
West German Army Leather Service Belt
When West Germany reconstituted its military in 1955, it made one thing clear from the start: the new Bundeswehr would not look like what came before it, and the belt buckle said so plainly.
Introduced in 1962 as the standard Bundeswehr service belt buckle, this design carries the Bundesadler, the German Federal Eagle officially readopted in 1950 by President Theodor Heuss as a conscious return to the democratic values of the Weimar Republic. Surrounding the eagle are the words "Einigkeit · Recht · Freiheit" — Unity, Justice, Freedom — taken from the third stanza of the Deutschlandlied written by Hoffmann von Fallersleben in 1841 and Germany's enduring national motto. Every soldier who buckled this on was wearing that declaration in plain sight.
What You Get
- Genuine Bundeswehr issue black leather service belt
- Two-tone eagle plate buckle inscribed "Einigkeit · Recht · Freiheit"
- Multi-hole leather tab for adjustable fit
- Hook-style buckle attachment for clean front presentation
- Stitched suede keeper tab
Sizing
- Width: 1.75"
- Small: 36"
- Medium: 39"
- Large: 44"
- XL: 47"
- XXL: 50"
- XXXL: 53"
Condition:
Used/issued surplus. Expect honest wear, natural buckle patina, and the kind of character that only comes with genuine field use. Every belt is unique.
Material:
100% black leather with natural tan suede interior and two-tone metal eagle plate buckle
Pairs well with

West German Army Leather Service Belt
