STUDIES IN PATHOLOGY - II ADOLPH HITLER
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Studies in Pathography
II. Adolph Hitler
by
Morris Leikind
NAZI WAR CRIMES DISCLOSURE ACT
2000
CA SPECIAL COLLECTIONS
RELEASE IN FULL
2000
A/A/4-0-y
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Summary:
Adolph Hitler was born in Branau, Austria on April 20, 1889.
He died, a suicide on April 30, 1945 at the age of 56. He began
his career as a vagrant and a house painter, he ended it as the
defeated leader of an empire that embraced most of Europe, a
large part of Africa and, had he been victorious, would have
included most of the world.
To attempt to explain his extraordinary career from a study
of his medical history is extremely difficult. For the purposes
of this report one must begin by dividing Hitler's medical history
into two segments, (a) psychiatric aspects, and (b) somatic or
physical aspects. Because of the vast number of writings which
have already appeared about Hitler's mental states and also
because of the controversial and speculative nature of the
available data, very little has been said here about Hitler's
psyche. The available data is attached hereto as Appendix 1.
His clinical history may be briefly summarized:
(1) In his youth Hitler was believed to have suffered from
weak lungs. The nature of this ailment (whether pneumonia,
pleurisy, tuberculosis, etc.) is not known with certainty.
(2) Many writers have stated that Hitler suffered from
syphilis, but no clinically valid evidence has ever been produced.
(3) He suffered from gas injuries in World War I but he seems
to have recovered without residual effects.
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(4) It has been alleged that during his adolescent years he
had epidemic encephalitis following influenza which in later
years manifested itself as Parkinson's diseases. Again, there
is no clinical substantiation of this hypothesis.
(5) He had some voice problems which were relieved by
removal of benign polyps from his vocal cords.
(6) From 1936 to 1945, Hitler had as his personal physician,
Dr. Theodor Morrell, described by his medical colleagues as a
charlatan and a quack. He kept Hitler under the influence of a
large number of drugs including vitamins, hormones, sulphonamides,
belladona, strychnine, etc. It was believed by those doctors
close to Hitler who could observe him without participating in
the treatments that this indiscriminate shotgun therapy caused
the ultimate physical deterioration and final collapse of Hitler.
(7) Hitler committed suicide on April 30, 1945. It is
generally believed that he shot himself. Recent information
published from Russia alleges that he died from cyanide
poisoning rather than from a gunshot wound.
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ADOLPH HITLER
The man who gave immortality to Winston Churchill was
Adolph Hitler, an Austrian by birth who at the age of 43 became
Chancellor and Fuller of Nazi Germany. Hitler was more than a
man - he was a phenomenon. He blazed across the sky like a
meteor and like a falling star fizzled into oblivion.
Adolph Hitler was born on April 20, 1889 in the town of
Braunau on the River Inn which forms the border between Austria
and Bavaria. The Austro-Hungarian Empire was still ruled by
Emperor Franz Joseph. Hitler came of peasant stock (traceable to
the 17th century) in a remote country district. His father was a
minor official in the Customs service of Austria. He married
twice but neither marriage lasted. He divorced his first wife,
his second spouse died of tuberculosis. Six months after her
death he married for the third time - now a second cousin twenty-
three years younger. Adolph was the third child of this marriage.
A brother and sister born earlier died in infancy, a younger
brother died at six, only his sister Paula born in 1896 reached
adulthood.
The father retired at 58 and settled finally on the outskirts
of Linz where Adolph Hitler grew up. In "Mein Kampf" Hitler por-
trays himself as a child of privation and poverty. On the con-
trary, it is known that his father had an adequate pension and was
able, within his means, to provide his son with a good elementary
education. Alois Hitler, Adolph's father died in 1903 but his
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widow still had his pension and thus she was still able to keep
her son in school. He left the Realschule in Linz in 1904, not
for financial reasons but because his school record was poor.
He was transferred to another school which he finally completed
at age 16. Hitler claimed later that his poor performance at
school stemmed from the fact that he wanted to be an artist, a
career his father opposed. 'While there is no doubt that father
and son did not get on well, it is highly probable that the elder
Hitler was in fact dissatisfied with Adolph's school performance
in general and he let his son know this in unmistakeable terms.
One of Adolph's teachers at this school later described young
Hitler in these terms:
"I can recall the gaunt, pale-faced youth pretty well. He
had definite talent, though in a narrow field. But he lacked
.self-discipline, being notoriously cantankerous, willful,
arrogant, and bad-tempered. He had obvious difficulty in fittingl'
in at school. Moreover, he was lazy. ..his enthusiasm for hard
work evaporated all too quickly...he reacted with ill-concealed
hostility to advice or reproof; at the same time he demanded of
his fellow pupils their unqualified subservience fancying himself
in the role of leader..."
As indicated, Adolph was in frequent conflict with his father
about his studies and the choice of a career. The elder Hitler
apparently insisted on uniform excellence in scholastic perfor-
mance, especially since he wanted his son to become a civil
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servant like himself. This type of career repelled Adolph and
the struggle between father and son reached a climax when young
Hitler announced that he had decided to become an artist, i.e.,
a painter. Alois, the father became increasingly bitter and
resentful at his son's intransigence; Adolph emerged as solitary,
uncooperative, sullen and stubborn, doing only what he had to at
home and just passing or more often failing at school. The
mediocrity of his school record barred his way to higher educa-
tion and filled him with confusion and resentment about his
family, himself and his future.
It has recently been suggested by a German physician -
Recktenwald (AH11a) that during this stage of his adolescence,
Hitler may have had an attack of epidemic encephalitis, a disease
often contracted in childhood or youth subsequent to a severe
cold or influenza. The virus, even if the infection is silent or
asymptomatic can produce middle brain damage which may manifest
itself as Parkinsonism in later life. Since, in the period
immediately before Hitler took his own life during the climatic
days of the Battle of Berlin, he displayed a pronounced tremor,
this may have given rise to the suggestion that he suffered from
post-encephalitic Parkinsonism. The fact that epidemic ence-
phalitis may produce dramatic changes in character and personality
soon after the disease is contracted, could provide a possible
explanation for Hitler's failure in school and his subsequent
personality troubles.
