the Aachen disaster and were not taken prisoner, because on November 19th the 246th VGD awarded him the EK1. At this point the 246th VGD was standing. in the defensive battle east of Aachen an der Rur. The EK1 is the last official entry, but the prisoner of war number written in bold on page 1 proves that Gehrke also survived the later fighting and was taken prisoner either in the North or Schnee Eifel (the division was for a short time in the Monschau area next to the 272nd VGD was deployed, but was later relocated to the area west of Stadtkyll to strengthen the former Ardennes Front).   Removed from Consignment

  • Original WWII German Luftwaffe Night Fighter Kill Report - Nachtjagdgeschwader 1 - RAF Lancaster Lantin/Heverlee Belgium - Photos - RARE

    Original WWII German Luftwaffe Night Fighter Kill Report – Nachtjagdgeschwader 1 – RAF Lancaster Lantin/Heverlee Belgium – Photos – RARE

    Here we ave an extremely rare Abschussmeldung for NG1. Lancaster ED 781 (DX-J) I of 57 Squadron, took off at 2252 from RAF Scampton on 24 June 1943 for its target Wuppertal in the heart of Germany’s Rhur industrial region. The aircraft was intercepted and shot down by a German nightfighter from Stab/II/NJG1 flown by Oberltnt Wilhelm Telge. The aircraft crashed at 0120 near Lantin, 8km from the centre of Liege in Belgium. Only Sgt Lambdin, the Bomb Aimer, managed to bale out and was taken POW; the rest of the crew are buried at the cemetery of Heverlee.

  • Original WWII German Photograph Graphic Content KIA French or Belgian Soldier

    Original WWII German Photograph Graphic Content KIA French or Belgian Soldier

    $65.00
×