Item Description
Original Items: Only 2 Available. This is a wonderful pair of identification tags as worn by an Officer (2 Lines of Information) and Enlistedman (3 Lines of Information). Both tags are constructed of a brass alloy with a rectangular hole at the top and bottom, most likely for a ribbon type securing method. The stamping on them is still mostly legible and with a little cleaning you might be able to translate them to discover their unit, serial number and ultimately their name if you can.
Comes ready for further research and display.
The earliest mention of an identification tag for soldiers comes in Polyaenus (Stratagems 1.17) where the Spartans wrote their names on sticks tied to their left wrists. A type of dog tag ("signaculum") was given to the Roman legionary at the moment of enrollment. The legionary "signaculum" was a lead disk with a leather string, worn around the neck, with the name of the recruit and the indication of the legion of which the recruit was part. This procedure, together with enrollment in the list of recruits, was made at the beginning of a four-month probatory period ("probatio"). The recruit obtained the military status only after the oath of allegiance ("sacramentum") at the end of "probatio", meaning that from a legal point of view the "signaculum" was given to a subject who was no longer a civilian, but not yet in the military.
In more recent times, dog tags were provided to Chinese soldiers as early as the mid-19th century. During the Taiping revolt (1851–66), both the Imperialists (i.e., the Chinese Imperial Army regular servicemen) and those Taiping rebels wearing a uniform wore wooden dog tags at the belt, bearing the soldier's name, age, birthplace, unit, and date of enlistment.
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