Totenkopf#Nazi Germany

{{Short description|German symbol for skull and crossbones}}{{About|the military symbol|other uses|Totenkopf (disambiguation)|and|Death's head (disambiguation){{!}}Death's head}}

{{Expand German|Totenkopf (Symbol)|date=June 2023|topic=mil}}

{{Italic title}}

Image:AugustvonMackensen.jpg, German field marshal in hussar full dress prior to 1914, with the Totenkopf on his fur busby]]

Totenkopf ({{IPA|de|ˈtoːtn̩ˌkɔpf|lang}}, i.e. skull, literally "dead person's head") is the German word for skull. The word is often used to denote a figurative, graphic or sculptural symbol, common in Western culture, consisting of the representation of a human skull – usually frontal, more rarely in profile with or without the mandible. In some cases, other human skeletal parts may be added, often including two crossed long bones (femurs) depicted below or behind the skull (when it may be referred to in English as a "skull and crossbones"). The human skull is an internationally used symbol for death, the defiance of death, danger, or the dead, as well as piracy or toxicity.

In English, the term Totenkopf is commonly associated with 19th- and 20th-century German military use, particularly in Nazi Germany.

The german word for skull without emotional connotation is Schädel.

Naval use

In early modern sea warfare to early modern sea piracy, buccaneers and pirates used the Totenkopf as a pirate flag: a skull or other skeletal parts as a death threat and as a demand to hand over a ship. The symbol continues to be used by modern navies.

File:Pirate Flag of Emanuel Wynne.svg | Emanuel Wynne's flag flown in 1700{{cite web |title=Hoist the Colors: History of the Pirate Flag |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=auGOEwHOxu4 |website=youtube.com |publisher=Gold and Gunpowder |access-date=2024-05-03}}

File:Jolly Roger flag of pirate Bartholomew Roberts (early).svg | Bartholomew Roberts' flag as described in a report from 1720{{cite web |title=The Pirate That Had WAY Too Many Flags... |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8XO8tvGFS1A |website=youtube.com |publisher=Gold and Gunpowder |access-date=2024-05-03}}

File:Flag of Edward England.svg | Edward England and Samuel Bellamy's flag as described by eyewitness Thomas Baker (Bellamy's crew){{cite web|title=The Pirate Ship Whydah: Pirate strategy|url=http://archive.fieldmuseum.org/pirates/pirateship_3.asp |work="Real Pirates" museum exhibit website|publisher=The Field Museum|access-date=21 January 2013|location=Chicago, Illinois|year=2009}}

File:Pirate Death's Head Flag.svg | Stede Bonnet's flag as described in a report from the 1718 Boston News-Letter{{cite web |title=Pirate Flags |author=Ed Foxe |date=2005-01-17 |url=http://www.bonaventure.org.uk/ed/flags.htm |access-date=2007-07-12 |url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080115071330/http://www.bonaventure.org.uk/ed/flags.htm |archive-date=2008-01-15 }}

File:19th century Barbary pirate flag.svg | 19th century Jolly Roger used by Barbary corsairs

File:Marine Raiders insignia.svg | Insignia for the USMC Marine Raiders

German military

=Prussia=

Image:Knoe02 von Reutsch Husaren.jpg from Husaren-Regiment Nr. 5 (von Ruesch) in 1744 with the Totenkopf on the mirliton (Ger. Flügelmütze)]]

Use of the Totenkopf as a military emblem began under Frederick the Great, who formed a regiment of Hussar cavalry in the Prussian army commanded by Colonel von Ruesch, the Husaren-Regiment Nr. 5 (von Ruesch). It adopted a black uniform with a Totenkopf emblazoned on the front of its mirlitons and wore it on the field in the War of Austrian Succession and in the Seven Years' War.{{cite book |last=Reid |first=Stuart |date=2010 |title=Frederick the Great's Allies 1756–63 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=m3uHCwAAQBAJ&q=Totenkopf+Frederick+the+Great&pg=PT28 |publisher=Osprey Publishing |isbn=978-1849081771 }} The Totenkopf remained a part of the uniform when the regiment was reformed into Leib-Husaren Regiments Nr.1 and Nr.2 in 1808.{{cite book |last=Nash |first=David |date=1972 |title=The Prussian Army, 1808-1815 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5pXfAAAAMAAJ&q=Leib-Husaren+Regiments+Nr.1+Totenkopf |publisher=Almark Publishing |page=54 |isbn=978-0855240752 }}

