Researching an individual serviceman

From Sanitäter.eu


Researching an individual serviceman
Subject Reconstructing a military career from surviving documents
Historical period Primarily the Second World War
Main sources Wehrpässe, Soldbücher, certificates, photographs, archival records, casualty reports, identity-tag registers, and unit histories
Main focus German military medics, physicians, dentists, veterinarians, and related medical personnel
Purpose Practical introductory research guide

A surviving Wehrpass or Soldbuch can reveal a surprising amount about an individual serviceman. A booklet may contain his full name, date of birth, civilian occupation, rank, units, training courses, promotions, hospital admissions, awards, and changes in military status.

Nevertheless, no single document tells the complete story.

Military records were created for administrative purposes. They were not written as biographies. Entries can be incomplete, abbreviated, difficult to read, or added retrospectively. Some wartime records were destroyed, while others survive only as fragments in archives or private collections.

The most reliable approach is to reconstruct a serviceman’s career gradually: begin with the surviving evidence, create a chronological timeline, compare different documents, and distinguish clearly between confirmed facts and provisional interpretations.

The basic rule: transcribe first, interpret second. Record what a document actually says before drawing conclusions about where the individual served or what he experienced.

Start with a clear research question

Before beginning, decide what you are trying to discover.

Possible questions include:

  • Who was this individual?
  • Was he a medic, physician, dentist, veterinarian, or another type of medical serviceman?
  • Which units did he serve with?
  • Where was he trained?
  • Was he attached to a frontline formation, hospital, replacement unit, or administrative office?
  • Did he serve in a particular campaign or geographical region?
  • Was he wounded, hospitalised, transferred, discharged, or declared missing?
  • What do the abbreviations and stamps in his documents mean?
  • Can his military career be connected with civilian records or family history?

A broad question such as “Where did this man serve?” is a useful starting point. More precise questions can be investigated once a basic timeline has been created.

Gather all surviving material

Begin by bringing together every available document, photograph, and note connected with the individual.

Useful sources may include:

Source Possible information
Wehrpass Personal details, examination, military training, units, promotions, campaigns, awards, and discharge information
Soldbuch Identification, current units, pay information, issued equipment, vaccinations, hospital admissions, awards, and leave
Award certificates Decoration, date, unit, approving officer, and official stamp
Photographs Uniform, rank insignia, branch of service, location, comrades, vehicles, buildings, or handwritten captions
Letters and postcards Field-post number, location clues, dates, personal experiences, and family connections
Identity disc or recorded inscription Original issuing unit and individual identity number
Hospital documents Admission, transfer, discharge, diagnosis, or treatment location
Death notice or condolence letter Date and place of death, unit, burial location, and next of kin
Military grave information Burial place, missing status, reburial information, or commemorative record
Civilian records Birth, marriage, death, profession, address, education, and post-war life

Do not discard envelopes, loose inserts, pencilled notes, or apparently repetitive pages. A small detail may later clarify an uncertain unit entry or date.

Photograph or scan the documents carefully

Good images are essential for accurate transcription.

When photographing a Wehrpass, Soldbuch, certificate, or handwritten letter:

  1. photograph the entire page before taking close-ups;
  2. place the document on a flat surface;
  3. use even lighting;
  4. avoid glare and strong shadows;
  5. keep the camera parallel to the page;
  6. include the page number where possible;
  7. photograph stamps separately at higher resolution;
  8. take close-ups of difficult handwriting;
  9. preserve the original colour image;
  10. keep the images in their original order.

A full-page photograph provides context. A close-up makes handwriting easier to read. Both are useful.

Do not rely only on automatic text recognition. Older German handwriting, faint stamps, and military abbreviations often require human interpretation.

Record the basic identity first

Before researching units, establish the identity of the serviceman as precisely as possible.

Create a basic profile:

Field Entry
Full name
Alternative spellings
Date of birth
Place of birth
Civilian occupation
Home address
Religion, when recorded
Marital status
Names of parents or spouse
Branch of service
Wehrnummer
Identity-disc inscription
Known rank or ranks

Names can be misleading. A man may appear under:

  • a full set of given names;
  • a shortened first name;
  • an alternative spelling;
  • a handwritten form that is difficult to read;
  • a spelling without umlauts;
  • a spelling with ss instead of ß;
  • a transcription error in an index;
  • a married or changed surname.

