A Most Rare And Highly Collectable The Chained 1936 SS-Ehrendolch ( A Most Rare And Highly Collectable The Chained 1936 SS-Ehrendolch ( A Most Rare And Highly Collectable The Chained 1936 SS-Ehrendolch ( A Most Rare And Highly Collectable The Chained 1936 SS-Ehrendolch ( A Most Rare And Highly Collectable The Chained 1936 SS-Ehrendolch ( A Most Rare And Highly Collectable The Chained 1936 SS-Ehrendolch ( A Most Rare And Highly Collectable The Chained 1936 SS-Ehrendolch ( A Most Rare And Highly Collectable The Chained 1936 SS-Ehrendolch ( A Most Rare And Highly Collectable The Chained 1936 SS-Ehrendolch ( A Most Rare And Highly Collectable The Chained 1936 SS-Ehrendolch (

A Most Rare And Highly Collectable The Chained 1936 SS-Ehrendolch ( "SS Honour Dagger") With Meine Ehre heißt Treue Blade, Only Ever Allowed To Be Awarded, Worn & Owned By The SS Old Guard Officers Of Pre-1935 Service

The 1936 "chained" SS service dagger was officially authorized in August 1936. To be eligible to wear or receive it, SS personnel had to meet strict criteria based on rank and length of service.
All SS Officers who had held their rank since no later than November 9, 1935.
Any SS member (officer or enlisted) who had completed at least three consecutive years of service in the SS.
The dagger, officially known as the Model 1936, was distinguished from the earlier Model 1933 by its distinctive black-painted scabbard and a metal chain hanger featuring alternating SS runes and skulls.

The daggers were given out at an awarding ceremony that took place on 9 November, the official founding date of the SS, which was conducted according to strict rules developed by Heinrich Himmler. The annual November 9th ceremonies involving Heinrich Himmler and the SS were massive state-sanctioned events in Nazi Germany. They centered around two main elements: the commemoration of the failed 1923 Beer Hall Putsch and the dark, neo-pagan rituals designed to bind the SS to Adolf Hitler. The Midnight SS Oath Ceremony The night of November 9 featured a highly symbolic SS ceremony in front of the Feldherrnhalle in Munich.
At midnight, thousands of newly recruited SS troops lined the torch-lit streets to swear personal allegiance to Adolf Hitler.
Designed as an almost religious rite, the ceremony emphasized absolute loyalty and cemented the SS as the fanatical, racial vanguard of the Nazi state. In addition to this dagger presented at the ceremony there may also be the SS Honour Ring (Ehrenring) and SS Honour Sword (Degen).

Here is the typical, superior version and rarest dagger used by SS officers, and awarded in 1936, and it is the most popular of all the National Socialist weapons, enjoying vast admiration and desirability in the WWII collecting field. This is a nice example, with black enamel paint scabbard. This one has a good blade, not maker marked exactly as it should be, as the '1936 chained' was never maker marked. The chains top loop is sometimes referred to as “Wotan’s Knot.” The SS proof stamp is very clear and sharp on the second up link of the chain. This is called the “Kulturzeichen.” The skulls and runes have superb definition. The external metal surface has as usual aging marks overall, as is to be expected on these rarest of German daggers.
If any service member of the elite SS brought the organisation into disrepute he could be imprisoned and his dagger and ring confiscated, despite each SS dagger being purchased by every owner. They were always issued, often during a ceremony on the 9th November, but they always had to be paid for by the recipient.

In a National Socialist context, the phrase Meine Ehre heißt Treue refers to a declaration by Adolf Hitler following the Stennes Revolt, an incident between the Berlin Sturmabteilung (SA) and the SS. In early April 1931, elements of the SA under Walter Stennes attempted to overthrow the head of the Berlin section of the NSDAP (Nazi Party). As the section chief, Joseph Goebbels, fled with his staff, a handful of SS under Kurt Daluege were beaten trying to repel the SA. After the incident, Hitler wrote a letter of congratulations to Daluege, stating … SS-Mann, deine Ehre heißt Treue! ("Man of the SS, your honour is loyalty").
Soon afterwards, Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler, made the modified version of this sentence the official motto of the organisation.

The Schutzstaffel translated to Protection Squadron or defence corps, abbreviated SS—was a major paramilitary organization under Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party (NSDAP). It began in 1923 as a small, permanent guard unit known as the "Saal-Schutz" made up of NSDAP volunteers to provide security for Nazi Party meetings in Munich. Later, in 1925, Heinrich Himmler joined the unit, which had by then been reformed and renamed the "Schutz-Staffel". Under Himmler's leadership (1929–45), it grew from a small paramilitary formation to one of the largest and most powerful organizations in the Third Reich. One link is an old contemporary replacement.

Code: 26233

5500.00 GBP