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Adolf Hitler

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Adolf Hitler[a] (20 April 1889 – 30 April 1945) was an Austrian-born German politician who was the dictator of Germany during the Nazi period from 1933 until his suicide in 1945. He rose to power as the leader of the Nazi Party,[c] becoming the chancellor in 1933 and then taking the title of Führer und Reichskanzler in 1934.[d] His invasion of Poland on 1 September 1939 marked the outbreak of the Second World War. Throughout his leadership in the ensuing conflict, he was closely involved in the direction of German military operations and the perpetration of the Holocaust—the genocide of about six million Jews and millions of other victims.

Hitler was born in Braunau am Inn in Austria-Hungary and moved to Germany in 1913. He was decorated during his service in the German Army in the First World War, receiving the Iron Cross. In 1919, he joined the German Workers' Party (DAP)—the precursor of the Nazi Party—and in 1921, was appointed the leader of the Nazi Party. In 1923, he attempted to seize governmental power in a failed coup in Munich and was sentenced to five years in prison, serving just over a year. While there, he dictated the first volume of his autobiography and political manifesto Mein Kampf (lit.'My Struggle'). After his early release in 1924, he gained popular support by attacking the Treaty of Versailles and promoting pan-Germanism, antisemitism, and anti-communism with charismatic oratory and Nazi propaganda. He frequently denounced communism as being part of an international Jewish conspiracy. By November 1932, the Nazi Party held the most seats in the Reichstag, but not a majority. Former chancellor Franz von Papen and other conservative leaders convinced President Paul von Hindenburg to appoint Hitler as chancellor on 30 January 1933. Shortly thereafter, the Reichstag passed the Enabling Act of 1933, which began the process of transforming the Weimar Republic into Nazi Germany, a one-party dictatorship based upon the totalitarian, autocratic, and fascistic ideology of Nazism.

Upon Hindenburg's death on 2 August 1934, Hitler became simultaneously the head of state and government, with absolute power. Domestically, Hitler implemented numerous racist policies and sought to deport or kill German Jews. His first six years in power resulted in rapid economic recovery from the Great Depression, the abrogation of restrictions imposed on Germany after the First World War, and the annexation of territories inhabited by millions of ethnic Germans, which initially gave him significant popular support. One of Hitler's key goals was Lebensraum (lit.'living space') for the German people in Eastern Europe, and his aggressive, expansionist foreign policy is considered the primary cause of World War II in Europe. He directed large-scale rearmament and, on 1 September 1939, invaded Poland, causing Britain and France to declare war on Germany. In June 1941, Hitler ordered an invasion of the Soviet Union and in December, Germany declared war on the United States. By the end of 1941, German forces and the European Axis powers occupied most of Europe and North Africa. These gains were gradually reversed after 1941, and in 1945 the Allied armies defeated the German army. On 29 April 1945, he married his longtime partner, Eva Braun, in the Führerbunker in Berlin. The couple committed suicide the next day to avoid capture by the Soviet Red Army.

The historian and biographer Ian Kershaw described Hitler as "the embodiment of modern political evil".[3] Under Hitler's leadership and racist ideology, the Nazi regime was responsible for the genocide of an estimated six million Jews and millions of other victims, whom he and his followers deemed Untermenschen (lit.'subhumans') or socially undesirable. Hitler and the Nazi regime were also responsible for the deliberate killing of an estimated 19.3 million civilians and prisoners of war. In addition, 28.7 million soldiers and civilians died as a result of military action in the European theatre. The number of civilians killed during World War II was unprecedented in warfare, and the casualties constitute the deadliest conflict in history.

Ancestry

[edit]

Hitler's father, Alois Hitler, was the illegitimate child of Maria Schicklgruber.[4] The baptismal register did not show the name of his father, and Alois initially bore his mother's surname, "Schicklgruber". In 1842, Johann Georg Hiedler married Alois's mother. Alois was brought up in the family of Hiedler's brother, Johann Nepomuk Hiedler.[5] Alois worked as a civil servant from 1855 until his retirement in 1895.[6] In 1876, Alois was made legitimate and his baptismal record annotated by a priest to register Johann Georg Hiedler as Alois's father (recorded as "Georg Hitler").[7][8] Alois then assumed the surname "Hitler",[8] also spelled "Hiedler", "Hüttler", or "Huettler". The name is probably based on the German word Hütte (lit.'hut'), and has the meaning "one who lives in a hut".[9]

The Nazi official Hans Frank suggested that Alois's mother had been employed as a housekeeper by a Jewish family in Graz, and that the family's 19-year-old son Leopold Frankenberger had fathered Alois, a claim that came to be known as the Frankenberger thesis.[10] No Frankenberger was registered in Graz during that period, and no record has been produced of a Leopold Frankenberger's existence,[11] so historians dismiss the claim that Alois's father was Jewish.[12][13]

Early life

[edit]

Childhood and education

[edit]
Hitler as an infant (c. 1889–90)

Adolf Hitler was born on 20 April 1889 in Braunau am Inn, a town in Austria-Hungary (present-day Austria), close to the border with the German Empire.[14][15] He was the fourth of six children born to Alois Hitler and his third wife, Klara Pölzl. Three of Hitler's siblings—Gustav, Ida, and Otto—died in infancy.[16] Also living in the household were Alois's children from his second marriage: Alois Jr. (born 1882) and Angela (born 1883).[17] In 1892, the family moved to Passau, Germany, following Alois's promotion to the customs administration in Passau. Hitler was three at the time. Alois was promoted and transferred to Linz, Austria, on 1 April 1893, but the rest of the family remained in Passau.[18] There Hitler acquired the distinctive lower Bavarian dialect, rather than Austrian German, which marked his speech throughout his life.[19][20][21] The family returned to Austria and settled in Leonding on 9 May 1894,[22] and in June 1895, Alois retired to Hafeld, near Lambach, where he farmed and kept bees. Hitler attended Volksschule (a state-funded primary school) in nearby Fischlham.[23][24]

The move to Hafeld coincided with the onset of intense father–son conflicts caused by Hitler's refusal to conform to the strict discipline of his school.[25] Alois tried to browbeat his son into obedience, while Adolf did his best to be the opposite of whatever his father wanted.[26] Alois would also beat his son, although his mother tried to protect him from regular beatings.[27]

Alois Hitler's farming efforts at Hafeld were unsuccessful, and in 1897, the family moved to Lambach. The eight-year-old Hitler took singing lessons, sang in the church choir, and even considered becoming a priest.[28] In 1898, the family returned permanently to Leonding. Hitler was deeply affected by the death of his younger brother Edmund in 1900 from measles. Hitler transformed from a confident, outgoing, and conscientious student to a morose, detached boy who frequently clashed with his father and teachers.[29] Paula Hitler recalled that Adolf was a teenage bully who would often slap her.[27]

Alois had made a successful career in the customs bureau and wanted his son to follow in his footsteps.[30] Hitler later dramatised an episode from this period when his father took him to visit a customs office, depicting it as an event that gave rise to an unforgiving antagonism between father and son, who were both strong-willed.[31][32][33] Ignoring his son's desire to attend a classical high school and become an artist, Alois sent Hitler to the Realschule in Linz in September 1900.[e][34] Hitler rebelled against this decision, and in Mein Kampf states that he intentionally performed poorly in school, hoping that once his father saw "what little progress I was making at the technical school he would let me devote myself to my dream".[35]

Hitler's father, Alois, c. 1900
Hitler's mother, Klara, 1870s

Like many Austrian Germans, Hitler began to develop German nationalist ideas from a young age.[36] He expressed loyalty only to Germany, despising the declining Habsburg monarchy and its rule over an ethnically diverse empire.[37][38] Hitler and his friends used the greeting "Heil", and sang the "Deutschlandlied" instead of the Austrian Imperial anthem.[39] After Alois's sudden death on 3 January 1903, Hitler's performance at school deteriorated, and his mother allowed him to leave.[40] He enrolled at the Realschule in Steyr in September 1904, where his behaviour and performance improved.[41] In 1905, after passing a repeat of the final exam, Hitler left the school without any ambitions for further education or clear plans for a career.[42]

Early adulthood in Vienna and Munich

[edit]
The house in Leonding, Austria, where Hitler spent his early adolescence
The Alter Hof in Munich, a watercolour painting by Hitler in 1914

In 1907, Hitler left Linz to live and study fine art in Vienna, financed by orphan's benefits and support from his mother. He applied for admission to the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna but was rejected twice.[43][44] The director suggested Hitler should apply to the School of Architecture, but he lacked the necessary academic credentials because he had not finished secondary school.[45]

On 21 December 1907, his mother died of breast cancer at the age of 47; Hitler was 18 at the time. In 1909, Hitler ran out of money and was forced to live a bohemian life in homeless shelters and the Meldemannstraße dormitory.[46][47] He earned money as a casual labourer and by painting and selling watercolours of Vienna's sights.[43] During his time in Vienna, he pursued a growing passion for architecture and music, attending ten performances of Lohengrin, his favourite of Richard Wagner's operas.[48]

In Vienna, Hitler was first exposed to racist rhetoric.[49] Populists such as mayor Karl Lueger exploited the city's prevalent antisemitic sentiment, occasionally also espousing German nationalist notions for political benefit. German nationalism was even more widespread in the Mariahilf district, where Hitler then lived.[50] Georg Ritter von Schönerer became a major influence on Hitler,[51] and he developed an admiration for Martin Luther.[52] Hitler read local newspapers that promoted prejudice and used Christian fears of being swamped by an influx of Eastern European Jews[53] as well as pamphlets that published the thoughts of philosophers and theoreticians such as Houston Stewart Chamberlain, Charles Darwin, Friedrich Nietzsche, Gustave Le Bon, and Arthur Schopenhauer.[54] During his life in Vienna, Hitler also developed fervent anti-Slavic sentiments.[55][56]

The origin and development of Hitler's antisemitism remain a matter of debate.[57] His friend August Kubizek claimed that Hitler was a "confirmed antisemite" before he left Linz.[58] However, the historian Brigitte Hamann describes Kubizek's claim as "problematical".[59] While Hitler states in Mein Kampf that he first became an antisemite in Vienna,[60] Reinhold Hanisch, who helped him to sell his paintings, disagrees. Hitler had dealings with Jews while living in Vienna.[61][62][63] The historian Richard J. Evans states that "historians now generally agree that his notorious, murderous antisemitism emerged well after Germany's defeat [in World War I], as a product of the paranoid "stab-in-the-back" explanation for the catastrophe".[64]

Hitler received the final part of his father's estate in May 1913 and moved to Munich, Germany.[65] When he was conscripted into the Austro-Hungarian Army,[66] he journeyed to Salzburg on 5 February 1914 for medical assessment. After he was deemed unfit for service, he returned to Munich.[67] Hitler later claimed that he did not wish to serve the Habsburg Empire because of the mixture of races in its army and his belief that the collapse of Austria-Hungary was imminent.[68]

World War I

[edit]
Hitler (far right, seated) with Bavarian Army comrades from the Bavarian Reserve Infantry Regiment 16 (c. 1914–18)

In August 1914, at the outbreak of World War I, Hitler was living in Munich and voluntarily enlisted in the Bavarian Army.[69] According to a 1924 report by the Bavarian authorities, allowing Hitler to serve was most likely an administrative error, because as an Austrian citizen, he should have been returned to Austria.[69] Posted to the Bavarian Reserve Infantry Regiment 16 (1st Company of the List Regiment),[69][70] he served as a dispatch runner on the Western Front in France and Belgium,[71] spending nearly half his time at the regimental headquarters in Fournes-en-Weppes, well behind the front lines.[72][73] In 1914, he was present at the First Battle of Ypres[74] and in that year was decorated for bravery, receiving the Iron Cross, Second Class.[74] During the war, he was saved by his commanding officer, Fritz Wiedemann, who pulled Hitler out of the rubble of a collapsed building while under heavy fire.[75]

During his service at headquarters, Hitler pursued his artistic interests, drawing cartoons and providing instructions for an army newspaper. During the Battle of the Somme in October 1916, he was wounded in the left thigh when a shell exploded in the dispatch runners' dugout.[74][76] Hitler spent almost two months recovering in hospital at Beelitz, returning to his regiment on 5 March 1917.[77] He was present at the Battle of Arras of 1917 and the Battle of Passchendaele.[74] He received the Black Wound Badge on 18 May 1918.[78] Three months later, in August 1918, on a recommendation by Lieutenant Hugo Gutmann, his Jewish superior, Hitler received the Iron Cross, First Class, a decoration rarely awarded at Hitler's Gefreiter rank.[79][80] On 15 October 1918, he was temporarily blinded in a mustard gas attack and was hospitalised in Pasewalk.[81] While there, Hitler learned of Germany's defeat, and, by his own account, suffered a second bout of blindness after receiving this news.[82]

Hitler described his role in World War I as "the greatest of all experiences", and was praised by his commanding officers for his bravery.[83] His wartime experience reinforced his German patriotism, and he was shocked by Germany's capitulation in November 1918.[84] His displeasure with the collapse of the war effort began to shape his ideology.[85] Like other German nationalists, he believed the Dolchstoßlegende (stab-in-the-back myth), which claimed that the German army, "undefeated in the field", had been "stabbed in the back" on the home front by civilian leaders, Jews, Marxists, and those who signed the armistice that ended the fighting—later dubbed the "November criminals".[86]

The Treaty of Versailles stipulated that Germany had to relinquish several of its territories and demilitarise the Rhineland. The treaty imposed economic sanctions and levied heavy reparations on the country. Many Germans saw the treaty as an unjust humiliation. They especially objected to Article 231, which they interpreted as declaring Germany responsible for the war.[87] The Versailles Treaty and the economic, social, and political conditions in Germany after the war were later exploited by Hitler for political gain.[88]

Entry into politics

[edit]
Hitler's German Workers' Party (DAP) membership card

After the war, Hitler returned to Munich.[89] Without formal education or career prospects, he remained in the Army.[90] In July 1919, he was appointed Verbindungsmann (intelligence agent) of an Aufklärungskommando (reconnaissance unit) of the Reichswehr, assigned to influence other soldiers and to infiltrate the German Workers' Party (DAP). At a DAP meeting on 12 September 1919, Party chairman Anton Drexler was impressed by Hitler's oratorical skills. He gave him a copy of his pamphlet My Political Awakening, which contained antisemitic, nationalist, anti-capitalist, and anti-Marxist ideas.[91] On the orders of his army superiors, Hitler applied to join the party,[92] and within a week was accepted as party member 555 (the party began counting membership at 500 to give the impression they were a much larger party).[93][94]

Hitler made his earliest known written statement about the Jewish question in a 16 September 1919 letter to Adolf Gemlich (now known as the Gemlich letter). In the letter, Hitler argues that the aim of the government "must unshakably be the removal of the Jews altogether".[95] At the DAP, Hitler met Dietrich Eckart, one of the party's founders and a member of the occult Thule Society.[96] Eckart became Hitler's mentor, exchanging ideas with him and introducing him to a wide range of Munich society.[97] To increase its appeal, the DAP changed its name to the Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei (National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSDAP), now known as the "Nazi Party").[98] Hitler designed the party's banner of a swastika in a white circle on a red background.[99]

Hitler was discharged from the Army on 31 March 1920 and began working full-time for the party.[100] The party headquarters was in Munich, a centre for anti-government German nationalists determined to eliminate Marxism and undermine the Weimar Republic.[101]

Friedrich Reck-Malleczewen commented in his 1947 book Diary of a Man in Despair:

He had come to a house where he had never been before, wearing gaiters, a floppy, wide-brimmed hat, and carrying a riding whip.... Eventually, he managed to launch into a speech. He talked on and on, endlessly. He preached. He went on at us like a division chaplain in the Army. We did not in the least contradict him, or venture to differ in any way, but he began to bellow at us. The servants thought we were being attacked, and rushed in to defend us. When he had gone, we sat silently confused and not at all amused. There was a feeling of dismay, as when on a train you suddenly find you are sharing a compartment with a psychotic.[102]