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Nevertheless, simplistic and attractive as this hypothesis
may be, it is in the highest degree speculative. The diagnosis
is not based on any clinical examination of Hitler. Furthermore,
Hitler's own physicians who were close to him for a number of
years up until the end, had advanced several other possibilities
for the deterioration of his health and his physical symptoms.
These included physical exhaustion, lack of exercise, extreme
and prolonged stress and finally the large quantities of drugs
administered by Morrell.
None of the tentative diagnoses offered by many writers of
whom Recktenwald appears to be the most recent can either be
convincingly sustained or summarily dismissed. Even Hitler's
unproven syphilis can, in its later stages produce a Parkin-
son-like tremor. It is true that of all the provisional diagnoses
about Hitler's childhood illnesses, epidemic encephalitis appears
to have a possible relationship to Hitler's later pathognomonic
states. However, we must be content to regard this only as an
unconfirmed and even uriconfirmable hypothesis. The only satis-
factory way in which these questions could have been resolved
would be on the basis of evidence from a thorough clinical exami-
nation supplemented by a most careful autopsy. No evidence
exists that such examinations were ever carried out.
Another medical episode in Hitler's early life must be
mentioned. This happened in 1905 about two years after the death
of his father. Hitler returned home to Liit at the close of the
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school semester where he had continued to make a poor record.
The family usually went to Spital in the country for the summer
and while there Adolph developed a lung disease. Hitler states
in "Mein Kampf" that he had a pulmonary infection at this time.
Although the disease is not named, the ailment is consistent
with a family history of lung involvement over several genera-
tions. During the vacation at Spital, Hitler's mother brought
him every morning a large cup of warm milk. This suggests that
the traditional treatment for pulmonary disease of nourishing
food, rest and country air were being applied. It is not clear
whether Hitler's lung condition at Spital arose "de Novo" that
summer or whether it was a recurrence of an earlier infection
which had become quiescent. In any case the condition may have
lingered on. Shortly before the outbreak of World War I,
Hitler had gone to Munich and it was suspected that he may have
left Austria among other reasons, to evade military service..
However, after some finagling he was examined by Austrian army
physicians and declared unfit for service.
After leaving school in 1905, Hitler spent two years with
his mother in Linz and then went to Vienna to try to enter the
Academy of Fine Arts as a student. He failed and was advised to
try for the school of architecture but he refused. After a
second rejection by the Academy of Fine Arts, Hitler drifted into
obscurity in Vienna for about five years. He worked as a laborer,
a sign painter. and as a general handy man. Testimony of those
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who knew him during this period indicates that tie was lazy and
moody, disliking regular work. He neither smoked nor drank and
was too shy and awkward to have much success with women. When-
ever he made a little money from painting picture postcards, he
quit work and went to a cafe to read newspapers and talk poli-
tics, a consuming passion with him. He also went to the public
library where he read extensively but indiscriminately and
unsystematically. It was at this time that Hitler began to
crystallize within himself the anti-semitic ideas, then endemic
in Vienna, which provided the basis for, and gave direction to,
his career from then on.
We come now to the beginning of Hitler's active political
career.
The defeat of Germany came as a profound shock to the
German people and its Army. Despite the fact that the war on
the Eastern front had come to a successful conclusion for
Germany, the catastrophic events on the Western front were kept
from the German nation. Thus the fact that the. Army, still
intact had been brought to its knees was a stunning blow. When
the Kaiser fled to Holland and the military refused to assume
responsibility for the debacle, the legend of the "stab in the
back" was born.
During the ensuing period of chaos until a semblance of
order was restored with the creation-of the German Republic,
Adolph Hitler was still in the hospital recovering from his gas
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injuries. It was during the chaotic and turbulent period
following the imposition of the Peace of Versailles that Hitler
took the decisive step to enter politics. He left the hospital -
one of the millions of demobilized jobless men who faced an
unknown future, and returned to Munich. Here the Army again
provided an opportunity. He got a job in the Press and News
Bureau of the Political Department of the Army's Munich Command.
After a course of political instruction, he was appointed as an
instructor. His task was that of preventing the contagion of the
men by alien ideas such as aocialism, pacificism and democracy.
In September of 1919, Hitler was directed by the Army to
look into the affairs of a small group in Munich which might be
of interest to the military. This was the German Worker's
Party organized in 1918 by a locksmith, Anton Drexler.
Drexler's objective was the creation of a party which would be
both working class and nationalistic in outlook. There were
only a few members present when Hitler attended his first meeting
in a Munich beer-hall. Here he was his opportunity and he began
his active political career. As he gradually assumed control,
the party grew in numbers. In 1920 Hitler left the Army to
devote himself full time to the affairs of the Party. The name
of the Party was now changed to "National Socialist Germany
Party" and soon it began to attract various splinter groups from
Austria and the Sudetenland. It adopted anti-semitic ideas from
its Austrian satellites and began to use the Hakenkreuz - the
swastika - as its symbol.
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Larger events now intervened. In 1929 a world-wide economic
depression came to the 'aid of the fledgling Nazi Party which had
been reconstituted at Munich. In the German elections of 1930
the Reichstag representation of the Nazi's rose from 12 to 107
seats. In 1932 Hitler ran for President of the Reich but although
his party strength was increasing he failed to unseat the incum-
bent Hindenburg. On January 30, Hitler was appointed Reich
Chancellor by the aging and senile Hindenburg and the Nazi's
were now close to the seat of power. A few weeks later on
February 27, a fire wrecked the Reichstag building, a conflagra-
tion Hitler, was swift to blame on the Communists. The following
day Hindenburg signed an emergency decree, "For the Protection of
the People and the State" suspending those sections of the
Constitution guaranteeing individual and civil liberties. When
the Reichstag on March 24 passed the so-called "Enabling Act"
legalizing the emergency powers, Hitler and his Nazi's were given
full control of the State. All political parties except the
NSDAP were outlawed. In 1934 Hitler purged a number of his
opponents - dissidents were either shot or sent to concentration
camps. Later that year following the death of Hindenburg,
Hitler abolished the office of President and he took the title
of Fuehrer and Reich Chancellor. The Armed Forces then took a
personal loyalty oath the Supreme Commander. In 1935, Hitler
announced a build-up of the Armed Forces and reintroduced mili-
tary conscription - both in violation pf. the Versailles Treaty.
