poniatowski
Well-known member
J.LeBrasseur said:I like it a lot, wish I would have beaten Joe to the punch on this one.
A Very nice find IMO
James
Yes.

J.LeBrasseur said:I like it a lot, wish I would have beaten Joe to the punch on this one.
A Very nice find IMO
James
The tail feathers are straight on a Kurassier eagle.
Very odd. That is an infantry 1870 reserve eagle. The tail feathers are straight on a Kurassier eagle.
I have observed that Reservist's plates that employ this style of bandeau omit the "tails" on either side of the feet; this applies to other regiments as well.
Arran said:I have observed that Reservist's plates that employ this style of bandeau omit the "tails" on either side of the feet; this applies to other regiments as well. Plates of active soldiers/officer's were made with the "tails" as part of the main stamping, and only had the centre part of the bandeau separately applied. I have NEVER seen a reservist's or Landwehr plate, that omits the "Mitt Gott" scroll, yet also has the "tails"...
Amen! Even more examples now. You two gentlemen have really found a narrow crevice. Thank you!Arran said:Thanks for posting this! Its the first time I've seen this configuration. I think we have to assume that the Reserve plates with absent tails are merely a variation rather than an official mandate...
joerookery said:Bruno,
Let me know when you get your new picture that I can put into an article. With your find and Arran's citations I should be able to add this to the KR2 article. This is a real discovery I think and you two deserve a pat on the back. :thumb up: