CLOVIS 57
Well-known member
Hello,
A French collector submitted a front plate to me, asking ‘if I knew anything about it’.
I replied that I did, although it was extremely rare.
This is a genuine Garde-Adler ohne Stern.En voici un autre en laiton doré.

If you look at them too quickly, you might think they were Grenadier de la Garde eagles from 1842 to 1889 or Linien-Grenadier eagles from 1897 (after the FWR eagle of the old regiments).
But the differences are very clear.

-The true Grenadier eagle with ‘hovering wings’ shows an S-shaped cross or sword guard, whereas the eagle of the Guard shows a butterfly-knot-shaped cross.
-The real Grenadier eagle shows an acanthus knob at the end of the sceptre, instead of an eaglet.
-The real Grenadier eagle shows a Vaterland-band with 5 folds, with ‘Koenig’ on the breast of the eagle, instead of 4 folds with Koenig on the left wing.
The eagle submitted to me is not a Grenadier eagle but a Prussian Guard eagle, which was never perforated to receive a Stern Guard.
These Garde-Adler, without the Garde-Stern, and without the 2 vents to fix it, are extremely rare, but they are sometimes found. I don't know which regiment they were intended for. For the K.I.R.145 of Metz, in 1913... in theory, perhaps, because in reality it was supplanted by the Grenadier-Adler.
One thing is certain, these eagles do exist...
In small numbers, but they do exist...
A French collector submitted a front plate to me, asking ‘if I knew anything about it’.
I replied that I did, although it was extremely rare.


If you look at them too quickly, you might think they were Grenadier de la Garde eagles from 1842 to 1889 or Linien-Grenadier eagles from 1897 (after the FWR eagle of the old regiments).
But the differences are very clear.

-The true Grenadier eagle with ‘hovering wings’ shows an S-shaped cross or sword guard, whereas the eagle of the Guard shows a butterfly-knot-shaped cross.
-The real Grenadier eagle shows an acanthus knob at the end of the sceptre, instead of an eaglet.
-The real Grenadier eagle shows a Vaterland-band with 5 folds, with ‘Koenig’ on the breast of the eagle, instead of 4 folds with Koenig on the left wing.
The eagle submitted to me is not a Grenadier eagle but a Prussian Guard eagle, which was never perforated to receive a Stern Guard.
These Garde-Adler, without the Garde-Stern, and without the 2 vents to fix it, are extremely rare, but they are sometimes found. I don't know which regiment they were intended for. For the K.I.R.145 of Metz, in 1913... in theory, perhaps, because in reality it was supplanted by the Grenadier-Adler.
One thing is certain, these eagles do exist...
In small numbers, but they do exist...
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