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Wolfsangel

Wolfsangel (German pronunciation: [ˈvɔlfsˌʔaŋəl], translation "wolf's hook") or Crampon (French pronunciation: ​[kʁɑ̃pɔ̃]) is a heraldic charge from Germany and eastern France, which was inspired by medieval European wolf traps that consisted of a Z-shaped metal hook (called the Wolfsangel, or the Crampon in French) that was hung by a chain from a crescent-shaped metal bar (called the Wolfsanker, or the Hameçon in French). The stylised symbol of the Z-shape (also called the Doppelhaken, meaning the "double-hook") can include a central horizontal bar to give a Ƶ-symbol, which can be reversed and/or rotated; it is sometimes mistaken as being an ancient rune due to its similarity to the "gibor rune" of the pseudo Armanen runes.[2]

Stylized horizontal (left) and vertical (centre) forms of the Wolfsangel (or Crampon), and a stylized Wolfsanker (or Hameçon) (right).[1] In heraldry, the vertical form of the Ƶ-symbol is associated with the Donnerkeil (or "thunderbolt"), and the horizontal form of the Ƶ-symbol is associated with the Werwolf (or "Werewolf").[1]

Early medieval pagans believed the symbol possessed magical powers and could ward off wolves.[3] It became an early symbol of German liberty and independence after its adoption as an emblem in various 15th-century peasant revolts, and also in the 17th-century Thirty Years War.[3] In pre-war Germany, interest in the Wolfsangel was revived by the popularity of Hermann Löns's 1910 novel Der Wehrwolf. The Ƶ-symbol was adopted by the Nazi Party,[4] and was used by various German Wehrmacht and SS units such as the Waffen-SS Division Das Reich and the Waffen-SS Division Landstorm Nederland.[4] The Anti-Defamation League, and others,[5] list the Ƶ-symbol as a hate and a neo-Nazi symbol.[6]

Origins

Hunting tool

 
8th century wolf hook from the Carolingian era Villa Arnesburg, in Lich, Germany.[7]
 
Reconstruction of a wolf hook (Z-shape) chained to a wolf anchor (crescent bar)

The Wolfsangel was a medieval wolf hunting technique in Europe whereby the hook was concealed inside a chunk of meat that would impale the unsuspecting wolf who ate the meat by gulping it in one movement.[8]

The tool was further developed by attaching the hook via a chain or rope to a larger bar (often with a double crescent or half-moon shape per photo opposite) that could be lodged between the overhanging branches of a tree. The wolf would therefore be encouraged to jump up to gulp the hanging chunk of meat (with the hook concealed inside), thus further impaling itself in the manner of a fish caught on a fishing hook.[8]

Medieval hunters were known to use "blood trails" to lead the wolf to the Wolfsangel trap, and also used wattle fencing nearer to the trap to create narrow channels that would guide the wolf to the trap.[8]

Names and symbols

 
1299 seal of Countess Udilhild, née von Wolfach
 
Municipal coat of arms of Wolfach, Germany
 
Horizontal Wolfsangel as a mason's mark, 15-century church

Other German names for the Wolfsangel include Wolfsanker ("wolf anchor", the crescent-shaped bar holding the hook), Wolfshaken ("wolf hook"), and Doppelhaken ("double hook"); French names include hameçon ("fish hook"), hameçon de loup ("fish hook for wolves") and fer-a-loup ("wolf iron"), as well as crampon ("iron hook").[9][10]

The stylised version of the Z-shaped Wolfsangel developed into a popular medieval symbol in Germany that was associated with magical powers, and was believed to have the ability to ward off wolves.[3][9] The symbol appears on early medieval banners and town seals in Germany (particularly in forested regions where wolves were present in large numbers); for example, as early as 1299 the symbol can be found on seals relating to the Lords of the German Black Forest town of Wolfach (see opposite, the seal of the widow Countess Udilhild von Fürstenberg [de], the sole heiress of the Lords of Wolfach); and their Wolfsangel banner eventually became the municipal coat of arms for the town (see opposite).[11] The symbol can also be found as a mason's mark in medieval stonework.[12]

The stylised Wolfsangel Z-symbol (i.e. excluding the horizontal bar) bears a visual resemblance to the proto-Germanic Eihwaz rune (meaning "yew"), historically part of the ancient runic alphabet.[4] However, the full Wolfsangel Ƶ-symbol has no equivalent amongst ancient runic systems but is sometimes confused as such due to its similarity to the "gibor rune", the eighteenth pseudo rune that was created by the nineteenth-century German revivalist Guido von List as part of his Armanen runes.[2]

Peasant revolts

Academic Akbar Ahmed writes that the Wolfsangel was adopted by 15th-century German peasants during revolts against oppressive German princes and their foreign mercenaries, and thus became an important early popular Germanic symbol of independence and liberty.[3]

