fbpx
Wikipedia

Gefreiter

Gefreiter ([ɡəˈfraɪ̯tɐ], abbr. Gefr.; plural Gefreite, English: private, in the military context) is a German, Swiss and Austrian military rank that has existed since the 16th century. It is usually the second rank or grade to which an enlisted soldier, airman or sailor could be promoted.[1][2]

Within the combined NATO rank scale, the modern-day rank of Gefreiter is usually equivalent to the NATO-standard rank scale OR-2. The word has also been lent into the Russian language (Russian: yefreytor/ефрейтор), and is in use in several Russian and post-Soviet militaries.

History

 
Illustration - Gefreiter uniform tunic rank insignia description of the 10th Hanoverian Jaeger Battalion (Hannoversches Jäger-Bataillon Nr. 10), Light Infantry, Royal Prussian Army.

Historically the military rank of Gefreiter (female and plural form: Gefreite)[3] emerged in 16th-century Europe for the German Landsknechte foot soldiers,[4] predominantly made up of German and Swiss mercenary pikemen and supporting infantry foot soldiers.[5][6][7][8] Those soldiers who proved especially reliable and experienced were appointed to gefreyten Knechten (exempted/freed Servants/Soldiers; a cognate to 'knight') and were installed in critical battlefield positions; along with their extra rank privileges they were exempted in general from sentry duties.[1][5][6][9][10][11][12]

From the 18th century, Gefreite were the first line members of a military company, and every Gefreiter led and commanded a section or squad of Gemeine[13] (ordinary-rank soldiers). The rank existed in the cavalry, infantry, pioneers, and artillery where the Gefreiter rank received a greater rank-class status.[5][6] Gefreiter was the only enlisted rank until 1918 within the Royal Prussian Army and respectively the imperial army of the German Empire to which an exceptional enlisted soldier could be promoted on the recommendation of the Hauptmann (Captain) or Rittmeister (Cavalry-Master otherwise Captain) and ultimately endorsed by the Regiments-Commandeur (Regimental Colonel), with exception of the rank Obergefreiter (since 1859) in the foot artillery which later replaced the artillery Bombardier (Corporal) rank.[5] The Gefreiter rank was also considered a transition rank for promotion to and wherefrom replacements were selected to the Unteroffizier (Corporal)[14] rank.[5] Within the Royal Prussian Army and respectively the imperial army of the German Empire, the rank Gefreiter was a deputy to the Unteroffizier (Corporal), and were distinguished by the wearing of a Auszeichnungsknopf (rank Distinction-button) known as the Gefreitenknopf (Gefreiter-button) on each side of their uniform collar, similar to the slightly larger rank collar side-buttons worn by both the Sergeant and Feldwebel ranks.[5]

In the Royal Prussian Army until its reorganization after 1806, there existed along with Gefreiter the rank of Gefreite-Korporale[5] who wore a silver Portepee (sword lanyard). These were officer cadets specifically selected for higher advancement, they stood equal with their officer cadet counterpart the Portepee-Fähnriche.[5] The Gefreite-Korporale was a rank that also existed along with Gefreiter in the Austrian Army during the Thirty Years' War.[5]

From the 1920s the German rank of Gefreiter has expanded into several additional ranks and duties, those being Obergefreiter (Senior Lance Corporal otherwise Second Corporal in the Prussian Army since 1859); Hauptgefreiter (Leading Lance Corporal in the Luftwaffe during 1935–1944, the Kriegsmarine during 1938–1945, and the Heer from 1955); Stabsgefreiter (Staff Lance Corporal in the Reichswehr since 1927, the Kriegsmarine until 1945, the Luftwaffe from 1944 temporarily replacing Hauptgefreiter rank); and Oberstabsgefreiter (Senior Staff Lance Corporal in the Kriegsmarine since 1940, not in the Heer or Luftwaffe until 1996). All Gefreiter ranks are now in use with the German army, air force, and navy.