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The anti-Jewish Nuremburg laws were passed in September and
early in the following year. Hitler repudiated the Treaty of
Locarno and sent German troops into the Rhineland.
The pace of events now increased. In 1938 Hitler took
direct command of the Wehrmacht and Austria was annexed to the
Third Reich. Then came the Sudentenland crisis which led to the
Munich Agreement and the German occupation of Czechoslovakia in
1939. Shortly after Hitler signed a .non-agression pact with
Russia, Poland was invaded and World War II began. The years
1940/41 were the apex of Hitler's conquests. In what came to be
known as the Blitzkrieg, Hitler's armies took over Belgium, the
Netherlands and Luxembourg followed by France and the Scandinavian
countries. The British were driven franthe continent.
Yugoslavia and Greece were occupied in 1941 and then in June of
that year Hitler launched his assualt on Russia which carried
him almost to the gates of Moscow. .During this time Hitler also
began his systematic extermination of European Jewry. On
December 7, the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor and Hitler promptly
declared war on the United States. The war was now truly global
in scope. However, in 1942 it began to become evident that
Hitler had now over-extended himself and tide began to turn
against him. 1943 saw the defeat at Stalingrad, the invasion
of Sicily and Italy by the allied forces which earlier had
already destroyed the Nazi threat in North Africa. The collapse
of Mussolini's regime in Italy added further to Hitler's woes.
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In 1944 came the Normandy invasion and Hitler was now caught
between the Russian anvil and Anglo-American hammer. By 1945
Hitler's empire was breathing its last and on April 30, Hitler,
committed suicide in his bunker beneath the ruins of his
Chancellory in Berlin. The Thousand Year Reich ha& come to a
crashing and flaming end.
A medical histoDy of Adolph Hitler is extremely difficult
to compile. One is confronted simultaneously with a plethora of
material on Hitler's mental state which undoubtedly governed his
life and a paucity of clinical data on his bodily ailments.
However, because so much has been written about Hitler's megalo-
mania, and also because many authorities disagree both in their
findings and interpretations, no attempt is made here to summarize
or evaluate this material. As a matter of fact such a summary
together with documentation does already exist and a copy is
attached as Appendix I.
However, without going into detail, it may be said, with
hindsight, that by ordinary psychiatric standards Hitler would
be diagnosed as insane. The outstanding characteristic of
Hitler which dominated all others was that he was a man of most
violent passions. Even as a child he had to have his way and as
he matured, the temper tantrums which most normal children out-
grow, became in the man-ever more virulent. His frenzies, his
A
botterness and hates, his rages and crying jags were legendary,
A
and one of the major causes of his phenomenal rise to power was
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his ability to intimidate and even paralyze his opponents,
shouting, screaming and even chewing the carpet as he rolled on
the floor. He often threatened to commit suicide if he could
not get his way.
Hitler emerged on the world stage, as already indicated
shortly after World War I. By 1924 he had become head of the
political party which within a few years became the dominant
force in Germany and almost achieved domination of the World.
How he achieved his power and used it is, again, so well
documented that it needs no repetition here.
There are however, aspects of Hitler's life which may still
be described as shadowy. These concern his private life,
especially those of a medical nature. Thus he has been des-
cribed as impotent, incapable of normal sexual intercourse, a
victim of phimosis and a practitioner of sexual perversions.
It is even today not possible to document these allegations with
certainty. It has been mentioned also that Hitler was afflicted
with syphilis. Again, it is impossible to confirm this with
clinical evidence. It is a fact however, that Hitler did have a
deep-seated aversion, an obsessive horror of this disease since. he
devotes an extensive passage to this affliction - he calls 1t a
Jewish disease - in Mein Kampf (pp 336-352). He considers this
disease to be one of the consequences of the failure to maintain
the racial purity of the Aryans - a condition he regards as the
God-given duty of his Party to correct.
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What is known with certainty is that Hitler was abstemious
in his habits. He neither smoked nor drank and he was a vege-
tarian. Indeed, he believed that meat�eating was harmful to
humanity. One might speculate that had Hitler won World War II,
he might have imposed vegetarianism on those whom his armies
had conquered.
One of the most reliable and authoritative sources on
Hitler's health, especially in his later years is the book "The
Last Days of Hitler", by H.R. Trevar-Roper. (3rd ed. 1962)
Trevor-Roper, now Professor of History at Oxford was given the
task by the British Intelligence Services of determining as far
as possible what actually happened to Hitler and Hitler's body
during the last days of the crumbling Third Reich. Much of what
follows is drawn from this book.
In mid-1944, it was plainly evident that Hitler's Third
Reich which he had promised his people and the world would last a
thousand years disintegrating under the hammer blows of the Allied
A
armies in the West and the Russian forces in the East. Germany.
was trapped in a gigantic vise from which there was no escape.
On July 20, 1944, a group of Hitler's generals made one final
effort to assassinate Hitler and bring his lost war to a halt.
The attempt failed.
The General's Plot
July 20, 1944
It is now known that Hitler's regime was not the monolithic
totalitarianism which most of the world saw and believed. It was
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in fact a Hollywoodian facade which as the tragic drama reached
its climactic end, crumbled into dust. From 1939, at least
seven attempts were made to assassinate Hitler and thus bring
his regime to an end:
On several earlier occasions, explosive charges had been
conveyed to Hitler's headquarters but returned unused for some
technical reason. Finally Count von Stauffenberg, on July 20,
1944 carried a bomb concealed in a briefcase to a conference
called by Hitler in his Eastern front headquarters at Rastenberg.
The Count placed the briefcase under the table against the
table-leg adjacent to Hitler. He made an excuse to leave the
room seconds before the bomb went off. Stauffenberg was already
in his plane flying to Berlin to announce to his co-conspirators
and the world that Hitler was dead but the announcement as they
soon discovered was premature. It is not clear just what
happened - whether Hitler moved around the table or whether the
table itself gave some protection from the full force of the
blast - but Hitler survived. His ear-drums were shattered, his
right arm was bruised and his uniform was in shreids. Again, as
Der Fuhrer was to repeat so often, Providence had intervened to
preserve him for the completion of his mission. The conspirators
were soon rounded up and most were executed, several being hung
with piano wire. One of the results of this plot was a further
withdrawal of Hitler from publicity. He made no public speeches,
no public appearances and it was even rutored that he was either
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dead or the prisoner of Himmler. The facts are that Hitler
was very much alive. A personal diary kept by his valet Heinz
Linge has survived. From.this we learn that until November 20,
1944 Hitler was in residence at "Wolfschanze" the Wolf's Lair in
Rastenberg where the abortive attempt on his life was made; until
December 10 in Berlin; from December 11 to January 15, at Bad
Nauheim whence he directed the futile Ardennes offensive (the
Battle of the Bulge) and finally from January 16 to the end in
Berlin at the Chancellery which Hitler never left alive.