Ahmed further notes that during the 17th-century Thirty Years War, groups of German militia waged a guerilla war against foreign forces under the German name Wehrwolf, and also adopted the Wolfsangel symbol as their emblem; they reportedly carved the symbol on the trees from which they hanged captured foreign combatants.[3]

In heraldry

 
Municipal arms of Wolxheim, Grand Est, France
 
Municipal arms of Wolfisheim, Grand Est, France
 
A heraldic hameçon in the arms of the von Stein family
 
Municipal arms of Erwitte, North Rhine-Westphalia
 
Municipal arms of Idar-Oberstein, Rhineland-Palatinate
 
Municipal arms of Marpingen, Saarland
 
Municipal arms of Oestrich-Winkel, Hesse
 
Municipal arms Mommenheim, Rhineland-Palatinate
 
Municipal arms of Dassendorf, Schleswig-Holstein
 
Municipal arms of Ilvesheim, Baden-Württemberg
 
Municipal arms of Sibbesse, Lower Saxony
 
Municipal arms of Eppelborn, Saarland
 
Municipal arms of Burgwedel, Lower Saxony
 
Municipal arms of Kleinblittersdorf, Saarland

The term "Wolfs-Angel" (German) and "Hameçon" (French) appears in a 1714 German heraldic handbook titled Wappenkunst. However, the description is more specifically about the Wolfsanker (or Hameçon) component part of the Wolfsangel trap, and defines it as: "the shape of a crescent moon with a ring inside, at mid-height", which describes the bar from which the Z-shaped hook is hung (see the yellow coat of arms of the von Stein family in the table opposite for an example).[10]

In modern German-language heraldic terminology, the name Wolfsangel is de facto used for a variety of heraldic charges, including the Wolfsanker from above (i.e. the half-moon shape with a ring that is also called a Fer-de-loop), as well as the Wolfshaken or Crampon (i.e. the Z-shaped or double-hook that is also called a Mauerhaken or a Doppelhaken, and that can also appear with a ring or a transversal stroke, Ƶ, at the center).

The Z-shaped symbol is found comparatively frequently in municipal coats of arms in Germany, and also in eastern France (see Wolfisheim or Wolxheim), where it is often identified as a Wolfsangel. The Ƶ-design is rarer but is found in about a dozen contemporary municipal coats of arms, and is usually (but not exclusively) represented as a reversed Ƶ-shape.[10]

In heraldry, the upright or vertical form of the Ƶ-symbol is associated with the Donnerkeil (or "thunderbolt"), while the horizontal form of the Ƶ-symbol is associated with the Werwolf (or "Werewolf").[1]

In forestry

 
Wolfsangel on a 1755 boundary marker near the wood of Barsinghausen
 
The Wolfsangel on an old field boundary stone in the Deister in Lower Saxony

In a 1616 boundary treaty concluded between Hesse and Brunswick-Lüneburg, the Brunswick forest boundary marker was called a Wulffsangel (a horizontal Wolfsangel). There is also evidence of its use in correspondence from the Forest Services in 1674.[13]

Later, the Wolfsangel was also used as a symbol on forest uniforms. In a document of 1792 regarding new uniforms, chief forester Adolf Friedrich von Stralenheim suggested a design for uniform buttons including the letters "GR" and a symbol similar to the Wolfsangel, which he called Forstzeichen. Later the Wolfsangel was also worn as a single badge in brass caps on the service and on the buttons of the Hanoverian forest supervisor. In Brunswick, it was prescribed for private forests and gamekeepers as a badge on the bonnet.[13]

The Wolfsangel is still used in the various forest districts in Lower Saxony as a boundary marker and it is part of the emblem of the hunters' association of Lower Saxony and the club Hirschmann, dedicated to the breeding and training of Hanover Hounds.[13]

In literature

In pre-war 1930s Germany, interest in the Wolfsangel was revived by the popularity of Hermann Löns's 1910 novel entitled Der Wehrwolf (later published as Harm Wulf, a peasant chronicle, and as The Warwolf in English). The book is set in a 17th-century German farming community during the Thirty Years' War and the protagonist, a resistance fighter named Harm Wulf, adopts the symbol as his personal badge.[3]

Wolfsangel: German City on Trial is a 2000 book by August Niro on the 1944 Rüsselsheim massacre that occurred in the city of Rüsselsheim am Main, whose coat of arms features a Wolfsangel symbol. The book draws parallels with the origins and symbolism of the Wolfsangel, particularly resistance against foreign mercenaries, and the events of the massacre.[14]

As a Nazi symbol

In Nazi Germany, the Wolfsangel symbol was widely adopted in Nazi symbolism. It is not clear whether the driver of its adoption was Hitler's strong personal association with wolf imagery (the Wolf's Lair for example), or to create an association with the post-15th-century symbol of German independence and liberty, which had a particular relationship to the achievement of German freedom from foreign influence by force.[3][2]