The female form, Gefreite, is not used by the military; the formal address is "Frau Gefreiter".[15]

Germany

Bundeswehr

Gefreiter
   
Heer shoulder and Marine sleeve insignia
Country  Germany
Service branch  German Army
  German Navy
  German Air Force
AbbreviationGefr.
RankGerman enlisted rank
NATO rank codeOR-2
Non-NATO rankE-2
Formation1955
Next higher rankObergefreiter
Next lower rankSoldat/Schütze
Matrose

Gefreiter (abbr. Gefr. or G.) is the second enlisted rank grade within the modern-day Army (Heer), Air Force (Luftwaffe) and Navy (Marine) of the Bundeswehr.[16] Following the NATO ranking system, Gefreiter equates to OR-2 on the NATO-standard rank scale, the rank is thus equivalent to either private, private first class, vice corporal or corporal rank depending on the chosen NATO-allied force used for the comparison.[2] It is grade A4 in the pay scale of the Federal Ministry of Defence.

The sequence of ranks (top-down approach) in this particular group is as follows:

In line with Bundeswehr rank advancement conditions, enlisted personnel OR-1 may be promoted to OR-2 level after passing primary recruit training (usually after three months) to the rank of Gefreiter.

junior Rank
Soldat (rank)
     

(German enlisted rank)
Gefreiter

senior Rank
Obergefreiter

Wehrmacht

Throughout the periods of the Royal Prussian Army, Imperial Army of the German Empire, Reichswehr and the German Wehrmacht, the rank of Gefreiter was considered the equivalent to a junior Lance Corporal rank, with Obergefreiter as senior lance corporal or rather second corporal in the artillery, and a full corporal rank known as Unteroffizier[14] (subordinate non-commissioned officer) which replaced the Korporal rank from 1856. Within the army branch of the German Wehrmacht, a rank of Oberschütze (senior rifleman) once existed between the ranks of Gefreiter and Schütze/Soldat ("[enlisted] ordinary-rank rifleman/soldier"). A Gefreiter was considered an "exempted man", who was not normally assigned more menial duties, such as guard detail. A soldier promoted to Gefreiter was seen as showing some promise of leadership capability, while those who did not were promoted to Oberschütze.

Bohemian corporal

The best-known holder of the rank of Gefreiter was Adolf Hitler, who held the rank in the Bavarian Reserve Infantry Regiment 16 of the Royal Bavarian Army during World War I.

"Bohemian corporal" was a derogatory term used (privately) in World War II for Adolf Hitler by German generals (many of whom were Prussian aristocrats: von) dissatisfied with Hitler's military leadership and detailed control such as Gerd von Rundstedt, Erich von Manstein and Friedrich Paulus. Rundstedt said often during and after the war, "Without Hitler's consent, I can't even move my own sentry from my front door around to the back!" Wilhelm Keitel once asked Hitler, "Do you realise that Rundstedt called you a Bohemian corporal?" Hitler replied, "Yes, but he is the best field marshal I have". Von Rundstedt used the term "Dieser böhmische Gefreiter", which he had gotten in the 1930s from a World War I hero, German President Paul von Hindenburg. Hindenburg, who took an instant mutual dislike to Hitler on their first meeting, mistook Hitler's home town of Braunau in Austria (Braunau am Inn) for another town of the same name (Broumov, German: Braunau) in Bohemia and initially said "Austrian corporal" but later used "Bohemian corporal", which was a pejorative term, as he regarded Bohemians as "essentially gypsies", unlike the more cultured Prussians or even Austrians.[17]

Final ranks to enlisted men until 1945
Waffen-SS Heer (Army) Luftwaffe (Air Force) Kriegsmarine (Navy)
SS-Schütze Schütze Flieger Matrose
SS-Oberschütze Oberschütze
SS-Sturmmann Gefreiter Matrosengefreiter
SS-Rottenführer Obergefreiter Matrosenobergefreiter
No equivalent Hauptgefreiter Matrosenhauptgefreiter
No equivalent Stabsgefreiter Matrosenstabsgefreiter
No equivalent Matrosenoberstabsgefreiter

Switzerland

Austria

 
Gefreiter in Austria
     
Rank insignia Austrian Bundesheer
Introduction 1857
Rank group Charges
Army / Air Force Gefreiter
Navy no equivalent
Lower:
Higher:
Rekrut
Korporal
NATO
equivalent
OR-2

Gefreiter (abbr. Gfr) is a military rank of the Austrian Bundesheer. It might be comparable to enlisted men OR2/ private 1st Class ranks in Anglophone armed forces. However, in the Bundesheer it belongs to the so-called charges rank group (OR2 to OR4).