When searching databases, begin broadly. Try the surname alone, spelling variants, and wildcard searches where available.

Create a chronological timeline

A timeline is the most useful tool for reconstructing a military career.

Begin with every confirmed date visible in the documents. Add uncertain readings only after marking them clearly.

Date Original wording Expanded form Interpretation Source Confidence
Confirmed / probable / uncertain

A simple timeline might contain:

Date Event Evidence
23 May 1910 Born in Leipzig Personal-information page of Wehrpass
26 October 1936 Entered active service Active-service entry
2 January – 28 February 1940 Attended medical-officer candidate course Training stamp
20 June 1942 Released from active service for Uk-Stellung Discharge entry

The timeline should grow gradually. Do not try to write a narrative biography before the underlying dates and sources have been organised.

Separate transcription from interpretation

Every difficult entry should be studied in three stages.

Stage 1: original wording

Record the abbreviation or handwritten entry exactly as it appears.

Example:

2. San. Offz. Anw. Lehrg.
vom 2. Jan. – 28. Febr. 1940

Stage 2: expanded German form

Expand the abbreviation separately:

2. Sanitätsoffizier-Anwärter-Lehrgang
vom 2. Januar bis 28. Februar 1940

Stage 3: English explanation

Explain the likely meaning:

Second medical-officer candidate course,
from 2 January to 28 February 1940.

This method prevents an interpretation from silently replacing the surviving evidence.

Use a clear system for uncertainty

Uncertainty is normal. It should be recorded rather than concealed.

Useful conventions include:

Convention Meaning
[illegible] Entry cannot be read reliably
[word?] Provisional reading
Res. Flak-Abt. [511?] Unit number uncertain
[stamp partly illegible] Stamp cannot be transcribed fully
[added later] Entry appears to have been written retrospectively
[reading confirmed by stamp] Difficult handwriting supported by another entry

A question mark is useful. It allows another researcher to improve the transcription later.

Understand the difference between Wehrpass and Soldbuch

The Wehrpass and Soldbuch served different purposes.

Document Main function Normally carried during active duty? Typical research value
Wehrpass Administrative military-service record No Broad chronological overview
Soldbuch Pay book and identification document Yes Practical details of active service

The two booklets can complement one another.

For example:

  • a Wehrpass may list a sequence of units;
  • a Soldbuch may show a current replacement unit;
  • a hospital entry may appear only in the Soldbuch;
  • an award may be recorded in both documents;
  • a promotion date may clarify a later stamp;
  • a photograph may help identify the branch of service.

When both documents survive, compare them page by page.

Read the civilian occupation carefully

For research on medical personnel, the civilian-occupation field is especially important.

Possible entries include:

German term Approximate English meaning
Arzt Physician or medical doctor
Zahnarzt Dentist
Tierarzt Veterinarian
Apotheker Pharmacist
Student der Medizin Medical student
Krankenpfleger Male nurse or orderly
Sanitäter Medic or medical orderly

Do not assume that every soldier in a medical formation was a doctor.

A Sanitätssoldat, Sanitätsunteroffizier, ambulance driver, hospital clerk, or stretcher-bearer could serve in a medical unit without being a physician.

Similarly, a civilian physician might initially serve in a non-medical formation before entering the military medical-officer structure.

Identify the branch of service

Determine whether the individual served in:

  • the Heer;
  • the Luftwaffe;
  • the Kriegsmarine;
  • the Waffen-SS;
  • the police;
  • the Reich Labour Service;
  • another organisation.

Do not assume that every medical document relates to the Heer.

Branch-specific terminology matters. For example:

Term Typical context
Sanitäts-Kompanie Commonly encountered in Heer medical organisation
Sanitätsstaffel Frequently encountered in Luftwaffe contexts
Luftwaffenlazarett Luftwaffe hospital
Marinelazarett Kriegsmarine hospital
Flak Often Luftwaffe anti-aircraft context, although other uses existed

Uniform photographs can also help identify the branch, rank, and period.

Distinguish between ranks and appointments

A rank is not always the same thing as a job.

