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Before the war began the German armed forces Heereswaffenamt compiled a list of known foreign equipment and assigned a unique number to each weapon. These weapons were called Fremdgerät or Beutegerät ("foreign device" or "captured device") and their technical details were recorded in a fourteen-volume set that was periodically updated.
This page contains a list of equipment used the German military of World War II.Germany used a number of type designations for their weapons. In some cases, the type designation and series number (i.e. FlaK 30) are sufficient to identify a system, but occasionally multiple systems of the same type are developed at the same time and share a partial designation.
FKK may refer to: . Freikörperkultur (FKK), a German naturist social movement and health culture; FKK sauna clubs, a type of German prostitution club that erroneously or falsely refers to itself as the German FKK 'Freikörperkultur' naturist culture
World War II 75: Type 95 75 mm field gun Japan: 2nd Sino-Japanese War: 75: Type 63 field gun Thailand: World War II 75: Type 90 75 mm field gun Japan: World War II 75: 7.5 cm FK 16 nA Nazi Germany: World War II 75: 7.5 cm FK 18 Nazi Germany: World War II 75: 7.5 cm FK 38 Nazi Germany: World War II 75: 7.5 cm FK 7M85 Nazi Germany: World War II ...
Association for socialist Lifestyle and Free Body Culture), with approximately 70,000 members in 1932. [2] In 1930, representatives from England, the Netherlands, France, Austria, Switzerland, Hungary, Italy, and Germany met in Frankfurt am Main and later founded a European League for Naturism. The first dissertation about the FKK movement was ...
Pages in category "World War II artillery of Germany" The following 107 pages are in this category, out of 107 total. ... 7.5 cm FK 16 nA; 7.5 cm FK 18; 7.5 cm FK 38;
The FlaK 38 was accepted as the standard Army gun in 1939, and by the Kriegsmarine as the 2 cm C/38. In order to provide airborne and mountain troops with an AA capability, Mauser was contracted to produce a lighter version of the Flak 38, which they introduced as the 2 cm Gebirgsflak 38 (2 cm GebFlaK 38). It featured a dramatically simplified ...
The 7.62 cm FK 36(r) and Pak 36(r) (7.62 cm Feldkanone /36 (russisch) and Panzerabwehrkanone (Anti-tank gun) 36(russisch)) were German anti-tank guns used by the Wehrmacht in World War II. The first guns were conversions of the Soviet 76 mm divisional gun M1936 (F-22) .