From this diary we learn that Hitler usually awoke about
noon and then carried on -a continual series of conferences with
generals, politicians, secretaries, his doctors and others. His
meals were snatched at irregular intervals, an occasional stroll
in the open and then a short evening nap. Then conferences till
2.a.m. and finally anon-political tea party followed some two
hours later by bed. .
As Trevor-Roper has written: "When he became the great
war-lord, the greatest strategical genius of all time, (as
Speer described him), Hitler's company changed, his hours of
work became monotonously regular, the pressure of events gave
him no release, he had no relaxation, no safety valves, for the
harmless discharge of pent-up dynamism. Defeat intensified the
process. If the German people must cut down their pleasures, ho
must sympathetically cut down his; and his were not only pleasures
but the necessary conditions of his political life. More and more
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the once sociable Fuehrer became an isolated hermit, with all
the psychological repressions inherent in that dismal condition.
He was isolated from persons, isolated from events. Convinced
that only he could lead the German people out of defeat to victory,
and that his life was therefore of cardinal importance and yet
convinced that every man's hand was against him, and assassina-
tion awaited him around every corner; by a logical consequence,
he seldom left the protection of his underground headquarters or
the banal society of his quack doctor, his secretaries, and the
few spiritless generals who still paudered to his inspiration.
He seldom visited the front, never knew the true extent of the
disasters to his armies, his towns, his industries: never in
the entire war did he visit a bombed city. He remained a
frustrated recluse, restless and miserable.
They style of life reflected itself inevitably in Hitler's
physical condition. Dr. von Hasselbach, one of the most critical
and reliable of Hitler's doctors said: "Up till 1940 Hitler
appeared to be much younger thn he actually was. From that date
he aged rapidly. From 1940 to 1943 he looked his age. After
1943 he appeared to have grown old." "In his last days," said
Speer (Economics minister) he was positively senile; and those
were not yet the last days of all, the last days of April 1945,
when all who saw him described him as a physical wreck. This
rapid deterioration in Hitler's health has often been attributed
to the effects of the bomb explosion of the 20th of July 1944;
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but this is wrong. The wounds which Hitler received on that
occasion were trivial and temporary. The real damage to his health
in the last months proceeded from two causes: his manner of life
which has been described, and his doctors. "What Hitler's
psychological condition may have been - and on such a subject
and in so unique a character, it would be imprudent to specu-
late - there can be no doubt that his physical stamina was
exceptionally strong. It could not have been otherwise, to have
endured for so long the tenancy of that violent personality.
(VEI 14, p 120-121) It seems that before the war, Hitler became
concerned about his voice and sent for a throat specialist,
Professor Von Eicken of Berlin. A polyp was diagnosed and sur-
gically removed. Hitler made an uneventful recovery from this
operation. Apart from an occasional tingling in his ears and
tendency to stomach cramps he continued in good health until
1943. He believed that he had a weak heart and after 1938 he
avoided all forms of exercise. As part of his hideaway at
Berchestgaden, Hitler had built, on a mountain top above his
lodge a gazebo with a fabulous view over the Bavarian Alps.
This was reached via an elevator shaft bored through the moun-
tain. But Hitler used it only rarely. At 5400 feet he complained
of. a constriction in his chest due to his weak heart. However,
despite numerous examinations no clinical evidence of a cardiac
condition was ever found by his doctors. Like his epigastric
pains and cramps, his heart symptoms were considered to be of
hysterical origin.
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Hitler's Doctors
During most of his career, Hitler was attended by three
doctors Karl Brandt, Hans Karl Von Hasselbach and Theodor
Morrell, the latter being closest to him as his personal physician.
Brandt, a surgeon had been with Hitler since 1934. However,
since his surgical skills were never
Brandt achieved notoriety in another
He directed and participated in
ments at the concentration camps and
required by Hitler,
direction.
the infamous medical experi-
for these crimes against
humanity he was tried by the Nuremberg Courts, condemned to
death and executed in 1947.
Of Professor Theodor Morrell, Hitler's personal physician
for nine years, it is difficultiin the words of Trevor-Roper
(JCR 14, p 122) "to speak in the measured terms and discreet
vocabulary proper to his profession. He was a quack. Those who
saw him, after his internment by the American forces, a gross
but deflated old man, of cringing manners, inarticulate speech
and the hygienic habits of a pig, could not conceive how a man so
utterly devoid of self-respect could ever have been selected as a
personal physician by anyone who had evev a limited possibility
of choice. But Hitler not only chose him; he kept him for nine
years, in constant attendance, preferring him above all other
doctors, and, in the end, surrendering his person, against
unanimous advice, to the disastrous experiments of a charlatan.
From 1936 to 1945, Morrell, in his own words, was Hitler's
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"constant companion;" and yet the health of his patient was to
him only a secondary consideration.
According to all the evidence, Morrell was money mad, com-
pletely indifferent to either truth or science. Research was too
slow for him - quick drugs and fancy nostums were his metier.
He claimed to be the discoverer of penicillin which was stolen
from him after years of dedicated research by the ubiquitous
British Secret Service. The truth of the matter was that
Morrell had no real need to build himself up as a scientist -
Hitler exploited his 'weaknesses - not his skills. Hitler in
fact liked quacks. He liked magic, astrology and somnambulism.
Among the tenets of the Nazi party line may be found anti-
vivisectionism - anti-vaccination ideas - vegetarianism, etc.
Hitler would have, felt at home among the bizarre medical
cults which flourist in California and other parts of this
country.