= Brunswick =

File:Braunschweiger Totenkopf.jpg in 1815]]

In 1809, during the War of the Fifth Coalition, Frederick William, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel raised a force of volunteers to fight Napoleon Bonaparte, who had conquered the Duke's lands. The Brunswick corps was provided with black uniforms, giving rise to their nickname, the Black Brunswickers. Both hussar cavalry and infantry in the force wore a Totenkopf badge, either in mourning for the duke's father, Charles William Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, who had been killed at the Battle of Jena–Auerstedt in 1806, or according to some sources, as a sign of revenge against the French. After fighting their way through Germany, the Black Brunswickers entered British service and fought with them in the Peninsular War and at the Battle of Waterloo. The Brunswick corps was eventually incorporated into the Prussian Army in 1866.[http://www.ospreypublishing.com/title_detail.php/title=Q1469~ser=MAA Osprey Publishing – The Black Brunswickers] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927003049/http://www.ospreypublishing.com/title_detail.php/title%3DQ1469~ser%3DMAA |date=2007-09-27 }}

= German Empire =

File:World_War_I_Totenkopf.svg

The skull continued to be used by the Prussian and Brunswick armed forces until 1918, and some of the stormtroopers that led the last German offensives on the Western Front in 1918 used skull badges.First World War - Willmott, H. P.; Dorling Kindersley, 2003, Page 252 Luftstreitkräfte fighter pilots Georg von Hantelmann{{cite web|url=http://www.wingnutwings.com/ww/vA565580A/www/products/decals/30006/colour_schemes/Fokker%20D.VII%20382~18,%20Georg%20von%20Hantelmann%20%2825%20victories%29%20&%20Kurt%20Wustoff%20%2827%20victories%29,%20Jasta%2015,%20June%201918.jpg|title=Georg von Hantelmann & Kurt Wüsthoff's Fokker D.VII, Jasta 15}} and Kurt Adolf Monnington{{cite book |last=van Wyngarden |first=Greg |date=2011 |title=Osprey Elite Aviation Units #40: Jasta 18 - The Red Noses |location=Oxford UK |publisher=Osprey Publishing |pages=85–86, 97 |isbn=978-1-84908-335-5}} are just two of a number of Central Powers military pilots who used the Totenkopf as their personal aircraft insignia.

= Weimar Republic =

The Totenkopf was used in Germany throughout the interwar period, most prominently by the Freikorps. In 1933, it was in use by the regimental staff and the 1st, 5th, and 11th squadrons of the Reichswehr{{'}}s 5th Cavalry Regiment as a continuation of a tradition from the Kaiserreich.{{cn|date=March 2023}}

Flag of the Iron Division Freikorps.svg|Flag of the Iron Division Freikorps

FreikorpsBerlinStahlhelmM18TuerkischeForm.jpg|Armed Freikorps troops in Berlin in 1919

Garford Putilov in Freikorps use.jpg|A Garford-Putilov Armoured Car used by the Freikorps in 1919

Bundesarchiv Bild 183-H26073, Berlin, Fahne Freikorps Brüssow.jpg|Flag at a meeting of former Brüssow Freikorps members in 1934

=Nazi Germany=

In the early days of the Nazi Party, Julius Schreck, the leader of the Stabswache (Adolf Hitler's bodyguard unit), resurrected the use of the Totenkopf as the unit's insignia. This unit grew into the Schutzstaffel (SS), which continued to use the Totenkopf as insignia throughout its history. According to a writing by Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler, the Totenkopf had the following meaning:

The Skull is the reminder that you shall always be willing to put your self at stake for the life of the whole community.Heinrich Himmler: "Der Totenkopf ist die Mahnung, jederzeit bereit zu sein, das Leben unseres Ichs einzusetzen für das Leben der Gesamtheit."

