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Nuremberg Party Day Badge
Nazi Party national award From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Nuremberg Party Day Badge (German: Das Nürnberger Parteiabzeichen von 1929)[1] was the second badge recognised as a national award of the Nazi Party (NSDAP). Also known as the Nuremberg Party Badge of 1929, it was awarded to those Nazi Party members who had attended the 1929 national rally in the city of Nuremberg.[2] After the establishment of Nazi Germany, it formally was given precedence as the second highest Party award in a decree of 6 November 1936.

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The rally
The Nazi Party held its 4th Reichsparteitage der NSDAP (National Party Day) in Nuremberg on 1–4 August 1929.[1] It was the first rally held since August 1927.[3] Thirty-five special trains brought an estimated 25,000 SA and SS personnel and 1,300 Hitler Youth participants from all over Germany. The police estimated the attendance at between 30,000 and 40,000. It was a far larger and more elaborate production than the previous rally, and Adolf Hitler intended to use it to showcase the growth of his movement, which now topped 130,000 members.[4]
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The badge
To commemorate the rally, a special honour badge was established on 15 August 1929 by the commander of the SA.[2] All Nazi Party members who had attended the rally were eligible to wear the badge.[2] Permission to wear the Nuremberg Party Badge was granted by the Gauleiter (Senior district leader). The wearing of the badge could be withdrawn by Hitler and the chief of the Nazi Party Chancellery, Martin Bormann.[5]
The badge measured 21mm wide by 48mm high. It displayed a representation of the Nuremberg Castle at the top with the word "Nürnberg" under it. An eagle clutching a wreath encircling a swastika stood on top of a helmet in the center, with the inscriptions "1914-1919" and "N.S.D.A.P. Partei Tag 1929" around it.[2] The badge was produced in gray, silver and gold, with no significance attributed to the color.[6]
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Precedence
After the founding of Nazi Germany, the Nuremberg Party Day Badge was viewed as a symbol of membership in the "Old Guard" (Alter Kämpfer) and was frequently displayed by high-ranking leaders, including Hitler (who normally did not wear an excess of NSDAP awards) at subsequent Nuremberg rallies. The badge was to be worn on the left breast side of a uniform.[2]
In a decree signed 6 November 1936, Hitler gave new orders of precedence for the "Orders and Awards" of Nazi Germany. The top NSDAP awards were listed in this order: 1. Coburg Badge; 2. Nuremberg Party Badge of 1929; 3. Brunswick Rally Badge of 1931; 4. Golden Party Badge; 5. The Blood Order; followed by the individual Gau badges and the Golden Hitler Youth Badge.[7][8]
Selected recipients
- Adolf-Heinz Beckerle[9]
- Joseph Berchtold[10]
- Heinrich Böhmcker[11]
- Philipp Bouhler[12]
- Walter Buch[13]
- Leonardo Conti[14]
- Kurt Daluege[15]
- Karl von Eberstein[16]
- Karl Fiehler[17]
- Heinrich-Georg Graf Finck von Finckenstein[18]
- Albert Forster[19]
- Hans Frank[20]
- Joseph Goebbels[21]
- Hermann Göring[22]
- Paul Hennicke[23]
- Arthur Hess[24]
- Rudolf Hess[25]
- Friedrich Hildebrandt[26]
- Heinrich Himmler[27]
- Adolf Hitler
- Otto Hofmann[28]
- Dietrich von Jagow[29]
- Fritz Katzmann[30]
- Wilhelm Kube[31]
- Hinrich Lohse[32]
- Viktor Lutze[33]
- Joachim Meyer-Quade[34]
- Wilhelm Murr[35]
- Martin Mutschmann[36]
- Franz Pfeffer von Salomon[37]
- Bernhard Rust[38]
- Fritz Sauckel[39]
- Wilhelm Schepmann[40]
- Baldur von Schirach[41]
- Fritz Schlessmann[42]
- Erich Schmiedicke[43]
- Heinrich Schoene[44]
- Gregor Strasser[45]
- Julius Streicher[46]
- Fritz Wachtler[47]
- Otto Wagener[48]
- Karl Wahl[49]
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See also
References
Sources
External links
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