Examples of ranks include:

  • Gefreiter;
  • Unteroffizier;
  • Feldwebel;
  • Unterarzt;
  • Assistenzarzt;
  • Oberarzt;
  • Stabsarzt;
  • Veterinär;
  • Stabsveterinär.

Examples of appointments include:

  • Truppenarzt;
  • Divisionsarzt;
  • company commander;
  • adjutant;
  • hospital chief;
  • unit medical officer.

A serviceman could hold a rank and an appointment at the same time.

For example, a Stabsarzt could serve as a Truppenarzt. The first term identifies his military medical rank. The second describes his role within a unit.

Pay attention to reserve status

A rank can be followed by an abbreviation describing reserve or administrative status.

Common examples include:

Abbreviation German term Approximate meaning
d.B. des Beurlaubtenstandes of the reserve or inactive establishment
d.R. der Reserve of the reserve
z.V. zur Verfügung available for assignment
a.D. außer Dienst retired or no longer serving actively

An entry such as:

Unterarzt d.B.

should not be transcribed simply as Unterarzt. The reserve-status addition is historically relevant.

Analyse every unit entry

Unit entries are among the most valuable parts of a Wehrpass or Soldbuch. They are also among the easiest to misunderstand.

Record:

  • the date range;
  • the exact abbreviation;
  • the unit number;
  • the branch;
  • whether the entry is handwritten or stamped;
  • whether it refers to a field unit, replacement unit, training unit, hospital, or administrative office;
  • whether the number is clear or uncertain.

Example:

Ers.San.Kp. 6

Expanded form:

Ersatz-Sanitäts-Kompanie 6

Meaning:

Medical replacement company number 6.

This does not automatically prove frontline medical service. A replacement company could be responsible for training, administration, recovery, or reassignment.

Understand unit-numbering conventions

German military unit notation is often compressed.

Example Approximate meaning
12./Flak-Regiment 12 12th Battery of Flak Regiment 12
2./Sanitäts-Kompanie 2nd Company of a medical formation
II./Infanterie-Regiment 123 2nd Battalion of Infantry Regiment 123
Stab/Res.Flak-Abt. 511 Headquarters staff of Reserve Flak Battalion 511
Feldlazarett 218 Numbered field hospital 218

A number before a slash usually refers to a company, battery, squadron, or similar sub-unit.

A Roman numeral before a slash usually indicates a battalion or battalion-equivalent formation.

The meaning should always be checked against the branch of service and historical context.

Distinguish field units from replacement units

One of the most common research mistakes is treating every recorded unit as a frontline formation.

The word:

Ersatz

means replacement.

An Ersatz unit could be responsible for:

  • basic training;
  • specialist instruction;
  • administration;
  • preparing replacement drafts;
  • processing returning personnel;
  • holding men awaiting reassignment;
  • supporting recovery after illness or wounds.

Examples include:

  • Ersatz-Bataillon;
  • Sanitäts-Ersatz-Abteilung;
  • Sanitäts-Ersatz-Kompanie;
  • Flak-Ersatz-Abteilung.

A replacement unit is historically important, but it should not automatically be described as a combat unit.

Identify medical formations correctly

Medical formations had different roles.

Formation General role
Verwundetennest Small forward casualty-collection point
Truppenverbandplatz Unit dressing station
Hauptverbandplatz Main dressing station
Sanitäts-Kompanie Medical company providing treatment and evacuation support
Feldlazarett Field hospital
Krankenkraftwagen-Zug Motor-ambulance platoon
Krankenkraftwagen-Kompanie Motor-ambulance company
Krankentransport-Abteilung Casualty-transport formation
Kriegslazarett War hospital or base hospital farther behind the front
Reservelazarett Reserve hospital for longer-term treatment
Sanitätspark Medical supply park
Sanitäts-Ersatz-Abteilung Medical replacement and training formation

A Sanitätspark was not a hospital. A motor-ambulance platoon transported casualties but was not itself a treatment facility. A reserve hospital in Germany had a different role from a field hospital in an operational area.

More information can be found in Medical units of the Wehrmacht.

Study training entries

Training entries can reveal how an individual’s role developed.

