Thanks Philippe! You are correct about the cockades, didn’t even notice that till you said something about it.The cockades should be inverted
Nice helmet! The name my be Ruhland. A lot of Ruhland in the bavarian army...Do you maybe see a written unit number?
Philippe





Above the name and partly covered by the reinforcement disc, there could be some more information about the regiment. I read something with „Reserve“Thanks Philippe! You are correct about the cockades, didn’t even notice that till you said something about it.
It has been corrected!
Unit number - This is the only inscriptions I can find in the helmet.
Matt
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The soldered spike looks original, I’ve seen those repairs before.Thanks for all the nice comments and likes!
What is the proper name/model for this type helmet?
Thanks,
Matt
Thanks Sandy! I really appreciate your expertise/help.The soldered spike looks original, I’ve seen those repairs before.
The helmet is an officer helmet M1886 for mounted troops (curved chinscales), which officers normally wore from 1886 to 1914 without changes. However, it has a Chapka emblem on the front, which was fashionable among officers since around 1900 and was occasionally seen. This emblem measures about 11 cm (height) x 16 cm (width), but has no leaves between the legs of the lions. It was technically against the regulations but it seems to have been tolerated.
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Historien-Kabinett - The history of the Pickelhaube in Bavaria
historien-kabinett.de