Unterfeldwebel

Unterfeldwebel (lit. 'Under Field Sergeant') was a rank of the Wehrmacht, from 1935 until 1945. It was also used in the East German National People's Army from 1956 to 1990. The equivalent to Unterfeldwebel in the Bundeswehr of West Germany and later the Federal Republic of Germany is the rank Stabsunteroffizier (OR-5).

History

Unterfeldwebel (in Cavalry, Artillery, and Armoured corps: Unterwachtmeister) was in Germany the designation to a person in uniform with the second lowest NCO-rank (after Unteroffizier). It was counted to the rank-group Unteroffiziere ohne Portepee.

The rank-designations Unterfeldwebel, respectively Unterfeldwebel were created by renaming of the Sergeant rank of the German Empire Army.

Independent to the military assignment an Unteroffizier could be promoted to Unterfeldwebel after a service time of three to four years. Since 1936 this rank could normally be skipped in Heer and Luftwaffe, and NCOs with the rank Unteroffizier were promoted to Feldwebel.

Rank designation Wehrmacht and Waffen-SS until 1945

Branch
German Army

Luftwaffe

Kriegsmarine

Waffen-SS
Collar
Shoulder
Sleeve
Name Unterfeldwebel ObermaatSS-Scharführer
Junior rank
Unteroffizier

(Wehrmacht ranks)
Unterfeldwebel
Senior rank
Feldwebel

Nationale People's Army

Unterfeldwebel/Obermaat
Border troops
Volksmarine

By the GDR National People's Army and the Border Troops the rank was introduced in 1962, comparable to NATO OR-6a[1]. The rank insignia remained almost identically to these Wehrmacht and Reichswehr.

Junior rank
Unteroffizier

(NPA ranks)
Unterfeldwebel
(Obermaat)
Senior rank
Feldwebel
gollark: Did you buy the bad clones from LyricTech™?
gollark: What? You didn't buy any from us.
gollark: That was only an issue if you configured them really stupidly.
gollark: Consider purchasing our GPT-bees instead, they have language capability.
gollark: It is a suboptimal number.

References

  1. The abbreviation "OR" stands for "Other Rank, officers excepted / fr: sous-officiers et militaires du rang / ru:другие ранги, кроме офицероф"

Source

  • Dictionary to the German military history, 1st edition (Liz.5, P189/84, LSV:0547, B-Nr. 746 635 0), military publishing house of the GDR (VEB) – Berlin, 1985, Volume 2, page 1013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.