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National League for Physical Education (Third Reich)

and other related NSDAP Sports Organizations

Last modified: 2012-09-01 by pete loeser
Keywords: nsdap | german national league for physical education |
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Introduction: German Sports Organizations during the Third Reich

patch example (reverse side)
for the "District 11/St. Hubertus Shooting Club/City of Frechen/founded 1913"
Image from James Bohanek, 18 August 2012

During the Third Reich there was a trend to transform all sports clubs and into National Socialist civil organizations, eventually placing them all under the control of the German National League for Physical Education - NSRL (Nationalsozialistischer Reichsbund für Leibesübungen). From the vexillological point of view this resulted in some very unimaginative, standardized, and uniform flags. The only difference between the usual National Socialist sports flag was the square patch in the canton identifying the which organization the flag was for.
Pete Loeser, 18 August 2012


German National League for Physical Education - NSRL
Nationalsozialistischer Reichsbund für Leibesübungen

[German National League for Physical Education (NSDAP, Germany)] Image by Jaume Ollé

In December of 1938, Adolf Hitler placed all German Sports activities under the Nationalsozialistischer Reichsbund für Leibesübungen (German National League for Physical Education) which became the sports organization that controlled all sports in the Third Reich. The NSRL director was called the Reichssportführer (the leader of German Sports) and he controlled all sports events in Germany, including the German National Olympic Committee. All other German sport associations gradually lost their freedom and were co-opted into the NSRL. The NSRL's leaders were Hans von Tschammer und Osten (1933–1943), Arno Breitmeyer (1943–1944) and Karl Ritter von Halt (1944–1945).
Pete Loeser, 18 January 2012


National Socialist League for Physical Education Vertical Banner - 1938
Nationalsozialistischer Reichsbund für Leibesübungen

Image by Fornax, 3 May 2009

It should be mentioned that this depicted banner was a unique standard (copying a SA-standard) used on the occasion of the official presentation of the NSRL colours at Breslau in 1938. Hans von Tschammer und Osten, the head of Nationalsozialistischer Reichsbund für Leibesübungen (NSRL), received the new NSRL banner from Dr. Wilhelm Frick on the occasion.
Fornax, posted 18 January 2012

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National Socialist League for Physical Education - Lower Division Flags

The Nationalsozialistischer Reichsbund für Leibesübungen was the umbrella organization for sports during the Third Reich. As the sports governing body seeking to control and integrate all sport activities in Germany, the NSRL provided a highly organized structure. Because of this, not surprisingly, many of the lower division flags were based on the pattern of the NSRL flag. Some more independent lower division sports organizations, however, like the DRV (Deutschen Radfahrer-Verband - German Bicycle Union), managed to escape the NS flag standardization.


German Rifle Association
Deutscher Schützenbund

Image from artfact.com, 24 February 2011

Editorial Comment: The black patch on this Schützenfahne (shooting club flag) seems to read: Gau XVI Bayern/Sportgemeinsch. S.S. e.V./Tölz. (district 16/registered sports community or association/Tölz?). The Schützenbund also had departments of sport shooting (guns, pistols, archery, etc.). Schützenvereine have long been a tradition in Germany and they predate the more modern athletics clubs. In the late Middle Ages, they seem to have played some role in the citizen's militia, and were sometimes active as something similar to a guild. Their main task probably was defence against bandits and plundering groups of enemy troops, and they were not actually a part of any regular military campaigns.

The German abbreviation "e.V." stands for eingetragener Verein, which means "registered association."
Ole Andersen, 14 June 2002

The Gau in the inscription is probably not a Nazi Gau, but the Schützengau, the district of a higher level shooting association.
It is common practice for many different kinds of associations and clubs (Vereine) here in Germany (especially shooting clubs, voluntary fire brigades; traditional custom clubs; veterans' clubs; sports clubs, etc.) to have flags, usually embroidered. Originally, they were something like the "regimental colours", and today there are probably tens of thousands of these different flags in clubs in Germany. A whole terra incognita for vexillology!
Marcus Schmöger, 14 June 2002

(reverse side)
Image from James Bohanek, 18 August 2012

The Nazi era Schützenvereine [shooting clubs], it appears, were all made member of the Deutscher Schützenbund (German Rifle Association). The Deutscher Schützenbund was, if not an explicit part of the Nationalsozialistischer Reichsbund für Leibesübungen (National Socialist Reich League for Physical Education), certainly under its wings. Thus Schützenfahne were all based on the pattern of the NSRL flag.
However, it turns out that, although all such flags were designed equal, some were more equal than others, with some having the column not centered and shifted towards the hoist, obvious size ratio differences, etc. James also tells us that the patch is only on one side [the reverse], where from other hierarchies one would expect these flags to have patches on both sides. Still this is enough to show that the flags were indeed based on the NSRL design.
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 23 February 2012


German Bicycle Union (DRV)
Deutschen Radfahrer-Verband

Image by Fornax Image by Fornax

After the German Cycling Federation (Bund Deutscher Radfahrer - BDR), which had been created in 1884 in Leipzig, was dissolved under the Third Reich in 1933 after Hitler seized power, it was replaced by the NS German Bicycle Union (Deutscher Radfahrer-Verband - DRV), and eventually becoming a unit (fachamt) of the German National League for Physical Education (Nationalsozialistischer Reichsbund für Leibesübungen).
The DRV itself was disbanded in 1945 for being the branch of a Nazi organization. It was reborn as part of the Deutscher Sportausschuss (the DDR's German athletic sports body) in East Germany in 1946, and re-established as the BDR in 1948 in West Germany.
Pete Loeser, 21 August 2012


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