In February 1921—already highly effective at crowd manipulation—Hitler spoke to a crowd of over 6,000.[103] To publicise the meeting, two truckloads of party supporters drove around Munich waving swastika flags and distributing leaflets. Hitler soon gained notoriety for his rowdy polemic speeches against the Treaty of Versailles, rival politicians, and especially against Marxists and Jews.[104]

Hitler poses for the camera in September 1930

In June 1921, while Hitler and Eckart were on a fundraising trip to Berlin, a mutiny broke out within the Nazi Party in Munich. Members of its executive committee wanted to merge with the Nuremberg-based German Socialist Party (DSP).[105] Hitler returned to Munich on 11 July and angrily tendered his resignation. The committee members realised that the resignation of their leading public figure and speaker would mean the end of the party.[106] Hitler announced he would rejoin on the condition that he would replace Drexler as party chairman, and that the party headquarters would remain in Munich.[107] The committee agreed, and he rejoined the party on 26 July as member 3,680. Hitler continued to face some opposition within the Nazi Party. Opponents of Hitler in the leadership had Hermann Esser expelled from the party, and they printed 3,000 copies of a pamphlet attacking Hitler as a traitor to the party.[107][f] In the following days, Hitler spoke to several large audiences and defended himself and Esser, to thunderous applause. His strategy proved successful, and at a special party congress on 29 July, he was granted absolute power as party chairman, succeeding Drexler, by a vote of 533 to 1.[108]

Hitler's vitriolic beer hall speeches began attracting regular audiences. A demagogue,[109] he became adept at using populist themes, including the use of scapegoats, who were blamed for his listeners' economic hardships.[110][111][112] Hitler used personal magnetism and an understanding of crowd psychology to his advantage while engaged in public speaking.[113][114] Historians have noted the hypnotic effect of his rhetoric on large audiences, and of his eyes in small groups.[115] Alfons Heck, a former member of the Hitler Youth, recalled:

We erupted into a frenzy of nationalistic pride that bordered on hysteria. For minutes on end, we shouted at the top of our lungs, with tears streaming down our faces: Sieg Heil, Sieg Heil, Sieg Heil! From that moment on, I belonged to Adolf Hitler body and soul.[116]

Early followers included Rudolf Hess, the former air force ace Hermann Göring, and the army captain Ernst Röhm. Röhm became head of the Nazis' paramilitary organisation, the Sturmabteilung (SA, "Stormtroopers"), which protected meetings and attacked political opponents. A critical influence on Hitler's thinking during this period was the Aufbau Vereinigung,[117] a conspiratorial group of White Russian exiles and early Nazis. The group, financed with funds channelled from wealthy industrialists, introduced Hitler to the idea of a Jewish conspiracy, linking international finance with Bolshevism.[118]

The programme of the Nazi Party was laid out in their 25-point programme on 24 February 1920. This did not represent a coherent ideology, but was a conglomeration of received ideas which had currency in the völkisch pan-Germanic movement, such as ultranationalism, opposition to the Treaty of Versailles, distrust of capitalism, as well as some socialist ideas. For Hitler, the most important aspect of it was its strong antisemitic stance. He also perceived the programme as primarily a basis for propaganda and for attracting people to the party.[119]

Beer Hall Putsch and Landsberg Prison

[edit]
Defendants in the Beer Hall Putsch trial, 1 April 1924. From left to right: Heinz Pernet, Friedrich Weber, Wilhelm Frick, Hermann Kriebel, Erich Ludendorff, Hitler, Wilhelm Brückner, Ernst Röhm, and Robert Wagner.
The dust jacket of Mein Kampf's 1926–28 edition, which Hitler authored in 1925

In 1923, Hitler enlisted the help of World War I General Erich Ludendorff for an attempted coup known as the "Beer Hall Putsch". The Nazi Party used Italian Fascism as a model for their appearance and policies. Hitler wanted to emulate Benito Mussolini's "March on Rome" of 1922 by staging his own coup in Bavaria, to be followed by a challenge to the government in Berlin. Hitler and Ludendorff sought the support of Staatskommissar (State Commissioner) Gustav Ritter von Kahr, Bavaria's de facto ruler. However, Kahr, along with Police Chief Hans Ritter von Seisser and Reichswehr General Otto von Lossow, wanted to install a nationalist dictatorship without Hitler.[120]

On 8 November 1923, Hitler and the SA stormed a public meeting of 3,000 people organised by Kahr in the Bürgerbräukeller, a beer hall in Munich. Interrupting Kahr's speech, he announced that the national revolution had begun and declared the formation of a new government with Ludendorff.[121] Retiring to a back room, Hitler, with his pistol drawn, demanded and subsequently received the support of Kahr, Seisser, and Lossow.[121] Hitler's forces initially succeeded in occupying the local Reichswehr and police headquarters, but Kahr and his cohorts quickly withdrew their support. Neither the Army nor the state police joined forces with Hitler.[122] The next day, Hitler and his followers marched from the beer hall to the Bavarian War Ministry to overthrow the Bavarian government, but police dispersed them.[123] In the failed coup, 16 Nazi Party members and four police officers were killed.[124]

Hitler fled to the home of Ernst Hanfstaengl and by some accounts contemplated suicide.[125] He was depressed but calm when arrested on 11 November 1923 for high treason.[126] His trial before the special People's Court in Munich began in February 1924,[127] and Alfred Rosenberg became temporary leader of the Nazi Party. On 1 April, Hitler was sentenced to five years' Festungshaft ('fortress confinement') at Landsberg Prison.[128] There, he received friendly treatment from the guards and was allowed mail from supporters and regular visits by party comrades. Pardoned by the Bavarian Supreme Court, he was released from jail on 20 December 1924, against the state prosecutor's objections.[129] Including time on remand, Hitler served just over one year in prison.[130]

While at Landsberg, Hitler dictated most of the first volume of Mein Kampf (lit.'My Struggle'; originally titled Four and a Half Years of Struggle against Lies, Stupidity, and Cowardice) at first to his chauffeur, Emil Maurice, and then to his deputy, Rudolf Hess.[130][131] The book, dedicated to Thule Society member Dietrich Eckart, was an autobiography and exposition of his ideology. The book laid out Hitler's plans for territorial expansion as well as transforming German society into a dictatorship based on race. Throughout the book, Jews are equated with "germs" and presented as the "international poisoners" of society. According to Hitler's ideology, the only solution was their extermination. While Hitler did not describe exactly how this was to be accomplished, his "inherent genocidal thrust is undeniable", according to Ian Kershaw.[132]

Published in two volumes in 1925 and 1926, Mein Kampf sold 228,000 copies between 1925 and 1932. One million copies were sold in 1933, Hitler's first year in office.[133] Shortly before Hitler was eligible for parole, the Bavarian government attempted to have him deported to Austria.[134] The Austrian federal chancellor rejected the request on the specious grounds that his service in the German Army made his Austrian citizenship void.[135] In response, Hitler formally renounced his Austrian citizenship on 7 April 1925.[135]

Rebuilding the Nazi Party

[edit]

At the time of Hitler's release from prison, politics in Germany had become less combative, and the economy had improved, limiting Hitler's opportunities for political agitation. As a result of the failed Beer Hall Putsch, the Nazi Party and its affiliated organisations were banned in Bavaria. In a meeting with the Prime Minister of Bavaria, Heinrich Held, on 4 January 1925, Hitler agreed to respect the state's authority and promised that he would seek political power only through the democratic process. The meeting paved the way for the ban on the Nazi Party to be lifted on 16 February.[136]

However, after an inflammatory speech he gave on 27 February, Hitler was barred from public speaking by the Bavarian authorities, a ban that remained in place until 1927.[137][138] To advance his political ambitions in spite of the ban, Hitler appointed Gregor Strasser, Otto Strasser, and Joseph Goebbels to organise and enlarge the Nazi Party in northern Germany. Gregor Strasser steered a more independent political course, emphasising the socialist elements of the party's programme.[139]

The stock market in the United States crashed on 24 October 1929. The impact in Germany was dire: millions became unemployed, and several major banks collapsed. Hitler and the Nazi Party prepared to take advantage of the emergency to gain support for their party. They promised to repudiate the Versailles Treaty, strengthen the economy, and provide jobs.[140]

Rise to power

[edit]
Nazi Party election results[141]
Election Total votes % votes Reichstag seats Notes
May 1924 1,918,300 6.5 32 Hitler in prison
December 1924 907,300 3.0 14 Hitler released from prison
May 1928 810,100 2.6 12  
September 1930 6,409,600 18.3 107 After the financial crisis
July 1932 13,745,000 37.3 230 After Hitler was candidate for presidency
November 1932 11,737,000 33.1 196  
March 1933 17,277,180 43.9 288 Only partially free during Hitler's term as chancellor of Germany

Brüning administration

[edit]

The Great Depression provided a political opportunity for Hitler. Germans were ambivalent about the parliamentary republic, which faced challenges from right- and left-wing extremists. The moderate political parties were increasingly unable to stem the tide of extremism, and the German referendum of 1929 helped to elevate Nazi ideology.[142] The elections of September 1930 resulted in the break-up of a grand coalition and its replacement with a minority cabinet. Its leader, chancellor Heinrich Brüning of the Centre Party, governed through emergency decrees from President Paul von Hindenburg. Governance by decree became the new norm, paving the way for authoritarian forms of government.[143] The Nazi Party rose from obscurity to win 18.3 per cent of the vote and 107 parliamentary seats in the 1930 election, becoming the second-largest party in parliament.[144]

Hitler and Nazi Party treasurer Franz Xaver Schwarz at the dedication of the renovation of the Palais Barlow on Brienner Straße in Munich into the Brown House headquarters, December 1930

Hitler made a prominent appearance at the trial of two Reichswehr officers, Lieutenants Richard Scheringer and Hanns Ludin, in late 1930. Both were charged with membership in the Nazi Party, at that time illegal for Reichswehr personnel.[145] The prosecution argued that the Nazi Party was an extremist party, prompting defence lawyer Hans Frank to call on Hitler to testify.[146] On 25 September 1930, Hitler testified that his party would pursue political power solely through democratic elections,[147] which won him many supporters in the officer corps.[148]

Brüning's austerity measures brought little economic improvement and were extremely unpopular.[149] Hitler exploited this by targeting his political messages specifically at people who had been affected by the inflation of the 1920s and the Depression, such as farmers, war veterans, and the middle class.[150]

Although Hitler had terminated his Austrian citizenship in 1925, he did not acquire German citizenship for almost seven years. This meant that he was stateless, legally unable to run for public office, and still faced the risk of deportation.[151] On 25 February 1932, the interior minister of Brunswick, Dietrich Klagges, who was a member of the Nazi Party, appointed Hitler as administrator for the state's delegation to the Reichsrat in Berlin, making Hitler a citizen of Brunswick,[152] and thus of Germany.[153]

Hitler ran against Hindenburg in the 1932 presidential election. A speech to the Industry Club in Düsseldorf on 27 January 1932 won him support from many of Germany's most powerful industrialists.[154] Hindenburg had support from various nationalist, monarchist, Catholic, and republican parties, and some Social Democrats. Hitler used the campaign slogan "Hitler über Deutschland" ("Hitler over Germany"), a reference to his political ambitions and his campaigning by aircraft.[155] He was one of the first politicians to use aircraft travel for campaigning and used it effectively.[156][157] Hitler came in second in both rounds of the election, garnering more than 35 per cent of the vote in the final election. Although he lost to Hindenburg, this election established Hitler as a strong force in German politics.[158]

Appointment as chancellor

[edit]
Hitler, at a window of the Reich Chancellery, receives an ovation on the evening of his inauguration as chancellor, 30 January 1933

The absence of an effective government prompted two influential politicians, Franz von Papen and Alfred Hugenberg, along with several other industrialists and businessmen, to write a letter to Hindenburg. The signers urged Hindenburg to appoint Hitler as leader of a government "independent from parliamentary parties", which could turn into a movement that would "enrapture millions of people".[159][160]

Hindenburg reluctantly agreed to appoint Hitler as chancellor after two further parliamentary elections—in July and November 1932—had not resulted in the formation of a majority government. Hitler headed a short-lived coalition government formed by the Nazi Party (which had the most seats in the Reichstag) and Hugenberg's party, the German National People's Party (DNVP). On 30 January 1933, the new cabinet was sworn in during a brief ceremony in Hindenburg's office. The Nazi Party gained three posts: Hitler was named chancellor, Wilhelm Frick Minister of the Interior, and Hermann Göring Minister of the Interior for Prussia.[161] Hitler had insisted on the ministerial positions as a way to gain control over the police in much of Germany.[162]

Reichstag fire and March elections

[edit]

As chancellor, Hitler worked against attempts by the Nazi Party's opponents to build a majority government. Because of the political stalemate, he asked Hindenburg to again dissolve the Reichstag, and elections were scheduled for early March. On 27 February 1933, the Reichstag building was set on fire. Göring blamed a communist plot, as the Dutch communist Marinus van der Lubbe was found in incriminating circumstances inside the burning building.[163] Until the 1960s, some historians, including William L. Shirer and Alan Bullock, thought the Nazi Party was responsible;[164][165] now the view of most historians is van der Lubbe started the fire alone.[166]

At Hitler's urging, Hindenburg responded by signing the Reichstag Fire Decree of 28 February, drafted by the Nazis, which suspended basic rights and allowed detention without trial. The decree was permitted under Article 48 of the Weimar Constitution, which gave the president the power to take emergency measures to protect public safety and order.[167] Activities of the German Communist Party (KPD) were suppressed, and 4,000 KPD members were arrested.[168]

In addition to political campaigning, the Nazi Party engaged in paramilitary violence and the spread of anti-communist propaganda, in the days preceding the election. On election day, 6 March 1933, the Nazi's share of the vote increased to 44%, and the party acquired the largest number of seats in parliament. Hitler's party failed to secure an absolute majority, necessitating another coalition with the DNVP.[169]

Day of Potsdam and the Enabling Act

[edit]
Hitler and Paul von Hindenburg on the Day of Potsdam, 21 March 1933

On 21 March 1933, the new Reichstag was constituted with an opening ceremony at the Garrison Church in Potsdam. This "Day of Potsdam" was held to demonstrate unity between the Nazi movement and the old Prussian elite and military. Hitler appeared in a morning coat and humbly greeted Hindenburg.[170][171]

To achieve full political control despite not having an absolute majority in parliament, Hitler's government brought the Ermächtigungsgesetz (Enabling Act) to a vote in the newly elected Reichstag. The Act—officially titled the Gesetz zur Behebung der Not von Volk und Reich ("Law to Remedy the Distress of People and Reich")—gave Hitler's cabinet the power to enact laws without the consent of the Reichstag for four years. These laws could (with certain exceptions) deviate from the constitution.[172]

Since it would affect the constitution, the Enabling Act required a two-thirds majority to pass. Leaving nothing to chance, the Nazis used the provisions of the Reichstag Fire Decree to arrest all 81 Communist deputies (in spite of their virulent campaign against the party, the Nazis had allowed the KPD to contest the election)[173] and prevent several Social Democrats from attending.[174]

On 23 March 1933, the Reichstag assembled at the Kroll Opera House under turbulent circumstances. Ranks of SA men served as guards inside the building, while large groups outside, opposing the proposed legislation, shouted slogans and threats towards the arriving members of parliament.[175] After Hitler verbally promised Centre party leader Ludwig Kaas that Hindenburg would retain his power of veto, Kaas announced the Centre Party would support the Enabling Act. The Act was passed by a vote of 444–94, with all parties except the Social Democrats voting in favour. The Enabling Act, along with the Reichstag Fire Decree, transformed Hitler's government into a de facto legal dictatorship.[176]

Dictatorship

[edit]

At the risk of appearing to talk nonsense I tell you that the National Socialist movement will go on for 1,000 years! ... Don't forget how people laughed at me 15 years ago when I declared that one day I would govern Germany. They laugh now, just as foolishly, when I declare that I shall remain in power![177]

— Adolf Hitler to a British correspondent in Berlin, June 1934

Having achieved full control over the legislative and executive branches of government, Hitler and his allies began to suppress the remaining opposition. The Social Democratic Party was made illegal, and its assets were seized.[178] While many trade union delegates were in Berlin for May Day activities, SA stormtroopers occupied union offices around the country. On 2 May 1933, all trade unions were forced to dissolve, and their leaders were arrested. Some were sent to concentration camps.[179] The German Labour Front was formed as an umbrella organisation to represent all workers, administrators, and company owners, thus reflecting the concept of Nazism in the spirit of Hitler's Volksgemeinschaft ("people's community").[180]

In 1934, Hitler became Germany's head of state with the title of Führer und Reichskanzler (leader and chancellor of the Reich).

