1st Contemporary History Auction

Bidding on 484 lots has ended on 16th November 2014. 83% of all lots sold

186 |

German Cross in gold (20) - heavy Zimmermann

German Cross in gold (20) - heavy Zimmermann

LOT 1-186
SOLD
Auction ended        16th November 2014  |  10:03 pm CET
RESULT
1.410,00
EXCL. BUYER’S PREMIUM: 17,5 %

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DESCRIPTion, DETaILS & Photos
SAVE FOR LATER
PERIOD
COUNTRY Deutschland
MATERIAL
DIMENSIONS
MAKER C.F. Zimmermann
WEIGHT
LOT 1-186
EAN 2000000003950
LOT 1-186
PERIOD
COUNTRY Deutschland
EAN 2000000003950
MATERIAL
DIMENSIONS
MAKER C.F. Zimmermann
WEIGHT
PERIOD
COUNTRY Deutschland
LOT 1-186
MATERIAL
DIMENSIONS
EAN 2000000003950
MAKER C.F. Zimmermann
WEIGHT


Description
German Cross in gold made by Zimmermann. 20 maker marked on the pin. Collectors call this a heavy Zimmermann according to contraction and weight. A quite rare one to come by. 
 
According to our scale: 67,5gr.
 
Dark patina spots to the front and back. Small scratches to the black enamel swastika. A few small areas of the enamel look restored to me.
 
Rare cross in condition 2- at a very fair starting price.

Condition
See description
Historical information

NAME

German Cross in Gold

DATE OF INSTITUTION

28. September 1941 as a military order in two grades. A special grade, the German Cross in Gold with Diamonds was planned and prototypes were made.

AWARD CRITERIA

The golden grade was awarded for multiple exceptional deeds of bravery or leadership and the silver grade for exceptional deeds in troop leadership. The award of the Iron Cross 1. Class, the Spange 1. Class , or the War Merit Cross 1. Class was a pre-requisite for the awarding of the German Cross. The German Cross was located above the Iron Cross 1. Class and War Merit Cross 1. Class but below the Knights Cross of the Iron Cross, respectively the Knights Cross of the War Merit Cross.

MANUFACTURERS

The German Cross was awarded by the decision of the supreme commanders of the three army branches.

The German Cross was produced by five known manufacturers and maybe one or two not yet known companies. The known manufacturers are Deschler & Sohn, who designed the cross, Gebrüder Godet, C.E. Juncker, C.F. Zimmermann, and Otto Klein.

Early crosses are unmarked and from the end of 1942/early 1943 onwards, the crosses were marked with the Präsidialkanzlei numbers of the companies.

Due to the heavy and slightly bulky nature of the award, a cloth version was authorized in June 1942. The cloth version can be found with eight different cloth backing colors: field gray (army), dark blue (navy), blue-gray (LW), black (tank forces), stone gray (assault gun), olive (Africa Heer), light khaki (Africa LW), and white (summer uniform).

AWARD NUMBERS

Accurate numbers are not known but the closest estimation based on surviving documents are 25,964 for the gold grade and 2,471 for the silver grade. A known total of eleven soldiers were awarded both grades.

The crosses were mainly stored and registered at the Präsidalkanzlei and were given out by this office. It is possible that smaller numbers were stored at the personnel offices of the three army branches.

AWARD DOCUMENTS

The Heer issued preliminary award documents in the format A5, followed by a larger (356 mm x 254 mm) formal document. The Luftwaffe and the Kriegsmarine never issued any preliminary documents, only the formal ones in the same size as the formal document of the Heer.

WEARING METHOD

The German Cross was worn at the right side of the uniform on the breast pocket.

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