SS-Totenkopfverbände ('Death's Head Units') was the Schutzstaffel (SS) organization responsible for administering the Nazi concentration camps and extermination camps for Nazi Germany, among similar duties. While the Totenkopf was the universal cap badge of the SS, the SS-TV also wore this insignia on the right collar tab to distinguish itself from other SS formations.

The Totenkopf was also used as the unit insignia of the Panzer forces of the German Heer (Army), and also by the Panzer units of the Luftwaffe, including those of the elite Fallschirm-Panzer Division 1 Hermann Göring.Angolia, John R., and Adolf Schlicht, Uniforms and Traditions of the Luftwaffe Volume 2, R. James Bender Publishing, San Jose, CA, 1997. {{ISBN|0-912138-71-8}}.

Both the 3rd SS Panzer Division of the Waffen-SS, and the World War II era Luftwaffe's 54th Bomber Wing Kampfgeschwader 54 were given the unit name "Totenkopf", and used a strikingly similar-looking graphic skull-crossbones insignia as the SS units of the same name. The 3rd SS Panzer Division also had skull patches on their uniform collars instead of the SS sieg rune.{{cn|date=May 2023}}

SS_Totenkopf_1923-34.gif|The first version of the SS-Totenkopf; used from 1923 to 1934

Totenkopf.svg|The second version of the SS-Totenkopf; used from 1934 to 1945

Bundesarchiv Bild 101I-405-0593-36, Flugzeug Junkers Ju 88.jpg|Junkers Ju 88 of Kampfgeschwader 54 (KG 54) in France, November 1940

KG54 Totenkopf.svg|The "standalone" version of the WW II Luftwaffe KG 54 wing's dead's head unit insignia

Panzer Totenkopf.jpg|German Panzer totenkopf

German SS uniform. Peaked visor cap with skull emblem (Totenkopf). Norwegian Armed Forces Museum (Forsvarsmuseet) Oslo, Norway 2019-03-31 DSC01647.jpg|German SS uniform. Peaked visor cap with skull emblem (Totenkopf)

Bundesarchiv Bild 101III-Mielke-036-23, Waffen-SS, 13. Gebirgs-Div. "Handschar".jpg|Members of SS Handschar; the SS-Totenkopf was printed on their fez cap.

Non-German military

{{refimprove-section|date=May 2019}}

File:Infante Fernando de España.jpg wearing the uniform of Spain's 8th Light Armoured Cavalry Regiment "Lusitania", 1915]]

File:2-6th cavalry commando - new guinea - beer.jpg in New Guinea, 1945]]