Morrell before meeting Hitler had practiced as a specialist
in venereal disease among the artistic demi-monde of Berlin. It
was there that he met Hoffmann who was a member of Hitler's
entourage as his official photographer. It was Hoffmann who
brought Morrell to Hitler's notice at Berchtesgaden and the
doctor's fortune was 1144AAr oet made. Under Hitler's patronage he built
Xactories and manufactured patent medicines. In somo casos ho
was able to secure compulsory purchase of his nostrums throughout
Germany - in others he was granted a monopoly on his own brands.
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One of his most financially successful concoctions was a chocolate
vitamin preparation. Under an order from Hitler, Morrell's
"Russia" lice powder became a standard item for use by the
armed forces. Construction of factories for the manufacture of
this product had the very highest priority.
Another of Morrell's preparations was a sulfa drug called
"Ultraseptyl" manufactured by one of his companies in Budapest.
It was tested by the Department of Pharmacology of the University
of Leipzig and found to be inferior to the corresponding German
product. It was found, among other things to have a deleterious
effect on the nerves. This report was shown to Hitler whop brushed
it aside. Indeed, he gave Morrell the priorities to enable him to
increase his production. As Trevor-Roper (AH14 p 124) tella it:
"These drugs were not so lucratively dispersed among the
German people without preliminary trial. The experiments were
made on Hitler. An almost complete list of the �drugs used by
Morrell upon Hitler, compiled from his own account (which
unlikely to exaggerate on such a topic) and excluding the
and hypnotics which were also used contains the names of
is
morphine
twenty-
eight different mixtures of drugs, including the propietary
"Ultraseptyl" condemned by the pharmacologists, various fake
medicines, narcotics, stimulants and aphrodisiacs. The way in
which Morrell made use of these drugs is thus described by
Dr. Brandt:
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"Morrell took more and more to treatment by injections, until
in the end he was doing all his work by'this method. For instance,
te would give large doses of sulphonamides for slight colds, and
gave them to everyone at Hitler's headquarters. Morrell and I
had many disputes about this. Morrell then took to giving injec-
tions that had dextrose, hormones vitamines, etc., so that the
patient immediately felt better; and this type of treatment seemed
to impress Hitler. Whenever he had a cold coming on, he would
have three to six injections daily and thus prevent any real
development of the infection. Therapeutically this was satis-
factory. Then Morrell used it as a prophylactic. If Hitler had
to deliver a speech on a cold or rainy day, he would have injec-
tions the day before, the day of the speech, and the day after.
The normal resistance of the body was thus gradually replaced by
an artificial medium. When the war began Hitler thought himself
indispensable, and throughout the war'he received almost continual
injections. During the last two years he was injected daily.
When I asked Morrell to name the drugs employed, he refused.
Hitler came to depend more and more on these injections; his
dependence became very obvious during the last year. With the
exception of General Jodi, all the members of Hitler's staff were
treated from time to time by Morrell." (AH14: p 124-125)
Although it must be admitted that Brandt had good reason to
hate Morrell and therefore his opinions of Hitler's doctor may
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to indicate their accuracy. Every other doctor in a position to
know, as well as many lay observers close to Hitler's court
support the facts as stated by Brandt. Thus Speer, Hitler's
economics minister said: "I believe that anyone who does a great
deal of intellectual work can understand this condition of mental
over-exertion; but there can hardly be another person who has
endured such an ever-increasing strain over so many years, and
who has further found himself a physician who tried out completely
new drugs on him, in order to keep him capable of work, and at
the same time, to carry out a unique medical experiment. It
would be interesting to analyse Hitler's handwriting during the
last months; it had the uncertainty of an old man. By his stubborn
ways, his sustained outbursts of anger, he often reminded me of a
senile man. This condition became permanent after 1944, and was
seldom interrupted.... For purely physical reasons...most other
.1
men would have broken down under the strain of such a life, and
after an enforced relaxation would have regained the capacity
for work; or else nature would have come to the rescue with an
illness. But Hitler's physician, Morrell, managed to cover up
his exhaustion by means of artificial stimulants, a method, which
as is well known, ends by completely ruining the patient. Hitler
became accustomed to these means of keeping up his endurance, and
kopt on domanding thorn, Ho admirod Morrell and his methods, and
was in some sense dependent on him and his remedies."
(AH14: p 125)
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Only a powerful constitution could have preserved Hitler from
an earlier collapse under the combined pressure of his way of
life and the medical treatments he allowed himself to be sub-
jected to. The first symptoms of physical change began to mani-
fest themselves in 194. Hitler's extremities began-to tremble,
especially his left arm and left leg; his left foot dragged and
he developed a stoop. The nature of this tremor has never been
satisfactorily explained. The possibility of Parkinson's
disease has already been mentioned. Other medical authorities
have suggested a hysterical origin. There is a general consensus
however, that.the tremors were not a consequence of the July 20,
1944 explosion, the tremor which had been progressively wor-
sening, stopped altogether but then it resumed in a more severe
form and continued to worsen until the end.
As Trevor-Roper points out, while the events of the 20th
�of July represent a military, political and psychological crisis,
these had little physical significance in the life of Hitler.
The doctors summoned to examine Hitler right after the explosion
found that Hitler's tympanic membranes in both ears were broken
(indeed such injuries were found in all, the officers present in
the room when the bomb went off). The labyrinths of his ears
were disturbed and there was a subcutaneous hemorrhage in his
right arm. Hitler was ordered to bed and in about four weeks he
had completely recovered from the immediate effects of the
explosion.
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However, the cumulative effects of Hitler's overly stress--
ful life plus Morrell's medication were not so easily cured.
Hitler returned to an underground bunker in the damp unhealthy
climate of East Prussia. He never left this bunker - he shunned
the air, feared exercise, suspected danger everywhere. One of
his doctors (Professor Von Eicken) begged Hitler to leave the
dank dugout for the bracing air of Berchestgaden even for a
week - Hitler refused. Others including Keitel urged Der Fuehrer
to leave but he kept saying "If I leave East Prussia then East
Prussia will fall. As long as I am here it will be held." Thus
he hung on, a sick man, taking to his bed from time to time but
dragging himself up for his daily staff conference.
In September and October (1944) Hitler was treated for an
infection of the maxillary sinus and swollen glands in the neck.
Another polyp was removed from his vocal cords. At the same
time Hitler had continuous pain from stomach cramps and head-
aches. The stomach cramps were not new - Hitler had compalined
of them for several years but late in 1944 they became serious.