By the end of June, the other parties had been intimidated into disbanding. This included the Nazis' nominal coalition partner, the DNVP; with the SA's help, Hitler forced its leader, Hugenberg, to resign on 29 June. On 14 July 1933, the Nazi Party was declared the only legal political party in Germany.[180][178] The demands of the SA for more political and military power caused anxiety among military, industrial, and political leaders. In response, Hitler purged the entire SA leadership in the Night of the Long Knives, which took place from 30 June to 2 July 1934.[181] Hitler targeted Ernst Röhm and other SA leaders who, along with a number of Hitler's political adversaries (such as Gregor Strasser and former chancellor Kurt von Schleicher), were rounded up, arrested, and shot.[182] While the international community and some Germans were shocked by the killings, many in Germany believed Hitler was restoring order.[183]

Hindenburg died on 2 August 1934. On the previous day, the cabinet had enacted the Law Concerning the Head of State of the German Reich.[2] This law stated that upon Hindenburg's death, the office of president would be abolished, and its powers merged with those of the chancellor. Hitler thus became head of state as well as head of government and was formally named as Führer und Reichskanzler (Leader and Chancellor of the Reich),[1] although Reichskanzler was eventually dropped.[184] With this action, Hitler eliminated the last legal remedy by which he could be removed from office.[185]

As head of state, Hitler became commander-in-chief of the armed forces. Immediately after Hindenburg's death, at the instigation of the leadership of the Reichswehr, the traditional loyalty oath of soldiers was altered to affirm loyalty to Hitler personally, by name, rather than to the office of commander-in-chief (which was later renamed to supreme commander) or to Germany.[186] On 19 August, the merger of the presidency with the chancellorship was approved by 88 per cent of the electorate voting in a plebiscite.[187]

Hitler's personal standard

In early 1938, Hitler used blackmail to consolidate his hold over the military by instigating the Blomberg–Fritsch affair. Hitler forced his War Minister, Field Marshal Werner von Blomberg, to resign by using a police dossier that showed that Blomberg's new wife had a record for prostitution.[188][189] Army commander Colonel-General Werner von Fritsch was removed after the Schutzstaffel (SS) produced allegations that he had engaged in a homosexual relationship.[190] Both men had fallen into disfavour because they objected to Hitler's demand to make the Wehrmacht ready for war as early as 1938.[191] Hitler assumed Blomberg's title of Commander-in-Chief, thus taking personal command of the armed forces.[192] He replaced the Ministry of War with the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (OKW), headed by General Wilhelm Keitel. On the same day, 16 generals were stripped of their commands and 44 more were transferred; all were suspected of not being sufficiently pro-Nazi.[193] By early February 1938, 12 more generals had been removed.[194]

Hitler took care to give his dictatorship the appearance of legality. Many of his decrees were explicitly based on the Reichstag Fire Decree and hence on Article 48 of the Weimar Constitution. The Reichstag renewed the Enabling Act twice, each time for a four-year period.[195] While elections to the Reichstag were still held (in 1933, 1936, and 1938), voters were presented with a single list of Nazis and pro-Nazi "guests" which received well over 90 per cent of the vote.[196] These sham elections were held in far-from-secret conditions; the Nazis threatened severe reprisals against anyone who did not vote or who voted against.[197]

Nazi Germany

[edit]
Hitler, Heinrich Himmler, and SA chief Viktor Lutze render the Nazi salute at the 1934 Nuremberg Rally

Economy and culture

[edit]

In August 1934, Hitler appointed Reichsbank President Hjalmar Schacht as Minister of Economics, and in the following year, as Plenipotentiary for War Economy in charge of preparing the economy for war.[198] Reconstruction and rearmament were financed through Mefo bills, printing money, and seizing the assets of people arrested as enemies of the state, including Jews.[199] The number of unemployed fell from six million in 1932 to fewer than one million in 1936.[200] Hitler oversaw one of the largest infrastructure improvement campaigns in German history, leading to the construction of dams, autobahns, railroads, and other civil works. Wages were slightly lower in the mid- to late 1930s compared with wages during the Weimar Republic, while the cost of living increased by 25 per cent.[201] The average workweek increased during the shift to a war economy; by 1939, the average German was working between 47 and 50 hours a week.[202]

Hitler's government sponsored architecture on an immense scale. Albert Speer, instrumental in implementing Hitler's classicist reinterpretation of German culture, was placed in charge of the proposed architectural renovations of Berlin.[203] Despite a threatened multi-nation boycott, Germany hosted the 1936 Olympic Games. Hitler officiated at the opening ceremonies and attended events at both the Winter Games in Garmisch-Partenkirchen and the Summer Games in Berlin.[204]

Rearmament and new alliances

[edit]

In a meeting with German military leaders on 3 February 1933, Hitler spoke of "conquest for Lebensraum in the East and its ruthless Germanisation" as his ultimate foreign policy objectives.[205] In March, Prince Bernhard Wilhelm von Bülow, secretary at the Foreign Office (Auswärtiges Amt), issued a statement of major foreign policy aims: Anschluss with Austria, the restoration of Germany's national borders of 1914, rejection of military restrictions under the Treaty of Versailles, the return of the former German colonies in Africa, and a German zone of influence in Eastern Europe. Hitler found Bülow's goals to be too modest.[206] In speeches during this period, he stressed what he termed the peaceful goals of his policies and a willingness to work within international agreements.[207] At the first meeting of his cabinet in 1933, Hitler prioritised military spending over unemployment relief.[208]

Germany withdrew from the League of Nations and the World Disarmament Conference in October 1933.[209] In January 1935, over 90 per cent of the people of the Saarland, then under League of Nations administration, voted to unite with Germany.[210] That March, Hitler announced an expansion of the Wehrmacht to 600,000 members—six times the number permitted by the Versailles Treaty—including development of an air force (Luftwaffe) and an increase in the size of the navy (Kriegsmarine). Britain, France, Italy, and the League of Nations condemned these violations of the Treaty but did nothing to stop it.[211][212] The Anglo-German Naval Agreement (AGNA) of 18 June allowed German tonnage to increase to 35 per cent of that of the Royal Navy. Hitler called the signing of the AGNA "the happiest day of his life", believing that the agreement marked the beginning of the Anglo-German alliance he had predicted in Mein Kampf.[213] France and Italy were not consulted before the signing, directly undermining the League of Nations and setting the Treaty of Versailles on the path towards irrelevance.[214]

Germany reoccupied the demilitarised zone in the Rhineland in March 1936, in violation of the Versailles Treaty. Hitler also sent troops to Spain to support Francisco Franco and his Nationalist faction during the Spanish Civil War after receiving an appeal for help in July 1936. At the same time, Hitler continued his efforts to create an Anglo-German alliance.[215] In August 1936, in response to a growing economic crisis caused by his rearmament efforts, Hitler ordered Göring to implement a Four Year Plan to prepare Germany for war within the next four years.[216] The plan envisaged an all-out struggle between "Judaeo-Bolshevism" and German Nazism, which in Hitler's view required a committed effort of rearmament regardless of the economic costs.[217]

In October 1936, Count Galeazzo Ciano, foreign minister of Mussolini's government, visited Germany, where he signed a Nine-Point Protocol as an expression of rapprochement and had a personal meeting with Hitler. On 1 November, Mussolini declared an "axis" between Germany and Italy.[218] On 25 November, Germany signed the Anti-Comintern Pact with Japan. Britain, China, Italy, and Poland were also invited to join the Anti-Comintern Pact, but only Italy signed in 1937. Hitler abandoned his plan of an Anglo-German alliance, blaming "inadequate" British leadership.[219] At a meeting in the Reich Chancellery with his foreign ministers and military chiefs that November, Hitler restated his intention of acquiring Lebensraum for the German people. He ordered preparations for war in the East to begin as early as 1938 and no later than 1943. In the event of his death, the conference minutes, recorded as the Hossbach Memorandum, were to be regarded as his "political testament".[220] He felt that a severe decline in living standards in Germany as a result of the economic crisis could only be stopped by military aggression aimed at seizing Austria and Czechoslovakia.[221][222] Hitler urged quick action before Britain and France gained a permanent lead in the arms race.[221] In early 1938, in the wake of the Blomberg–Fritsch affair, Hitler asserted control of the military-foreign policy apparatus, dismissing Neurath as foreign minister and appointing himself as War Minister.[216] From early 1938 onwards, Hitler was carrying out a foreign policy ultimately aimed at war.[223]

World War II

[edit]

Early diplomatic successes

[edit]
Hitler and the Japanese foreign minister, Yōsuke Matsuoka, at a meeting in Berlin in March 1941. In the background is Joachim von Ribbentrop.

Alliance with Japan

[edit]

In February 1938, on the advice of his newly appointed foreign minister, the strongly pro-Japanese Joachim von Ribbentrop, Hitler ended the Sino-German alliance with the Republic of China to instead enter into an alliance with the more modern and powerful Empire of Japan. Hitler announced German recognition of Manchukuo, the Japanese puppet state in Manchuria, and renounced German claims to their former colonies in the Pacific held by Japan.[224] Hitler ordered an end to arms shipments to China and recalled all German officers working with the Chinese Army.[224] In retaliation, Chinese General Chiang Kai-shek cancelled all Sino-German economic agreements, depriving the Germans of many Chinese raw materials.[225]

Austria and Czechoslovakia

[edit]
October 1938: Hitler is driven through the crowd in Cheb (German: Eger), in the Sudetenland

On 12 March 1938, Hitler announced the unification of Austria with Nazi Germany in the Anschluss.[226][227] Hitler then turned his attention to the ethnic German population of the Sudetenland region of Czechoslovakia.[228] On 28–29 March 1938, Hitler held a series of secret meetings in Berlin with Konrad Henlein of the Sudeten German Party, the largest of the ethnic German parties of the Sudetenland. The men agreed that Henlein would demand increased autonomy for Sudeten Germans from the Czechoslovak government, thus providing a pretext for German military action against Czechoslovakia. In April 1938, Henlein told the foreign minister of Hungary that "whatever the Czech government might offer, he would always raise still higher demands ... he wanted to sabotage an understanding by any means because this was the only method to blow up Czechoslovakia quickly".[229] In private, Hitler considered the Sudeten issue unimportant; his real intention was a war of conquest against Czechoslovakia.[230]

In April, Hitler ordered the OKW to prepare for Fall Grün (Case Green), the code name for an invasion of Czechoslovakia.[231] As a result of intense French and British diplomatic pressure, on 5 September, Czechoslovak President Edvard Beneš unveiled the "Fourth Plan" for constitutional reorganisation of his country, which agreed to most of Henlein's demands for Sudeten autonomy.[232] Henlein's party responded to Beneš' offer by instigating a series of violent clashes with the Czechoslovak police that led to the declaration of martial law in certain Sudeten districts.[233][234]

Germany was dependent on imported oil; a confrontation with Britain over the Czechoslovak dispute could curtail Germany's oil supplies. This forced Hitler to call off Fall Grün, originally planned for 1 October 1938.[235] On 29 September, Hitler, Neville Chamberlain, Édouard Daladier, and Mussolini attended a one-day conference in Munich that led to the Munich Agreement, which handed over the Sudetenland districts to Germany.[236][237]

Chamberlain was satisfied with the Munich conference, calling the outcome "peace for our time", while Hitler was angered about the missed opportunity for war in 1938;[238][239] he expressed his disappointment in a speech on 9 October in Saarbrücken.[240] In Hitler's view, the British-brokered peace, although favourable to the ostensible German demands, was a diplomatic defeat which spurred his intent of limiting British power to pave the way for the eastern expansion of Germany.[241][242] As a result of the summit, Hitler was selected Time magazine's Man of the Year for 1938.[243] In late 1938 and early 1939, the continuing economic crisis caused by rearmament forced Hitler to make major defence cuts.[244] In his "Export or die" speech of 30 January 1939, he called for an economic offensive to increase German foreign exchange holdings to pay for raw materials such as high-grade iron needed for military weapons.[244]

On 14 March 1939, under threat from Hungary, Slovakia declared independence and received protection from Germany.[245] The next day, in violation of the Munich Agreement and possibly as a result of the deepening economic crisis requiring additional assets,[246] Hitler ordered the Wehrmacht to invade the Czech rump state, and from Prague Castle he proclaimed the territory a German protectorate.[247]

Start of World War II

[edit]
Boundaries of the Nazi-planned Greater Germanic Reich
Hitler and Benito Mussolini stand together on a reviewing stand during Mussolini's official visit in Munich

In private discussions in 1939, Hitler declared Britain the main enemy to be defeated and that Poland's obliteration was a necessary prelude for that goal.[248] The eastern flank would be secured and land would be added to Germany's Lebensraum.[249] Offended by the British "guarantee" on 31 March 1939 of Polish independence, he said, "I shall brew them a devil's drink".[250] In a speech in Wilhelmshaven for the launch of the battleship Tirpitz on 1 April, he threatened to denounce the Anglo-German Naval Agreement if the British continued to guarantee Polish independence, which he perceived as an "encirclement" policy.[250] Poland was to either become a German satellite state or it would be neutralised to secure the Reich's eastern flank and prevent a possible British blockade.[251]

Hitler initially favoured the idea of a satellite state, but upon its rejection by the Polish government, he decided to invade and made this the main foreign policy goal of 1939.[252] On 3 April, Hitler ordered the military to prepare for Fall Weiss ("Case White"), the plan for invading Poland on 25 August.[252] In a Reichstag speech on 28 April, he renounced both the Anglo-German Naval Agreement and the German–Polish Non-Aggression Pact.[253] Historians such as William Carr, Gerhard Weinberg, and Ian Kershaw have argued that one reason for Hitler's rush to war was his fear of an early death. He had repeatedly claimed that he must lead Germany into war before he got too old, as his successors might lack his strength of will.[254][255][256] Hitler was concerned that a military attack against Poland could result in a premature war with Britain.[251][257] Hitler's foreign minister and former Ambassador to London, Joachim von Ribbentrop, assured him that neither Britain nor France would honour its commitments to Poland.[258][259] Accordingly, on 22 August 1939 Hitler ordered a military mobilisation against Poland.[260]

This plan required tacit Soviet support,[261] and the non-aggression pact (the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact) between Germany and the Soviet Union, led by Joseph Stalin, included a secret agreement to partition Poland between the two countries.[262] Contrary to Ribbentrop's prediction that Britain would sever Anglo-Polish ties, Britain and Poland signed the Anglo-Polish alliance on 25 August 1939. This, along with news from Italy that Mussolini would not honour the Pact of Steel, prompted Hitler to postpone the attack on Poland from 25 August to 1 September.[263] Hitler unsuccessfully tried to manoeuvre the British into neutrality by offering them a non-aggression guarantee on 25 August; he then instructed Ribbentrop to present a last-minute peace plan with an impossibly short time limit in an effort to blame the imminent war on British and Polish inaction.[264][265]

