| The above article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stahlhelm 6/12/05 |
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Stahlhelm is German for steel helmet.
The Imperial German Army began to replace the
traditional leather
Pickelhaube (spiked
helmet) with the Stahlhelm during the First World
War in 1916. The term Stahlhelm refers both
to a generic steel helmet, and more specifically to
the distinctive (and symbolic) German design.
At
the beginning of World War I, none of the combatants
were issued with any form of protection for the head
other than cloth and leather caps. As the war
entered the trench warfare phase, the number of
casualties on all sides suffering from severe head
wounds (often caused by shrapnel) increased
dramatically. The French were the first to see a
real need for more effective protection The Stahlhelm with its distinctive "coal scuttle" shape was an excellent symbol for military imagery. It was a common element of military propaganda on both sides, just like the pickelhaube before. After the Second World War, West Germany abandoned the distinctive Stahlhelm, which had become a symbol of German military aggression, using a variant of the more harmless-looking US "GI pot" helmet instead. In the 1990s, a Kevlar helmet was adopted. East Germany used a helmet modelled on a late WW2 German design with a more conical shape. After the war, the Bundesgrenzschutz border guards and some West German police units kept the Stahlhelm in their inventories, though it was seldom worn, and the Fallschirmjager variant was used for some time by the GSG 9. The Chilean army still uses the Stahlhelm design. Some modern Kevlar helmets bear a superficial resemblance to the German Stahlhelm of the World Wars, since they protect the ears, hence the name "Fritz helmet" in the US. See Combat Vehicle Crewman helmet. Original Stahlhelms from WWII are much prized by collectors today. |
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