Several doctors in addition to Morrell were visiting Hitler
during the latter half. of 1944. Among them were a cardiologist,
a dentist, an ear specialist and a throat specialist.
In September 1944 there occurred a medical crisis in the
affairs of Hitler. Be was suffering from a continuing series of
stomach cramps. Dr. Giesing, the ear, nose and throat ppecialist
who had attended Hitler after the Bomb Plot discovered, more or.
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less accidentally that Morrell, for at least two years, had been
treating the symptoms of Der Fuehrer with a proprietary drug
known as Dr. Koester's Antigas Pills. They consisted of a compound
of strychnine and belladonna (the prescription is given as
Extr. Nux Vomp Extr. Bellad. a.a. 0.5; extr. Gent. 1.0) (AH14:
p 128). The dose Hitler was taking was supposed to be 2 to 4
pills with each meal although 8 pills per day was considered to
be the maximum safe dose. Morrell himself did not personally
administer this medication but. left it to Hitler's valet Heinz
Linge. He received these pills in bulk lots from Morrell and
gave them to his master as requested without medical supervision.
Dr. Giesing discovered these pills by chance in Linge's room.
Shocked by the discovery, Giesing consulted Dr. Brandt, the sur-
geon. They both agreed that Hitler was being slowly poisoned by
Morrell's treatment. They concluded that the chronic poisoning
not only was responsible in itself for the abdominal pains it
was supposed to relieve but also for the discoloration of Hitler's
skin which was becoming increasingly apparent. Brandt and Giesing
now took their findings up with Dr. von Hasselbach and all
agreed that something had to be done. .Brandt and Giesing con-
fronted Hitler with the facts they had uncovered and told him
that he was allowing himself. to be poisoned by Morrell. But
Hitler. was not shaken from his dependence on his "medicine man".
Brandt, Giesing and von Hasselbach were all dismissed from Hitler's
"court." Brandt himself was stripped of all political posts
held by him, he was tried before a summary court, accused among
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other things of having lost faith in a Germany victory. He was
condemned to death but before the sentence could be carried out,
the allied military tidal wave was approaching Berlin. Brandt
was captured, tried by the Nuremberg Tribunals and was executed
for crimes more serious than those charged to him by-Hitler.
With Brandt and Hasselbach gone, Hitler needed to fill the
facancy of a surgeon at his court. Himmler's physician Professor
Karl Gebhardt, recommended one of his students Ludwig Stumpfegger
an orthopedic surgeon. Gebhardt himself already had an unsavoury
t,
and sinister reputation as an unscrupulous dabbler in politics.
He had also carried out medical experiments on Polish girls at
Auschwitz. Stumpfegger, although he rendered few medical
services to Hitler, stayed with him to the end. He was astute
enough to allow Morrell to maintain his baleful influence over
his Fuehrer. Thus, with all the other doctors dismissed,
Morrell's control of Hitler's person for the last six months of
his life was unchallenged.
In his last days, although Hitler suffered from no organic
disease, he had become, according to the testimony of all those
about him, a physical wreck. As Trevor-Roper wrote: "Ceaseless
work, the loss of all freedom, the frustration of all his hopes,
Morrell's drugs, and perhaps more than all these, the violence of
his temperament when bitterness and disappointment had multiplied
around him, had reduced that once powerful conqueror to a
trembling spectre. All witnesses of the final days agree when
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they describe his emaciated face, his grey complexion, his
stooping body, his shaking hands and foot, his hourse and quaver-
ing voice, and the film of exhaustion that covered his eyes.
They agree about certain less clearly physical symptoms too:
his universal suspicion, his incessant rages, his alternation of
optimism and despair. But two characteristics of his former
temper he still possessed. The fascinztion of those eyes,
which had bewitched so many seemingly sober men...had not
deserted them.... Secondly, Hitler's lust for blood was unabated,
perhaps even increased by time and defeat... In his last days,
in the days of Radio Werewolf and suicidal strategy, Hitler
seemed like some cannibal god, rejoicing in the ruin of his own
temples. Almost his last orders were for execution; prisoners
were to be slaughtered, his old surgeon was to be murdered, his
own brother-in-law was executed, all traitors without further
specifications were to die. Like an ancient hero, Hitler wished
to be sent with human sacrifices to his own grave; and the burning
of his own body, which had never ceased to be the centre and totem
of the Nazi State, was the logical and symbolic conclusion of the
Revolution of Destruction:"
On April 20, while the Russian juggernaut was storming the
gates of Berlin Hitler celebrated his 56th birthday. It was
to be his last. Hitler was still 'Ewing that some military
miracle would break the siege of Berlin and that his armies would
somehow reverse the onrushing tide of events. But it was too
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late. On the night of April 27/28 Hitler finalized his decision
to commit suicide. In characteristic fasion, he blamed not
himself, but others, especially the Jews for the failure of his
Thousand Year Reich to survive. And so, since neither Germany
nor the world deserved him, Hitler decided to end it all. On
April 29, he dictated his will and political testament (KH :
p 793) naming Admiral D8nitz as his successor. Then on April 30,
came the end. As Bullock, one of Hitler's biographers has
written (kH5: p 799) "Meanwhile, having finished his lunch,
Hitler went to fetch his wife from her room, and for the second
time they said farewell to Goebbels, Bormann and the others who
remained in the bunker. Hitler then returned to the Vihrer's
suite with Eva and closed the door. A few minutes passed while
those outside stood waiting in the passage. Then a single'
shot rang out.
After a brief pause the little 'group outside opened the
door. Hitler was lying on the sofa, which was soaked with blood:
he had shot himself through the mouth. On his right-hand side
lay Eva Braun, also dead: she had swallowed poison. The time
was half past three on the afternoon of Monday, 30 April 1945,
ten days after Hitler's fifty-sixth birthday."
"Characteristically, Hitler's last message to the German
people contained at least one striking lie. His death was any-
thing but a hero's end; by committing suicide he deliberately
abandoned his responsibilities and took a way out which in
earlier years he had strongly condemned as a coward's way out."