Possible courses include:

  • basic military training;
  • weapons training;
  • driving courses;
  • NCO courses;
  • medical instruction;
  • officer-candidate courses;
  • technical courses;
  • hospital-related training;
  • specialist medical instruction.

For physicians, one particularly useful abbreviation is:

San. Offz. Anw. Lehrg.

Expanded:

Sanitätsoffizier-Anwärter-Lehrgang

Meaning:

Medical-officer candidate course

A course entry can help explain a later promotion or transfer.

Study promotion entries

Record each promotion separately.

Date Original entry Expanded form Meaning Source

Promotions may reveal:

  • career progression;
  • completion of training;
  • movement from ordinary service into a medical role;
  • reserve status;
  • commissioned or non-commissioned status;
  • changes in responsibility.

Do not rely only on the rank printed near the front of a Soldbuch. Later promotions may appear elsewhere.

Study hospital entries carefully

Hospital admissions are historically valuable but require caution.

A hospital entry can confirm that a serviceman received treatment. It does not automatically prove that he suffered a combat wound.

Possible reasons for hospitalisation include:

  • wounds;
  • illness;
  • infection;
  • accident;
  • surgery;
  • exhaustion;
  • dental treatment;
  • observation;
  • recovery after treatment.

Record:

Field Entry
Date of admission
Date of discharge
Hospital name or number
Hospital type
Location
Stamp
Reason for treatment Confirmed / probable / unknown
Next destination Unit / hospital / leave / unknown

Possible hospital terms include:

  • Feldlazarett;
  • Kriegslazarett;
  • Reservelazarett;
  • Ortslazarett;
  • Teillazarett;
  • Luftwaffenlazarett;
  • Marinelazarett.

A hospital stamp may provide the strongest clue.

Do not overlook vaccinations and routine medicine

Vaccination pages in a Soldbuch are useful evidence of preventive medicine.

Possible entries include vaccinations against:

  • typhoid;
  • paratyphoid;
  • cholera;
  • tetanus;
  • smallpox;
  • other infectious diseases.

Routine medical entries may help identify:

  • intended overseas deployment;
  • preparation for a campaign;
  • medical examination;
  • hospital treatment;
  • return to duty;
  • reduced fitness;
  • discharge.

The medical services were concerned not only with battlefield casualties but also with disease control and the preservation of manpower.

Research the Erkennungsmarke

The Erkennungsmarke was the military identity disc.

Its inscription may appear in a Soldbuch, on other papers, or in surviving registers.

Record the inscription exactly as written, including:

  • unit abbreviation;
  • unit number;
  • identity number;
  • punctuation;
  • blood group;
  • crossed-out or replacement text.

An identity-disc inscription often identifies the unit that originally issued the disc. It does not necessarily identify the serviceman’s final unit or the unit in which he spent most of the war.

The Bundesarchiv explains that identity-tag registers were used to document movements of personnel between units. It also warns that wartime administrative requirements were not always fully implemented, which means that gaps remain. Bundesarchiv, “Explanatory Notes on Identity Tag Registers”. Available online: Bundesarchiv.

Use Feldpost numbers carefully

Letters and postcards may contain a:

Feldpostnummer

or military postal number.

A field-post number can help identify a unit at a particular time. However:

  • the same number could be reassigned;
  • a number may refer to an administrative element rather than the whole formation;
  • dates are essential;
  • handwritten numbers can be misread;
  • a soldier could write from a temporary posting.

Always record the postmark date, the complete number, and the contents of the letter before interpreting the unit.

Examine photographs critically

A photograph can provide valuable information, but it should be treated as evidence rather than illustration alone.

Look for:

  • branch insignia;
  • rank insignia;
  • medical badges;
  • collar tabs;
  • shoulder boards;
  • headgear;
  • armbands;
  • vehicles;
  • hospital signs;
  • buildings;
  • handwritten captions;
  • photographer’s marks;
  • dates;
  • names of comrades.

A portrait in civilian clothing may have been added to a Wehrpass before active service.

A photograph in uniform may have been taken later.

Do not assume that every person in a group photograph belonged permanently to the same unit.

Compare stamps across the document

Stamps can confirm uncertain handwriting.

