wearing the uniform of Spain's 8th Light Armoured Cavalry Regiment "Lusitania" in 1915. The Spanish were amongst the first to adopt the symbol in the military after it was earned at the
Battle of Madonna dell'Olmo in 1744 in New Guinea, 1945 • A
skull and crossbones has often been a symbol of pirates, especially in the form of the
Jolly Roger, but usually having the crossbones
below the skull's lower mandibile (if present) rather than behind it, as used by pirate
Samuel Bellamy in one example. • The second oldest usage in a military uniform was that of the
Spanish Army's Lusitania Dragoon Regiment, which adopted it in 1744. It included three skull and crossbones in the cuffs, and in 1902 the skull and crossbones insignia was authorized again to replace the regiment number on the sides of the collar. • It was used as the emblem on the uniforms of Greek revolutionaries of
Alexander Ypsilantis'
Sacred Band (1821) during the
Wallachian uprising of 1821 • Armenian fedayis, during the
First World War against the Ottoman Empire, used a skull with two bolt rifles under the words "revenge revenge" in their flags. • The British Army's
Royal Lancers continue to use the skull and crossbones in their emblem, inherited from its use by the
17th Lancers, a unit raised in 1759 following
General Wolfe's death in Quebec. The emblem contains an image of a death's head, and the words 'Or Glory', chosen in commemoration of Wolfe. • In 1792, a regiment of
Hussards de la Mort (Death Hussars) was formed during the
French Revolution by the
French National Assembly and were organized and named by
Kellerman. The group of 200 volunteers were from wealthy families and their horses were supplied from the King's Stables. They were formed to defend against various other European states in the wake of the revolution. They participated in the
Battle of Valmy and its members also participated in the
Battle of Fleurus (1794). They had the following mottos: , and – Victory or death; Freedom or death; and Live free or die. • Although not exactly a
Totenkopf per se, the
Chilean guerrilla leader
Manuel Rodríguez used the symbol on his elite forces called ("
Hussars of death"). It is still used by the
Chilean Army's 3rd Cavalry Regiment. • The primarily Prussian 41st Regiment New York Volunteer Infantry (mustered on 6 June 1861; mustered out 9 December 1865) wore a skull insignia. • The
Vengeurs de la Mort ("death avengers"), an irregular unit of
Commune de Paris, 1871. • The Portuguese
Army Police 2nd Lancers Regiment use a skull-and-crossbones image in their emblem, similar to the one used by the Queen's Royal Lancers. • The
Kingdom of Sweden's Hussar Regiments wore a death's head emblem in the Prussian Style on the front of the mirleton. •
Ramón Cabrera's regiment adopted in 1838 a skull with crossbones flanked by an
olive branch and a sword on a black flag during the Spanish
Carlist Wars. • Serbian
Chetniks wore a death's head emblem in several conflicts:
guerrilla in
Old Serbia,
First and Second Balkan Wars,
World War I (both defense and
resistance) and
World War II. • Some Macedonian-Bulgarian
komitas that were members of the
Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization wore a death's head emblem, usually with crossed revolver and
qama below the skull and crossbones (similar to the Serbian ones) throughout the existence of the organization in several conflicts:
Macedonian Struggle (
Ilinden–Preobrazhenie Uprising, the
Balkan Wars),
World War I, during the interwar period in Macedonia,
Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, and in
World War II. The most prominent example being
Pitu Guli who wears one in his only known photo, and his son
Steryu Gulev. • The Italian elite storm-troopers of the
Arditi used a skull with a dagger between its teeth as a symbol during World War I. Various versions of skulls were also later used by the Italian Fascists. • The Russian
Kornilov's Shock Detachment (
8th Army) adopted a death's head emblem in 1917. Then after World War I, the unit became Kornilov's Shock Regiment as a part of the
White Russian Volunteer Army during the
Russian Civil War. Also a death's head emblem was depicted on
17th Don Cossack regiment and
Mariupol 4th Hussar regiment badges of
Russian Imperial Army. • The Estonian
Kuperjanov's Partisan Battalion used the skull-and-crossbones as their insignia (since 1918); the Infantry Battalion continues to use the skull and crossbones as their insignia today. • Two Polish small cavalry units used death's head emblem during
Polish–Ukrainian War and Polish–Soviet War – (also known as i.e.