Austro-Hungarian Army

In the k.u.k. Austro-Hungarian Army (1867–1918) Gefreiter (Hungarian: Őrvezetö) was corresponding to Patrouilleführer, and Vormeister. It was used by the k.u.k. Kaiserjäger as well as the Feldjäger, Standschützen troops, k.u.k. Cavalry, Medical corps, and Infantry.

Then rank insignia was a single white celluloid-star on the stand-up collar of the so-called Waffenrock (en: Tunic) on gorget patch (de: Paroli). Stand-up collar and background of the gorget patch showed a particular egalisation colour.

Junior rank
Soldat (Honvéd)
 
Rank insignias of the Austro-Hungarian armed forces
Gefreiter
Patrouilleführer
Vormeister
Senior rank
Korporal
Rank insignia
Desigahntion Austrian k.u.k. Army enlisted men
             
insignia
description Patrouilleführer Gefreiter Vormeister
k.u.k. Mountain
troops
k.u.k.
Rifles
Machine-gun
units
Infantry
IR 7
branch Rifles Cavalry Infantry Military
engineering
Artillery
(equivalent) (Rifle 1st class) (Private 1st class) (Gunner 1st class)
Gefreiter in adjustation of the infantry
See also

Russia

Yefreytor
   
Army and Air Force shoulder insignia
Country  Russia
Service branch  Russian Ground Forces
  Russian Air Force
RankTable of ranks
Non-NATO rankOR-4
Formation1716 in the Imperial Russian Army
Next higher rankMladshy serzhant
Next lower rankRyadovoy

Yefreytor (Russian: Ефрейтор) is a German loanword in Russian and denotes a similar rank in the Russian army.

In Russia, the rank of yefreytor was introduced by Peter I in 1716 to the infantry, cavalry and engineer forces. The rank was not used after 1722. During the reign of Paul I it was made an equivalent rank to private, which after the reign of Alexander I was used only for the Imperial Guard. Yefreytor was re-introduced in the course of the military reforms of 1826.

In the armed forces of the Soviet Union (and later the Russian Federation) yefreytor is the highest rank of enlisted personnel. According to NATO-rank system the rank might be comparable to OR-4 in Anglophone armed forces.[18]

Sequence of ranks
junior rank:
Ryadovoy

 
Yefreytor
senior rank:
Junior sergeant

Rank insignia

Imperial Russian Army

Red Army (RA) and Soviet Armed Forces (SA)