On 1 September 1939, Germany invaded western Poland under the pretext of having been denied claims to the Free City of Danzig and the right to extraterritorial roads across the Polish Corridor, which Germany had ceded under the Versailles Treaty.[266] In response, Britain and France declared war on Germany on 3 September, surprising Hitler and prompting him to angrily ask Ribbentrop, "Now what?"[267] France and Britain did not act on their declarations immediately, and on 17 September, Soviet forces invaded eastern Poland.[268]

Hitler reviews troops on the march during the campaign against Poland (September 1939)

The fall of Poland was followed by what contemporary journalists dubbed the "Phoney War" or Sitzkrieg ("sitting war"). Hitler instructed the two newly appointed Gauleiters of north-western Poland, Albert Forster of Reichsgau Danzig-West Prussia and Arthur Greiser of Reichsgau Wartheland, to Germanise their areas, with "no questions asked" about how this was accomplished.[269] In Forster's area, ethnic Poles merely had to sign forms stating that they had German blood.[270] In contrast, Greiser agreed with Himmler and carried out an ethnic cleansing campaign towards Poles. Greiser soon complained that Forster was allowing thousands of Poles to be accepted as "racial" Germans and thus endangered German "racial purity".[269] Hitler refrained from getting involved. This inaction has been cited as an example of the theory of "working towards the Führer", in which Hitler issued vague instructions and expected his subordinates to develop policies independently.[269][271]

Another dispute pitched one side represented by Heinrich Himmler and Greiser, who championed ethnic cleansing in Poland, against another represented by Göring and Hans Frank (governor-general of occupied Poland), who called for turning Poland into the "granary" of the Reich. On 12 February 1940, the dispute was initially settled in favour of the Göring–Frank view, which ended the economically disruptive mass expulsions. On 15 May 1940, Himmler issued a memo entitled "Some Thoughts on the Treatment of Alien Population in the East", calling for the expulsion of the entire Jewish population of Europe into Africa and the reduction of the Polish population to a "leaderless class of labourers". Hitler called Himmler's memo "good and correct", and, ignoring Göring and Frank, implemented the Himmler–Greiser policy in Poland.[272]

Hitler visits Paris with the architect Albert Speer (left) and the sculptor Arno Breker (right), 23 June 1940

On 9 April, German forces invaded Denmark and Norway. On the same day Hitler proclaimed the birth of the Greater Germanic Reich, his vision of a united empire of Germanic nations of Europe in which the Dutch, Flemish, and Scandinavians were joined into a "racially pure" polity under German leadership.[273] In May 1940, Germany attacked France, and conquered Luxembourg, the Netherlands, and Belgium. These victories prompted Mussolini to have Italy join forces with Hitler on 10 June. France and Germany signed an armistice on 22 June.[274] Kershaw notes that Hitler's popularity within Germany—and German support for the war—reached its peak when he returned to Berlin on 6 July from his tour of Paris.[275] Following the unexpected swift victory, Hitler promoted 12 generals to the rank of field marshal during the 1940 Field Marshal Ceremony.[276][277]

Britain, whose troops were forced to evacuate France by sea from Dunkirk,[278] continued to fight alongside other British dominions in the Battle of the Atlantic. Hitler made peace overtures to the new British prime minister, Winston Churchill, and upon their rejection, he ordered a series of aerial attacks on Royal Air Force airbases and radar stations in southeast England. On 7 September, the systematic nightly bombing of London began. The German Luftwaffe failed to defeat the Royal Air Force in what became known as the Battle of Britain.[279] By the end of September, Hitler realised that air superiority for the invasion of Britain (in Operation Sea Lion) could not be achieved, and ordered the operation postponed. The nightly air raids on British cities intensified and continued for months, including London, Plymouth, and Coventry.[280]

On 27 September 1940, the Tripartite Pact was signed in Berlin by Saburō Kurusu of Imperial Japan, Hitler, and Italian foreign minister Ciano,[281] and later expanded to include Hungary, Romania, and Bulgaria, thus yielding the Axis powers. Hitler's attempt to integrate the Soviet Union into the anti-British bloc failed after inconclusive talks between Hitler and Molotov in Berlin in November, and he ordered preparations for the invasion of the Soviet Union.[282]

In early 1941, German forces were deployed to North Africa, the Balkans, and the Middle East. In February, German forces arrived in Libya to bolster the Italian presence. In April, Hitler launched the invasion of Yugoslavia, quickly followed by the invasion of Greece.[283] In May, German forces were sent to support Iraqi forces fighting against the British and to invade Crete.[284]

Path to defeat

[edit]
Hitler announcing the declaration of war against the United States to the Reichstag on 11 December 1941
Adolf Hitler and Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim in Finland in June 1942

On 22 June 1941, contravening the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact of 1939, over three million Axis troops attacked the Soviet Union.[285] This offensive (codenamed Operation Barbarossa) was intended to destroy the Soviet Union and seize its natural resources for subsequent aggression against the Western powers.[286][287] The action was also part of the overall plan to obtain more living space for German people; and Hitler thought a successful invasion would force Britain to negotiate a surrender.[288] The invasion conquered a huge area, including the Baltic republics, Belarus, and West Ukraine. By early August, Axis troops had advanced 500 km (310 miles) and won the Battle of Smolensk. Hitler ordered Army Group Centre to temporarily halt its advance to Moscow and divert its Panzer groups to aid in the encirclement of Leningrad and Kiev.[289] His generals disagreed with this change, having advanced within 400 km (250 miles) of Moscow, and his decision caused a crisis among the military leadership.[290][291] The pause provided the Red Army with an opportunity to mobilise fresh reserves; the historian Russel Stolfi considers it to be one of the major factors that caused the failure of the Moscow offensive, which was resumed in October 1941 and ended disastrously in December.[289] During this crisis, Hitler appointed himself as head of the Oberkommando des Heeres.[292]

On 7 December 1941, Japan attacked the American fleet based at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. Four days later, Hitler declared war against the United States.[293] On 18 December 1941, Himmler asked Hitler, "What to do with the Jews of Russia?", to which Hitler replied, "als Partisanen auszurotten" ("exterminate them as partisans").[294] The Israeli historian Yehuda Bauer has commented that the remark is probably as close as historians will ever get to a definitive order from Hitler for the genocide carried out during the Holocaust.[294]

In late 1942, German forces were defeated in the Second Battle of El Alamein,[295] thwarting Hitler's plans to seize the Suez Canal and the Middle East. Overconfident in his own military expertise following the earlier victories in 1940, Hitler became distrustful of his Army High Command and began to interfere in military and tactical planning, with damaging consequences.[296] In December 1942 and January 1943, Hitler's repeated refusal to allow their withdrawal at the Battle of Stalingrad led to the almost total destruction of the 6th Army. Over 200,000 Axis soldiers were killed, and 235,000 were taken prisoner.[297] Thereafter came a decisive strategic defeat at the Battle of Kursk.[298] Hitler's military judgement became increasingly erratic, and Germany's military and economic position deteriorated, as did Hitler's health.[299]

The destroyed map room at the Wolf's Lair, Hitler's eastern command post, after the 20 July plot

Following the Allied invasion of Sicily in 1943, Mussolini was removed from power by King Victor Emmanuel III after a vote of no confidence of the Grand Council of Fascism. Marshal Pietro Badoglio, placed in charge of the government, soon surrendered to the Allies.[300] Throughout 1943 and 1944, the Soviet Union steadily forced Hitler's armies into retreat along the Eastern Front. On 6 June 1944, the Western Allied armies landed in northern France in one of the largest amphibious operations in history, Operation Overlord.[301] Many German officers concluded that defeat was inevitable and that continuing under Hitler's leadership would result in the complete destruction of the country.[302]

Between 1939 and 1945, there were numerous plans to assassinate Hitler, some of which proceeded to significant degrees.[303] The most well-known and significant, the 20 July plot of 1944, came from within Germany and was at least partly driven by the increasing prospect of a German defeat in the war.[304] Part of Operation Valkyrie, the plot involved Claus von Stauffenberg planting a bomb in one of Hitler's headquarters, the Wolf's Lair at Rastenburg. Hitler narrowly survived because the staff officer Heinz Brandt moved the briefcase containing the bomb behind a leg of the heavy conference table, which deflected much of the blast. Later, Hitler ordered reprisals, resulting in the execution of more than 4,900 people.[305] Hitler was put on the United Nations War Crimes Commission's first list of war criminals in December 1944, after determining that Hitler could be held criminally responsible for the acts of the Nazis in occupied countries. By March 1945, at least seven indictments had been filed against him.[306]

Defeat and death

[edit]
Hitler in his last filmed appearance, honouring Hitler Youth members of the Volkssturm in the Reich Chancellery garden
Front page of the US Armed Forces newspaper, Stars and Stripes, 2 May 1945, announcing Hitler's death. It erroneously states that Hitler died on 1 May; he died on 30 April.

By late 1944, both the Red Army and the Western Allies were advancing into Germany. Recognising the strength and determination of the Red Army, Hitler decided to use his remaining mobile reserves against the American and British armies, which he perceived as far weaker.[307] On 16 December, he launched the Ardennes Offensive to incite disunity among the Western Allies and perhaps convince them to join his fight against the Soviets.[308] After some temporary successes, the offensive failed.[309] With much of Germany in ruins in January 1945, Hitler spoke on the radio: "However grave as the crisis may be at this moment, it will, despite everything, be mastered by our unalterable will."[310] On 19 March, Hitler commented that the needs of the German population could now be disregarded, because they "had proven to be the weaker, and the future belongs solely to the stronger eastern nation. In any case only those who are inferior will remain after this struggle, for the good have already been killed".[311] The same day, Hitler ordered the destruction of all German industrial infrastructure before it could fall into Allied hands.[312] Minister for Armaments Albert Speer was entrusted with executing this scorched earth policy, but he secretly disobeyed the order.[312][313] Hitler's hope to negotiate peace with the United States and Britain was encouraged by the death of US President Franklin D. Roosevelt on 12 April 1945, but contrary to his expectations, this caused no rift among the Allies.[308][314]

On 20 April, his 56th and final birthday, Hitler made his last trip from the Führerbunker to the surface. In the ruined garden of the Reich Chancellery, he awarded Iron Crosses to boy soldiers of the Hitler Youth, who were now fighting the Red Army at the front near Berlin.[315] By 21 April, Georgy Zhukov's 1st Belorussian Front had broken through the defences of General Gotthard Heinrici's Army Group Vistula during the Battle of the Seelow Heights and advanced to the outskirts of Berlin.[316] In denial about the dire situation, Hitler placed his hopes on the undermanned and under-equipped Armeeabteilung Steiner (Army Detachment Steiner), commanded by Felix Steiner. Hitler ordered Steiner to attack the northern flank of the salient, while the German Ninth Army was ordered to attack northward in a pincer attack.[317]

During a military conference on 22 April, Hitler enquired about Steiner's offensive. He was informed that the attack had not been launched and that the Soviets had entered Berlin. Hitler ordered everyone but Wilhelm Keitel, Alfred Jodl, Hans Krebs, and Wilhelm Burgdorf to leave the room,[318] then launched into a tirade against the perceived treachery and incompetence of his generals, culminating in his declaration—for the first time—that "everything is lost".[319] He announced that he would stay in Berlin until the end and then shoot himself.[320]

By 23 April, the Red Army had surrounded Berlin,[321] and Goebbels made a proclamation urging its citizens to defend the city.[318] That same day, Göring sent a telegram from Berchtesgaden, arguing that as Hitler was isolated in Berlin, Göring should assume leadership of Germany. Göring set a deadline, after which he would consider Hitler incapacitated.[322] Hitler responded by having Göring arrested, and in his last will and testament of 29 April, he removed Göring from all government positions.[323][324] On 28 April, Hitler discovered that Himmler, who had left Berlin on 20 April, was attempting to negotiate a surrender to the Western Allies.[325][326] He considered this treason and ordered Himmler's arrest. He also ordered the execution of Hermann Fegelein, Himmler's SS representative at Hitler's headquarters in Berlin, for desertion.[327]

After midnight on the night of 28–29 April, Hitler married Eva Braun in a small civil ceremony in the Führerbunker.[328][g] Later that afternoon, Hitler was informed that Mussolini had been executed by the Italian resistance movement on the previous day; this is believed to have increased his determination to avoid capture.[329] On 30 April, Soviet troops were within five hundred metres of the Reich Chancellery when Hitler shot himself in the head and Braun bit into a cyanide capsule.[330][331] In accordance with Hitler's wishes, their corpses were carried outside to the garden behind the Reich Chancellery, where they were placed in a bomb crater, doused with petrol, and set on fire as the Red Army shelling continued.[332][333][334] Grand Admiral Karl Dönitz and Goebbels assumed Hitler's roles as head of state and chancellor respectively.[335] On the evening of 1 May, Goebbels and his wife, Magda, committed suicide in the Reich Chancellery garden, after having poisoned their six children with cyanide.[336]

Berlin surrendered on 2 May. The remains of the Goebbels family, General Hans Krebs (who had committed suicide that day), and Hitler's dog Blondi were repeatedly buried and exhumed by the Soviets.[337] Hitler's and Braun's remains were alleged to have been moved as well, but this is most likely Soviet disinformation. There is no evidence that any identifiable remains of Hitler or Braun—with the exception of dental bridges—were ever found by them.[338][339][340] While news of Hitler's death spread quickly, a death certificate was not issued until 1956, after a lengthy investigation to collect testimony from 42 witnesses. Hitler's death was entered as an assumption of death based on this testimony.[341]

The Holocaust

[edit]

If the international Jewish financiers in and outside Europe should succeed in plunging the nations once more into a world war, then the result will not be the Bolshevisation of the earth, and thus the victory of Jewry, but the annihilation of the Jewish race in Europe![342]

A mass grave at Bergen-Belsen after the camp's liberation, April 1945

The Holocaust and Germany's war in the East were based on Hitler's long-standing view that the Jews were the enemy of the German people, and that Lebensraum was needed for Germany's expansion. He focused on Eastern Europe for this expansion, aiming to defeat Poland and the Soviet Union and then removing or killing the Jews and Slavs.[343] The Generalplan Ost (General Plan East) called for deporting the population of occupied Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union to West Siberia, for use as slave labour or to be murdered;[344] the conquered territories were to be colonised by German or "Germanised" settlers.[345] The goal was to implement this plan after the conquest of the Soviet Union, but when this failed, Hitler moved the plans forward.[344][346] By January 1942, he had decided that the Jews, Slavs, and other deportees considered undesirable should be killed.[347][h]

Hitler's order for Aktion T4, dated 1 September 1939

The genocide was organised and executed by Heinrich Himmler and Reinhard Heydrich. The records of the Wannsee Conference, held on 20 January 1942 and led by Heydrich, with 15 senior Nazi officials participating, provide the clearest evidence of systematic planning for the Holocaust. On 22 February, Hitler was recorded saying, "we shall regain our health only by eliminating the Jews".[348] Similarly, at a meeting in July 1941 with leading functionaries of the Eastern territories, Hitler said that the easiest way to quickly pacify the areas would be best achieved by "shooting everyone who even looks odd".[349] Although no direct order from Hitler authorising the mass killings has surfaced,[350] his public speeches, orders to his generals,[contradictory] and the diaries of Nazi officials demonstrate that he conceived and authorised the extermination of European Jewry.[351][352] During the war, Hitler repeatedly stated his prophecy of 1939 was being fulfilled, namely, that a world war would bring about the annihilation of the Jewish race.[353] Hitler approved the Einsatzgruppen—killing squads that followed the German army through Poland, the Baltic, and the Soviet Union[354]—and was well informed about their activities.[351][355] By summer 1942, Auschwitz concentration camp was expanded to accommodate large numbers of deportees for murder or enslavement.[356] Scores of other concentration camps and satellite camps were set up throughout Europe, with several camps devoted exclusively to extermination.[357]

