The Prussian royal postal officials in uniform 1855

by Lithography: Ludwig Burger last modified 2020-05-25T10:36:13+01:00
© Museum für Kommunikation, Frankfurt am Main
Ludwig Burger (1825–1884), Die königlich-preussischen Post-Offizianten in Staats- und Dienstuniform, Lithograph, 1855; source: © Museum für Kommunikation, Frankfurt am Main.

Ludwig Burger (1825–1884), Die königlich-preussischen Post-Offizianten in Staats- und Dienstuniform, Lithographie, 1855; Bildquelle: © Museum für Kommunikation, Frankfurt am Main.

Postal uniforms were among the first civil uniforms to display strictly regulated badges. Civil uniforms were intended to display state legitimacy and authority, but also to regiment and discipline state servants in their physical appearance and, by extension, in their behaviour. The first regulations for Prussian postal uniforms were issued on 28 November, 1785 and prescribed a complete uniform set. However, the actual uniform was very similar to civilian clothing and, with drainpipe trousers and a waistcoat, resembled the tail-coat.


Ludwig Burger (1825–1884), Die königlich-preussischen Post-Offizianten in Staats- und Dienstuniform, Lithograph, 1855; source: © Museum für Kommunikation, Frankfurt am Main.


Central Europe, Eastern Europe
Social Matters, Society, Media, Communication
IEG(http://www.ieg-mainz.de)
yes
Media Description
HTML
EGO(http://www.ieg-ego.eu)
English
1855
1855
1850 - 1859

Prussian royal postal officials in
Image
No image
German
German, English
No file
No file