  • A skull and crossbones has often been a symbol of pirates, especially in the form of the Jolly Roger, but usually having the crossbones below the skull's lower mandibile (if present) rather than behind it, as used by pirate Samuel Bellamy in one example.
  • The uniform of the Spanish Army's Lusitania Dragoon Regiment during part of the 18th century included three skull and crossbones in the cuffs,{{cite book |last=María de Sotto |first=Serafín |title=Historia orgánica de las armas de Infantería y Caballería españolas |year=1856 |volume=16 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=C2f7a3w0LFQC |page=10 |language=es }} and in 1902 the skull and crossbones insignia was authorized again to replace the regiment number on the sides of the collar.{{cite book |title=Colección legislativa del Ejército |year=1902 |url=http://bibliotecavirtualdefensa.es/BVMDefensa/i18n/catalogo_imagenes/grupo.cmd?path=98292 |pages= 390–391 |language=es }}
  • It was used as the emblem on the uniforms of Greek revolutionaries of Alexander Ypsilantis' Sacred Band (1821) during the Wallachian uprising of 1821
  • Armenian fedayis, during the First World War against the Ottoman Empire, used a skull with two bolt rifles under the words "revenge revenge" in their flags.
  • The British Army's Royal Lancers continue to use the skull and crossbones in their emblem, inherited from its use by the 17th Lancers, a unit raised in 1759 following General Wolfe's death in Quebec. The emblem contains an image of a death's head, and the words 'Or Glory', chosen in commemoration of Wolfe.[http://www.qrl.uk.com/h_home.html QRL Regimental Association] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081226155624/http://www.qrl.uk.com/h_home.html |date=2008-12-26 }}
  • In 1792, a regiment of Hussards de la Mort (Death Hussars) was formed during the French Revolution by the French National Assembly and were organized and named by Kellerman. The group of 200 volunteers were from wealthy families and their horses were supplied from the King's Stables. They were formed to defend against various other European states in the wake of the revolution. They participated in the Battle of Valmy and its members also participated in the Battle of Fleurus (1794). They had the following mottos: {{lang|fr|Vaincre ou mourir}}, {{lang|fr|La liberté ou la mort}} and {{lang|fr|Vivre libre ou mourir}} – Victory or death; Freedom or death; and Live free or die.{{cite book|title=Historique du 14e Chasseurs|publisher=Service Historique de la Défense}}{{cite book|title=La Cavalerie pendant la Révolution|publisher=Desbrières et Sautai|date=1907}}{{cite book|title=Les Hussards français, Tome 1, De l'Ancien régime à l'Empire édition Histoire et collection}}
  • Although not exactly a Totenkopf per se, the Chilean guerrilla leader Manuel Rodríguez used the symbol on his elite forces called {{lang|es|Husares de la muerte}} ("Hussars of death"). It is still used by the Chilean Army's 3rd Cavalry Regiment.
  • The primarily Prussian 41st Regiment New York Volunteer Infantry (mustered on 6 June 1861; mustered out 9 December 1865) wore a skull insignia.{{cite web|url=http://dmna.ny.gov/historic/mil-hist.htm|title=New York State Military Museum and Veterans Research Center – Welcome}}
  • The Vengeurs de la Mort ("death avengers"), an irregular unit of Commune de Paris, 1871.{{Cite web|url=http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b8426916f/f20.item|title=1870–1871. Guerre et Commune. Gardes nationaux volontaires, gardes mobiles...|last=Draner|website=BNF Gallica|page=20|language=fr|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171005000935/http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b8426916f/f20.item|archive-date=2017-10-05|url-status=dead}}
  • The Portuguese Army Police 2nd Lancers Regiment use a skull-and-crossbones image in their emblem, similar to the one used by the Queen's Royal Lancers.
  • The Kingdom of Sweden's Hussar Regiments wore a death's head emblem in the Prussian Style on the front of the mirleton.
  • Ramón Cabrera's regiment adopted in 1838 a skull with crossbones flanked by an olive branch and a sword on a black flag during the Spanish Carlist Wars.
  • Serbian Chetniks wore a death's head emblem in several conflicts: guerrilla in Old Serbia, First and Second Balkan Wars, World War I (both defense and resistance) and World War II.
  • Some Macedonian-Bulgarian komitas that were members of the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization wore a death's head emblem, usually with crossed revolver and qama below the skull and crossbones (similar to the Serbian ones) throughout the existence of the organization in several conflicts: Macedonian Struggle (Ilinden–Preobrazhenie Uprising, the Balkan Wars), World War I, during the interwar period in Macedonia, Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, and in World War II. The most prominent example being Pitu Guli who wears one in his only known photo, and his son Steryu Gulev.
  • The Italian elite storm-troopers of the Arditi used a skull with a dagger between its teeth as a symbol during World War I. Various versions of skulls were also later used by the Italian Fascists.{{cn|date=May 2019}}
  • The Russian Kornilov's Shock Detachment (8th Army) adopted a death's head emblem in 1917. Then after World War I, the unit became Kornilov's Shock Regiment as a part of the White Russian Volunteer Army during the Russian Civil War. Also a death's head emblem was depicted on 17th Don Cossack regiment and Mariupol 4th Hussar regiment badges of Russian Imperial Army.
  • The Estonian Kuperjanov's Partisan Battalion used the skull-and-crossbones as their insignia (since 1918); the {{lang|et|Kuperjanov}} Infantry Battalion continues to use the skull and crossbones as their insignia today.
  • Two Polish small cavalry units used death's head emblem during Polish–Ukrainian War and Polish–Soviet War – {{ill|Dywizjon Jazdy Ochotniczej|pl|Dywizjon Jazdy Ochotniczej}} (also known as {{lang|pl|Huzarzy Śmierci}} i.e. Death Hussars) and {{ill|Poznański Ochotniczy Batalion Śmierci|pl}}.
  • During 1943–1945 the Italian Black Brigades and numerous other forces fighting for the Italian Social Republic wore various versions of skulls on their uniforms, berets, and caps.
  • The United States Marine Corps Reconnaissance Battalions use the skull-and-crossbones symbol in their emblem.
  • The No. 100 Squadron RAF (Royal Air Force) continue to use a flag depicting a skull and crossbones, supposedly in reference to a flag stolen from a French brothel in 1918.{{citation needed|date=March 2019}}
  • The Batalhão de Operações Policiais Especiais, a special unit within the military police of Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil, uses the skull emblem to differentiate their team from the regular units.
  • South Korea's 3rd Infantry Division (백골부대) have a skull-and-crossbones in their emblem.{{cite video|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tuB2L6SN6Lg | time=2:12|title=History of Nazi Symbols – Death's Head|author =Mark Felton Productions |publisher=youtube |date=10 March 2021}}
  • Many United States Cavalry reconnaissance troops or squadrons utilize a skull insignia, often wearing the traditional Stetson hat, and backed by either crossed cavalry sabers, crossed rifles, or some other variation, as an unofficial unit logo. These logos are incorporated into troop T-shirts, challenge coins, or other items designed to enhance morale and esprit de corps.
  • A version of the Punisher skull symbol has been used by U.S. military personnel since the Iraq War.
  • Members of the Azov Regiment of the Ukrainian National Guard have used the totenkopf.{{cite news |title=Nationalists not extremists: Pravy Sektor deny radicalism claims and say they want to 'serve' Ukraine |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/ukraine-russia-pravy-sektor-extremism-b2011598.html |agency=The Independent}}
  • 72nd Mechanized Brigade of Ukrainian Ground Forces have a skull in their emblem.
  • The skull and crosshair were the main symbol of the Wagner Group until it was merged with the Rosgvardiya.

