Poor 1240, first he gets wounded, then he looses his plate and spoon, and lastly he gets killed.
Poor 1240, first he gets wounded, then he looses his plate and spoon, and lastly he gets killed.
Nice grenades !!!
Excellent, atlichna
Looking for the photo albums of Leutnant Emil Freitag, 3. / G.R. 377
Fantastic plate! Amazing it survived. Your friend made ok! The grenades were in super shape too.Ya gotta bring your metal detector along with you when you go into the Army Sebastien. If they were to let you. Ron
Great finds as always, such a shame you have to waste digging time when you are in the army, how long do you have to serve? Two years?
Hello Sebastien,
All the above photos definitely depict belongings of a Romanian officer (most probably a 2nd Lt. Infantry). Those are 1 LEU (Romanian currency then, and now as well) and 5 LEI coins. If I recall, Gumrak was also an airfield, and there were Romanian airmen (fighter planes squadrons) and infantry and flak troops defending the airfield. I am Romanian and very much into collecting WWII relics myself. I must admit I was touched about your findings (for obvious reasons). Please let me ask you kindly to take good care of all those findings, on behalf of that soldier's mother that never seen him again. Romanians, as former enemies, might be blamed for their participation on the war in the East but those were the times...and we cannot anymore judge the past. Just take note of it and avoid such things from happening again. Appreciate your work as well. You can, if you want, keep me posted on other similar findings, just for information purposes. Dan Radu/Bucharest - Romania
Hi again Sebastien,
Here are the meanings for the lettering on a Romanian dog-tag:
- C.R. stands for CENTRU DE RECRUTARE, i.e. the place where the soldier was drafted (recruited) from.
- CTG (not CTR), stands for CONTINGENT, i.e. the year the soldier was recruited. This particular one shows 938 (i.e. 1938)
- MATR. stands for MATRICOLA, that is for identification number.
- REG means the REGIMENT where the soldier was from.
Please let me know about any other clarification concerning Romanian Army's names, ranks, etc. I am a 2nd Lt. Armored Corps (reserve) myself.
Cheers, Dan.
Dear Sebastian,
I dare ask you (if it's not too much, of course): could you please do me (and eventually to other relatives that may be alive) a huge favor, i.e. photo all the Romanian dog tags you found (and I am sure you kept) front and reverse, so I could eventually try and identify the soldiers?
Again, I can understand a negative answer, no bother, but I thought it was worth asking.
Many thanks in anticipation for your efforts. You can send a private message or a public one, I don't mind.
Regards, Dan.
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