 
A Nazi leader and his family. The youngest girls wear Wolfsangel symbols in horizontal form as members of NS-Frauenschaft's Deutsche Kinderschar for children

The symbol was used by a wide range of military and non-military Nazi-linked groups, including:

Post-World War II symbolism

Post WWII emblems resembling the Wolfsangel
 
Emblem of the North American hate group, the Aryan Nations
 
Badge of Azov Regiment, Ukraine
 
Former badge of the Azov Battalion used until 2015
 
Emblem of the Ukrainian ultranationalist group, Patriot of Ukraine

After World War II, public exhibition of the Wolfsangel symbol became illegal in Germany if it was connected with Neo-Nazi groups.[16][17] On August 9, 2018, Germany lifted the ban on the usage of swastikas and other Nazi symbols in video games. "Through the change in the interpretation of the law, games that critically look at current affairs can for the first time be given a USK age rating," USK managing director Elisabeth Secker told CTV. "This has long been the case for films and with regards to the freedom of the arts, this is now rightly also the case with computer and videogames."[18][19]

Outside of Germany, the Wolfsangel symbol has been used by some Neo-Nazi organizations such as in the United States where the Aryan Nations organization uses a white Wolfsangel-like symbol with a sword replacing the cross-bar in its logo.[20] The US-based Anti-Defamation League (ADL) database, as well as other non-governmental organisations,[5] list the Wolfsangel as a hate symbol and as a neo-Nazi symbol.[6][9]

In Ukraine, far-right movements like the Social-National Party of Ukraine[21][22][23] and the Social-National Assembly,[24] as well as the Azov Regiment of the Ukrainian army.[25][26][27][28] have used a similar symbol of (an elongated centre bar and the Z being rotated but untypically not reversed) for their political slogan Ідея Нації (Ukrainian for "National Idea", where the symbol is a composite of the "N" and the "I"); they deny any connection or attempt to draw a parallel with the regiment and Nazism.[29] Political scientist Andreas Umland told Deutsche Welle, that though it had far right connotations, the Wolfsangel was not considered a fascist symbol by the general population in Ukraine.[30] The Reporting Radicalism initiative from Freedom House notes that "Accidental use of this symbol or its use without an understanding of its connotations (for example as a talisman) is rare", and ".. in Ukraine, the use of a Wolfsangel as a heraldic symbol or a traditional talisman would be uncharacteristic".[5]