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Hitler's instructions for the disposal of their bodies had
been explicit and they were carried out to the letter. Hitler's
own body, wrapped in a blanket was carried out and up to the
garden by two S.S. men. The head was concealed but the black
trousers and black shoes which he wore with his uniform jacket
hung down beneath the covering. Eva's body was picked up by
Bormann who handed it to Kemkor. They made their way up the
stairs and out into the open air, accompanied by Goebbels, GUnsche
and Gurgdorf. The doors leading into the garden had been locked
and the bodies were laid in a shallow depression of sandy soil
close to the porch. Picking up the five cans of petrol, one
after another, GUnsche, Hitler's S.S. adjutant, poured the con-
tents over the two corpses and set fire to them with a lighted rag.
A sheet of flame leapt up, and the watchers withdrew to the
shelter of the porch. A heavy Russian bombardment was in progress
and shells continuously burst on the Chancellery. Silently they'
�
stood to attention, and for the last time gave the Hitler salute;
then disappeared into the shelter.
Outside, in the deserted garden, the two bodies burned
steadily side by side. It was twelve years and three months to
the day since Hitler had walked out of the President's room,
Chancellor of the German Reich."
"What happened to the ashes of the two burned bodies left in
the Chancellery Garden has never been discovered. That they
were disposed of in some way remains a possibility since an open
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fire will not normally destroy the human body so completely as
to leave no traces, and nothing was found in the garden after
its capture by the Russians. Professor Trevor-Roper, who carried
out a thorough investigation in 1945 of the circumstances
surrounding Hitler's death, inclines to the view that the ashes
were collected into a box and handed to Artur Axmann, the leader
of the Hitler Youth. There is some slight evidence for this and,
as Trevor-Roper points out (in the Introduction to his second
edition, pages xxxii-xxxiv) it would have been a logical act to
pass on the sacred relics to the next generation. The simplest
explanation may still be the correct one. It is not known how
thorough a search was made by the Russians, and it is possible
that the remains of Adolph Hitler and his wife became mixed up
with those of other bodies which have been found there,
especially as the garden continued to be under bombardment until
the Russians captured the Chancellery.: on 2 May.
The question would scarcely be of interest had the failure
to discover the remains not been used to throw doubt on the fact
of Hitler's death. It is of course, true that no final incon-
trovertible evidence in the form of Hitler's dead body has been
produced. But the weight of circumstantial evidence set out in
Trevor-Roper's book, when added to the state of Hitler's health at
the time and the psychological probability that this was the end
he would choose, make a sufficiently strong case to convince all
but the constitutionally incredulous -' or those who have not
bothered to study the evidence."
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However, the story does not end here. There has long been a
suspicion that the Russians knew more than they were willing to
tell about what happened to the remains of Hitler and others,
notably Goebbels, and his family, whose bodies were found in the
bunker. In 1968, a book entitled "The Death of Adolph Hitler:
Unknown Documents from the Soviet Archives" (AHlla ) provides
additional data.
According to the author of this report, the Russians found a
number of bodies underneath the ruins of the Chancellery, when
they occupied this area of Berlin on May 5, 1945. Among them
were two partially burned corpses, that of a man and a woman.
These were removed along with the other bodies later identified
as those of Goebbels' and his wive and children.
The two partially burned bodies were autopsied and on the
basis of the observations made were presumptively identified as
those of Adolph Hitler and his newly wedded wife, Eva Braun. The
autopsy protocols, which appear below seems to have been "edited".
Several points may be noted: (a) Contrary to other published
reports Hitler did not commit suicide by shooting himself. He
died by poison - the odor of cyanide was still detectable in his
mouth together with slivers of glass from the containing capsule.
(b) Confirmation of ,the fact that the two bodies were in fact
those of Adolph Hitler and Eva Braun, comes mainly from dental
evidence. (c) In the body presumed to be that of Hitler, "'"the
left testicle could not be found either in the scrotum or on the
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spermatic cord inside the inguinal canal, nor in the small
pelvis." It was further stated in the protocols that despite
considerable damage by fire, no visible signs of severe lethal
injuries or illnesses could be detected.. This conclusion may
refer to what might have been observed by simple visual inspec-
tion of the remains. Since no statement appears in these pro-
tocols about microscopic examination of the tissues, we are
left in the dark as to whether his topathologic studies were
made, or if made, were deleted from this publication.
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:
REFERENCES
AH1 Abrahamsen, D.
Men, mind and power.
New York, Columbia Univ. Pr., 1945, pp 53-94
AHla Ainsztein, Reuben
How Hitler died: the Soviet version
International Affairs 43: 307-318 (Apr.) 1967
AH2 Anon
A psychiatrist looks at Hitler
Lancet 1: 44-7, 1940
AH3 Baumrind, S.
A further note on Adolph Hitler's teeth.
Jr. Calif. Dent. Ass'n. 41: 501-2, 1965
AH4 Bezymenski, Lev A.
The death of Adolph Hitler. Unknown documents from
Soviet Archives.
New York, Harcourt, Brace & World, Inc., 1968, 114 p.
AH5 Bullock, Alan
Hitler, a study in tyranny. Rev. Ed.
New York, Harper & Row, 1964, 848 P.
AH6 Fabricant, N. D.
Hitler's vocal cords.
Eye, Ear, Nose & Throat Monthly. 38: 396, 400, 1959
AH6 Fabricant, N. D.
They were also patients: George Gershwin, Clarence
Darrow, and Adolph Hitler.
Northwestern Univ. Med. Sch. Quart. Bull. 34: 346-357,
1960
AH7 Hagens, J.
Hitler's personal physician.
Marquette Med. Rev. 31: 93-94, 1965
AH8 Hitler, A.
Mein kampf.
New York, Reynal & Hitchcock, 1941. 1003 p.
AH9 Kahn, S.
Is Hitler Insane?
Med. Record (N.Y.) 155: 409-14, 1942
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AH10 Lange-Eichbaum, W. & W. Kurth
Genie, Irrsinn and Ruhm. Genie-llythus and Pathographie
.des Genies. 6th ed.
- Machen/Basel. E. Reinhardt, 1967
AH11 McGovern, Games.
Martin Bormann.
N. Y. Morrow & Co., 1968. 237 p.
AHlla Recktenwald, Johann
Woran hat Hitler gelitten (What did Hitler suffer from)?
Munich, Reinhardt. 1963
AH12 Shirer, Wm. L.
The rise and fall of the Third Reich a history of Nazi
Germany.
