A Fabulous, Imperial German WW1, Steel, Folding Sniper Shield. Western Front Recovery In Great Surviving Condition. A Fabulous, Imperial German WW1, Steel, Folding Sniper Shield. Western Front Recovery In Great Surviving Condition. A Fabulous, Imperial German WW1, Steel, Folding Sniper Shield. Western Front Recovery In Great Surviving Condition. A Fabulous, Imperial German WW1, Steel, Folding Sniper Shield. Western Front Recovery In Great Surviving Condition. A Fabulous, Imperial German WW1, Steel, Folding Sniper Shield. Western Front Recovery In Great Surviving Condition. A Fabulous, Imperial German WW1, Steel, Folding Sniper Shield. Western Front Recovery In Great Surviving Condition.

A Fabulous, Imperial German WW1, Steel, Folding Sniper Shield. Western Front Recovery In Great Surviving Condition.

WW1 German sniper shield with moving protective side plates, reputedly battlefield dug on the Somme.

Soldiers in front-line trenches suffered from enemy snipers. These men were usually specially trained marksmen that had rifles with telescopic sights. German snipers did not normally work from their own trenches. The main strategy was to creep out at dawn into no-man's land and remain there all day. Wearing camouflaged clothing and using the cover of a fake tree, they waited for a British soldier to pop his head above the parapet. A common trick was to send up a kite with English writing on it. Anyone who raised his head to read it was shot. They also used a steel plate with a loophole for their Mauser sniper rifle. This is a super example and it shows at least one bullt strike upon it. There were many variants in these shields from lightweight models to huge, fully wheeled contraptions. This is the 'standard' German model, the 'Infanterieschild' from 1916. The front has curved edges to protect the user from bullet splash or richochets. The position of the opening allows maximum protection for right handed soldiers and normally a movable cover is fitted to protect the rifle slot.
To the rear there are supports to allow the shield to be self-supporting on flat terrain. Many were designed to be portable on the battlefield. Normally they would have been dug into the trench system or used in useful numbers as part of short term or even semi-permanent strong points or sniper posts in trench systems.

Export shipping abroad would likely be expensive

Code: 26154

675.00 GBP