=Gallery=

==Flags==

Doliente de Hidalgo.png|Flag used from 1811 to 1812 by Regimiento de la muerte (Death Regiment) after Hidalgo's death in the Independence War

Flag of Quiroga 1.svg|One of the flags used by Argentine caudillo Facundo Quiroga, "Rn.o M." means "Religion or Death" (1825-1834)

File:Bandera de Ramón Cabrera.svg|Spanish Carlist flag (1838)

Philippine revolution flag llanera.png|Flag used by Filipino revolutionary general Mariano Llanera (1896–1899)

Banner of russian death unit.jpg|Banner of one of Russian "Death Units", formed in Eastern Front in 1917

Anarkistimatruuseja.jpg|Sailors of the Petropavlovsk in Helsinki, before the Finnish Civil War (Summer 1917); Flag calls for "death to the bourgeoisie", the flag was later used during the Kronstadt uprising and the occupation of Naissaar Island.

File:Kornilovzy.jpg|Kornilov's Shock Detachment flag bearer and honor guard (1917)

File:II Szwadron Śmierci 1920.jpg|Polish Voluntary II Death Squad in Lviv, Ukraine (1920)

Anarchy flag in Hulyaipole Museum.jpg|Flag used by Svyryd Kotsur's Dnipro Division, with the slogan "Death to all who stand in the way of freedom for the working people" (1920){{cite web|url=https://anarchiststudies.noblogs.org/death-to-all-who-stand-in-the-way-of-freedom-for-the-working-class-anarchys-false-flag/|title="Death to All Who Stand in the Way of Freedom for the Working People": Anarchy's False Flag|first=Sean|last=Patterson|date=30 June 2022|access-date=1 July 2022|work=Anarchist Studies}}

Arditi del Popolo Flag.svg|Reconstruction of the insignia used by the Arditi del Popolo (1921–1924)

Sandinoflagusmc.jpg|A flag captured by U.S. marines from Sandino's forces in 1932

==Other==

File:Hussard de la mort.JPG|A French {{lang|fr|Hussard de la mort}} (1792)

File:Alexander2.jpg|Alexander Ypsilantis, founder of the military force The Sacred Band, shown wearing the fighting force's uniform, complete with mandible-less totenkopf (1821)

File:17th Lancers - cap badge, original, antique.jpg|Cap badge of the British 17th Lancers

File:Knoe04 59.jpg|Swedish hussars in 1761

File:Odznaka Góra Stracenia (SF).jpg|Pin worn by veterans of the Battle of Lwów. The G.S. stands for Góra Stracenia (Execution Mount) (1918).