Russian Liberation Army

Russian Armed Forces

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Duden; Definition of Gefreiter, in German. [1]
  2. ^ a b Official Website (Bundeswehr): Dienstgrade und Uniformen der Bundeswehr (Service Ranks and Uniforms of the German Federal Defence Forces), in German. [2]
  3. ^ "Alternative Spelling and Definition of Gefreite". Duden (in German).
  4. ^ Duden; Origin and meaning of "Landsknecht", in German. [3]
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Gefreiter" - Allgemeine Encyclopädie der Wissenschaften und Künste, Erste Section, A-G, (Universal Encyclopaedia of the Sciences and Arts, First Section, A-G), Author: Johann Samuel Ersch and Johann Gottfried Gruber, Publisher: F. A. Brockhaus, Leipzig, 1852, Page 471-472, in German. [4]
  6. ^ a b c Corpus Juris Militaris Des Heiliges Römisches Reich (Military Law of the Holy Roman Empire), Volume 2, Author: Johann Christian Lünig, Leipzig, 1723, in German.
  7. ^ The Landsknechts, Author: Douglas Miller, Publisher: Osprey Publishing, Great Britain, 1976, ISBN 0850452589.
  8. ^ Landsknecht Soldier 1486-1560, Author: John Richards, Publisher: Osprey Publishing, Great Britain, 2002, ISBN 1841762431.
  9. ^ Lutz Mackensen. Vom Ursprung der Wörter. Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache.
  10. ^ "Notes and Queries". Oxford University Press. 3 June 1880 – via Google Books.
  11. ^ Carruthers, Bob (30 June 2015). Hitler's Violent Youth: How Trench Warfare and Street Fighting Moulded Hitler. Pen and Sword. ISBN 9781473833517 – via Google Books.
  12. ^ Carruthers, Bob (30 June 2015). Hitler's Propaganda Pilgrimage. Pen and Sword. ISBN 9781473833500 – via Google Books.
  13. ^ Duden; Origin and meaning of "Gemeine", in German. [5]
  14. ^ a b Duden; Origin and meaning of "Korporal", in German. [6]
  15. ^ "VSB-Statement "weibliche Dienstgrade"". Verband der Soldaten der Bundeswehr. Retrieved February 12, 2021.
  16. ^ BROCKHAUS, The encyclopedia in 24 volumes (1796–2001), Volume 8: 3-7653-3668-8, page 231; definition "Gefreiter".
  17. ^ Margaritis, Peter (2019). Countdown to D-Day: The German perspective. Oxford, UK & PA, USA: Casemate. pp. xv, 33. ISBN 978-1-61200-769-4.
  18. ^ NATO (2010). STANAG 2116 NATO (6th ed.). Brussels, Belgium: NATO Standardization Agency. p. D-1.