In 2020, there was a brief trend of Generation Z TikTok users tattooing a "Generation Ƶ" symbol on the arm as "a symbol of unity in our generation but also as a sign of rebellion" (in the manner of the 15th-century peasant's revolts). The originator of the trend later renounced it when the use of the symbol by the Nazis was brought to her attention.[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Yenne, Bill (2010). "5. The Old Crooked Cross". Hitler's Master of the Dark Arts: Himmler's Black Knights and the Occult Origins of the SS. Zenith Press. p. 69. ISBN 978-0760337783.
  2. ^ a b c Yenne, Bill (2010). "2. The Court of the Godfather". Hitler's Master of the Dark Arts: Himmler's Black Knights and the Occult Origins of the SS. Zenith Press. p. 27. ISBN 9780760337783.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Ahmed, Akbar (February 2018). Journey into Europe: Islam, Immigration, and Identity. Brookings Institution. p. 77. ISBN 9780815727583.
  4. ^ a b c Lumsden, Robin (2009). Himmler's SS: Loyal to the Death's Head. The History Press. pp. 201–206. ISBN 978-0752497228. Retrieved 24 March 2015 – via Google Books.
  5. ^ a b c "Wolfsangel". Reportingradicalism.org. Retrieved 28 September 2022.
  6. ^ a b c Greenspan, Rachel (22 September 2020). "TikTok users recommended a Nazi symbol as a Gen Z tattoo idea to represent 'rebellion'". Insider. Retrieved 17 March 2022.
  7. ^ Christoph Röder (2014). "Vier karolingerzeitliche Grubenhäuser bei der Junkermühle, Stadt Münzenberg". hessenARCHÄOLOGIE am.
  8. ^ a b c Almond, Richard (March 2011). Medieval Hunting. The History Press. ISBN 978-0752459493.
  9. ^ a b c "Wolfsangel: General Hate Symbols, Neo-Nazi Symbols". Anti-Defamation League. Retrieved 17 March 2022.
  10. ^ a b c Gustav Adelbert Seyler (1890). "Geschichte der Heraldik (Wappenwesen, Wappenkunst und Wappenwissenschaft) ... Abt. A. des Siebmacher'schen Wappenbuches". Bauer & Raspe. p. 664. Retrieved 12 June 2015. Wolffs-Angel, frantz. hamecon, lat. uncus quo lupi capiuntur, ist die Form eines halben Mondes und hat inwendig in der Mitte einen Ring. Wolffs-Angel: French hameçon, Latin uncus quo lupi capiuntur ("hook with which wolves are caught") is the shape of a crescent moon with a ring inside, at mid-height.
  11. ^ Sadlier, Klemens (1971). German Coats-of-Arms. Federal Republic of Germany: Municipal Coats-of-Arms of the Federal State of Baden-Wurttemberg). Vol. 8. Angelsachsen-Verlag. p. 115.
  12. ^ Press release of the Regional Association of Westphalia-Lippe, 30 October 2009 No original ancient specimens of such hooks were known prior to 2009 when excavations at the Falkenburg ruin in Detmold yielded more than 25 wolf hooks dated to the 13th century. Video on YouTube
  13. ^ a b c Gerhard Große Löscher: Die Wolfsangel als Forst- und Jagdzeichen in Niedersachsen. In: Jürgen Delfs u. a.: Jagd in der Lüneburger Heide. Beiträge zur Jagdgeschichte. Celle 2006, ISBN 3-925902-59-7, pp. 238–239
  14. ^ Niro, August (2000). Wolfsangel: German City on Trial. Potomac Books. ISBN 978-1574882452. Retrieved 28 April 2022.
  15. ^ Watt, Roderick (October 1992). "Wehrwolf or Werwolf? Literature, Legend, or Lexical Error into Nazi Propaganda?". The Modern Language Review. 87 (4): 879–895. doi:10.2307/3731426. JSTOR 3731426. A study of the iconography of German nationalist groups between the wars and then of Nazi party, military, and paramilitary organizations from 1933 to 1945 proves beyond doubt that the 'Wolfsangel' symbol was widely, even indiscriminately used by them long before the formation of the Nazi Werwolf movement at the end of the war. Wolfsangel, if at all translatable, means, or at least originally meant, 'wolf trap', an instrument which is a threat to the wolf. Yet both Lons and the Nazis used it as a menacing symbol of intimidation representing the savage and relentless ferocity of the wolf... In the late summer or early autumn of 1944, when it was clear that Germany was committed to a European land war on two fronts, Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler initiated Unternehmen Werwolf, ordering SS-Obergruppenführer Prutzmann to begin organizing an elite troop of volunteer special forces to operate secretly behind enemy lines.
  16. ^ . Informations- und Dokumentationszentrum für Antirassismusarbeit in Nordrhein-Westfalen. Archived from the original on 5 July 2012. Retrieved 5 April 2012.
  17. ^ "Gruppierungen auf dem Index". Programm Polizeiliche Kriminalprävention.
  18. ^ "Germany lifts ban on Nazi symbols in video games". The Telegraph. 9 August 2018.
  19. ^ "Germany lifts ban on swastikas in videogames". PC Gamer. 9 August 2018.
  20. ^ . Anti-Defamation League. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 7 December 2016.
  21. ^ "Kyiv's Next Image Problem". Open Democracy. Retrieved 7 December 2016.
  22. ^ Analysing Fascist Discourse: European Fascism in Talk and Text,Per Anders Rudling "The Return of the Ukrainian Far Right: The Case of VO Svoboda" edited by Ruth Wodak, John E. Richardson. Routledge, 2012
  23. ^ Olszański, Tadeusz A. (4 July 2011). "Svoboda Party – The New Phenomenon on the Ukrainian Right-Wing Scene". Centre for Eastern Studies. OSW Commentary (56)
  24. ^ . Open Democracy. Archived from the original on 24 May 2018. Retrieved 7 December 2016.
  25. ^ "Look far right, and look right again". Open Democracy. Retrieved 7 December 2016.
  26. ^ Alec Luhn (30 August 2014). "Preparing for War With Ukraine's Fascist Defenders of Freedom". Foreign Policy. Retrieved 8 August 2015.
  27. ^ Andrew E. Kramer (13 December 2014). "A Pastor's Turn Fighting for Ukraine". The New York Times. Retrieved 8 August 2015.
  28. ^ "'Don't confuse patriotism and Nazism': Ukraine's Azov forces face scrutiny". Financial Times. 29 March 2022. Retrieved 1 September 2022.
  29. ^ "Profile: Who are Ukraine's far-right Azov regiment?". Al Jazeera. 1 March 2022. Retrieved 2 May 2022.
  30. ^ Welle (www.dw.com), Deutsche. "The Azov Battalion: Extremists defending Mariupol | DW | 16.03.2022". DW.COM. Retrieved 26 September 2022.