Create a stamp table:

Page Date Visible text Unit or office Ink colour Notes

Useful stamps may identify:

  • unit headquarters;
  • medical companies;
  • hospitals;
  • replacement units;
  • training establishments;
  • administrative offices;
  • adjutants;
  • commanding officers;
  • discharge offices;
  • local authorities.

When possible, include cropped images of stamps in archive articles.

Research the Wehrnummer

The Wehrnummer was a military registration number.

It can help connect an individual to:

  • his registration district;
  • year of birth;
  • administrative records;
  • archival enquiries;
  • other surviving documents.

Transcribe the number exactly.

Do not modernise punctuation or silently correct an uncertain letter. A small difference may affect an archival search.

Search the German Federal Archives

The Bundesarchiv is one of the most important institutions for researching former German military personnel.

Its current guidance states that person-related military records are held in several departments. The Department German Reich in Berlin-Tegel provides information about:

  • former members of the Army, Navy, and Air Force;
  • Wehrmacht civil servants, employees, and labourers;
  • medical records of soldiers born between 1900 and 1928;
  • German prisoners of war in Western custody;
  • fallen and missing servicemen;
  • war graves;
  • identity-tag lists;
  • casualty reports.<ref name="BundesarchivMilitary">Bundesarchiv, “Personal Documents of Military Provenance”. Available online: Bundesarchiv.</ref>

The Bundesarchiv asks researchers seeking information about a specific person to provide a completed and signed request form. It also requests the additional form for a search concerning a member of the military where applicable.<ref name="BundesarchivRequest">Bundesarchiv, “Submitting a Request”. Available online: Bundesarchiv.</ref>

When submitting an enquiry, provide as much information as possible:

Information Include when available
Full name Always
Alternative spellings Useful
Date of birth Very important
Place of birth Very useful
Branch of service Useful
Known unit Useful
Rank Useful
Wehrnummer Useful
Identity-disc inscription Useful
Date or place of death Important for fallen or missing servicemen
Copies of documents Helpful
Your relationship to the person Include where relevant
Purpose of the research Include clearly

Do not send the same request separately to multiple Bundesarchiv departments. The archive states that its staff coordinate enquiries internally when required.<ref name="BundesarchivRequest" />

Search invenio broadly

The Bundesarchiv offers the online research tool invenio.

The archive recommends beginning broadly when searching for an individual. A search can fail if the entered name or date of birth differs from the original record. Spelling variants should therefore be considered, and the wildcard character * can be useful.

Try:

  • surname only;
  • surname with wildcard;
  • alternative spellings;
  • surname and first name;
  • surname without a birth date;
  • umlaut variants;
  • ss and ß variants;
  • different spacing;
  • unit searches;
  • field-post-number searches.

A negative invenio result does not prove that no records survive. The Bundesarchiv warns that many documents and card indexes are not indexed by name and that some records may not appear online because of retention periods or data-protection restrictions.

Research the unit with Tessin

Once a unit has been identified, research its history separately.

The Bundesarchiv provides a digitised version of Georg Tessin’s reference work:

Verbände und Truppen der deutschen Wehrmacht und Waffen-SS 1939–1945

The archive describes the series as a comprehensive, although not exhaustive, reference work covering units, formations, command authorities, and hierarchical structures. Bundesarchiv, “Military Formations and Units up to 1945”. Available online: Bundesarchiv.

Use unit histories to investigate:

  • formation date;
  • replacement affiliation;
  • renaming;
  • subordination;
  • location;
  • transfer;
  • reorganisation;
  • dissolution;
  • theatre of operations.

Do not assume that a unit remained in the same place throughout the war.

Search for fallen or missing servicemen

For servicemen who died or went missing, the online grave search of the Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge can be useful.

The database may contain:

  • full name;
  • date of birth;
  • place of birth;
  • date of death;
  • missing date;
  • burial location;
  • reburial information;
  • cemetery;
  • commemorative entry.

The Volksbund warns that its results can be incomplete because the place of birth is not known for every war dead individual and because data collection is still ongoing. Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge, “Gravesearch Online”. Available online: Volksbund.

A missing result does not prove that the person survived the war.