Between 1939 and 1945, the Schutzstaffel (SS), assisted by collaborationist governments and recruits from occupied countries, were responsible for the deaths of at least 11 million non-combatants,[358][344] including the murders of about six million Jews (representing two-thirds of the Jewish population of Europe),[359][i] and between 200,000 and 1,500,000 Romani people.[361][359] The victims were killed in concentration and extermination camps and in ghettos, and through mass shootings.[362][363] Many victims of the Holocaust were murdered in gas chambers or shot, while others died of starvation or disease or while working as slave labourers.[362][363] In addition to eliminating Jews, the Nazis planned to reduce the population of the conquered territories by 30 million people through starvation in an action called the Hunger Plan. Food supplies would be diverted to the German army and German civilians. Cities would be razed, and the land allowed to return to forest or resettled by German colonists.[364] Together, the Hunger Plan and Generalplan Ost would have led to the starvation of 80 million people in the Soviet Union.[365] These partially fulfilled plans resulted in additional deaths, bringing the total number of civilians and prisoners of war who died in the democide to an estimated 19.3 million people.[366]

Hitler's policies resulted in the killing of nearly two million non-Jewish Polish civilians,[367] over three million Soviet prisoners of war,[368] communists and other political opponents, homosexuals, the physically and mentally disabled,[369][370] Jehovah's Witnesses, Adventists, and trade unionists. Hitler never spoke publicly about the killings and seems to have never visited the concentration camps.[371] The Nazis embraced the concept of racial hygiene. On 15 September 1935, Hitler presented two laws—known as the Nuremberg Laws—to the Reichstag. The laws banned sexual relations and marriages between Aryans and Jews and were later extended to include "Gypsies, Negroes or their bastard offspring".[372] The laws stripped all non-Aryans of their German citizenship and forbade the employment of non-Jewish women under the age of 45 in Jewish households.[373] Hitler's early eugenic policies targeted children with physical and developmental disabilities in a programme dubbed Action Brandt, and he later authorised a euthanasia programme for adults with serious mental and physical disabilities, now referred to as Aktion T4.[374]

Leadership style

[edit]
Hitler during a meeting at the headquarters of Army Group South in June 1942

Hitler ruled the Nazi Party autocratically by asserting the Führerprinzip (leader principle). The principle relied on absolute obedience of all subordinates to their superiors; thus, he viewed the government structure as a pyramid, with himself—the infallible leader—at the apex. Rank in the party was not determined by elections—positions were filled through appointment by those of higher rank, who demanded unquestioning obedience to the will of the leader.[375] Hitler's leadership style was to give contradictory orders to his subordinates and to place them into positions where their duties and responsibilities overlapped with those of others, to have "the stronger one [do] the job".[376] In this way, Hitler fostered distrust, competition, and infighting among his subordinates to consolidate and maximise his own power. His cabinet never met after 1938, and he discouraged his ministers from meeting independently.[377][378] Hitler typically did not give written orders; instead, he communicated verbally, or had them conveyed through his close associate Martin Bormann.[379] He entrusted Bormann with his paperwork, appointments, and personal finances; Bormann used his position to control the flow of information and access to Hitler.[380]

Hitler dominated his country's war effort during World War II to a greater extent than any other national leader. He strengthened his control of the armed forces in 1938, and subsequently made all major decisions regarding Germany's military strategy. His decision to mount a risky series of offensives against Norway, France, and the Low Countries in 1940 against the advice of the military proved successful, though the diplomatic and military strategies he employed in attempts to force the United Kingdom out of the war ended in failure.[381] Hitler deepened his involvement in the war effort by appointing himself commander-in-chief of the Army in December 1941; from this point forward, he personally directed the war against the Soviet Union, while his military commanders facing the Western Allies retained a degree of autonomy.[382] Hitler's leadership became increasingly disconnected from reality as the war turned against Germany, with the military's defensive strategies often hindered by his slow decision-making and frequent directives to hold untenable positions. Nevertheless, he continued to believe that only his leadership could deliver victory.[381] In the final months of the war, Hitler refused to consider peace negotiations, regarding the destruction of Germany as preferable to surrender.[383] The military did not challenge Hitler's dominance of the war effort, and senior officers generally supported and enacted his decisions.[384]

Personal life

[edit]

Family

[edit]
Hitler and Braun in 1942

Hitler created a public image as a celibate man without a domestic life, dedicated entirely to his political mission and the nation.[151][385] He met his lover, Eva Braun, in 1929,[386] and married her on 29 April 1945, one day before they both committed suicide.[387] In September 1931, his half-niece, Geli Raubal, committed suicide with Hitler's gun in his Munich apartment. It was rumoured among contemporaries that Geli was in a romantic relationship with him, and her death was a source of deep, lasting pain.[388] Paula Hitler, the younger sister of Hitler and the last living member of his immediate family, died in June 1960.[16]

Views on religion

[edit]

Hitler was born to a practising Catholic mother and an anti-clerical father; after leaving home, Hitler never again attended Mass or received the sacraments.[389][390][391] Albert Speer states that Hitler railed against the church to his political associates, and though he never officially left the church, he had no attachment to it.[392] He adds that Hitler felt that in the absence of organised religion, people would turn to mysticism, which he considered regressive.[392] According to Speer, Hitler believed that Japanese religious beliefs or Islam would have been a more suitable religion for Germans than Christianity, with its "meekness and flabbiness".[393] The historian John S. Conway states that Hitler was fundamentally opposed to the Christian churches.[394] According to Bullock, Hitler did not believe in God, was anticlerical, and held Christian ethics in contempt because they contravened his preferred view of "survival of the fittest".[395] He favoured aspects of Protestantism that suited his own views, and adopted some elements of the Catholic Church's hierarchical organisation, liturgy, and phraseology.[396] In a 1932 speech, Hitler stated that he was not a Catholic, and declared himself a German Christian.[397] In a conversation with Albert Speer, Hitler said, "Through me the Evangelical Church could become the established church, as in England."[398]

Hitler shakes hands with Bishop Ludwig Müller in Germany in the 1930s

Hitler viewed the church as an important politically conservative influence on society,[399] and he adopted a strategic relationship with it that "suited his immediate political purposes".[394] In public, Hitler often praised Christian heritage and German Christian culture, though professing a belief in an "Aryan Jesus" who fought against the Jews.[400] Any pro-Christian public rhetoric contradicted his private statements, which described Christianity as "absurdity"[401] and nonsense founded on lies.[402]

According to a US Office of Strategic Services (OSS) report, "The Nazi Master Plan", Hitler planned to destroy the influence of Christian churches within the Reich.[403][404] His eventual goal was the total elimination of Christianity.[405] This goal informed Hitler's movement early on, but he saw it as inexpedient to publicly express this extreme position.[406] According to Bullock, Hitler wanted to wait until after the war before executing this plan.[407] Speer wrote that Hitler had a negative view of Himmler's and Alfred Rosenberg's mystical notions and Himmler's attempt to mythologise the SS. Hitler was more pragmatic, and his ambitions centred on more practical concerns.[408][409]

Health

[edit]

Researchers have variously suggested that Hitler suffered from irritable bowel syndrome, skin lesions, irregular heartbeat, coronary sclerosis,[410] Parkinson's disease,[299][411] syphilis,[411] giant-cell arteritis,[412] tinnitus,[413] and monorchism.[414] In a report prepared for the OSS in 1943, Walter Charles Langer of Harvard University described Hitler as a "neurotic psychopath".[415] In his 1977 book The Psychopathic God: Adolf Hitler, the historian Robert G. L. Waite proposes that Hitler suffered from borderline personality disorder.[416] The historians Henrik Eberle and Hans-Joachim Neumann consider that while he suffered from a number of illnesses including Parkinson's disease, Hitler did not experience pathological delusions and was always fully aware of, and therefore responsible for, his decisions.[417][319]

Sometime in the 1930s, Hitler adopted a mainly vegetarian diet,[418][419] avoiding all meat and fish from 1942 onwards. At social events, he sometimes gave graphic accounts of the slaughter of animals in an effort to make his guests shun meat.[420] Bormann had a greenhouse constructed near the Berghof (near Berchtesgaden) to ensure a steady supply of fresh fruit and vegetables for Hitler.[421] Hitler stopped drinking alcohol around the time he became vegetarian and thereafter only very occasionally drank beer or wine on social occasions.[422][423] He was a non-smoker for most of his adult life, but smoked heavily in his youth (25 to 40 cigarettes a day); he eventually quit, calling the habit "a waste of money".[424] He encouraged his close associates to quit by offering a gold watch to anyone able to break the habit.[425] Hitler began using amphetamine occasionally after 1937 and became addicted to it in late 1942.[426] Speer linked this use of amphetamine to Hitler's increasingly erratic behaviour and inflexible decision-making (for example, rarely allowing military retreats).[427]

Prescribed 90 medications during the war years by his personal physician, Theodor Morell, Hitler took many pills each day for chronic stomach problems and other ailments.[428] He regularly consumed amphetamine, barbiturates, opiates, and cocaine,[429][430] as well as potassium bromide and atropa belladonna (the latter in the form of Doktor Koster's Antigaspills).[431] He suffered ruptured eardrums as a result of the 20 July plot bomb blast in 1944, and 200 wood splinters had to be removed from his legs.[432] Newsreel footage of Hitler shows tremors in his left hand and a shuffling walk, which began before the war and worsened towards the end of his life.[428] Ernst-Günther Schenck and several other doctors who met Hitler in the last weeks of his life also formed a diagnosis of Parkinson's disease.[433]

Legacy

[edit]
Outside of a building in Braunau am Inn, Austria, where Hitler was born, is a memorial stone placed as a reminder of World War II. The inscription translates as:[434]

For peace, freedom
and democracy
never again fascism
millions of dead warn [us]

According to the historian Joachim Fest, Hitler's suicide was likened by numerous contemporaries to a "spell" being broken.[435] Similarly, Speer commented in Inside the Third Reich on his emotions the day after Hitler's suicide: "Only now was the spell broken, the magic extinguished."[436] Public support for Hitler had collapsed by the time of his death, which few Germans mourned; Kershaw argues that most civilians and military personnel were too busy adjusting to the collapse of the country or fleeing from the fighting to take any interest.[437] According to the historian John Toland, Nazism "burst like a bubble" without its leader.[438]

Kershaw describes Hitler as "the embodiment of modern political evil".[3] "Never in history has such ruination—physical and moral—been associated with the name of one man", he adds.[439] Hitler's political programme brought about a world war, leaving behind a devastated and impoverished Eastern and Central Europe. Germany suffered wholesale destruction, characterised as Stunde Null (Zero Hour).[440] Hitler's policies inflicted human suffering on an unprecedented scale;[441] according to R. J. Rummel, the Nazi regime was responsible for the democidal killing of an estimated 19.3 million civilians and prisoners of war.[358] In addition, 28.7 million soldiers and civilians died as a result of military action in the European theatre of World War II.[358] The number of civilians killed during the Second World War was unprecedented in the history of warfare.[442] Historians, philosophers, and politicians often use the word "evil" to describe the Nazi regime.[443] Many European countries have criminalised both the promotion of Nazism and Holocaust denial.[444]

The historian Friedrich Meinecke described Hitler as "one of the great examples of the singular and incalculable power of personality in historical life".[445] The English historian Hugh Trevor-Roper saw him as "among the 'terrible simplifiers' of history, the most systematic, the most historical, the most philosophical, and yet the coarsest, cruelest, least magnanimous conqueror the world has ever known".[446] For the historian John M. Roberts, Hitler's defeat marked the end of a phase of European history dominated by Germany.[447] In its place emerged the Cold War, a global confrontation between the Western Bloc, dominated by the United States and other NATO nations, and the Eastern Bloc, dominated by the Soviet Union.[448] The historian Sebastian Haffner asserted that without Hitler and the displacement of the Jews, the modern nation-state of Israel would not exist. He contends that without Hitler, the de-colonisation of former European spheres of influence would have been postponed.[449] Further, Haffner claimed that other than Alexander the Great, Hitler had a more significant impact than any other comparable historical figure, in that he too caused a wide range of worldwide changes in a relatively short time span.[450]

In propaganda

[edit]

Hitler exploited documentary films and newsreels to inspire a cult of personality. He was involved and appeared in a series of propaganda films throughout his political career, many made by Leni Riefenstahl, regarded as a pioneer of modern filmmaking.[451] Hitler's propaganda film appearances include:

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Shirer 1960, pp. 226–227.
  2. ^ a b Overy 2005, p. 63.
  3. ^ a b Kershaw 2000b, p. xvii.
  4. ^ Bullock 1999, p. 24.
  5. ^ Maser 1973, p. 4.
  6. ^ Kershaw 1999, pp. 5, 14.
  7. ^ Maser 1973, p. 15.
  8. ^ a b Kershaw 1999, p. 5.
  9. ^ Jetzinger 1976, p. 32.
  10. ^ Rosenbaum 1999, p. 21.
  11. ^ Hamann 2010, p. 50.
  12. ^ Toland 1992, pp. 246–247.
  13. ^ Kershaw 1999, pp. 8–9.
  14. ^ House of Responsibility.
  15. ^ Bullock 1999, p. 23.
  16. ^ a b Kershaw 2008, p. 4.
  17. ^ Toland 1976, p. 6.
  18. ^ Rosmus 2004, p. 33.
  19. ^ Keller 2010, p. 15.
  20. ^ Hamann 2010, pp. 7–8.
  21. ^ Kubizek 2006, p. 37.
  22. ^ Rosmus 2004, p. 35.
  23. ^ Kubizek 2006, p. 92.
  24. ^ Hitler 1999, p. 6.
  25. ^ Fromm 1977, pp. 493–498.
  26. ^ Hamann 2010, pp. 10–11.
  27. ^ a b Diver 2005.
  28. ^ Shirer 1960, pp. 10–11.
  29. ^ Payne 1990, p. 22.
  30. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 9.
  31. ^ Hitler 1999, p. 8.
  32. ^ Keller 2010, pp. 33–34.
  33. ^ Fest 1977, p. 32.
  34. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 8.
  35. ^ Hitler 1999, p. 10.
  36. ^ Evans 2003, pp. 163–164.
  37. ^ Bendersky 2000, p. 26.
  38. ^ Ryschka 2008, p. 35.
  39. ^ Hamann 2010, p. 13.
  40. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 10.
  41. ^ Kershaw 1999, p. 19.
  42. ^ Kershaw 1999, p. 20.
  43. ^ a b Hitler 1999, p. 20.
  44. ^ Bullock 1962, pp. 30–31.
  45. ^ Bullock 1962, p. 31.
  46. ^ Bullock 1999, pp. 30–33.
  47. ^ Hamann 2010, p. 157.
  48. ^ Kershaw 1999, pp. 41, 42.
  49. ^ Shirer 1960, p. 26.
  50. ^ Hamann 2010, pp. 243–246.
  51. ^ Nicholls 2000, pp. 236, 237, 274.
  52. ^ Hamann 2010, p. 250.
  53. ^ Hamann 2010, pp. 341–345.
  54. ^ Hamann 2010, p. 233.
  55. ^ Britannica: Nazism.
  56. ^ Pinkus 2005, p. 27.
  57. ^ Kershaw 1999, pp. 60–67.
  58. ^ Shirer 1960, p. 25.
  59. ^ Hamann 2010, p. 58.
  60. ^ Hitler 1999, p. 52.
  61. ^ Toland 1992, p. 45.
  62. ^ Kershaw 1999, pp. 55, 63.
  63. ^ Hamann 2010, p. 174.
  64. ^ Evans 2011.
  65. ^ Shirer 1960, p. 27.
  66. ^ Weber 2010, p. 13.
  67. ^ Kershaw 1999, p. 86.
  68. ^ Kershaw 1999, p. 49.
  69. ^ a b c Kershaw 1999, p. 90.
  70. ^ Weber 2010, pp. 12–13.
  71. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 53.
  72. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 54.
  73. ^ Weber 2010, p. 100.
  74. ^ a b c d Shirer 1960, p. 30.
  75. ^ Pearson & Allen 1941.
  76. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 57.
  77. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 58.
  78. ^ Steiner 1976, p. 392.
  79. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 59.
  80. ^ Weber 2010a.
  81. ^ Kershaw 2008, pp. 59, 60.
  82. ^ Kershaw 1999, pp. 97, 102.
  83. ^ Keegan 1987, pp. 238–240.
  84. ^ Bullock 1962, p. 60.
  85. ^ Kershaw 2008, pp. 61, 62.
  86. ^ Kershaw 2008, pp. 61–63.
  87. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 96.
  88. ^ Kershaw 2008, pp. 80, 90, 92.
  89. ^ Bullock 1999, p. 61.
  90. ^ Kershaw 1999, p. 109.
  91. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 82.
  92. ^ Evans 2003, p. 170.
  93. ^ Kershaw 2008, pp. 75, 76.
  94. ^ Mitcham 1996, p. 67.
  95. ^ Kershaw 1999, pp. 125–126.
  96. ^ Fest 1970, p. 21.
  97. ^ Kershaw 2008, pp. 94, 95, 100.
  98. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 87.
  99. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 88.
  100. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 93.
  101. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 81.
  102. ^ Reck-Malleczewen 2013, p. 17.
  103. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 89.
  104. ^ Kershaw 2008, pp. 89–92.
  105. ^ Kershaw 2008, pp. 100, 101.
  106. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 102.
  107. ^ a b Kershaw 2008, p. 103.
  108. ^ Kershaw 2008, pp. 83, 103.
  109. ^ Kershaw 2000b, p. xv.
  110. ^ Bullock 1999, p. 376.
  111. ^ Frauenfeld 1937.
  112. ^ Goebbels 1936.
  113. ^ Kershaw 2008, pp. 105–106.
  114. ^ Bullock 1999, p. 377.
  115. ^ Kressel 2002, p. 121.
  116. ^ Heck 2001, p. 23.
  117. ^ Kellogg 2005, p. 275.
  118. ^ Kellogg 2005, p. 203.
  119. ^ Bracher 1970, pp. 115–116.
  120. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 126.
  121. ^ a b Kershaw 2008, p. 128.
  122. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 129.
  123. ^ Kershaw 2008, pp. 130–131.
  124. ^ Shirer 1960, pp. 73–74.
  125. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 132.
  126. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 131.
  127. ^ Munich Court, 1924.
  128. ^ Evans 2003, p. 196.
  129. ^ Kershaw 1999, p. 239.
  130. ^ a b Bullock 1962, p. 121.
  131. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 147.
  132. ^ Kershaw 2008, pp. 148–150.
  133. ^ Shirer 1960, pp. 80–81.
  134. ^ Kershaw 1999, p. 237.
  135. ^ a b Kershaw 1999, p. 238.
  136. ^ Kershaw 2008, pp. 158, 161, 162.
  137. ^ Kershaw 2008, pp. 162, 166.
  138. ^ Shirer 1960, p. 129.
  139. ^ Kershaw 2008, pp. 166, 167.
  140. ^ Shirer 1960, pp. 136–137.
  141. ^ Kolb 2005, pp. 224–225.
  142. ^ Kolb 1988, p. 105.
  143. ^ Halperin 1965, p. 403 et. seq.
  144. ^ Halperin 1965, pp. 434–446 et. seq.
  145. ^ Wheeler-Bennett 1967, p. 218.
  146. ^ Wheeler-Bennett 1967, p. 216.
  147. ^ Wheeler-Bennett 1967, pp. 218–219.
  148. ^ Wheeler-Bennett 1967, p. 222.
  149. ^ Halperin 1965, p. 449 et. seq.
  150. ^ Halperin 1965, pp. 434–436, 471.
  151. ^ a b Shirer 1960, p. 130.
  152. ^ Hinrichs 2007.
  153. ^ Halperin 1965, p. 476.
  154. ^ Halperin 1965, pp. 468–471.
  155. ^ Bullock 1962, p. 201.
  156. ^ Hoffman 1989.
  157. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 227.
  158. ^ Halperin 1965, pp. 477–479.
  159. ^ Letter to Hindenburg, 1932.
  160. ^ Fox News, 2003.
  161. ^ Shirer 1960, p. 184.
  162. ^ Evans 2003, p. 307.
  163. ^ Bullock 1962, p. 262.
  164. ^ Shirer 1960, p. 192.
  165. ^ Bullock 1999, p. 262.
  166. ^ Hett 2014, pp. 255–259.
  167. ^ Shirer 1960, pp. 194, 274.
  168. ^ Shirer 1960, p. 194.
  169. ^ Bullock 1962, p. 265.
  170. ^ City of Potsdam.
  171. ^ Shirer 1960, pp. 196–197.
  172. ^ Shirer 1960, p. 198.
  173. ^ Evans 2003, p. 335.
  174. ^ Shirer 1960, p. 196.
  175. ^ Bullock 1999, p. 269.
  176. ^ Shirer 1960, p. 199.
  177. ^ Time, 1934.
  178. ^ a b Shirer 1960, p. 201.
  179. ^ Shirer 1960, p. 202.
  180. ^ a b Evans 2003, pp. 350–374.
  181. ^ Kershaw 2008, pp. 309–314.
  182. ^ Tames 2008, pp. 4–5.
  183. ^ Kershaw 2008, pp. 313–315.
  184. ^ Evans 2005, p. 44.
  185. ^ Shirer 1960, p. 229.
  186. ^ Bullock 1962, p. 309.
  187. ^ Evans 2005, p. 110.
  188. ^ Kershaw 2008, pp. 392, 393.
  189. ^ Shirer 1960, p. 312.
  190. ^ Kershaw 2008, pp. 393–397.
  191. ^ Shirer 1960, p. 308.
  192. ^ Shirer 1960, p. 318.
  193. ^ Shirer 1960, pp. 318–319.
  194. ^ Kershaw 2008, pp. 397–398.
  195. ^ Shirer 1960, p. 274.
  196. ^ Read 2004, p. 344.
  197. ^ Evans 2005, pp. 109–111.
  198. ^ McNab 2009, p. 54.
  199. ^ Shirer 1960, pp. 259–260.
  200. ^ Shirer 1960, p. 258.
  201. ^ Shirer 1960, p. 262.
  202. ^ McNab 2009, pp. 54–57.
  203. ^ Speer 1971, pp. 118–119.
  204. ^ Evans 2005, pp. 570–572.
  205. ^ Weinberg 1970, pp. 26–27.
  206. ^ Kershaw 1999, pp. 490–491.
  207. ^ Kershaw 1999, pp. 492, 555–556, 586–587.
  208. ^ Carr 1972, p. 23.
  209. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 297.
  210. ^ Shirer 1960, p. 283.
  211. ^ Messerschmidt 1990, pp. 601–602.
  212. ^ Martin 2008.
  213. ^ Hildebrand 1973, p. 39.
  214. ^ Roberts 1975.
  215. ^ Messerschmidt 1990, pp. 630–631.
  216. ^ a b Overy, Origins of WWII Reconsidered 1999.
  217. ^ Carr 1972, pp. 56–57.
  218. ^ Goeschel 2018, pp. 69–70.
  219. ^ Messerschmidt 1990, p. 642.
  220. ^ Aigner 1985, p. 264.
  221. ^ a b Messerschmidt 1990, pp. 636–637.
  222. ^ Carr 1972, pp. 73–78.
  223. ^ Messerschmidt 1990, p. 638.
  224. ^ a b Bloch 1992, pp. 178–179.
  225. ^ Plating 2011, p. 21.
  226. ^ Butler & Young 1989, p. 159.
  227. ^ Bullock 1962, p. 434.
  228. ^ Overy 2005, p. 425.
  229. ^ Weinberg 1980, pp. 334–335.
  230. ^ Weinberg 1980, pp. 338–340.
  231. ^ Weinberg 1980, p. 366.
  232. ^ Weinberg 1980, pp. 418–419.
  233. ^ Kee 1988, pp. 149–150.
  234. ^ Weinberg 1980, p. 419.
  235. ^ Murray 1984, pp. 256–260.
  236. ^ Bullock 1962, p. 469.
  237. ^ Overy, The Munich Crisis 1999, p. 207.
  238. ^ Kee 1988, pp. 202–203.
  239. ^ Weinberg 1980, pp. 462–463.
  240. ^ Messerschmidt 1990, p. 672.
  241. ^ Messerschmidt 1990, pp. 671, 682–683.
  242. ^ Rothwell 2001, pp. 90–91.
  243. ^ Time, January 1939.
  244. ^ a b Murray 1984, p. 268.
  245. ^ Evans 2005, p. 682.
  246. ^ Murray 1984, pp. 268–269.
  247. ^ Shirer 1960, p. 448.
  248. ^ Weinberg 1980, p. 562.
  249. ^ Weinberg 1980, pp. 579–581.
  250. ^ a b Maiolo 1998, p. 178.
  251. ^ a b Messerschmidt 1990, pp. 688–690.
  252. ^ a b Weinberg 1980, pp. 537–539, 557–560.
  253. ^ Weinberg 1980, p. 558.
  254. ^ Carr 1972, pp. 76–77.
  255. ^ Kershaw 2000b, pp. 36–37, 92.
  256. ^ Weinberg 2010, p. 792.
  257. ^ Robertson 1985, p. 212.
  258. ^ Bloch 1992, p. 228.
  259. ^ Overy & Wheatcroft 1989, p. 56.
  260. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 497.
  261. ^ Robertson 1963, pp. 181–187.
  262. ^ Evans 2005, p. 693.
  263. ^ Bloch 1992, pp. 252–253.
  264. ^ Weinberg 1995, pp. 85–94.
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  267. ^ Bloch 1992, p. 260.
  268. ^ Hakim 1995.
  269. ^ a b c Rees 1997, pp. 141–145.
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Bibliography

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from Grokipedia
Adolf Hitler (20 April 1889 – 30 April 1945) was an Austrian-born German politician who led the National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSDAP) and served as Chancellor of Germany from 30 January 1933 and as Führer und Reichskanzler from August 1934 until his death in 1945. Under Hitler's leadership, the Nazi regime ended the democratic institutions of the Weimar Republic and established a one-party government. It pursued territorial expansion that violated the Treaty of Versailles, which led to the invasion of Poland on 1 September 1939 and the beginning of World War II. The regime also perpetrated the Holocaust, the systematic genocide of approximately six million Jews and millions of other victims during the war. Hitler's military decisions, including the invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941, contributed to Germany's defeat by the Allied powers. In April 1945, as Soviet forces advanced on Berlin, Hitler died by suicide in the Führerbunker by ingesting cyanide and shooting himself in the head.

Early Life

Birth and Family Background

The house where Adolf Hitler was born in Braunau am Inn, Austria
Hitler's birthplace in Braunau am Inn, shown in its modern state with a memorial stone
Adolf Hitler, the fourth child of customs official Alois Hitler and his third wife, Klara Pölzl, was born on 20 April 1889 in Braunau am Inn, a small town in Upper Austria near the border with the German Empire.[1][2] He was baptized a Catholic in the Braunau am Inn parish church, with the baptismal registry listing him simply as "Adolfus Hitler" (the Latinized form), indicating no middle name was recorded. Alois, born out of wedlock as Schicklgruber in 1837 near Döllersheim and later legitimized with the surname Hitler in 1876, married Klara—his second cousin or closer depending on uncertain paternity—requiring papal dispensation for their 1885 union due to consanguinity.[3][4][5] The couple had six children: Gustav (1885–1887), Ida (1886–1888), Otto (1887–1887), Adolf (1889–1945), Edmund (1894–1900), and Paula (1896–1960). Only Adolf and Paula reached adulthood; Gustav, Ida, and Otto died young from illnesses like diphtheria, while Edmund died at age five from measles.[1][2] Alois advanced to senior customs inspector and enforced a strict household amid career-driven moves. The family departed Braunau soon after Adolf's birth, relocating to Passau in Bavaria in August 1892, where Adolf resided until age five and developed a Bavarian dialect influencing his speech.[3][6] Alois was promoted and transferred to Linz on 1 April 1893, but the rest of the family remained in Passau until May 1894, when they joined him in the Linz area, then to nearby Leonding village in November 1898 after his retirement and house purchase. Adolf attended local schools but clashed with his authoritarian father, who preferred civil service over artistic pursuits.[2][6] Alois died on 3 January 1903 from a lung hemorrhage, bequeathing a modest pension that sustained Klara and the children until her death from breast cancer in 1907.[3][1]

Education and Artistic Ambitions

Hitler performed well in primary school (Volksschule in places like Fischlham and Leonding), showing intelligence, popularity among peers, and leadership qualities; he enjoyed outdoor activities and was lively. He briefly attended the monastery school at Lambach, where his mother hoped he might become a monk, but was expelled after being caught smoking on the grounds. Hitler attended the Realschule in Linz from September 1900, where he was exposed to German nationalist ideas prevalent in the area, which influenced him early. He struggled academically in secondary school, clashing with strict discipline and his father's expectations. He transferred to the Realschule in Steyr in September 1904, until leaving school in March 1905, earning mediocre grades overall—weak in languages like French and English, but adequate in geography, history, and drawing.[7][8][9] Despite repeating a year, his final report of September 16, 1905, showed no improvement, and he left without the Matura needed for university or civil service. From 1902 to 1903, family finances exempted him as the only tuition-free pupil in his class. Defying his father's civil service hopes, Hitler pursued painting, drawn to his drawing skills and disinterest in academics.[8] In October 1907, at age 18, he applied to the Academy of Fine Arts, passing the preliminary drawing test among 112 applicants but failing the evaluation due to insufficient heads in his sample drawings; only 28 were admitted.[10] He attempted again in 1908 but was not admitted to the drawing stage, as his preliminary submissions were deemed inadequate.[11] The rector had advised pursuing architecture instead, citing insufficient talent for painting, but Hitler lacked the Matura required for architectural studies, underscoring his vocational failure in art.[10]

Vienna Period and Ideological Stirrings

After his mother's death, inheritance funded Hitler's permanent move to Vienna in early 1908 to chase artistic goals, allowing a rented-room existence.[12] Funds exhausted by late 1909, he sank into poverty, using a homeless shelter briefly before the Männerheim dormitory at 27 Meldemannstraße in Brigittenau (20th district) from February 1910 to 1913.[13][12] He supported himself selling watercolors and postcards of Viennese landmarks, mainly through Jewish dealers like Samuel Morgenstern from 1911 or 1912, plus sporadic day labor.[12][14] This solitary time amid Vienna's multicultural Habsburg tensions exposed him to Slavic migrations and Jewish trade, which developed his pan-German views in the fracturing empire—yet no records show explicit personal antisemitism.[12] On May 24, 1913, rejecting the Austro-Hungarian monarchy and evading conscription, he departed for Munich, closing his Austrian phase. Vienna's volatile milieu, marked by ethnic clashes and imperial decay, shaped Hitler's emerging worldview. He frequented pan-German gatherings, influenced by Georg Ritter von Schönerer's drive for German primacy against multicultural dissolution.[15] He respected Mayor Karl Lueger, the Christian Social Party's leader of Vienna from 1897 to 1910, for wielding antisemitic barbs at Jewish economic sway, despite pragmatic Jewish dealings.[12] In Mein Kampf (1925), Hitler credited Vienna with arming him against Marxism and igniting antisemitism through Jewish ties to both, but scholars see these attitudes budding then and hardening after World War I.[12] Völkisch tracts, possibly Jörg Lanz von Liebenfels' Ostara magazine (c. 1905) advocating Aryan supremacy, nudged him toward ethnic German solidarity over imperial diversity.[15]

