Ranks and insignia of the Schutzstaffel

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The ranks and insignia of the Schutzstaffel were a paramilitary rank system used by the German SS, to differentiate the group from the German military, German state, and the Nazi Party. The original SS ranks were the same as the ranks of the SA, but eventually developed into their own unique titles. In line with the Führerprinzip (Leader Principle) of the Nazi party's ideolgy, the word Führer was incorporated into all SS ranks except those of the troopers themselves.

Contents

[edit] SS rank insignia

[edit] 1934–1945

SS General Officer Rank Translation Waffen-SS suffix Wehrmacht equivalent Collar Insignia

1934–1942

Collar Insignia

1942–1945

Duty Shoulder Insignia Dress Shoulder Insignia
Reichsführer-SS Reich Leader N/A Generalfeldmarschall
Oberstgruppenführer Colonel Group Leader Generaloberst der Waffen-SS Generaloberst N/A
Obergruppenführer Senior Group Leader General der Waffen-SS General
Gruppenführer Group Leader Generalleutnant der Waffen-SS Generalleutnant
Brigadeführer Brigade Leader Generalmajor der Waffen-SS Generalmajor
Oberführer Senior Leader N/A Brigadier
SS Officer Rank Translation German Army equivalent Collar Insignia

1934–1945

Duty Shoulder Insignia

1938–1945

Dress Shoulder Insignia

1934–1945

Standartenführer Regiment Leader Oberst
Obersturmbannführer Senior Storm Unit Leader Oberstleutnant
Sturmbannführer Storm Unit Leader Major
Hauptsturmführer Head Storm Leader Hauptmann
Obersturmführer Senior Storm Leader Oberleutnant
Untersturmführer Junior Storm Leader Leutnant
SS NCO Rank Translation Officer Candidate Equivalent German Army equivalent Collar Insignia

1934–1945

Duty Shoulder Insignia

1938–1945

Dress Shoulder Insignia

1934–1945

Sturmscharführer Storm Squad Leader N/A Stabsfeldwebel
Hauptscharführer Head Squad Leader Standartenoberjunker Oberfeldwebel
Oberscharführer Senior Squad Leader Standartenjunker Feldwebel
Scharführer Squad Leader Oberjunker Unterfeldwebel
Unterscharführer Junior Squad Leader Junker Unteroffizier
SS Enlisted Rank Translation German Army equivalent Collar Insignia

1934–1945

Sleeve Insignia

1938–1945

Duty Shoulder Insignia

1938–1945

Dress Shoulder Insignia

1934–1945

Rottenführer Section Leader Obergefreiter
Sturmmann Storm Trooper Gefreiter
Oberschütze/Obermann Senior Trooper Oberschütze
Schütze/Mann Trooper Schütze No Insignia
Anwärter Recruit No Equivalent No Insignia No Insignia No Insignia No Insignia
Bewerber Candidate No Equivalent No Insignia No Insignia No Insignia No Insignia

[edit] 1932–1934

SS Rank Translation Army Equivalent Collar Insignia Shoulder Insignia
Obergruppenführer Senior Group Leader General
Gruppenführer Group Leader Generalleutnant
Brigadeführer Brigade Leader Generalmajor
Oberführer Senior Leader Brigadier
Standartenführer Regiment Leader Oberst
Obersturmbannführer Senior Storm Unit Leader Oberstleutnant
Sturmbannführer Storm Unit Leader Major
Sturmhauptführer Storm Head Leader Hauptmann
Obersturmführer Senior Storm Leader Oberleutnant
Sturmführer Storm Leader Leutnant
Haupttruppführer Head Troop Leader Stabsfeldwebel
Obertruppführer Senior Troop Leader Oberfeldwebel
Truppführer Troop Leader Feldwebel
Oberscharführer Senior Squad Leader Unterfeldwebel
Scharführer Squad Leader Unteroffizier
Rottenführer Section Leader Obergefreiter
Sturmmann Storm Trooper Gefreiter
Mann Trooper Schütze
Anwärter Recruit Recruit No Insignia No Insignia

[edit] 1930–1932

SS Rank Army Equivalent Collar Insignia
Gruppenführer General
Oberführer Brigadier
Standartenführer Colonel
Sturmbannführer Major
Sturmhauptführer Captain
Sturmführer Lieutenant
Haupttruppführer Sergeant Major
Truppführer Sergeant
Scharführer Corporal
Mann Private


[edit] 1925–1929

Early SS armband
Enlarge
Early SS armband

The earliest SS ranks were titles with no recognizable insignia. By 1929, a system of white stripes, centered on an armband, denoted SS rank with the first established SS ranks listed below:

[edit] Police ranks

In 1936, the SS absorbed the regular German police and formed the Ordnungspolizei. Known as the Orpo, the Ordnungspolizei was considered a full branch of the SS but maintained a separate system of insignia and Orpo ranks. It was also possible for SS members to hold dual status in both the Orpo and the SS, and SS-Generals were referred to simultaneously by both rank titles. For instance, an Obergruppenführer in the SS, who was also a Police General, would be referred to as Obergruppenführer und General der Polizei.