Sources

  • K. von Alberti (1960). Die sogenannte Wolfsangel in der Heraldik (in German). Südwestdeutsche Blätter für Familien und Wappenkunde. p. 89.
  • H. Horstmann (1955). Die Wolfsangel als Jagdgerät und Wappenbild (in German). Vj. Bl. d. Trierer Gesellschaft für nützliche Forschungen.

wolfsangel, this, article, about, symbol, novel, series, lachlan, mark, barrowcliffe, confused, with, chinese, letter, meaning, foot, german, pronunciation, ˈvɔlfsˌʔaŋəl, translation, wolf, hook, crampon, french, pronunciation, kʁɑ, heraldic, charge, from, ger. This article is about the symbol For the novel series by M D Lachlan see Mark Barrowcliffe Not to be confused with the Chinese Yi letter ꑭ meaning foot Wolfsangel German pronunciation ˈvɔlfsˌʔaŋel translation wolf s hook or Crampon French pronunciation kʁɑ pɔ is a heraldic charge from Germany and eastern France which was inspired by medieval European wolf traps that consisted of a Z shaped metal hook called the Wolfsangel or the Crampon in French that was hung by a chain from a crescent shaped metal bar called the Wolfsanker or the Hamecon in French The stylised symbol of the Z shape also called the Doppelhaken meaning the double hook can include a central horizontal bar to give a Ƶ symbol which can be reversed and or rotated it is sometimes mistaken as being an ancient rune due to its similarity to the gibor rune of the pseudo Armanen runes 2 Stylized horizontal left and vertical centre forms of the Wolfsangel or Crampon and a stylized Wolfsanker or Hamecon right 1 In heraldry the vertical form of the Ƶ symbol is associated with the Donnerkeil or thunderbolt and the horizontal form of the Ƶ symbol is associated with the Werwolf or Werewolf 1 Early medieval pagans believed the symbol possessed magical powers and could ward off wolves 3 It became an early symbol of German liberty and independence after its adoption as an emblem in various 15th century peasant revolts and also in the 17th century Thirty Years War 3 In pre war Germany interest in the Wolfsangel was revived by the popularity of Hermann Lons s 1910 novel Der Wehrwolf The Ƶ symbol was adopted by the Nazi Party 4 and was used by various German Wehrmacht and SS units such as the Waffen SS Division Das Reich and the Waffen SS Division Landstorm Nederland 4 The Anti Defamation League and others 5 list the Ƶ symbol as a hate and a neo Nazi symbol 6 Contents 1 Origins 1 1 Hunting tool 1 2 Names and symbols 1 3 Peasant revolts 2 In heraldry 3 In forestry 4 In literature 5 As a Nazi symbol 6 Post World War II symbolism 7 See also 8 References 9 SourcesOrigins EditHunting tool Edit 8th century wolf hook from the Carolingian era Villa Arnesburg in Lich Germany 7 Reconstruction of a wolf hook Z shape chained to a wolf anchor crescent bar The Wolfsangel was a medieval wolf hunting technique in Europe whereby the hook was concealed inside a chunk of meat that would impale the unsuspecting wolf who ate the meat by gulping it in one movement 8 The tool was further developed by attaching the hook via a chain or rope to a larger bar often with a double crescent or half moon shape per photo opposite that could be lodged between the overhanging branches of a tree The wolf would therefore be encouraged to jump up to gulp the hanging chunk of meat with the hook concealed inside thus further impaling itself in the manner of a fish caught on a fishing hook 8 Medieval hunters were known to use blood trails to lead the wolf to the Wolfsangel trap and also used wattle fencing nearer to the trap to create narrow channels that would guide the wolf to the trap 8 Names and symbols Edit 1299 seal of Countess Udilhild nee von Wolfach Municipal coat of arms of Wolfach Germany Horizontal Wolfsangel as a mason s mark 15 century church Other German names for the Wolfsangel include Wolfsanker wolf anchor the crescent shaped bar holding the hook Wolfshaken wolf hook and Doppelhaken double hook French names include hamecon fish hook hamecon de loup fish hook for wolves and fer a loup wolf iron as well as crampon iron hook 9 10 The stylised version of the Z shaped Wolfsangel developed into a popular medieval symbol in Germany that was associated with magical powers and was believed to have the ability to ward off wolves 3 9 The symbol appears on early medieval banners and town seals in Germany particularly in forested regions where wolves were present in large numbers for example as early as 1299 the symbol can be found on seals relating to the Lords of the German Black Forest town of Wolfach see opposite the seal of the widow Countess Udilhild von Furstenberg de the sole heiress of the Lords of Wolfach and their Wolfsangel banner eventually became the municipal coat of arms for the town see opposite 11 The symbol can also be found as a mason s mark in medieval stonework 12 The stylised Wolfsangel Z symbol i e excluding the horizontal bar bears a visual resemblance to the proto Germanic Eihwaz rune meaning yew historically part of the ancient runic alphabet 4 However the full Wolfsangel Ƶ symbol has no equivalent amongst