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FELDGENDARMERIE

The 'Feldgendarmerie' (a German[1] term roughly translating to "Field Police") were the military police units of the armies of the German Empire (including the Wehrmacht) from post-Napoleonic times through its dissolution at the conclusion of World War II.

Contents
History
World War II
Postwar reorganization
See also
External links
Notes

History


Early incarnations of the Feldgendarmerie came into being on an ad-hoc basis through mobilizations of the Germany army as a whole, most notably in the wars of 1866 and 1870. At the outset of hostilities in 1914 the Feldgendarmerie comprised 33 units; this number was expanded to 100 by war's end.
World War II

The ''Feldgendarmerie'' (pejoratively ''Kettenhunde'', or "chained dogs", for the gorget they wore) had an especially significant role towards the end of World War II as they became responsible for the fate of tens of thousands of deserters (known as ''Fahnenflüchtiger'', literally "runners from the flag"). According to Hitler's way of thinking, "the solder may die, but the deserter must die" and many were summarily executed. Towards the end of the war (as public support for anything but non-defensive actions by the Wehrmacht was rapidly evaporating), they also became known as the ''Heldenklau'' (or "hero-snatchers") because they were assigned the unpopular task of searching streams of returning refugees for possible deserters and sending rear-echelon personnel to the front.
Additionally, some ''Feldgendarmerie'' units were given occupation duties in the territories controlled by the Wehrmacht. Their missions ranged from straightforward traffic control and civilian policing to suppression and execution of partisans and enemy stragglers.
As combat units moved out of a region, control was transferred to the SS and Police Leaders occupation authority under the Nazi Party and Heinrich Himmler, and the ''Feldgendarmerie's'' role would formally end. The SS and Police Leaders are known to have committed numerous war crimes including mass arrests and deportation to concentration camps and even mass murder of entire villages, especially of Jews and other distrusted populations. The extent to which the ''Feldgendarmerie'' participated in such activities is not well documented. Overall, the history of the ''Feldgendarmerie'' is one of the least explored chapters of Wehrmacht history during the Second World War.

Postwar reorganization


Main articles: Feldjäger

With the creation of the ''Bundeswehr'' in 1955, many of its branches of service were given names that would at least nominally distinguish them from their logical ''Wehrmacht'' equivalents. Thus, military police in the modern ''Bundeswehr'' were not called ''Feldgendarmerie.'' In fact, the original intent was to call the MPs ''Militärpolizei,'' literally military police. However, state officials protested as the law enforcement function in the brand new German constitution had been given primarily to the states, not the federation. The word ''Polizei'' (Police) was jealously guarded by the states, so the Federal Defence Ministry searched for a new designation and adopted ''Feldjäger'' which was a traditional Prussian regiment with some military police type functions.

See also



Feldjägerkorps

External links



An independent historian's page on the history of the German ''Feldgendarmerie'' and ''Feldjäger''

Notes


1. A compound of the native German term ''Feld'', and the word ''Gendarmerie'', imported from French


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