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Wwii Imperial Japanese Army Military Etiquette Manual Infantry School Named







Original wartime Japanese Army pocket manual titled. Army Etiquette Regulations with Supplement. February 1, 1940 (Showa 15).
And marked as officially inspected by the Japanese Army Ministry. This places it in the tense pre-Pacific War period, when Japan was expanding military mobilization during the Sino-Japanese War. Handwritten ownership markings on the back indicate.
Army Infantry School, Chiba Training Regiment 1st Machine Gun Company (name withheld). This is an especially interesting provenance. What Was the Army Infantry School? The Japanese Army Infantry School was one of the Army's central institutions for training officers, NCOs, and instructors in infantry tactics, marksmanship, command methods, and battlefield doctrine. Rather than a basic recruit camp, it functioned more like an elite professional military school.
What Was the Training Regiment / 1st Machine Gun Company? Was likely a model instructional unit used for demonstrations, advanced training, and practical education. Would have specialized in crew-served automatic weapons, fire support tactics, field positioning, and combat coordination.
That means the original owner may have belonged to a more advanced training environment rather than an ordinary line unit. This pocket manual explains formal military conduct such as. Formal conduct around royalty and senior officers. Several pages include diagrams and layouts. In the Imperial Japanese Army, etiquette was not just politeness-it was discipline, hierarchy, and obedience made visible.
Please examine all photos carefully. International Buyers - Please Note. Thank you for your understanding.
