Last modified: 2003-07-12 by edward mooney jr.
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Danish infantry units carry a regimentsfane or bataljonsfane. According to old files at the US Army Institute of Heraldry, this flag measures 105 x 140 cm, but pictures on the web and a news photograph I clipped from the Washington Post several years ago indicate a proportion of roughly 3:4 is actually in use. The flag is a variation of the Dannebrog, with a curvilinear white Dannebrog cross, set with its center about 1/2 the width of the hoist from the hoist edge. The royal cypher is embroidered in gold over the center of the cross, the unit badge in gold in the upper hoist, and the unit number and/or name in gold in the lower hoist. Some regiments have additional marks in the upper and lower fly. The Prince's Life Regiment, for instance, as Prince Henrik's cipher in the upper fly and the Queen Mother's in the lower, as it was formerly her "life regiment." The finial is an ornate gold openwork spearhead with the royal cypher in the center. Attached below the spearhead are one or more fanebander, lengths of red silk with gold fringe at each end, knotted around the pike, with the regiment's battle honors (name of battle and year) inscribed in gold. The color is decorated with a gold cord with two tassels and bordered with a thin strip of gold cord. The sleeve holding the color to the pike is attached with ornamental nails, the first three of which represent the sovereign, the Fatherland, and the Union. The color of the Den Kongelige Livgarde (Royal Life Guard) regiment is shown.
Cavalry (armor) units carry an estandart, of similar design to the infantry
fane, but smaller and square, with the cross centered on the field. The royal
cypher is in the upper hoist and the initials of the regiment in the lower
hoist.
Principal source: Danish Battalion "Fane med Faneband".
Joe McMillan, 21 February 2002
This image was located at a site from the Deutsches
Historisches Museum in Berlin describing an exhibition on "Wahlverwandtschaft"
or "Elective Affinity" between Germans and Scandinavians. From the page titled
"War," describing the conflicts between Germans (or Prussians and Austrians) and
Danes over Schleswig and Holstein, the dual duchies that were German in heritage
but ruled by the Danish royal house. This image is named by the site
"5danekl2.jpg" and appears to me to be some sort of Danish regimental flag. Can
anyone confirm this?
Roger Moyer, 24 October 2000
Sort of. Yes, I think I saw similar flags at the museum at the "Danish wall",
the dike build across the passable tracts of southern Jutland in the first
millennium to protect it against invaders from the south, which was walled and
otherwise improved several times during periods of conflict in the second
millennium (usually by Danes, but on occasion also by Germans). The conflict at
the end of the nineteenth century had a section of its own, and if I recall
correctly I saw such a flag there. I believe the meaning of the characters could
even be made out from the texts describing that period, but since I was there
for interest in the site, rather than the flags I didn't make any notes about
all of that.
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 28 December 2000
This is pretty much a
guess, but it might be from the 9TH JAGER BATALLION, 2ND COMPANY. I'm certainly
no authority on the Danish military, but I have a hunch that it'll be something
similar to this.
Mike Richardson, 3 January 2001
This is a Danish army company marker from the 1864
war, containing the identification of the regiment and the company. Mike
Richardson's suggestion as to what the letters and numbers stand for may well be
correct, though I have not been able to confirm this.
The company markers were not considered proper colours - Dannebrog colours - by
the Danish and were just left behind when the Danish troops retreated.
Nevertheless the Prussians and Austrians took them and displayed them as
trophies. The Prussians alone took about 65 of them. The company marker in the
photo, for instance, was taken by the Prussians in the 1864 war and displayed in
Berlin. Later this company marker was bought back to Denmark at auction and it
is now in the collection of the Museet på
Sønderborg Slot.
Sources:
Inge Adriansen: "Dannebrog i traengselstider", in Hjermind, Jesper and
Melgaard, Kristian (eds) (1995): Om Dannebrog jeg ved..., Viborg: Forlaget
Viborg, p. 20.
Helge Bruhn (1949): Dannebrog og
danske Faner gennem Tiderne, Copenhagen: Jespersen og Pios Forlag, 1949, p.
186-188.
Jan Oskar Engene, 3 January 2001
I asked one of my Danish colleagues,
Steffen Jorgensen, formerly a captain in the Royal Danish Artillery, about this
flag, and this is what he said: "I believe the colours are to be proper red and
white, but age tends to make white textiles yellowish. In appearance the flag
seems to be the mid 19th century company standard of 2nd Company 9th Jaeger
Battalion. Jaegers were in 19th century rifle armed light troops specialised in
open order combat, and today the name is carried on in the Danish and Norwegian
armies in the Jaegercorps (Danish sp: Jægerkorps) being crack special forces."