Death Hussars) and . • During 1943–1945 the Italian
Black Brigades and numerous other forces fighting for the
Italian Social Republic wore various versions of skulls on their uniforms, berets, and caps. • The
United States Marine Corps Reconnaissance Battalions use the skull-and-crossbones symbol in their emblem. • Many
United States Cavalry reconnaissance troops or squadrons utilize a skull insignia, often wearing the traditional Stetson hat, and backed by either crossed cavalry sabers, crossed rifles, or some other variation, as an unofficial unit logo. These logos are incorporated into troop T-shirts, challenge coins, or other items designed to enhance morale and esprit de corps. • A version of the
Punisher skull symbol has been used by U.S. military personnel since the
Iraq War. • Members of the
Azov Regiment of the Ukrainian National Guard have used the totenkopf. •
72nd Mechanized Brigade of Ukrainian Ground Forces have a skull in their emblem. • The skull and
crosshair were the main symbol of the
Wagner Group until it was merged with the
Rosgvardiya.
Gallery Flags Doliente de Hidalgo.png|Flag used from 1811 to 1812 by
Regimiento de la muerte (Death Regiment) after
Hidalgo's death in the
Independence War Flag of Quiroga 1.svg|One of the flags used by
Argentine caudillo Facundo Quiroga, "Rn.o M." means "Religion or Death" (1825-1834) File:Bandera de Ramón Cabrera.svg|Spanish Carlist flag (1838) Philippine revolution flag llanera.png|Flag used by
Filipino revolutionary general
Mariano Llanera (1896–1899) Banner of russian death unit.jpg|Banner of one of Russian "Death Units", formed in
Eastern Front in 1917 Anarkistimatruuseja.jpg|Sailors of the Russian battleship
Petropavlovsk after the 1917
February Revolution (flag calls for "death to the
bourgeoisie"). File:Kornilovzy.jpg|Kornilov's Shock Detachment flag bearer and honor guard (1917) File:II Szwadron Śmierci 1920.jpg|Polish Voluntary II Death Squad in Lviv, Ukraine (1920) Anarchy flag in Hulyaipole Museum.jpg|Flag used by
Svyryd Kotsur's Dnipro Division, with the slogan "Death to all who stand in the way of freedom for the working people" (1920) Arditi del Popolo Flag.svg|Reconstruction of the insignia used by the
Arditi del Popolo (1921–1924) Sandinoflagusmc.jpg|A flag captured by
U.S. marines from
Sandino's forces in 1932
Other File:Hussard de la mort.JPG|A French (1792) File:Alexander2.jpg|
Alexander Ypsilantis, founder of the military force
The Sacred Band, shown wearing the fighting force's uniform, complete with mandible-less totenkopf (1821) File:17th Lancers - cap badge, original, antique.jpg|Cap badge of the British
17th Lancers File:Knoe04 59.jpg|Swedish hussars in 1761 File:Odznaka Góra Stracenia (SF).jpg|Pin worn by veterans of the
Battle of Lwów. The G.S. stands for
Góra Stracenia (Execution Mount) (1918). File:Odznaka Dywizjonu Huzarów Śmierci wz. 1920 - replika.jpg|The "death's head" was the insignia of
Polish Death Hussar Divisions, 1920 (
Polish–Soviet War). Croix de Feu.svg|Early symbol of the
Fire Cross League File:Kevyt osasto 4 kypärä.JPG|Helmet of a
Finnish Light detachment 4 (
World War II) in skeletal paint scheme File:Insignia of the Kuperjanov Infantry Battalion.svg|Insignia of the Estonian
Kuperjanov Infantry Battalion File:Peacekeepermissileuniform.jpg|Stylized Totenkopf on
shoulder sleeve insignia of the United States Air Force
400th Missile Squadron uniform sometime between 1995 and 2005 File:Deuce_Four_Skull2.jpg|
United States Army's 24th Infantry Regiment's "Deuce four skull" symbol used to mark buildings where enemy combatants had been killed in Iraq as part of
Operation Iraqi Freedom (2004) File:United_States_Navy_SEALs_81.jpg|Totenkopf inspired patch depicting
Punisher (Marvel character) skull symbol, without optional leg bones, worn by
US Navy SEALs (2012) File:Syrian Republican Guard SSI.svg|Insignia of the
Syrian Republican Guard (2021) File:Polvolcorp.svg|Emblem of the
Polish Volunteer Corps == Police use ==