ancient runic systems but is sometimes confused as such due to its similarity to the gibor rune the eighteenth pseudo rune that was created by the nineteenth century German revivalist Guido von List as part of his Armanen runes 2 Peasant revolts Edit Academic Akbar Ahmed writes that the Wolfsangel was adopted by 15th century German peasants during revolts against oppressive German princes and their foreign mercenaries and thus became an important early popular Germanic symbol of independence and liberty 3 Ahmed further notes that during the 17th century Thirty Years War groups of German militia waged a guerilla war against foreign forces under the German name Wehrwolf and also adopted the Wolfsangel symbol as their emblem they reportedly carved the symbol on the trees from which they hanged captured foreign combatants 3 In heraldry Edit Municipal arms of Wolxheim Grand Est France Municipal arms of Wolfisheim Grand Est France A heraldic hamecon in the arms of the von Stein family Municipal arms of Erwitte North Rhine Westphalia Municipal arms of Idar Oberstein Rhineland Palatinate Municipal arms of Marpingen Saarland Municipal arms of Oestrich Winkel Hesse Municipal arms Mommenheim Rhineland Palatinate Municipal arms of Dassendorf Schleswig Holstein Municipal arms of Ilvesheim Baden Wurttemberg Municipal arms of Sibbesse Lower Saxony Municipal arms of Eppelborn Saarland Municipal arms of Burgwedel Lower Saxony Municipal arms of Kleinblittersdorf Saarland The term Wolfs Angel German and Hamecon French appears in a 1714 German heraldic handbook titled Wappenkunst However the description is more specifically about the Wolfsanker or Hamecon component part of the Wolfsangel trap and defines it as the shape of a crescent moon with a ring inside at mid height which describes the bar from which the Z shaped hook is hung see the yellow coat of arms of the von Stein family in the table opposite for an example 10 In modern German language heraldic terminology the name Wolfsangel is de facto used for a variety of heraldic charges including the Wolfsanker from above i e the half moon shape with a ring that is also called a Fer de loop as well as the Wolfshaken or Crampon i e the Z shaped or double hook that is also called a Mauerhaken or a Doppelhaken and that can also appear with a ring or a transversal stroke Ƶ at the center The Z shaped symbol is found comparatively frequently in municipal coats of arms in Germany and also in eastern France see Wolfisheim or Wolxheim where it is often identified as a Wolfsangel The Ƶ design is rarer but is found in about a dozen contemporary municipal coats of arms and is usually but not exclusively represented as a reversed Ƶ shape 10 In heraldry the upright or vertical form of the Ƶ symbol is associated with the Donnerkeil or thunderbolt while the horizontal form of the Ƶ symbol is associated with the Werwolf or Werewolf 1 In forestry Edit Wolfsangel on a 1755 boundary marker near the wood of Barsinghausen The Wolfsangel on an old field boundary stone in the Deister in Lower Saxony In a 1616 boundary treaty concluded between Hesse and Brunswick Luneburg the Brunswick forest boundary marker was called a Wulffsangel a horizontal Wolfsangel There is also evidence of its use in correspondence from the Forest Services in 1674 13 Later the Wolfsangel was also used as a symbol on forest uniforms In a document of 1792 regarding new uniforms chief forester Adolf Friedrich von Stralenheim suggested a design for uniform buttons including the letters GR and a symbol similar to the Wolfsangel which he called Forstzeichen Later the Wolfsangel was also worn as a single badge in brass caps on the service and on the buttons of the Hanoverian forest supervisor In Brunswick it was prescribed for private forests and gamekeepers as a badge on the bonnet 13 The Wolfsangel is still used in the various forest districts in Lower Saxony as a boundary marker and it is part of the emblem of the hunters association of Lower Saxony and the club Hirschmann dedicated to the breeding and training of Hanover Hounds 13 In literature EditIn pre war 1930s Germany interest in the Wolfsangel was revived by the popularity of Hermann Lons s 1910 novel entitled Der Wehrwolf later published as Harm Wulf a peasant chronicle and as The Warwolf in English The book is set in a 17th century German farming community during the Thirty Years War and the protagonist a resistance fighter named Harm Wulf adopts the symbol as his personal badge 3 Wolfsangel German City on Trial is a 2000 book by August Niro on the 1944 Russelsheim massacre that occurred in the city of Russelsheim am Main whose coat of arms features a Wolfsangel symbol The book draws parallels with the origins and symbolism of the Wolfsangel particularly resistance against foreign mercenaries and the events of the massacre 14 As a Nazi symbol Edit The emblems of the 2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich 1939 1945 the 4th SS Polizei Panzergrenadier Division 1939 1945 and the 34th SS Volunteer Grenadier Division Landstorm Nederland 1943 1945 