DEATH OF ADOLF HITLER
The front cover of ''Time'' magazine, May 7 1945. Although he had committed suicide on April 30 and German radio reported Hitler had died in battle on May 1, his death was widely presumed but not yet confirmed. Note that this portrait is historically inaccurate: Hitler's eyes were blue, not brown. "The most impressive feature of his otherwise coarse and rather undistinguished face was his eyes. They were extraordinarily light blue in color, with a faint touch of greenish-gray" (page 6) -- Robert G. L. Waite. ''The Psychopathic God: Adolf Hitler''. Da Capo Press, 1993. ISBN 0306805146.
:''For fiction about Hitler's death see Hitler in popular culture''
The generally accepted cause of the 'death of Adolf Hitler' on April 30, 1945 is suicide by gunshot and cyanide poisoning. The dual method and other circumstances surrounding the event encouraged rumours that Adolf Hitler may have survived the end of World War II along with speculation about what happened to his remains. The 1993 opening of records kept by the Russian KGB and FSB confirmed the widely accepted version of the death of Hitler as described by Hugh Trevor-Roper in his book ''The Last Days of Hitler'' published in 1947. The Russian archives did, however, shed some new light on what happened to the cadaver.
| Contents |
| Standard account of Hitler's death |
| Later Russian disclosures |
| Miscellanea |
| See also |
| Dramatizations |
| References |
| Further reading |
| Footnotes |
Standard account of Hitler's death
Hitler fled to the Führerbunker on January 16, 1945, where he presided over a rapidly disintegrating Third Reich as the Allies advanced from both east and west. By late April, Soviet forces had entered Berlin and were battling their way to the centre of the city where the Chancellery was located.
On April 22, 1945, Hitler had what some historians have described as a nervous breakdown during one of his military situation conferences, admitting defeat was imminent and Germany would lose the war. He expressed his intent to commit suicide and later asked physician Werner Haase to recommend a method of suicide that would ensure his death. Haase suggested combining a dose of cyanide with a gunshot to the head.
Hitler had a supply of cyanide capsules which he obtained through the SS. Meanwhile on April 28 Hitler learned of Heinrich Himmler's attempt to independently negotiate a peace treaty. Hitler considered this treason and began to show signs of paranoia, expressing worries the cyanide capsules he had received through Himmler's SS were fake. To verify the capsules' potency he ordered Dr. Haase to test them on his dog Blondi and the test was successful.
After midnight on 29 April,Hitler's last days: "Hitler's will and marriage" "In the small hours of 28-29 April.. Hitler married Eva Braun in a small civil ceremony in a map room within the bunker complex. Antony Beevor states that after hosting a modest wedding breakfast with his new wife, Hitler took a secretary, Traudl Junge, to another room and dictated his his last will and testament. He signed these documents at 04:00 and then retired to bed.Beevor References p. 343. Records the marriage as taking place 'before' Hitler had dictated the last will and testament Other sources place Hitler's dictation of the last will and testament before the wedding, but all sources agree that these events occurred before 0400 hours, the time at which the last will and testament were signedHitler's last days: "Hitler's will and marriage" on the website of MI5 using the sources available to Trevor Roper (an WWII MI5 agent) ''The Last Days of Hitler'' records the marriage as taking place 'after' Hitler had dictated the last will and testament.
Hitler and Braun lived together as man and wife in the bunker for less than 40 hours. Late in the morning of April 30, with the Soviets less than 500 metres from the bunker, Hitler had a meeting with General Helmuth Weidling, commander of the Berlin Defense Area, who informed Hitler that the Berlin garrison would probably exhaust their ammunition that night and asked Hitler permission to breakout (a request he had made before and had been refused before). Hitler did not give an immediate answer but, at about 13:00 Weidling, who was back in his headquarters in the Bendlerblock, finally received Hitler's permission to attempt a breakout that night.Beevor, References p.358 After a light lunch, Hitler and Eva Braun then said their personal farewells to members of the Führerbunker staff and fellow occupants, including the Goebbels family, Bormann, the secretaries, and several military officers. At around 14:30, Adolf and Eva Hitler went into Hitler's personal study.