More information on the history of this unit and its flag will be forthcoming.
Theodore Leverett, 3 January 2001
I've researched your flag question, and it seems a little more complicated
that first thought. First, the flag isn't official, but could be a company
marker designed with inspiration from the official regimental flags, but
produced on the initiative and expense of the unit (not uncommon - I also had a
marker and a crest too made for the battery I was in command of).
Second there apparently wasn't a 9th Jaeger Battalion by 1864, but it could be
the company marker from an old unit taken with into the new unit, or it could
belong to the 19th Jaeger battalion (a "1" figure having fallen off?) which was
the number of one of the voluntary Jaeger formations.
About Danish military flags I think the best available source in English would
be the Osprey series on Napoleonic flags. In 17/18th century and until 1842
regimental flags usually looked much like the British, i.e. a small "Dannebrog"
in the upper corner nearest the pole. The flag itself would usually be coloured
in the Regimental distinction colour, and with the Regimental crest in centre.
On each of the sides, in centre, there would be a flame, in white or yellow.
In 1842 Dannebrog-flags in shape similar to that you had a picture of was
issued, and this is still the design for Danish Regimental flags.
Steffen Jorgenson, 11 January 2001
Initially I was sure that it had belonged to a 9. Jaeger Battalion (JB), but
there wasn't any units of that name in either 1848-51 or in 1864, but I found
and read quite
a lot of interesting books. Your question remained unanswered though, and I had
to call for help. In my best German I wrote to the museum in Berlin, and
apparently it was understandable enough for them to write a very kind and
detailed answer (from the leader of the militaria collection - Klaus-Peter Merta).
The flag was a company marker (60x71,5cm, cotton), and belonged to the 2nd
Company, 9th Infantry Battalion. The "J" in "JB" actually was an "I" (originally
"J" and "I" were identical letters in many European languages, but I had
forgotten that) and thus meant Infantry Battalion. The marker was lost in the
battle of Dybbøl (Düppel, German sp.) near Sønderborg in current Denmark on 18th
of April 1864. The Danish main army had withdrawn from a position further south
(Dannevirke, at Schleswig town) and had taken a position at Dybbøl on the
peninsula of Sundeved, to be a flank threat to any German (incl. Austrians and
Schleswig-Holsteiners) forces moving north. That trick had worked splendidly in
earlier wars, and the position was even reinforced by earth ramparts and
dug-outs. Against the earlier smooth bore cannons the field fortifications would
have provided excellent protection, but now the Germans had a large number of
modern rifled guns, and from outside the range of the old-fashioned Danish
smooth bore artillery, they could through a week-long bombardment literally wear
down the ramparts, guns and shelters. On 18th of April the position was
successfully stormed, and both company markers of 2nd Company, 9th Infantry
Battalion were taken, One of the Danish marker bearers was killed. The Markers
were taken by the 10th Company of the Brandenburgisches Füsilierregimentes Nr.
35 (Prussian Army), but the main part of the Danish army succeeded in
extricating itself before being surrounded, by a valiant counterattack by the
9th Brigade. The Army thereafter withdrew to the small island of Alsen (I have
once been stationed there in my Army time). From here the Danish army would
still be a flank threat, as the strait (and the sea around North Germany) was
controlled by the Danish navy. At Alsen Strait the steam-powered and turreted
iron clad Rolf Krake patrolled, but somehow she managed not to be there the
morning the Germans crossed the strait (very narrow - 200-500 yds.) and
surprised the Danish forces. After this all Jutland was occupied and resistance
really became hopeless and an armistice was negotiated whereby Prussia got all
Schleswig-Holstein. The Danish speaking northern parts came back in 1920, but
the defeat in 1864 gave Danish foreign policy a rather fatalistic and reactive
aura, that only now is diminishing .
Steffen Jorgenson, 27 January 2001
Walbom-Pramvig (1988) (p. 125) shows the
green infirmary flag [Danish: lazaretflag], used by the army medical
corps in both Schleswig Wars [OA: 1848-50 and 1864] until superseded by the
Geneva Cross, the "Red Cross".
Ole Andersen, 2 August 2002