In Nazi Germany the Wolfsangel symbol was widely adopted in Nazi symbolism It is not clear whether the driver of its adoption was Hitler s strong personal association with wolf imagery the Wolf s Lair for example or to create an association with the post 15th century symbol of German independence and liberty which had a particular relationship to the achievement of German freedom from foreign influence by force 3 2 A Nazi leader and his family The youngest girls wear Wolfsangel symbols in horizontal form as members of NS Frauenschaft s Deutsche Kinderschar for children The symbol was used by a wide range of military and non military Nazi linked groups including the 19th Infantry Division Wehrmacht the 19th Panzer Division Wehrmacht the 33rd Infantry Division Wehrmacht the 206th Infantry Division Wehrmacht the 256th Infantry Division Wehrmacht the 2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich the 4th SS Polizei Panzergrenadier Division the 34th SS Volunteer Grenadier Division Landstorm Nederland the Sturmabteilung Feldherrnhalle Wachstandart Kampfrunen Assault Unit SA Warlord s Hall Guard Regiment the NS Volkswohlfahrt organization the Flamische Nazionalsozialistische Kraftfahr Korps Vlaamsche NSKK the Vlaamse wacht zwarte brigade Flemish guard Black brigade the Dietse Militie Dietsch militia the Nationaal Socialistische Beweging NSB Dutch Nazi fascist party whose magazine was called De Wolfsangel the Werwolf plan of resistance against allied occupation was intended to use this symbol 15 Post World War II symbolism EditSee also Bans on Nazi symbols and Azov Regiment Neo Nazism Post WWII emblems resembling the Wolfsangel Emblem of the North American hate group the Aryan Nations Badge of Azov Regiment Ukraine Former badge of the Azov Battalion used until 2015 Emblem of the Ukrainian ultranationalist group Patriot of Ukraine After World War II public exhibition of the Wolfsangel symbol became illegal in Germany if it was connected with Neo Nazi groups 16 17 On August 9 2018 Germany lifted the ban on the usage of swastikas and other Nazi symbols in video games Through the change in the interpretation of the law games that critically look at current affairs can for the first time be given a USK age rating USK managing director Elisabeth Secker told CTV This has long been the case for films and with regards to the freedom of the arts this is now rightly also the case with computer and videogames 18 19 Outside of Germany the Wolfsangel symbol has been used by some Neo Nazi organizations such as in the United States where the Aryan Nations organization uses a white Wolfsangel like symbol with a sword replacing the cross bar in its logo 20 The US based Anti Defamation League ADL database as well as other non governmental organisations 5 list the Wolfsangel as a hate symbol and as a neo Nazi symbol 6 9 In Ukraine far right movements like the Social National Party of Ukraine 21 22 23 and the Social National Assembly 24 as well as the Azov Regiment of the Ukrainian army 25 26 27 28 have used a similar symbol of ꑭ an elongated centre bar and the Z being rotated but untypically not reversed for their political slogan Ideya Naciyi Ukrainian for National Idea where the symbol is a composite of the N and the I they deny any connection or attempt to draw a parallel with the regiment and Nazism 29 Political scientist Andreas Umland told Deutsche Welle that though it had far right connotations the Wolfsangel was not considered a fascist symbol by the general population in Ukraine 30 The Reporting Radicalism initiative from Freedom House notes that Accidental use of this symbol or its use without an understanding of its connotations for example as a talisman is rare and in Ukraine the use of a Wolfsangel as a heraldic symbol or a traditional talisman would be uncharacteristic 5 In 2020 there was a brief trend of Generation Z TikTok users tattooing a Generation Ƶ symbol on the arm as a symbol of unity in our generation but also as a sign of rebellion in the manner of the 15th century peasant s revolts The originator of the trend later renounced it when the use of the symbol by the Nazis was brought to her attention 6 See also Edit Look up wolfsangel in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wolfsangel Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wolfsangel List of heraldic charges List of symbols designated by the Anti Defamation League as hate symbols Fascist symbolism Modern runic writing Wolf hunting Z with strokeReferences Edit a b c Yenne Bill 2010 5 The Old Crooked Cross Hitler s Master of the Dark Arts Himmler s Black Knights and the Occult Origins of the SS Zenith Press p 69 ISBN 978 0760337783 a b c Yenne Bill 2010 2 The Court of the Godfather Hitler s Master of the Dark Arts Himmler s Black Knights and the Occult Origins of the SS Zenith Press p 27 ISBN 9780760337783 a b c d e f g Ahmed Akbar February 2018 Journey into Europe Islam Immigration and Identity Brookings Institution p 77 ISBN 9780815727583 a b c Lumsden Robin 2009 Himmler s SS Loyal to the Death s Head The