Defense District Command 26

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Defense District Command 26
- VBK 26 -

No coats of arms.svg

(did not have an association badge )
active approx. 1963 to 1978
Country GermanyGermany Germany
Armed forces Bundeswehr Kreuz.svg armed forces
Armed forces Bundeswehr Kreuz.svg army
Type District Defense Command
Insinuation WBK II.svg Military District Command II
Staff seat Stade

The defense district command 26 was a defense area command of the Armed Forces with the seat of the rod in Stade . The main task of the command was the territorial defense in its defense district.

history

Lineup

The defense district command was to assume the army structure II in the 1960s as part of the Territorial Army deallocated and the commanders in the Military District II assumed. Based on the civil administrative structure , the defense district roughly corresponded to the administrative district of Stade . The location of the Stade staff was accordingly .

resolution

The administrative district of Stade was dissolved by 1978. Most of its area was incorporated into the administrative district of Lüneburg . Accordingly, Defense District Command 26 was decommissioned and its Defense District was added to Defense District 25 . The Defense District Command 25 with headquarters in Lüneburg was previously responsible for the (still much smaller) administrative district of Lüneburg.

structure

Like most units of the Territorial Army, the Defense District Command consisted of only a few active soldiers. Only in the case of defense , the defense district command could by the convening of reserve and the mobilization stored and civilian material to a force levels increase , the last about one brigade of the Army corresponded. For the longest time of its existence the Defense District Command, derived from the civil administrative structure, was further subdivided into subordinate Defense District Commands .

Association badge

The Defense District Command 26 did not have its own association badge due to its planning as a predominantly inactive unit . The few active soldiers therefore wore the association badge of the superior military area command .

As a "badge" for some of the other defense district commands, the internal association badge of the staff and the staff company " pars pro toto " for the entire defense district command was therefore sometimes used imprecisely . The Defense District Command 26 was, however, dissolved by about 1978, i.e. shortly before the introduction of the internal association badge in the Bundeswehr around 1980, and consequently never had an internal association badge.

Individual evidence

  1. a b Military District Command II. BArch, BH 28-2. In: invenio. Federal Archives, accessed on July 14, 2018 .
  2. ^ A b Defense District Commands . BArch, BH 30. In: invenio. Federal Archives, accessed on December 14, 2018 .
  3. ^ Ralf Flatau: reservist comradeship Nienburger grenadiers. In: www.reservistenverband.de. Association of Reservists of the German Federal Armed Forces, accessed on December 11, 2018 : "In 1980 the Federal Ministry of Defense approved the wearing of association badges on the uniform"

Coordinates: 53 ° 34 ′ 3.5 ″  N , 9 ° 30 ′ 6.5 ″  E