gefreiter, ɡəˈfraɪ, abbr, gefr, plural, gefreite, english, private, military, context, german, swiss, austrian, military, rank, that, existed, since, 16th, century, usually, second, rank, grade, which, enlisted, soldier, airman, sailor, could, promoted, within. Gefreiter ɡeˈfraɪ tɐ abbr Gefr plural Gefreite English private in the military context is a German Swiss and Austrian military rank that has existed since the 16th century It is usually the second rank or grade to which an enlisted soldier airman or sailor could be promoted 1 2 Within the combined NATO rank scale the modern day rank of Gefreiter is usually equivalent to the NATO standard rank scale OR 2 The word has also been lent into the Russian language Russian yefreytor efrejtor and is in use in several Russian and post Soviet militaries Contents 1 History 2 Germany 2 1 Bundeswehr 2 2 Wehrmacht 2 2 1 Bohemian corporal 3 Switzerland 4 Austria 4 1 Austro Hungarian Army 5 Russia 5 1 Rank insignia 5 1 1 Imperial Russian Army 5 1 2 Red Army RA and Soviet Armed Forces SA 5 1 3 Russian Liberation Army 5 1 4 Russian Armed Forces 6 See also 7 ReferencesHistory Edit Illustration Gefreiter uniform tunic rank insignia description of the 10th Hanoverian Jaeger Battalion Hannoversches Jager Bataillon Nr 10 Light Infantry Royal Prussian Army Historically the military rank of Gefreiter female and plural form Gefreite 3 emerged in 16th century Europe for the German Landsknechte foot soldiers 4 predominantly made up of German and Swiss mercenary pikemen and supporting infantry foot soldiers 5 6 7 8 Those soldiers who proved especially reliable and experienced were appointed to gefreyten Knechten exempted freed Servants Soldiers a cognate to knight and were installed in critical battlefield positions along with their extra rank privileges they were exempted in general from sentry duties 1 5 6 9 10 11 12 From the 18th century Gefreite were the first line members of a military company and every Gefreiter led and commanded a section or squad of Gemeine 13 ordinary rank soldiers The rank existed in the cavalry infantry pioneers and artillery where the Gefreiter rank received a greater rank class status 5 6 Gefreiter was the only enlisted rank until 1918 within the Royal Prussian Army and respectively the imperial army of the German Empire to which an exceptional enlisted soldier could be promoted on the recommendation of the Hauptmann Captain or Rittmeister Cavalry Master otherwise Captain and ultimately endorsed by the Regiments Commandeur Regimental Colonel with exception of the rank Obergefreiter since 1859 in the foot artillery which later replaced the artillery Bombardier Corporal rank 5 The Gefreiter rank was also considered a transition rank for promotion to and wherefrom replacements were selected to the Unteroffizier Corporal 14 rank 5 Within the Royal Prussian Army and respectively the imperial army of the German Empire the rank Gefreiter was a deputy to the Unteroffizier Corporal and were distinguished by the wearing of a Auszeichnungsknopf rank Distinction button known as the Gefreitenknopf Gefreiter button on each side of their uniform collar similar to the slightly larger rank collar side buttons worn by both the Sergeant and Feldwebel ranks 5 In the Royal Prussian Army until its reorganization after 1806 there existed along with Gefreiter the rank of Gefreite Korporale 5 who wore a silver Portepee sword lanyard These were officer cadets specifically selected for higher advancement they stood equal with their officer cadet counterpart the Portepee Fahnriche 5 The Gefreite Korporale was a rank that also existed along with Gefreiter in the Austrian Army during the Thirty Years War 5 From the 1920s the German rank of Gefreiter has expanded into several additional ranks and duties those being Obergefreiter Senior Lance Corporal otherwise Second Corporal in the Prussian Army since 1859 Hauptgefreiter Leading Lance Corporal in the Luftwaffe during 1935 1944 the Kriegsmarine during 1938 1945 and the Heer from 1955 Stabsgefreiter Staff Lance Corporal in the Reichswehr since 1927 the Kriegsmarine until 1945 the Luftwaffe from 1944 temporarily replacing Hauptgefreiter rank and Oberstabsgefreiter Senior Staff Lance Corporal in the Kriegsmarine since 1940 not in the Heer or Luftwaffe until 1996 All Gefreiter ranks are now in use with the German army air force and navy The female form Gefreite is not used by the military the formal address is Frau Gefreiter 15 Germany EditBundeswehr Edit Gefreiter Heer shoulder and Marine sleeve insigniaCountry GermanyService branch German Army German Navy German Air ForceAbbreviationGefr RankGerman enlisted rankNATO rank codeOR 2Non NATO rankE 2Formation1955Next higher rankObergefreiterNext lower rankSoldat