Photographing a one liter beer stein is not easy! I've rather shortchanged the cool top on this.
Of the two regimental steins my father brought back from Germany circa 1951, this is the one with all the "stuff". There's a lot to look at, but as we'll see it is a bit more pedestrian than the next one we'll visit.
Presumably that's Reservist Christman depicted in the central image. It is almost certainly not "him" in an artistic sense, just a generic young artillery man. These were created with a combination of stencils and paint. One way to sort it out is by touch. The base image of the soldier is smooth, so probably stencil. But the buttons on his uniform and the gilded stuff on his hat is raised, so added by hand!
There is never a first name on these things but the markings indicate he did his active service time as a recruit/conscript between 1898 and 1900. The spidery, hand applied script indicates he was in the 3rd Company of "foot artillery"* of an artillery regiment based in Mainz. Unhelpfully I can't be sure of the regiment, but it is probably the 117th, aka The 3rd Grand Ducal Hessian, aka the Grand Duchess regiment. I am at least sure of Mainz, which narrows it down to three options, and there is a 3 among all the scribbles and abbreviations.
On one side we have this serious image and saying. It translates to, more or less:
"It is the Artilleryman's job to make a powerful argument"
Around the top is another serious saying:
"Canonen donner ist unser Grufs"**
Cannon thunder is our Greeting.
But this stein is not all cannon thunder and bluster. It does not photograph well but when you hold the empty stein up to a bright enough light you can see that there is the image of a man and a woman sitting in a tavern stamped into the base in what is known as a Lithophane. One of the many ways to tell a real from a repro regimental stein is the content of the lithophane. This one is typical. Nudes are all fakes.
On the other side is something along the lines of: "Today the last shot was fired because I must go home". Certainly the kind of sentiment that one would expect at the end of military service. Being launched homeward by the cannon and waved off by your kamerades seems to fit.
So, what ever happened to Reservist Christman? Absent a first name we shall never know. But if he did his main military service on the dates listed here 1898-1900 he would have gone out of the most active reserve status by 1905. He would have then spent 10 or 11 years in a second line sort of organization called the Landwehr. So by 1914 he'd have been getting a bit old for soldiering. Maybe mid 30s. He'd still be a member of the lowest level of reserve, called the Landsturm, but by the time they got down to calling up those fellows he'd be pushing 40. Let's hope he was not marched off to the last years of The Great War at that age. Of course specialized skills were always in higher demand, and he was after all, an artilleryman....
* Foot artillery would be attached to an infantry division. The guns would in general still be moved by horses. Horse artillery was much less common, but cavalry divisions did have a few light field pieces they'd haul around with them.











