Re: Junker skin for Taschenpistole M1914 in Battlefield 1 Community Test Environment
Inhaber (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inhaber) has a similar meaning to Junker (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Junker).
Inhaber is also a Battlefield 1 in-game skin name (Inhaber skin for the Hungarian Frommer Stop Pistol).
On wikipedia you can read this in the Junker article:
Junker (Danish: Junker, German: Junker, Dutch: Jonkheer, English: Yunker, Norwegian: Junker, Swedish: Junker, Georgian: იუნკერი, Iunkeri) is a noble honorific, derived from Middle High German Juncherre, meaning 'young nobleman' or otherwise 'young lord' (derivation of jung and Herr). The term is traditionally used throughout the German-speaking, Dutch-speaking and Scandinavian-speaking parts of Europe. It was also used in the Russian Empire due to Baltic German influence, up until the Russian Revolution. Modern popular usage in Prussia. In modern Prussian history (reference to the Parabellum MG14/17's The Prussian skin), the term became popularly used as a loosely defined synecdoche for the landed nobility (particularly of so-called East Elbia) who controlled almost all of the land and government, or by extension, the Prussian estate owners regardless of noble status. With the formation of the German Empire in 1871, the Junkers dominated the central German government and the Prussian military. A leading representative was Prince Otto von Bismarck. "The Junkers" of Prussia were often contrasted with the elites of the western and southern states in Germany, such as the city-republic of Hamburg (which had no nobility) or Catholic states like Bavaria (reference to the Selbstlader M1916's Bavarian skin), in which the "Junker class" of Prussia was often viewed with contempt. After World War II, the junker class, which had formed much of the officer corps of the Wehrmacht and whose prominent member President and former General Paul von Hindenburg had appointed H_tl_r chancellor in 1933, was often blamed for Prussian militarism, the rise of the * and World War II. As a consequence, a land reform in the Soviet Occupation Zone which had the goal of collectivization along Soviet lines was justified in propaganda as a strike against the Junker class with the slogan "Junkerland in Bauernhand" (junker lands in peasant hands).