[edit] Waffen-SS Generals

SS Generals of the Waffen-SS were typically addressed by both their SS rank title and a corresponding General's rank associated with the Wehrmacht. All such General ranks were followed by the phrase der Waffen-SS to distinguish the SS General from their counterparts in other branches of the German military. Thus, a typical title would be Obergruppenführer und General der Waffen-SS.

In 1944, all SS General Officers were granted equivalent Waffen-SS rank so that, in the event that they were captured by the Allies, they would have status as military officers instead of police officials. For those who had held police rank prior to 1944, the SS General's title could become rather lengthy. Ernst Kaltenbrunner, for instance, was listed on the SS rolls in 1945 as Obergruppenführer und General der Polizei und Waffen-SS.

[edit] Senior SS Titles

In addition to the regular ranks of the SS, the SS also used a variety of titles which were commonly interchanged with ranks to denote senior levels of responsibility. Some of these titles included:

  • SS-Führer: Originally an early rank of the SS, the title of SS-Führer was commonly used by any SS officer and translated as “SS Leader”.
  • SS-Unterführer: This title was often used in the Waffen-SS by non-commissioned officers holding the rank of Unterscharführer and above. An enlisted SS soldier, applying for NCO status, was often known as an Unterführer-Anwärter.
  • SD-Leiter: This title was used by senior officers of the Sicherheitsdienst, typically those in command of a major SD office or regional headquarters
  • SS und Polizeiführer: Translated as SS and Police Leader, these were some of the most powerful men in the SS, commanding all SS units in a given geographic region
  • Kriminalrat: A title used by the Kriminalpolizei to denote those SS members who were also fully certified detectives. Artur Nebe went by the title of Kriminalrat for most of the 1930s, only using addressing himself by an SS rank when engaged in non-Kripo activities.

[edit] Adolf Hitler

Adolf Hitler, as the Führer of Germany, was by default the supreme commander of the SS and outranked Heinrich Himmler, who served as “Reich Leader” of the entire SS. In the early days of the SS, Hitler was Oberster SA-Führer and supreme commander of the Sturmabteilung stormtroopers. Hitler’s supreme SA rank, when the SS was still under the authority of the SA, could be seen as a rank superior to that of Reichsführer-SS. Hitler also was considered SS Member #1 (Emil Maurice who founded the SS was SS Member #2), while Himmler was SS Member #168. Based on the seniority system of SS membership number, this made Hitler senior in the SS to all other members even if not by rank. Given the SS membership system one should assume though that each member should possess a rank.

After the Night of the Long Knives, when the SS became independent from the SA, no data exist that Hitler did adopt any new rank as the supreme SS commander.

Some non-German sources [1] have claimed that Hitler did in fact hold a supreme SS rank known by a variety of grand titles to include Oberster SS-Führer and Der Oberste Führer der Schutzstaffel. There are, however, no German sources or documentary evidence from World War II that Hitler ever called himself by any of these titles nor are there any photographic records of Hitler wearing an SS uniform.

[edit] Additional information

  • Stabsscharführer was a positional rank granted to the senior NCO of an SS Company. The position was the equivalent of a First Sergeant. Stabsscharführer was denoted by a special sleeve patch, worn on the upper right arm of the SS uniform.
  • SS officers holding the rank of Standartenführer and above wore rank insignia on both collar patches. All other SS members wore their rank on the left collar patch while an SS unit badge was worn on the right.

[edit] In Popular Culture

In Harry Turtledove's Southern Victory series of alternate-history novels, the Confederate Freedom Party guards have rank names immitating those of the SS.

In the Ian McKellan adaptation of Richard III, King Richard wears a paramilitary black uniform with the insignia of an SS-Oberstgruppenführer.

Rankings in Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory are identical.

[edit] See also

The organizations of the Schutzstaffel (Runic 'SS')
view  talk  edit
SS branches
Allgemeine SS | Waffen-SS
Leadership
Reichsführer-SS | Regional leaders | Personnel
Headquarters
Office of the Reichsführer-SS | Head Administrative Office | Head Operational Office | Reich Central Security Office | Police Office | Economics and Administration Office | Office of Race and Settlement | Main Office for Ethnic Germans | Office of the Reich Commissioner for Germanic Resettlement | SS Courts Office | Personnel Office | Education Office
Special services
Concentration camp guards | Death squads | Hitler's bodyguards | Intelligence service (SD) | Ahnenerbe
Police units
Regular police (Orpo) | Criminal police (Kripo) | Secret police: Gestapo and Sipo
Waffen-SS units
Waffen-SS corps | Waffen-SS divisions
SS publications
Das Schwarze Korps
SS-controlled businesses
Holdings: Ostindustrie | Deutsche Wirtschaftsbetriebe
Weapons: Deutsche Ausrüstungswerke
Art: Allach porcelain
Drinking water: Apollinaris | Mattoni | Sudettenquell


[edit] References

[edit] References