File:Odznaka Dywizjonu Huzarów Śmierci wz. 1920 - replika.jpg|The "death's head" was the insignia of Polish Death Hussar Divisions, 1920 (Polish–Soviet War).

Croix de Feu.svg|Early symbol of the Fire Cross League

File:Kevyt osasto 4 kypärä.JPG|Helmet of a Finnish Light detachment 4 (World War II) in skeletal paint scheme

File:Insignia of the Kuperjanov Infantry Battalion.svg|Insignia of the Estonian Kuperjanov Infantry Battalion

File:Peacekeepermissileuniform.jpg|Stylized Totenkopf on shoulder sleeve insignia of the United States Air Force 400th Missile Squadron uniform sometime between 1995 and 2005

File:Deuce_Four_Skull2.jpg|United States Army's 24th Infantry Regiment's "Deuce four skull" symbol used to mark buildings where enemy combatants had been killed in Iraq as part of Operation Iraqi Freedom (2004)

File:United_States_Navy_SEALs_81.jpg|Totenkopf inspired patch depicting Punisher (Marvel character) skull symbol, without optional leg bones, worn by US Navy SEALs (2012)

File:Syrian Republican Guard SSI.svg|Insignia of the Syrian Republican Guard (2021)

Police use

  • The uniform of the Ordnungspolizei -- Nazi Germany's uniformed police could feature the totenkopf. Peaked visor cap of the Sicherheitsdienst SD with skull emblem.
  • "Punisher" variations of the totenkopf appear on police vehicles.{{cite web |last1=Hannigan |first1=Charley |title=Solvay police: Punisher decals stay; they show 'we will stand between good and evil' |url=https://www.syracuse.com/news/2017/04/central_new_york_police_punisher_decal_shows_we_will_stand_between_good_and_evil.html |website=syracuse.com|date=13 April 2017 }}
  • Challenge coins as used by the Firearms Training Team for the Calgary, Canada police force.{{Cite web|url=https://calgaryherald.com/news/local-news/unbelievably-inappropriate-calgary-police-prohibit-distribution-of-offensive-coin|title='Unbelievably inappropriate': Calgary police prohibit distribution of 'offensive' coin}}

File:WW2 in Norway. German Police uniform. Peaked visor cap of the Sicherheitsdienst SD (Schutzstaffel, SS) with skull emblem (Totenkopf) Norwegian Armed Forces Museum (Forsvarsmuseet) Oslo, Norway 2020-02-24 2912.jpg|Peaked visor cap of the Sicherheitsdienst SD with skull emblem. Norwegian Armed Forces Museum, Oslo, Norway (1936).

File:Solvay NY totenkopf decal on police vehicle.jpg|"Thin blue line" variation of the Punisher skull used on police vehicles in Solvay, New York (2017)

File:CMF Blindados 1.jpg|Armored personnel carrier used by the Batalhão de Operações Policiais Especiais (BOPE). According to the official BOPE website, the logo represents victory over death{{cite web|url=http://www.bopeoficial.com/|title=BOPE - Batalhão de Operações Policiais Especiais|access-date=11 May 2015}} (2018).