SchutzeMatroseGefreiter abbr Gefr or G is the second enlisted rank grade within the modern day Army Heer Air Force Luftwaffe and Navy Marine of the Bundeswehr 16 Following the NATO ranking system Gefreiter equates to OR 2 on the NATO standard rank scale the rank is thus equivalent to either private private first class vice corporal or corporal rank depending on the chosen NATO allied force used for the comparison 2 It is grade A4 in the pay scale of the Federal Ministry of Defence The sequence of ranks top down approach in this particular group is as follows OR 4a Oberstabsgefreiter OR 4b Stabsgefreiter OR 3a Hauptgefreiter OR 3b Obergefreiter OR 2 Gefreiter OR 1 Soldat Schutze Army Flieger Air Force Matrose Navy In line with Bundeswehr rank advancement conditions enlisted personnel OR 1 may be promoted to OR 2 level after passing primary recruit training usually after three months to the rank of Gefreiter junior RankSoldat rank German enlisted rank Gefreiter senior RankObergefreiterWehrmacht Edit Throughout the periods of the Royal Prussian Army Imperial Army of the German Empire Reichswehr and the German Wehrmacht the rank of Gefreiter was considered the equivalent to a junior Lance Corporal rank with Obergefreiter as senior lance corporal or rather second corporal in the artillery and a full corporal rank known as Unteroffizier 14 subordinate non commissioned officer which replaced the Korporal rank from 1856 Within the army branch of the German Wehrmacht a rank of Oberschutze senior rifleman once existed between the ranks of Gefreiter and Schutze Soldat enlisted ordinary rank rifleman soldier A Gefreiter was considered an exempted man who was not normally assigned more menial duties such as guard detail A soldier promoted to Gefreiter was seen as showing some promise of leadership capability while those who did not were promoted to Oberschutze Bohemian corporal Edit The best known holder of the rank of Gefreiter was Adolf Hitler who held the rank in the Bavarian Reserve Infantry Regiment 16 of the Royal Bavarian Army during World War I Bohemian corporal was a derogatory term used privately in World War II for Adolf Hitler by German generals many of whom were Prussian aristocrats von dissatisfied with Hitler s military leadership and detailed control such as Gerd von Rundstedt Erich von Manstein and Friedrich Paulus Rundstedt said often during and after the war Without Hitler s consent I can t even move my own sentry from my front door around to the back Wilhelm Keitel once asked Hitler Do you realise that Rundstedt called you a Bohemian corporal Hitler replied Yes but he is the best field marshal I have Von Rundstedt used the term Dieser bohmische Gefreiter which he had gotten in the 1930s from a World War I hero German President Paul von Hindenburg Hindenburg who took an instant mutual dislike to Hitler on their first meeting mistook Hitler s home town of Braunau in Austria Braunau am Inn for another town of the same name Broumov German Braunau in Bohemia and initially said Austrian corporal but later used Bohemian corporal which was a pejorative term as he regarded Bohemians as essentially gypsies unlike the more cultured Prussians or even Austrians 17 Final ranks to enlisted men until 1945 vte Waffen SS Heer Army Luftwaffe Air Force Kriegsmarine Navy SS Schutze Schutze Flieger MatroseSS Oberschutze OberschutzeSS Sturmmann Gefreiter MatrosengefreiterSS Rottenfuhrer Obergefreiter MatrosenobergefreiterNo equivalent Hauptgefreiter MatrosenhauptgefreiterNo equivalent Stabsgefreiter MatrosenstabsgefreiterNo equivalent MatrosenoberstabsgefreiterSwitzerland EditMain article Swiss army ranksAustria Edit Gefreiter in Austria Rank insignia Austrian BundesheerIntroduction 1857Rank group ChargesArmy Air Force GefreiterNavy no equivalentLower Higher RekrutKorporalNATOequivalent OR 2Gefreiter abbr Gfr is a military rank of the Austrian Bundesheer It might be comparable to enlisted men OR2 private 1st Class ranks in Anglophone armed forces However in the Bundesheer it belongs to the so called charges rank group OR2 to OR4 Austro Hungarian Army Edit In the k u k Austro Hungarian Army 1867 1918 Gefreiter Hungarian Orvezeto was corresponding to Patrouillefuhrer and Vormeister It was used by the k u k Kaiserjager as well as the Feldjager Standschutzen troops k u k Cavalry Medical corps and Infantry Then rank insignia was a single white celluloid star on the stand up collar of the so called Waffenrock en Tunic on gorget patch de Paroli Stand up collar and background of the gorget patch showed a particular egalisation colour Junior rankSoldat Honved Rank insignias of the Austro Hungarian armed forcesGefreiterPatrouillefuhrerVormeister Senior rankKorporalRank insigniaDesigahntion Austrian k u k Army enlisted men