History Press pp 201 206 ISBN 978 0752497228 Retrieved 24 March 2015 via Google Books a b c Wolfsangel Reportingradicalism org Retrieved 28 September 2022 a b c Greenspan Rachel 22 September 2020 TikTok users recommended a Nazi symbol as a Gen Z tattoo idea to represent rebellion Insider Retrieved 17 March 2022 Christoph Roder 2014 Vier karolingerzeitliche Grubenhauser bei der Junkermuhle Stadt Munzenberg hessenARCHAOLOGIE am a b c Almond Richard March 2011 Medieval Hunting The History Press ISBN 978 0752459493 a b c Wolfsangel General Hate Symbols Neo Nazi Symbols Anti Defamation League Retrieved 17 March 2022 a b c Gustav Adelbert Seyler 1890 Geschichte der Heraldik Wappenwesen Wappenkunst und Wappenwissenschaft Abt A des Siebmacher schen Wappenbuches Bauer amp Raspe p 664 Retrieved 12 June 2015 Wolffs Angel frantz hamecon lat uncus quo lupi capiuntur ist die Form eines halben Mondes und hat inwendig in der Mitte einen Ring Wolffs Angel French hamecon Latin uncus quo lupi capiuntur hook with which wolves are caught is the shape of a crescent moon with a ring inside at mid height Sadlier Klemens 1971 German Coats of Arms Federal Republic of Germany Municipal Coats of Arms of the Federal State of Baden Wurttemberg Vol 8 Angelsachsen Verlag p 115 Press release of the Regional Association of Westphalia Lippe 30 October 2009 No original ancient specimens of such hooks were known prior to 2009 when excavations at the Falkenburg ruin in Detmold yielded more than 25 wolf hooks dated to the 13th century Video on YouTube a b c Gerhard Grosse Loscher Die Wolfsangel als Forst und Jagdzeichen in Niedersachsen In Jurgen Delfs u a Jagd in der Luneburger Heide Beitrage zur Jagdgeschichte Celle 2006 ISBN 3 925902 59 7 pp 238 239 Niro August 2000 Wolfsangel German City on Trial Potomac Books ISBN 978 1574882452 Retrieved 28 April 2022 Watt Roderick October 1992 Wehrwolf or Werwolf Literature Legend or Lexical Error into Nazi Propaganda The Modern Language Review 87 4 879 895 doi 10 2307 3731426 JSTOR 3731426 A study of the iconography of German nationalist groups between the wars and then of Nazi party military and paramilitary organizations from 1933 to 1945 proves beyond doubt that the Wolfsangel symbol was widely even indiscriminately used by them long before the formation of the Nazi Werwolf movement at the end of the war Wolfsangel if at all translatable means or at least originally meant wolf trap an instrument which is a threat to the wolf Yet both Lons and the Nazis used it as a menacing symbol of intimidation representing the savage and relentless ferocity of the wolf In the late summer or early autumn of 1944 when it was clear that Germany was committed to a European land war on two fronts Reichsfuhrer SS Heinrich Himmler initiated Unternehmen Werwolf ordering SS Obergruppenfuhrer Prutzmann to begin organizing an elite troop of volunteer special forces to operate secretly behind enemy lines In Deutschland verbotene Zeichen und Symbole Informations und Dokumentationszentrum fur Antirassismusarbeit in Nordrhein Westfalen Archived from the original on 5 July 2012 Retrieved 5 April 2012 Gruppierungen auf dem Index Programm Polizeiliche Kriminalpravention Germany lifts ban on Nazi symbols in video games The Telegraph 9 August 2018 Germany lifts ban on swastikas in videogames PC Gamer 9 August 2018 Aryan Nations Anti Defamation League Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 7 December 2016 Kyiv s Next Image Problem Open Democracy Retrieved 7 December 2016 Analysing Fascist Discourse European Fascism in Talk and Text Per Anders Rudling The Return of the Ukrainian Far Right The Case of VO Svoboda edited by Ruth Wodak John E Richardson Routledge 2012 Olszanski Tadeusz A 4 July 2011 Svoboda Party The New Phenomenon on the Ukrainian Right Wing Scene Centre for Eastern Studies OSW Commentary 56 Provoking the Euromaidan Open Democracy Archived from the original on 24 May 2018 Retrieved 7 December 2016 Look far right and look right again Open Democracy Retrieved 7 December 2016 Alec Luhn 30 August 2014 Preparing for War With Ukraine s Fascist Defenders of Freedom Foreign Policy Retrieved 8 August 2015 Andrew E Kramer 13 December 2014 A Pastor s Turn Fighting for Ukraine The New York Times Retrieved 8 August 2015 Don t confuse patriotism and Nazism Ukraine s Azov forces face scrutiny Financial Times 29 March 2022 Retrieved 1 September 2022 Profile Who are Ukraine s far right Azov regiment Al Jazeera 1 March 2022 Retrieved 2 May 2022 Welle www dw com Deutsche The Azov Battalion Extremists defending Mariupol DW 16 03 2022 DW COM Retrieved 26 September 2022 Sources EditK von Alberti 1960 Die sogenannte Wolfsangel in der Heraldik in German Sudwestdeutsche Blatter fur Familien und Wappenkunde p 89 H Horstmann 1955 Die Wolfsangel als Jagdgerat und Wappenbild in German Vj Bl d Trierer Gesellschaft fur nutzliche Forschungen Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wolfsangel amp oldid 1141674976, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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