File:Calgary police totenkopf challenge coin.jpg|Challenge coin used by the Firearms Training branch of the Calgary Police Service (2020).{{Cite web|url=https://calgaryherald.com/news/local-news/unbelievably-inappropriate-calgary-police-prohibit-distribution-of-offensive-coin|title='Unbelievably inappropriate': Calgary police prohibit distribution of 'offensive' coin}}

File:Nnpf pin.png

Other uses

  • International hazard symbol to indicate poisonous substances
  • Craft International logo, military training company founded by Chris Kyle
  • Wilhelm "Deathshead" Strasse, a major antagonist in the Wolfenstein series, is named after the symbol
  • Sometimes placed within a circle next to a 6 to represent Death in June
  • The phrase "never lose your smile" is sometimes used in social media posts as a way of subtly expressing Nazi sympathies, particularly in countries where open promotion of Nazism is illegal. The phrase refers to the totenkopf skull, which, in some versions of the symbol, appears to be smiling. As the phrase also has innocuous meanings, its use by neo-Nazis is an example of a dogwhistle that relies on plausible deniability.{{cite web|url=https://worldcrunch.com/in-the-news/secret-emoji-language-neo-nazis/|title=Is That A Hitler Salute In Your Feed? Decoding Neo-Nazi’s Secret Emoji Language}}

Etymology

Toten-Kopf translates literally to "Dead's Head", meaning exactly "dead person's head". Semantically, it refers to a skull, literally a Schädel. As a term, Totenkopf connotes the human skull as a symbol, typically one with crossed thigh bones as part of a grouping.

The common translation of "Totenkopf" as death's head is incorrect; it would be Todeskopf, but no such word is in use -- the English term death squad is called Todesschwadron,Sonia Brough: Langenscheidts Großes Schulwörterbuch Deutsch-Englisch, revised by the Langenscheidt editorial staff, Langenscheidt KG, Berlin & Munich. {{ISBN|3-468-07129-9}}. P. 1047. not Totenschwadron. It would be a logical fallacy to conclude that usage varies only because of the German naming of the death's-head hawkmoth, which is called skull hawkmoth (Totenkopfschwärmer)Prof. Dr. Axel Karenberg: Amor, Äskulap & Co: klassische Mythologie in der Sprache der modernen Medizin. Schattauer, 2005. P. 21 (named for the skull-like spot) in German, in the same way that it would be a fallacy to conclude that the German word for night candle (i.e. Nachtkerze) would mean willowherb, just because the willowherb hawkmoth (Proserpinus proserpina) is called night candle hawkmoth (Nachtkerzenschwärmer, Proserpinus proserpinaBrockhaus' Konversations-Lexikon. 14th completely revised edition. 12th Vol., Brockhaus, Leipzig, Berlin, Vienna, 1895. P. 142.Burkhard Bohne: Nachhaltig gärtnern: Biologisch, ressourcenschonend und klimafreundlich, Gräfe und Unzer Publishing House, 2 ed., 2019, {{ISBN|978-3833871283}}. P. 133.) in German.

Contemporary German language meaning of the word Totenkopf has not changed for at least two centuries. For example, the German poet Clemens Brentano (1778–1842) wrote in the story "Baron Hüpfenstich":
"Lauter Totenbeine und Totenköpfe, die standen oben herum ..."[http://gutenberg.spiegel.de/buch/-357/2 Clemens Brentano: Baron Hüpfenstich - Chapter 2] (Projekt Gutenberg-DE) (i.e. "A lot of bones and skulls, they were placed above ...").

See also

References

{{Reflist}}

Bibliography

  • Klaus D. Patzwall: Der SS-Totenkopfring. 5th edition: Patzwall, Melbeck 2010, {{ISBN|978-3-931533-07-6}}.
  • Joost Hølscher (Author, Illustrator): Death's Head, The History of the Military Skull & Crossbones Badge (The History of Uniform). 1st edition: Éditions Chamerelle 2013, {{ISBN|978-90-820326-0-4}}
  • Adrian Ruda: [https://books.google.com/books?id=SqHkEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA0 Der Totenkopf als Motiv. Eine historisch-kulturanthropologische Analyse zwischen Militär und Moden (The Skull as Motif: A Historical-Cultural Anthropological Analysis between Military and Fashion)]. Böhlau, Köln 2023, {{ISBN|978-3-412-52890-4}}.

Category:Symbols

Category:Military insignia

Category:Military heraldry

Category:Nazi symbolism

Category:Fascist symbols

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