insigniadescription Patrouillefuhrer Gefreiter Vormeisterk u k Mountaintroops k u k Rifles Machine gununits InfantryIR 7branch Rifles Cavalry Infantry Militaryengineering Artillery equivalent Rifle 1st class Private 1st class Gunner 1st class Gefreiter in adjustation of the infantry IR 7 IR 25 IR 33 IR 37 IR 41 IR 50 IR 62 IR 69 IR 77 IR 87 IR 92 IR 99 IR 101See also Main articles Rank insignias of the Austro Hungarian armed forces Waffenfarbe Austria and AdjustierungRussia EditYefreytor Army and Air Force shoulder insigniaCountry RussiaService branch Russian Ground Forces Russian Air ForceRankTable of ranksNon NATO rankOR 4Formation1716 in the Imperial Russian ArmyNext higher rankMladshy serzhantNext lower rankRyadovoyYefreytor Russian Efrejtor is a German loanword in Russian and denotes a similar rank in the Russian army In Russia the rank of yefreytor was introduced by Peter I in 1716 to the infantry cavalry and engineer forces The rank was not used after 1722 During the reign of Paul I it was made an equivalent rank to private which after the reign of Alexander I was used only for the Imperial Guard Yefreytor was re introduced in the course of the military reforms of 1826 In the armed forces of the Soviet Union and later the Russian Federation yefreytor is the highest rank of enlisted personnel According to NATO rank system the rank might be comparable to OR 4 in Anglophone armed forces 18 Sequence of ranks junior rank Ryadovoy Yefreytor senior rank Junior sergeant Rank insignia Edit Imperial Russian Army Edit Epaulette Yefreytor of the 3rd Lancer Smolensk Emperor Alexander III Regiment 1908 Shoulder insignia Yefreytor to Imperial Russian Army until 1917 Pogon Yefreytor lance corporal the of Russian Life Guards Uhlan Regiment 1914 Red Army RA and Soviet Armed Forces SA Edit Gorget insignia to gymnastyorka yefreytor RA 1940 1943 Shoulder board yefreytorAir ForceRA 1943 1955 and SA 1946 1955 Yefreytorinfantry SA Yefreytor Air Force aviation Air defence and Navy Airborne troops SA 1955 1963 Russian Liberation Army Edit ROA yefreytor shoulder insigniaRussian Armed Forces Edit Kursant Service uniform with OR 3 rank yefreytor of the Air Force or Airborne Troops 1994 2010 Service uniform yefreytorof the Army and SMF 1994 2010 Field uniform yefreytor of the whole Armed Forces branches 1994 2010 Service uniform yefreytor of the Army 2010 present Service uniform yefreytor of the Air Force 2010 present Field uniform yefreytor of the whole Armed Forces branches 2010 present See also EditRanks of the Imperial German Army World War II German Army ranks and insignia Rank insignia of the German armed forces Ranks and insignia of NATO armies enlisted History of Russian military ranksReferences Edit a b Duden Definition of Gefreiter in German 1 a b Official Website Bundeswehr Dienstgrade und Uniformen der Bundeswehr Service Ranks and Uniforms of the German Federal Defence Forces in German 2 Alternative Spelling and Definition of Gefreite Duden in German Duden Origin and meaning of Landsknecht in German 3 a b c d e f g h i Gefreiter Allgemeine Encyclopadie der Wissenschaften und Kunste Erste Section A G Universal Encyclopaedia of the Sciences and Arts First Section A G Author Johann Samuel Ersch and Johann Gottfried Gruber Publisher F A Brockhaus Leipzig 1852 Page 471 472 in German 4 a b c Corpus Juris Militaris Des Heiliges Romisches Reich Military Law of the Holy Roman Empire Volume 2 Author Johann Christian Lunig Leipzig 1723 in German The Landsknechts Author Douglas Miller Publisher Osprey Publishing Great Britain 1976 ISBN 0850452589 Landsknecht Soldier 1486 1560 Author John Richards Publisher Osprey Publishing Great Britain 2002 ISBN 1841762431 Lutz Mackensen Vom Ursprung der Worter Etymologisches Worterbuch der deutschen Sprache Notes and Queries Oxford University Press 3 June 1880 via Google Books Carruthers Bob 30 June 2015 Hitler s Violent Youth How Trench Warfare and Street Fighting Moulded Hitler Pen and Sword ISBN 9781473833517 via Google Books Carruthers Bob 30 June 2015 Hitler s Propaganda Pilgrimage Pen and Sword ISBN 9781473833500 via Google Books Duden Origin and meaning of Gemeine in German 5 a b Duden Origin and meaning of Korporal in German 6 VSB Statement weibliche Dienstgrade Verband der Soldaten der Bundeswehr Retrieved February 12 2021 BROCKHAUS The encyclopedia in 24 volumes 1796 2001 Volume 8 3 7653 3668 8 page 231 definition Gefreiter Margaritis Peter 2019 Countdown to D Day The German perspective Oxford UK amp PA USA Casemate pp xv 33 ISBN 978 1 61200 769 4 NATO 2010 STANAG 2116 NATO 6th ed Brussels Belgium NATO Standardization Agency p D 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gefreiter amp oldid 1154288071, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.