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Vigo Militaria and Collectables

WW2 German M40 Single Decal Winter Camouflage Battle Recovered Helmet with Liner and maker mark.

Regular price £345.00 GBP
Regular price Sale price £345.00 GBP
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This superb ground dug, battlefield found, German M40 winter camouflage helmet (Stahlhelm) was found in the Kurland (Courland) pocket at the positions of the German 16th or 18th Armies.

It is a solid example, it’s Decal is still visible, It shows most of the original paint. The liner is present, although a little loose and brittle, has been treated with leather food. The helmet has been waxed to preserve it.

It shows it’s maker mark EF64, which means it was made by Emaillerwerke AG, Fulda and it’s size 64.
This is a very rare winter camouflage helmet from the German/
Russian theatre of war, and would look great in any WW2 collection. 

The Courland Pocket was an area of the Courland Peninsula where a group of Nazi German forces from the Reichskommissariat Ostland were cut off and surrounded by the Red Army for almost a year, lasting from July 1944 until May 1945.

The pocket was created during the Red Army's Baltic Offensive, when forces of the 1st Baltic Front reached the Baltic Sea near Memel during its lesser Memel Offensive Operation phases. This action isolated the German Army Group North from the rest of the German forces, having been pushed from the south by the Red Army, standing in a front between Tukums and Libau in Latvia, with the Baltic Sea in the West, the Irbe Strait in the North and the Gulf of Riga in the East behind the Germans. Renamed Army Group Courland on 25 January, the Army Group in the Courland Pocket remained isolated until the end of the war. When they were ordered to surrender to the Soviet command on 8 May, they were in "blackout" and did not get the official order before 10 May, two days after the capitulation of Germany. It was one of the last German groups to surrender in Europe.