Likewise, an entry should be compared with date of birth, birthplace, unit, and other documents before concluding that it refers to the correct individual.

Consider civilian archives

Military records should be compared with civilian sources.

Useful archives can include:

  • municipal archives;
  • regional archives;
  • church archives;
  • civil-registration offices;
  • university archives;
  • medical associations;
  • professional directories;
  • local newspapers;
  • address books;
  • cemetery records;
  • probate files;
  • family papers.

For a physician, dentist, pharmacist, or veterinarian, civilian professional records can be especially helpful.

Possible clues include:

  • university enrolment;
  • graduation;
  • doctoral dissertation;
  • medical licence;
  • address of a practice;
  • hospital appointment;
  • professional directory;
  • post-war employment;
  • obituary.

A discharge for Uk-Stellung may become more understandable when compared with civilian professional records.

Use Arolsen Archives only where relevant

The Arolsen Archives preserve extensive documentation relating to victims and survivors of Nazi persecution, forced labour, and displaced persons.

They are not the routine first source for reconstructing an ordinary Wehrmacht service record. They may become relevant when the research intersects with:

  • forced labour;
  • displacement;
  • persecution;
  • imprisonment;
  • concentration camps;
  • post-war displaced-person records;
  • missing-person investigations.

The Arolsen Archives provide an online search portal and describe their holdings as documentation relating to victims and survivors of Nazi persecution. Arolsen Archives, “Search the Online Archive”. Available online: Arolsen Archives.

Historical research should remain attentive to the wider context in which military service occurred.

Understand archival gaps

Missing information is normal.

The Bundesarchiv explains that large quantities of records from the period up to 1945 were lost as a consequence of the war. It notes particularly heavy losses among central Wehrmacht and Army command records, Army formations below divisional level, Luftwaffe records, and Waffen-SS records. At the same time, many war diaries from Army command authorities and divisional staffs up to 1943 survived, as did much of the naval archival material. Bundesarchiv, “Special Areas of Military Documents”. Available online: Bundesarchiv.

The same principle applies to privately held documents:

  • a Soldbuch may be missing pages;
  • a Wehrpass may contain blank sections;
  • a certificate may have become separated from the main group;
  • a unit stamp may be illegible;
  • a photograph may no longer have its caption;
  • a family may have discarded letters;
  • a record may never have been created;
  • a wartime update may never have been entered.

A gap should be recorded as a gap. It should not be filled with speculation.

Build an evidence table

Before writing a biographical article, create an evidence table.

Claim Evidence Source page Confidence Notes
Individual was born in Leipzig Birthplace entered on personal-information page Wehrpass, page 3 Confirmed Clearly legible
Individual attended a medical-officer candidate course Stamped course entry Wehrpass, page 21 Confirmed Abbreviation expanded separately
Individual served with a particular unit Handwritten unit entry Wehrpass, page 12 Probable Unit number partly difficult to read
Individual was wounded Hospital admission only Soldbuch, hospital page Unconfirmed Hospitalisation does not prove combat wound

This makes it easier to distinguish evidence from interpretation.

Use three levels of confidence

Sanitäter.eu articles can use a simple confidence system.

Level Meaning Example wording
Confirmed Clearly supported by the surviving document or archival source “The Wehrpass records his transfer on 20 June 1942.”
Probable Strongly supported but not entirely certain “The entry probably refers to Reserve Flak Battalion 511.”
Uncertain Possible reading requiring further evidence “The partly legible stamp may refer to a reserve hospital.”

Avoid writing:

He was wounded on the Eastern Front.

when the evidence only shows:

He was admitted to a military hospital while his unit was serving in the East.

Do not confuse presence with personal experience

A unit history can establish that a formation operated in a particular place. It does not automatically prove that every individual assigned to the unit experienced every battle.

A medic, doctor, dentist, veterinarian, clerk, driver, or hospital orderly could have been:

  • on leave;
  • hospitalised;
  • detached elsewhere;
  • assigned temporarily to another unit;
  • in training;
  • travelling;
  • working in the rear area;
  • awaiting reassignment.

Use cautious wording.

Prefer:

His recorded unit served in the Mediterranean theatre during this period.

over:

He fought personally in every Mediterranean operation undertaken by the unit.

