Hello
What are your thoughts on this beret?
I do not know anything when it comes to British berets.
looking around it seems different from the ww2 period ones?
No dates or markings anywhere that I could see.
Thank you very much
Tony
Hello
What are your thoughts on this beret?
I do not know anything when it comes to British berets.
looking around it seems different from the ww2 period ones?
No dates or markings anywhere that I could see.
Thank you very much
Tony
not WWII and I have no idea what the badge is, perhaps foreign
Regards,
Jerry
Whatever its just an opinion.
I agree with Jerry here. The beret with the red backing is as worn by non-commando trained / qualified RM badged personnel (this would include the Cadets, a pseudo-military youth organisation mostly aged 14 - 18 yrs) to this day and the stitching around the red patch does have a very modern look to it apart from the fact that this is not a WWII beret as Jerry said.
As for the badge it is certainly not British military and I am not convinced it is a cap badge at all. It does have a european look to it and I did initially think of Scandinavia. If you look at the device in the centre of the badge you will see it is not in the correct orientation and is canted 45 degrees to the right when it should be upright like a + sign rather than like a x sign.
I would be interested to find out what it actually is though.
As for the word Marine marked on the label this in many Romance or Germanic languages simply means the sea or of the sea but is used to refer to the "Navy" so is most like spurious in this case.
I hope this helps
Regards
Mark
"War is an ugly thing, but not the ugliest of things. A man who has nothing for which he is willing to fight, nothing he cares more about than his own personal safety, is a miserable creature with no chance of being free unless made and kept so by the exertions of better men than himself."
I think it's a Royal Netherlands Marine Corps (Korps Mariniers) beret with an unknown badge. The number on the sewn tag looks to be the reg number of the original owner.
The black (actually very dark blue) beret with the half-circular red patch was introduced in 1945-46 and is still worn by Dutch marines that complete basic training. It is worn with either a black anchor badge (daily/combat) or a gold one (parade).
Hello
Thank you so much for the help and information.
I really appreciate it
Tony
The pin closure looks civilian, Belgium sometimes uses prongs.
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