Some witnesses later reported hearing a loud gunshot at around 15:30 (the Goebbels' young son is said to have declared, "A direct hit!" thinking it was a bomb overhead). After waiting a few minutes, Hitler's valet, Heinz Linge, with Bormann at his side, opened the door to the study. Linge later stated he immediately noted a scent of burned almonds in the small study, a common observation made in the presence of prussic acid, a form of cyanide. The Hitlers were both sitting on a small sofa, Eva on the left, Adolf to the right. Eva's body slumped away from Adolf's. Hitler appeared to have shot himself at right temple, with an exit wound towards the top, left side of his head, with a 7.65 mm pistol which lay at his feet. Blood was dripping from Adolf's temple/chin and had made a large stain on the right arm of the sofa and pool on the floor/carpet. Eva had no visible physical wounds and Linge assumed she had poisoned herself.
Several witnesses stated the two bodies were carried up to ground level and through the bunker's emergency exit to a small, bombed-out garden behind the Chancellery where they were doused with petrol and set alight by Linge and members of Hitler's personal SS bodyguard. The SS guards and Linge later noted the fire did not completely destroy the corpses, but Soviet shelling of the bunker compound made further cremation attempts impossible and the remains were later covered up in a shallow bomb crater after 18:00.
Later Russian disclosures
Cover of US newspaper ''The Stars and Stripes'', May 2, 1945.
A book by Soviet journalist Lev Bezymensky on the SMERSH autopsy report was published in the west in 1968 but was associated with other disinformation attempts and considered untrustworthy.
The KGB/FSB opened information to the public in 1993, releasing records and statements by former KGB members. Drawing from these, historians reached a consensus about what happened to the bodies of Hitler and Braun.
Red Army troops began storming the Chancellery at approximately 23:00, about 7 hours and 30 minutes after Hitler's death. On May 2 the remains of Hitler, Braun and two dogs (thought to be Blondi and her offspring Wulf) were discovered in a shell crater by Ivan Churakov of the 79th Rifle Corps (Commonly referred to as ''79th SMERSH'').
After the autopsy, which (contrary to public reports authorized by Stalin in 1945) recorded both gunshot damage to Hitler's skull and glass shards in his jaw, their remains were frequently buried and exhumed by SMERSH during the unit's relocation from Berlin to a new facility at 30-32 Klausnerstrasse in Magdeburg where they (along with the charred remains of propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels, his wife Magda and their six children) were permanently buried in an unmarked grave beneath a paved section of the front courtyard and the location was kept highly secret.
By 1970 the SMERSH facility (now controlled by the KGB) was scheduled to be handed over to the East German government. Fearing the possibility that Hitler's burial site might become a Neo-Nazi shrine, KGB director Yuri Andropov authorised a special operation to destroy the remains. On April 4, 1970 a Soviet KGB team (who had been given detailed burial charts) secretly exhumed the bodies and thoroughly burned them before dumping the ashes in the Elbe river.
Miscellanea
★ July 1943 Pierre J. Huss, chief correspondent in Berlin for the International News Service who had interviewed Hitler several times during the 1930s and 1940s, filed a report which concluded, "But Hitler, unlike ''Il Duce'', probably will ride the storm to the bitter end, wildly spilling oceans of blood in occupied countries and even in the Reich itself, and kill himself rather than follow Mussolini's example and resign." That same year a classified psychological report by the Office of Strategic Services came to the same conclusion.
★ During Hitler's last lunch of spaghetti with a "light sauce," according to the secretaries who ate with him, conversation revolved around dog breeding and how lipstick was made from sewer grease. Both were topics Hitler had brought up on numerous past mealtime occasions.