Keep a research log

A research log prevents repeated work and makes later corrections easier.

Date checked Source Search terms Result Follow-up needed

Record:

  • websites searched;
  • archival enquiries submitted;
  • spelling variants tried;
  • books consulted;
  • uncertain readings;
  • rejected interpretations;
  • dates of correspondence;
  • file names of scans;
  • cropped images;
  • source references.

Research may continue over months or years. A log preserves the reasoning behind earlier conclusions.

Suggested structure for an individual article

A biographical archive article can use the following structure:

{{DISPLAYTITLE:Full name of serviceman}}

== Introduction ==
Brief overview of the individual and surviving documents.

== Early life ==
Birth, birthplace, civilian occupation, education, and family details where relevant.

== Military registration ==
Examination, fitness classification, Wehrnummer, and date of entry.

== Training ==
Military and medical courses.

== Promotions ==
Chronological list of ranks and appointments.

== Unit assignments ==
Timeline of confirmed and probable postings.

== Wartime service ==
Campaigns, geographical deployments, and historical context.

== Hospital treatment ==
Admissions and medical entries, with cautious interpretation.

== Awards ==
Decorations and certificates.

== Discharge, death, or post-war life ==
Known later history.

== Transcription notes ==
Difficult handwriting, unclear stamps, and provisional readings.

== Sources ==
Documents, archives, reference works, and external records.

== See also ==
Related guides and category pages.

Responsible historical interpretation

A military document records selected facts about service. It does not automatically reveal an individual’s personal beliefs, conduct, or moral responsibility.

At the same time, the wider historical context must not be ignored. The German armed forces served the National Socialist state and fought a war that caused immense suffering across Europe and beyond.

The purpose of Sanitäter.eu is to preserve, transcribe, and interpret surviving documents critically. Historical research should neither romanticise military service nor reduce every individual life to a single administrative entry.

Research checklist

Use the following checklist when beginning a new archive article.

Identity

  • [ ] Full name recorded
  • [ ] Alternative spellings checked
  • [ ] Date and place of birth recorded
  • [ ] Civilian occupation recorded
  • [ ] Branch of service identified
  • [ ] Wehrnummer transcribed
  • [ ] Identity-disc inscription transcribed

Documents

  • [ ] All pages photographed or scanned
  • [ ] Page numbers preserved
  • [ ] Close-ups of stamps created
  • [ ] Loose inserts photographed
  • [ ] Certificates and letters checked
  • [ ] Photographs examined for captions and insignia

Timeline

  • [ ] Entry into service recorded
  • [ ] Training courses recorded
  • [ ] Unit assignments listed chronologically
  • [ ] Promotions recorded
  • [ ] Hospital entries recorded
  • [ ] Awards recorded
  • [ ] Leave periods checked
  • [ ] Discharge, death, or missing status recorded

Interpretation

  • [ ] Original wording preserved
  • [ ] Abbreviations expanded separately
  • [ ] Uncertain readings marked
  • [ ] Replacement units distinguished from field units
  • [ ] Hospital admission not automatically treated as a combat wound
  • [ ] Unit history not confused with personal experience
  • [ ] Branch-specific terminology checked

External research

  • [ ] Bundesarchiv guidance checked
  • [ ] Bundesarchiv enquiry considered
  • [ ] invenio searched broadly
  • [ ] Tessin unit reference checked
  • [ ] Volksbund grave search checked where relevant
  • [ ] Civilian archives considered
  • [ ] Family sources considered
  • [ ] Research log updated

Summary

Reconstructing a serviceman’s career requires patience.

The most useful method is:

  1. gather every surviving document;
  2. photograph or scan the material carefully;
  3. establish the individual’s identity;
  4. transcribe before interpreting;
  5. build a chronological timeline;
  6. distinguish confirmed facts from probable and uncertain readings;
  7. separate ranks from appointments;
  8. distinguish replacement units from field units;
  9. interpret hospital entries cautiously;
  10. research units separately;
  11. submit an archival enquiry where appropriate;
  12. preserve gaps honestly;
  13. place the individual record within its wider historical context.

A Wehrpass or Soldbuch is not a complete biography. It is the beginning of a research process.

See also