World War I Experience

Enlistment and Frontline Service

Upon the declaration of war on August 1, 1914, 25-year-old Austrian national Adolf Hitler, residing in Munich, volunteered for the Bavarian Army to affirm allegiance to Germany; he had been deemed unfit by Austro-Hungarian authorities in Salzburg on February 5, 1914, while facing draft evasion charges in Linz.[16] He submitted enlistment papers on August 3 and, despite his Austrian citizenship—likely overlooked amid mobilization—was accepted as a Kriegsfreiwilliger (war volunteer) on August 16.[17][18] Assigned to the 16th Bavarian Reserve Infantry Regiment (List Regiment, after commander Oberst Julius List), part of the 6th Bavarian Reserve Division, he joined the 1st Company as a Schütze (private) and completed recruit training near Munich before advanced training at regimental barracks.[16][19] The List Regiment entrained for the Western Front on October 21, 1914, arriving in Lille on October 23–24; Hitler saw first combat in the First Battle of Ypres on October 29, as German reserves assaulted entrenched British and French positions in a failed push to Channel ports.[20][16] The regiment suffered catastrophic losses in the Kindermord bei Ypern (Massacre of the Innocents), with its ~3,600 reservists—mostly untrained civilians like Hitler—reduced to ~611 effective men.[18][19] In postwar writings, he described intense close-quarters fighting, hand-to-hand combat, machine-gun fire, and holding lines amid Flanders mud and artillery.[17] Promoted to Gefreiter (lance corporal) on November 1, 1914, Hitler shifted to regimental headquarters Meldegänger (dispatch runner) on November 9; this hazardous role entailed carrying orders on foot or bicycle from HQ—kilometers behind the front—to battalion or company leaders, under artillery and sniper fire, keeping him near the lines.[16][21] He participated in later actions, including Fromelles defenses in 1915 and the Somme Offensive in October 1916, amid static trench warfare featuring raids, artillery duels, and disease in flooded positions.[17][18] Comrades described him as diligent yet aloof, fervently patriotic, and volunteering for patrols, though his runner duties spared him some direct infantry assaults.[19]

Wounds, Awards, and Postwar Disillusionment

During his service with the 16th Bavarian Reserve Infantry Regiment on the Western Front, Hitler sustained his first significant injury on October 5, 1916, when shrapnel from a British artillery shell struck his left thigh during the Battle of the Somme, requiring hospitalization in Germany for several months before his return to the front in March 1917.[18] His second wound occurred on October 14, 1918, near Ypres, when a British mustard gas attack temporarily blinded him, leading to his evacuation to a military hospital in Pasewalk, Pomerania, where he remained until after the armistice.[22] Hitler received several decorations for his role as a dispatch runner, including the Iron Cross, Second Class, awarded on 2 December 1914, for bravery under fire, and the Iron Cross, First Class, on August 4, 1918, recommended by his Jewish superior, Lieutenant Hugo Gutmann, for his bravery and service as a dispatch runner under fire— an uncommon honor for a corporal, as fewer than 5% of Iron Cross recipients at that level were enlisted men.[19] [23] He also earned the Bavarian Military Merit Cross, Third Class with Swords, on 17 September 1917.[24] While recovering in Pasewalk during the final weeks of the war, Hitler learned of Germany's armistice on November 11, 1918, and the subsequent revolution, which he later described in Mein Kampf as causing profound despair and a resolve to enter politics to restore national honor, viewing the defeat as a betrayal by internal forces including civilians, socialists, and Jews.[25] This perspective aligned with the "stab-in-the-back" legend, propagated by figures like Paul von Hindenburg.[26]

Entry into Politics

Joining the German Workers' Party

Interior of the Sterneckerbräu beer hall with Nazi-era decorations, inscriptions, and portraits
The back room of the Sterneckerbräu beer hall in Munich, where Hitler attended his first German Workers' Party meeting in 1919
In the aftermath of World War I, Adolf Hitler remained in Munich, working for the Reichswehr's intelligence and propaganda section to monitor and counter leftist groups amid Bavaria's unrest. The suppression of the Bavarian Soviet Republic in May 1919 intensified Munich's anti-Semitic and anti-Communist atmosphere, as Jewish revolutionaries' roles fueled views of a "Judeo-Bolshevik" conspiracy behind Germany's turmoil.[27] On September 12, 1919, he attended a meeting of the German Workers' Party (Deutsche Arbeiterpartei, or DAP), founded that year by Anton Drexler and Karl Harrer to oppose Marxism and promote German ethnic unity. Held in the Sterneckerbräu beer hall with about two dozen attendees, the event featured Gottfried Feder's speech titled "How and by What Means Can Capitalism Be Abolished?".[28][29][30] Drexler, impressed by Hitler's oratory, gave him a pamphlet and invited him to join. Seeing alignment with his anti-Bolshevik and völkisch views, Hitler applied and joined in September 1919 as member 555—a party tactic starting numbers at 501 to inflate size.[12][30][31] Because the membership list was maintained in alphabetical order, it is unknown whether he was exactly the 55th member to join.[31] In Mein Kampf, he exaggerated his role as the seventh member, contradicted by records.[12]

Leadership of the NSDAP and Early Oratory

After joining the German Workers' Party, Hitler rose prominently through propaganda and speeches. His rhetoric appealed to veterans and nationalists facing economic woes, drawing crowds through effective delivery.[32] He pushed for growth via agitation, giving his debut address on October 16, 1919, to 111 attendees in the Munich Hofbräukeller. In that address, he intervened against Adalbert Baumann's advocacy for Bavaria's secession, passionately defending national unity and earning applause.[33][29]
Adolf Hitler speaking at a crowded indoor rally
Hitler addressing a large crowd at a beer-hall rally with NSDAP banner
On February 24, 1920, Hitler addressed 2,000 at Munich's Hofbräuhaus, unveiling the 25-point program as the party's platform.[34] This event formalized the agenda and led to renaming the DAP the National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSDAP) in early 1920, with Hitler creating its swastika emblem.[35] Membership jumped from around 50 in late 1919 to over 3,000 by year-end, driven by beer-hall rallies secured by Sturmabteilung (SA) against opponents.[36]
Adolf Hitler delivering a speech with raised arms
Hitler using dramatic gestures during an early oration
Hitler's style used measured pacing—soft openings building to passionate peaks—along with repetition and gestures to rally crowds, influenced by Viennese agitators and military talks.[37] It tapped frustrations over inflation and joblessness, casting him as Germany's redeemer and cementing his sway, though national reach remained small.[38] In 1921, founder Anton Drexler sought merger with the larger German Socialist Party, leading Hitler to resign on July 27 and insist on total command. The risk of party split prompted his return as chairman—or Führer—with unchecked power on July 29, 1921.[39] This shifted the NSDAP to his vision, using oratory for recruitment and building Bavarian strength amid national marginality.[40]

Beer Hall Putsch and Imprisonment

Soldiers gathered at the entrance of the Bürgerbräukeller beer hall
The Bürgerbräukeller in Munich during the Beer Hall Putsch
On November 8, 1923, Adolf Hitler, leader of the National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSDAP), led an attempted coup in Munich to overthrow the Bavarian government and undermine the Weimar Republic, drawing inspiration from Benito Mussolini's March on Rome.[41] With about 600 armed Sturmabteilung (SA) members and nationalists, he stormed the Bürgerbräukeller during a speech by Bavarian commissioner Gustav Ritter von Kahr, fired a pistol to announce a "national revolution," and declared himself chancellor with Erich Ludendorff as military head.[42] Hitler then seized Kahr, Reichswehr general Otto von Lossow, and police chief Hans von Seisser as hostages, forcing initial support to claim control of Bavaria en route to Berlin.[43] The leaders retracted their backing after Hitler departed briefly, escaping to denounce the putsch by radio and proclamation on November 9, rallying state forces.[43] Hitler, Ludendorff, and some 2,000 followers then marched to the city center and War Ministry but encountered a police blockade at the Feldherrnhalle on Odeonsplatz; a short clash killed 16 Nazis and 4 officers, wounding dozens, as Hitler escaped with a dislocated shoulder.[41] [42] Hitler hid briefly before arrest on November 11, 1923, facing high treason charges with eight others, including Ludendorff.[44] From February 26 to April 1, 1924, a lenient Bavarian People's Court in Munich allowed Hitler a platform to portray his acts as resistance to the 1918 "November criminals," using speeches to spread Nazi ideas and draw publicity.[45] The court convicted him and three others of treason on April 1, sentencing to the minimum five years' fortress confinement with parole after six months, while acquitting Ludendorff amid nationalist judicial bias.[44] [46]
Adolf Hitler gazing out a barred prison window
Hitler looking out from his cell in Landsberg Fortress, 1924
At Landsberg Fortress from April 1, 1924, Hitler enjoyed lenient conditions—a furnished cell, visitors, and no labor—as a prison report later described his discipline and writing focus.[47] There, he dictated the first volume of Mein Kampf, his autobiographical manifesto of ideology, to Rudolf Hess and Emil Maurice over nine months.[48] Paroled early on December 20, 1924, amid economic recovery, he shifted to electoral paths despite the NSDAP's temporary ban and dispersal.[48] [47]

Ideological Foundations

Key Influences and Philosophical Roots

Hitler's ideological development drew heavily from the anti-Semitic völkisch movement, a late-19th-century German ethno-nationalist current that emphasized blood, soil, and folkish mysticism. It fused romantic nationalism with racial pseudoscience and anti-urban sentiments.[49] During his Vienna years (1908–1913), Hitler encountered these ideas through pan-Germanic publications and key figures. Georg Ritter von Schönerer promoted Protestantism with Germanic symbolism over Catholicism in his Los von Rom (Away from Rome) campaign. Karl Lueger, the anti-Semitic mayor, led the Christian Social Party, which blended populism with racial exclusion.[50] These influences shaped Hitler's view of Jews as a corrosive force undermining Aryan vitality in Vienna's multicultural setting.[15] Hitler also admired Mustafa Kemal Atatürk as a model for national revival after defeat. He called Atatürk his "shining star in the darkness" and praised his secular reforms that curbed religious authority. Hitler viewed Kemalist Turkey as a prototype for a strong, nationalist, one-party state with ethnic homogeneity, influencing Nazi ideology and even aspects of the Munich Putsch.[51][52] Houston Stewart Chamberlain's The Foundations of the Nineteenth Century (1899) offered a pseudo-historical framework. It positioned Teutonic Aryans as creators of civilization, threatened by Semitic influences and racial mixing. Hitler met Chamberlain in Bayreuth in 1923, the site of the annual Wagner Festival dedicated to Richard Wagner.[53] Wagner's operas, drawing on Germanic myths and legends in works like the Ring Cycle and Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, celebrated heroism, cultural purity, and the German spirit, profoundly shaping Hitler's view of the German people as a superior, creative Volk destined for greatness. Wagner's antisemitic essay "Judaism in Music" (1850) argued that Jews were incapable of genuine artistic creation and posed a cultural threat to Germany, ideas that resonated with and reinforced Hitler's developing antisemitism and perception of Jews as a parasitic, destructive force in society.[54][55] Arthur de Gobineau's Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races (1853–1855) argued for Aryan superiority and decline through miscegenation. Though indirect, this influenced Hitler via Chamberlain and völkisch circles.[56] Hans F. K. Günther's Racial Studies of the German People (1922) reinforced Hitler's Nordicist ideals. It classified Germans into racial types, stressing the preservation of Nordic traits as the ideal Aryan element. This informed Nazi racial policy and Nordicism.[57] Social Darwinist concepts of racial struggle—popularized by figures like Ernst Haeckel rather than Darwin himself—supported Hitler's notions of Lebensraum and eugenics. He viewed history as a perpetual conflict in which weaker races must yield to stronger ones.[58][59] Philosophically, Hitler drew from Arthur Schopenhauer, carrying The World as Will and Representation during World War I for its pessimism and emphasis on the will. He adopted nationalist and statist ideas from Johann Gottlieb Fichte's Addresses to the German Nation.[59][60] Hitler invoked Friedrich Nietzsche's concepts of the Übermensch and will to power—distorted through Nietzsche's sister Elisabeth—to support elite rule and reject Christian "slave morality." This stood in contrast to Nietzsche's opposition to anti-Semitism and his emphasis on individualism.[61][62] An OSS analysis of Hitler's personality by psychologist Henry A. Murray, published in 1943, links these Nietzschean concepts to Prussian militarist and expansionist aims.[60] Dietrich Eckart, Hitler's early mentor, considered Fichte, Schopenhauer, and Nietzsche the philosophical triumvirate of National Socialism.[61] Hitler's rhetoric framed these ideas in apocalyptic and conspiratorial terms, depicting Jewish influence as a satanic power responsible for Germany's collapse — language consistent across his speeches from 1925 through 1940.[65][66][67]

Mein Kampf and Core Tenets

Mein Kampf, subtitled My Struggle, was dictated by Adolf Hitler to Rudolf Hess during his nine-month imprisonment in Landsberg Prison following the failed Beer Hall Putsch of November 1923.[62] Hitler began the work in April 1924 under the initial title Viereinhalb Jahre Kampf gegen Lüge, Dummheit und Feigheit ("Four and a Half Years of Struggle against Lies, Stupidity, and Cowardice"), shortening it before completion by December 1924.[63] The book blends autobiography with the ideological foundations of National Socialism.
Red cover of Mein Kampf Eine Abrechnung by Adolf Hitler, Franz Eher Verlag
Cover of an early edition of Mein Kampf Volume 1 (Eine Abrechnung), published by the Nazi Party's Franz Eher Verlag
The first volume, Eine Abrechnung ("A Reckoning"), appeared on July 18, 1925, from Franz Eher Verlag, the Nazi Party's publisher, with about 9,473 copies sold in its first year.[62] [64] The second volume, Die nationalsozialistische Bewegung ("The National Socialist Movement"), followed in December 1926; total sales exceeded 12 million by 1945, remaining low in the 1920s.[63] [62]
Open copy of Mein Kampf showing Adolf Hitler's portrait and title pages for both volumes
Interior of Mein Kampf displaying the frontispiece portrait of Adolf Hitler and title pages for Eine Abrechnung and Die nationalsozialistische Bewegung
Volume II addresses Nazi organization, propaganda, and goals for racial homogeneity.[63] The book articulates core tenets rooted in biological determinism: antisemitism as a racial threat requiring Jewish removal; Aryan supremacy with eugenic measures; völkisch nationalism demanding Lebensraum through Eastern conquest; rejection of democracy and the Versailles Treaty in favor of the Führerprinzip; and anti-communism intertwined with racial subversion.[63] These tenets built on the NSDAP's 25-point program of 1920, which prioritized racial purity and expansion of the Germanic Volk over state institutions while rejecting cosmopolitanism and democracy as threats to ethnic cohesion. It advocated unifying ethnic Germans into a Greater Germany, repudiating the Treaty of Versailles, and restricting citizenship to those of German blood; framed Jews as a racially alien, unassimilable force blamed for Germany's defeat and decay via control of finance, culture, and politics, necessitating exclusion from citizenship and public roles (points 4 and 6); and depicted Bolshevism as a Jewish-led assault on racial hierarchy and sovereignty, promoting class conflict against folk communities and denouncing international Marxism (point 25) as an existential threat under Judeo-Bolshevism.[65] Synthesizing 19th-century racial pseudoscience and völkisch ideas, these elements provided the foundational outline for Nazi policy.[63]