Greenwich. Conn. Fawcett Publications, Inc., 1962. 1599 p.
AH13 Stein, George H. Ed.
Hitler.
Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall, 1968. 183 p.
AH 14 Trevor-Roper, H. R.
� The last days of Hitler, 3rd ed.
New York, Collier Books, 1962. 318 p.
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Hitler's Physical Health and Personality. The following
doctors have been interrogated on Hitler's health and physical
condition, and on other personal matters:
Brandt, Dr. Karl - Surgeon to Hitler's staff until
October, 1944. Condemned and executed 1947. --
Von Eicken, Professor - Ear, nose and throat specialist.
Attended Hitler in 1935 and again after 20th July 1944.
Giesing, Dr. Erwin - Ear, nose and throat specialist.
Attended Hitler after 20th July 1944.
von Hasselbach, Dr. Hans Karl - Surgeon, deputy to
Brandt until October, 1944.
Morrell, Professor Theodor, Personal Physician to Hitler
whom he last saw on 22nd April 1945. Died 1948.
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CHRONOLOGY OF THE LIFE OF ADOLPH HITLER
1889 (Apr. 20) Born in Braunau, Austria, son of Alois Hitler
(born Alois Schicklgruber), a customs official.
1900-05 In high school (Realschule); first in Linz, then in Steyr.
1903 Father dies.
1905 Drops out of school before graduation.
1907 (Sept.) Fails to gain admission to Academy of Fine Arts in
Vienna.
(Dec.) Mother dies.
1907-13
1913
1914-18
Aimless existence in Vienna; absorbs ideas and techniques
that later became central elements in his political ideology.
Moves to Munich, Germany, probably to avoid military service
in Austrian Army.
Volunteers for service in German Army and serves with
distinction as a courier until incapacitated by poison gas
shortly before the end of the war.
1919 In Munich as political instructor in the postwar German
army (Reichswehr).
(Sept.) Joins German Workers' Party or DAP (later NSDAP).
1920 (Feb. 24) Announces 25 point program of the NSDAP at a mass
meeting in Munich Beer Hall.
(Mar. 31) Resigns from the Reichswehr to devote all his time
to politics.
1921 Becomes Fiihrer of the NSDAP with almost unlimited authority '
in party affairs.
1923 (Nov. 8/9) Leads abortive "Beer-Hall Putsch" in Munich
1924 (Feb./Mar.) Tried for high treason: convicted and sentenced
to 5 years imprisonment at Landsberg.
Writes first volume of Mein Kampf.
(Dec.) Pardoned and released from prison.
1925 (Feb.) Formally reconstitutes NSDAP in Munich.
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1929
1930
World-wide economic depression.
(Sept.) National election raises Reichstag representation of
NSDAP from 12 to 107 seats.
1932 Runs for presidency; gets one-third of votes but loses to
incumbent Hindenburg.
1933 (Jan. 30) Appointed Reich Chancellor by President Hindenburg.
(Feb. 27) Reichstag fire; Hitler blames Communists.
(Feb. 28) Prevails on President Hindenburg to sign an
emergency decree "for the Protection of the People and the
State" suspending those sections of the constitution
guaranteeing individual and civil liberties;
(Mar. 6) NSDAP gets 44% of the vote in the Reichstag election.
(Mar. 24) Reichstag passes so-called (Enabling Act" which in
effect gives Hitler authority to enact laws and to deviate
from the constitution.
(Jul. 14) All political parties except NSDAP outlawed.
1934 (Jun. 30) Purges, S. A.; Riihm and other storm troop leaders
as well as a number of non-Nazi enemies of Hitler shot.
(Aug. 2) Hindenburg dies. Hitler abolishes office of
president and takes title of Fuhrer and Reich Chancellor.
Armed Forces take personal oath to Hitler as Supreme Commander.
1935 (Mar. 16) Announces build-up of Armed Forces and reintroduces
general military conscription - all in Violation of Versailles
Treaty.
(Sept.) Passage of the Anti-Jewish "Nuremberg Laws"
1936 (Mar. 7) Repudiates Locarno Treaty and sends German troops
into Rhineland.
1937 (Nov. 5) Outlines to highest ranking military and civilian
leaders his plans for territorial aggrandizement and war.
(Hassbach Memorandum)
1938 (Feb. 4) Takes direct command of German Armed Forces
(Wehrmacht) in wake of the Blomberg-Fritsch Affair.
Also appoints Ribbentrop foreign minister in place of Neurath.
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1938 (Mar. 13) Annexes Austria (Anschluss)
(Sept./Oct.) Sudetenland crisis; Munich agreement; German
occupation of Sudetenland.
(Nov. 9) Organized program against the Jews of Germany
(Kristallnacht).
1939 (Mar. 15) German troops occupy Czechoslovakia.
(Aug. 23) Nonaggression pact with USSR.
.(Sept.) German invasion of Poland
World War II begins.
(Sept. 3) Gt. Brit. and France declare war on Germany.
1940 (Apr.) German conquest of Denmark and Norway.
(May/Jun.) German conquest of Belgium, Luxembourg and
Netherlands.
France militarily defeated and largely occupied by Wehrmacht.
B.E.F. driven from continent.
1941 German conquest of Yugoslavia and Greece.
(Jun. 22) German invasion of Russia.
Systematic extermination of East European Jewry begins.
(Dec.) Germany declares war on U.S.
German advance in Russia stalled.
Hitler takes personal command of armies.
1942 � (Jan.) Final solution - physical extermination of all Jews
under German control decreed.
� (Summer) Hitler's empire at peak.
(Autumn) Tide of war turns against Hitler.
1943 (Jan./Feb.) Catastrophic German defeat at Stalingrad.
(Jul.) Allied invasion of Sicily and collapse of Mussolini's
regime in Italy.
1944 (Jun. 6) D-Day. Allied invasion of France.
(Jul. 20) Hitler survives assassination attempt by German
Army officers.
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(944 (Sep.) British and American troops reach Germany's western
frontier.
(Dec.) Battle of Bulge fails.
f9.45 (Jan.) Red Army breaks through German defense and advances
rapidly through Eastern Germany.
(Mar.) American troops cross Rhine.
(Apr. 25) Berlin encircled.
(Apr. 29) Marries Eva Braun
(Apr. 30) Commits suicide.
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