Re: what is "1/10th SS Frundsberg"?
If it were UK/Commonwealth then that would be 1st battalion of the 10th Frundsberg Regiment.
UK Regiments had 1 or more battalions, typically 3 as a maximum with 2 common (one on home service, the other abroad). The battalion was the deploying formation - not the regiment as in Continental armies. Regimental HQ was a purely administrative depot company in some UK garrison town where recruits were formed and sent out to the deployed battalion and some clerical matters were dealt with.
In WW1 and WW2 with mass conscription, regimental names were re-used rather than building an anonymous wartime-only "127th infantry" regiment say.
So the Black Watch regiment would raise a second regiment for battalions 3-6, a third Black watch for wartime battalions 7-9 and so on. All thus shared the regimental tribal customs, cap badge, Tartan if a Scots Regiment, any associated funny hats, battle honours and traditions. The original would be 1/BW, the next raised would be 2/BW etc. There were 25 battalions of the Black Watch regiment raised in WW1 - far too many for a single regimental HQ to administer.
BY re-using regimental names, units could be formed with some tradition to rely upon. An anonymous 127th regiment of foot would be merely a blank slate and would have to build its own tribal "esprit de corps" from nothing.
(Nowadays with the reduction in regiments, individual battalions of the new conglomerations hold the titles of once separate regiments - so they are now The Black Watch, 3rd Battalion, Royal Regiment of Scotland, or 3 SCOTS for short, and the officers and men of the conglomerated regiment are supposedly able to be administratively shifted about as required. In the old Regimental system if you joined the Black Watch then you were forever Black Watch - even if you became a Staff Officer, you kept the regimental dress and added red tabs.)
Therefore this may be the 1st Bn (or regiment) of this German division perhaps?
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