★ There was a rumour that the fragment of Hitler's skull from the Archives was presented as a gift to Stalin, who then used it as an ashtray. This story may have emerged from a more prosaic tale however, since the fragments were kept for a time in a wooden cigar box by a member of 79th SMERSH.
See also
★ List of suicides
★ Nazi mysticism
Dramatizations
"Head of a country. Can't be voted out of office. I'm Hitler! I'm in a bunker! It's the end of the war!"
★ '' (1973) is a movie depicting the days leading up to Adolf Hitler's death, starring Sir Alec Guinness.
★ ''The Bunker'' (1978) by James O'Donnell, describing the last days in the Führerbunker from 1945-01-17 to 1945-05-02. Made into the TV movie ''The Bunker'' (1981), starring Anthony Hopkins.
★ ''100 Jahre Adolf Hitler - Die letzte Stunde im Führerbunker'' (100 years of Adolf Hitler - the last hour in the Führerbunker) (1989) is a German movie by provocateur Christoph Schlingensief filmed in realtime on location in the remains of the Führerbunker depicting the events in an absurd way as in a madhouse.
★ ''Schtonk!'' (1992), a satirical German movie revolving around the fake of the Hitler Diaries, starts with the burning of the Hitlers' corpses, which is foiled initially by them failing to catch fire.
★ ''Der Untergang'' (engl. ''Downfall'') (2004) is a German movie about the last days of Adolf Hitler and the Third Reich. It also features interviews with Traudl Junge.
★ ''The Twilight Zone'' deals with Hitler's death in two episodes: In "The Man in the Bottle" a mischievous genie twists a pawnbroker's wish for power by putting the man in Hitler's shoes at the end of the Battle of Berlin; and in "He's Alive" the ghost of Hitler tries to inspire for an American neo-Nazi. The latter concludes, "Anyplace, everyplace, where there's hate, where there's prejudice, where there's bigotry ... He's alive because through these things we keep him alive."
References
★ Beevor, Antony, ''Berlin - The Downfall 1945'', Penguin Books, 2002, ISBN 0-670-88695-5
★ Trevor-Roper, Hugh (1947). ''The Last Days of Hitler'', University Of Chicago Press; Reprint 1992, ISBN 0-226-81224-3
Further reading
Main articles: List of Adolf Hitler books
;Books
★ Ryan, Cornelius, ''The Last Battle'', Simon and Schuster, New York, 1966
★ Fest,Joachim. ''Inside Hitler's Bunker : The Last Days of the Third Reich'' by , ISBN 0-374-13577-0
★ Gardner, Dave. ''The Last of the Hitlers'', BMM, Worcester, UK, 2001. ISBN 0-9541544-0-1
★ O'Donnell, James - The Bunker. - New York: Da Capo Press; Reprint(2001). - ISBN 0-306-80958-3.
★ Petrova, Ada. ''The Death of Hitler: The Full Story With New Evidence from Secret Russian Archives'', W W Norton & Co Inc (May 1 1995), ISBN 0-393-03914-5
★ William L. Shirer (1959), ''The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich'', Simon & Schuster; ISBN 0-671-62420-2
★ Waite, Robert G.L. (1977). ''The Psychopathic God: Adolf Hitler'', New York: First DaCapo Press Edition, 1993, ISBN 0-306-80514-6.
;Articles
★ Gavin, Philip. ''The Death of Hitler '', history historyplace.com. An by Philip Gavin on his website.
★ Mollo, Andrew ''No.61 Special Edition: The Berlin Führerbunker: The thirteenth hole'', website After the Battle, Battle of Britain International Ltd, 1988, London
★ Petrova, Ada, and Watson, Peter. '' The Death of Hitler: The Full Story with New Evidence from Secret Russian Archives'', Washington Post, 1995
★ Staff, Russia displays 'Hitler skull fragment', BBC, 26 April, 2000.
Footnotes
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