Rise to Power

Weimar Electoral Struggles

After the Beer Hall Putsch failed in November 1923—leading to the NSDAP's temporary ban and Hitler's imprisonment—the party endured setbacks, including arrests or flights of leaders and a membership drop. Released on December 20, 1924, Hitler rebuilt via a "legality" doctrine, forgoing putschism to subvert Weimar through elections, as outlined in post-prison speeches and directives. This approach, shaped by the risks of direct state confrontation, stressed mass propaganda, SA paramilitary discipline, and appeals to economic woes and nationalism for legal vote gains.[66][67] Early elections brought limited success amid Weimar stabilization under the Dawes Plan and Stresemann's diplomacy, which eased hyperinflation and spurred prosperity, restricting NSDAP appeal to fringe nationalists and völkisch elements. In December 1924, aligned candidates via the Völkisch-National Socialist Freedom Movement took ~3% of votes and 14 seats, gains muted by internal splits and state bans. By May 1928, running as NSDAP, it garnered 2.6% (810,127 votes) for 12 of 491 seats, hampered by rivals like SPD, DNVP, communists, and centrists. Membership lingered near 100,000, mostly in Bavaria, with scant urban or industrial foothold.[66] The onset of the Great Depression in 1929 catalyzed a dramatic surge, enabling the NSDAP to position itself as a radical alternative to ineffective coalition governments. In the September 1930 Reichstag election, triggered by the collapse of the Müller cabinet, the party exploded to 18.3% of the vote (6.4 million votes), securing 107 seats and becoming the second-largest party behind the SPD, driven by targeted campaigning in Protestant rural areas and among the middle class fearing proletarianization. Hitler centralized control, sidelining rivals like the Strasser brothers' left-leaning faction at the 1926 Bamberg conference, while SA street violence intimidated opponents without derailing the legality facade. Yet, proportional representation and party fragmentation prevented outright control, forcing reliance on unstable alliances.[66]
Election DateVote Share (%)Votes ReceivedSeats Won
May 20, 1928 (Reichstag)2.6810,12712
September 14, 1930 (Reichstag)18.36,409,600107
July 31, 1932 (Reichstag)37.313,745,000230
November 6, 1932 (Reichstag)33.111,737,000196
1932 German presidential election poster for Adolf Hitler
Nazi Party campaign poster from the 1932 presidential election urging voters to elect Hitler as leader from misery and distress
Peak gains came in the July 1932 Reichstag election, where the NSDAP claimed 37.3% (largest party with 230 seats), capitalizing on Brüning's austerity measures and Hindenburg's dissolution of parliament, though vote erosion in November (33.1%, 196 seats) highlighted voter volatility and backlash against SA excesses. Hitler's March-April 1932 presidential campaign netted 30.1% in the first round (March 13) and 36.8% in the runoff against Hindenburg, underscoring broad but insufficient support amid multipolar competition from Thälmann's KPD (13-17%). These results exposed ongoing struggles: no absolute majority despite mobilization of 4.5 million members by 1933, dependence on economic despair rather than ideological purity, and elite maneuvering by figures like Papen and Schleicher, who viewed Hitler as controllable. The party's anti-Semitic and anti-communist platform resonated amid fears of Bolshevik upheaval and Jewish influence in finance, yet electoral success hinged on pragmatic adaptation to Weimar's proportional system rather than revolutionary purity.[66]

Economic Crisis Exploitation

The Wall Street Crash of October 1929 triggered a severe economic downturn in Germany, exacerbating vulnerabilities from Treaty of Versailles reparations and prior hyperinflation. Unemployment surged from under 2% in 1929 to over 30% of the insured labor force by early 1932.[68][69] This eroded confidence in Weimar governments, particularly under Chancellor Heinrich Brüning, whose deflationary policies of wage cuts and tax hikes intensified deflation and social unrest without restoring stability.[70] The NSDAP exploited the widespread despair through propaganda that blamed the Versailles Treaty, international finance (often implying Jewish influence), and Weimar institutional failures. The party promised national revival, employment via public works and rearmament, and protection for small businesses against both communism and large-scale capital.[70] These narratives further undermined faith in democracy by positioning the Nazis as a bulwark against total economic collapse.
Nazi SA paramilitaries and supporters marching with banner reading 'Tod dem Marxismus'
SA march against Marxism during the Weimar economic crisis
As unemployment peaked in 1932, the Nazis intensified mobilization efforts through the Sturmabteilung (SA), deploying expanding brownshirt formations to project strength amid strikes and street violence.[71] Hitler capitalized on the crisis's psychological toll—including elevated mortality rates and social alienation—to frame the party as a resolute anti-Bolshevik force, appealing to those disillusioned by Brüning's austerity measures and Social Democratic passivity.[72] Persistent scapegoating of perceived enemies sustained Nazi momentum even after 1931 reparations adjustments, eroding opponents and facilitating alliances among conservatives fearful of communism, which paved the way for Hitler's appointment as chancellor on January 30, 1933.[66]

Chancellorship and Power Seizure

Chancellor Kurt von Schleicher resigned on January 28, 1933, unable to secure a parliamentary majority or emergency powers from President Paul von Hindenburg amid the November 1932 Reichstag elections deadlock, where Nazis held 196 seats as the largest faction without a coalition.[73] His bid to divide the Nazis by offering Gregor Strasser the vice-chancellorship failed, as Hitler prevented the defection, unified the party, and intensified pressure on the government.[74]
Adolf Hitler shaking hands with Paul von Hindenburg
Hitler appointed Chancellor by President Hindenburg, January 30, 1933
Franz von Papen, Hindenburg's chancellor until dismissed in December 1932, brokered deals to name Hitler chancellor in a conservative cabinet, anticipating Nazi support would steady the regime while others contained radicalism.[75] With backing from industrialists like Gustav Krupp and Hindenburg's son Oskar von Hindenburg, Papen swayed the skeptical president—who labeled Hitler "the Bohemian corporal" for his Austrian birth—to appoint him legally on January 30, 1933, allied with the German National People's Party.[76][77] The eleven-member cabinet included just three Nazis: Hitler, Hermann Göring as Prussian interior minister, and Wilhelm Frick as Reich interior minister, with Papen as vice-chancellor to check him.[78][79]
Adolf Hitler walking past saluting Nazi paramilitaries
Hitler greeted by saluting Nazi supporters after his appointment as Chancellor
Hitler leveraged this precarious position under Weimar Republic rules, which demanded Reichstag backing for chancellors but permitted decree rule via Hindenburg.[66] On February 1, 1933, he dissolved the Reichstag and set March 5 elections to exploit Nazi advances amid hardship and unrest, using the 400,000-strong SA for coercion without declaring martial law.[80] Conservatives presumed Hitler would temper in power, blind to his plan for internal radicalization after spurning deals short of the chancellorship.[81] This lawful appointment—not by vote or putsch—delivered constitutional leverage, paving rapid escalation against Great Depression unemployment of 6 million and Weimar Republic stalemate.[78]

Consolidation of Dictatorship

Reichstag Fire and Enabling Act

The Reichstag building burning with smoke rising from the dome
The Reichstag building in flames during the Reichstag Fire, February 27, 1933
On February 27, 1933, the Reichstag building in Berlin burned, with extensive damage reported shortly after 9 p.m. Dutch communist Marinus van der Lubbe, aged 24, was arrested on site with matches and incendiary materials; he confessed, stating it protested the Nazi government.[82] The German Supreme Court convicted van der Lubbe alone of arson, sentencing him to death by guillotine on January 15, 1934, while acquitting four co-defendants for insufficient evidence.[82] Although theories—often from communist and postwar accounts—allege Nazi false-flag involvement to enable repression, forensic and archival evidence, including eyewitness reports and lacking Nazi planning documents, points to van der Lubbe's independent action; declassified files and exhumations provide no conclusive conspiracy proof.[83][84]
Marinus van der Lubbe in striped prison uniform in a courtroom surrounded by officials
Marinus van der Lubbe (center) on trial in Leipzig for the Reichstag Fire arson, December 1933
Nazi leaders Hermann Göring and Joseph Goebbels swiftly blamed a communist plot, framing it as the start of a Bolshevik uprising despite van der Lubbe's solo confession.[83] This spurred President Paul von Hindenburg to issue the Reichstag Fire Decree on February 28, officially the "Decree of the Reich President for the Protection of People and State," which halted Weimar safeguards like habeas corpus, freedoms of expression, press, assembly, and association, and permitted indefinite detention without trial alongside federal supremacy over states.[85] Within days, it led to arresting around 4,000 suspected communists and socialists, gutting opposition before the March 5 elections where Nazis gained 43.9% of votes (288 seats) yet needed alliances for a majority.[86] Capitalizing on the ensuing panic, Hitler's cabinet advanced the Enabling Act—the "Law to Remedy the Distress of People and Reich"—on March 23, 1933, in a Reichstag meeting at the Kroll Opera House amid intimidating SA presence.[87] It passed 444–94, opposed solely by the Social Democratic Party (SPD); communists were detained or barred, with other foes coerced or abstaining. The measure allowed cabinet lawmaking sans parliamentary consent, even against constitutional norms, for four years initially (subsequently renewed).[87] Effective March 24, it stripped Reichstag veto authority, entrenched Hitler's dictatorship, and facilitated decrees abolishing trade unions, prohibiting parties, and amassing control, leaving democratic mechanisms defunct.[88]

Night of the Long Knives

Ernst Röhm reviewing Silesian SA troops in Breslau, Germany, 1933
Ernst Röhm, chief of the SA, inspecting Silesian SA troops in Breslau, 1933
The Night of the Long Knives, occurring from June 30 to July 2, 1934, was a purge ordered by Adolf Hitler targeting leaders of the Sturmabteilung (SA), the Nazi Party's paramilitary wing, along with select political rivals. It eliminated perceived threats to Hitler's authority, including SA chief Ernst Röhm, whose organization had grown to over three million members and advocated for a "second revolution" involving socialist reforms and integration of the SA into the regular army, which alarmed conservative elites and Reichswehr generals.[89] The operation addressed fabricated rumors of an imminent SA coup, amplified by SS and Gestapo intelligence under Heinrich Himmler and Hermann Göring, who sought to curb the SA's influence and elevate their own factions.[90] Planning began in spring 1934 amid tensions exacerbated by Röhm's personal ambitions and the SA's disruptive street violence, which hindered Nazi efforts to stabilize relations with the military and industry. Hitler, initially protective of Röhm as an early comrade, yielded to pressure from figures like Defense Minister Werner von Blomberg and President Paul von Hindenburg, who warned that continued SA excesses could provoke a military intervention. On June 28, Hitler met with Röhm in Berlin, feigning reconciliation before authorizing arrests two days later. Göring coordinated killings in Berlin, while SS units under Sepp Dietrich handled executions in Munich; the SS and Gestapo bypassed legal processes, using lists compiled by Reinhard Heydrich to target not only SA officers but also conservatives like former Chancellor Kurt von Schleicher and Nazi dissident Gregor Strasser.[91][92] The purge commenced on June 30 when Hitler personally led a raid on the SA headquarters at Bad Wiessee, arresting Röhm and other intoxicated leaders during a meeting; Röhm was initially detained without immediate execution, offered a pistol for suicide on July 1, which he refused, leading to his shooting by SS officer Theodor Eicke on July 2 at Stadelheim Prison in Munich. Simultaneous actions across Germany resulted in summary executions, often without trial, including shootings in hotel rooms, forests, and Gestapo custody; victims included at least 85 confirmed deaths, with scholarly estimates placing the total around 100, though Nazi figures initially claimed only 77 before retroactively justifying higher numbers. Over 1,000 were arrested, many later released or sent to camps like Dachau.[89][93] The operation extended beyond the SA to settle personal vendettas, killing figures like Gustav Ritter von Kahr, who suppressed the 1923 Beer Hall Putsch, and Erich Klausener, a Catholic activist, revealing opportunistic motives amid the chaos. Röhm's homosexuality, long tolerated by Hitler, served as a post-hoc pretext for propaganda portraying the purge as moral cleansing, though primary drivers were political consolidation. On July 3, the Reichstag passed a law declaring the killings "legal" as state necessity for averting treason, shielding participants from prosecution.[90][92]
German soldiers swearing allegiance to Adolf Hitler at Rathenower Strasse barracks, Berlin, August 2, 1934
Reichswehr soldiers swearing personal allegiance to Adolf Hitler at Rathenower Strasse barracks, Berlin, August 2, 1934
The purge secured Reichswehr loyalty, paving the way for Hitler to assume supreme command after Hindenburg's death on August 2, 1934; army officers swore a personal oath to Hitler, viewing the action as curbing radicalism. It dismantled the SA's revolutionary potential, subordinating it to the SS, which emerged as the regime's primary enforcement arm, and signaled the Nazi leadership's readiness for extralegal violence to maintain power hierarchies.[89][91]

Gleichschaltung and Totalitarian Control

Large crowd with torches gathered outside a building, speaker visible in window
Mass gathering during the Nazi seizure of power in 1933 (Bundesarchiv image)
Gleichschaltung—literally "coordination" or synchronization—rapidly centralized authority following the initial consolidation of power, subordinating all facets of German society, including state governments, civil service, media, cultural institutions, and voluntary associations, to National Socialist control. This transformed the federal Weimar Republic into a unitary dictatorship under Hitler's personal leadership via the Führerprinzip, which mandated absolute obedience without intermediary checks.[94] By mid-1934, opposition had been dismantled, with over 100,000 civil servants, judges, professors, and other professionals purged or coerced into alignment, equating dissent with treason.[95] Initial measures targeted federalism and bureaucracy. On March 31, 1933, the regime dissolved state parliaments (Landtage) and appointed Reich commissioners, followed by rigged elections installing Nazi majorities; by April, non-Nazi governors were replaced.[96] The Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service of April 7, 1933, dismissed civil servants, teachers, and judges deemed unreliable, affecting about 5% initially and explicitly excluding Jews and regime opponents since November 1918.[97] The Law for the Reconstruction of the Reich on January 30, 1934, abolished remaining state diets and transferred legislative powers to the center, ending federal autonomy.[98] Professional guilds and associations, from lawyers to farmers, were coordinated under Nazi appointees, with membership mandatory for practice. Cultural and informational spheres underwent rigorous Nazification to propagate ideology and suppress pluralism. The Reich Chamber of Culture, established on September 22, 1933, under Joseph Goebbels' Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda, required artists, journalists, musicians, and filmmakers to join and adhere to racial and ideological standards, expelling over 1,000 writers and blacklisting "degenerate" works.[99] The Editors' Law of October 4, 1933, centralized press control by requiring Nazi-aligned editors, censoring harmful content, and aligning media with party goals like glorifying Hitler and demonizing enemies.[100] Universities adopted the Führerprinzip by 1933, with rectors as absolute leaders and around 700 Jewish professors dismissed, fostering self-censorship via student Nazi groups.[101]
Nazi propaganda poster 'In 8 Monaten' listing regime achievements
1933 Nazi propaganda poster claiming successes in building a unified Reich under Hitler
Enforcement combined legal coercion and terror. The auxiliary police, augmented by 50,000 SA and SS members by March 1933, made arbitrary arrests, detaining over 100,000 in early camps like Dachau by year's end.[94] The Gestapo, formalized under Hermann Göring in Prussia on April 26, 1933, and centralized under Heinrich Himmler in 1936, held extralegal powers to monitor and eliminate opposition without judicial oversight. This framework blended pseudo-legalism with brute force for near-total control, as shown by the August 1934 Hindenburg oath, where 95% of the army and civil service swore personal loyalty to Hitler after Hindenburg's death.[102] Initial compliance arose from economic desperation and nationalism, but sustained control came from eliminating autonomous institutions, making organized resistance infeasible.[103]

Domestic Policies

Economic Recovery Measures

Upon assuming power in January 1933, the Nazi government confronted unemployment affecting roughly 6 million Germans, equivalent to nearly 30% of the insured workforce. Initial measures focused on state-directed work creation programs, including the expansion of the Reichsarbeitsdienst (RAD), a compulsory labor service for young men established in 1931 but greatly enlarged under Nazi control to undertake infrastructure projects like land reclamation, forestry, and road building, thereby absorbing idle labor. These initiatives were financed through deficit spending, with public investment rising sharply from 1.7 billion Reichsmarks in 1933 to over 7 billion by 1936. Labor market controls were enforced via the German Labour Front (DAF), formed in May 1933 after the dissolution of independent trade unions, which mandated membership for all workers, prohibited strikes, and froze wages while extending working hours by about 15% on average. Public works symbolized recovery efforts, notably the Autobahn network, whose construction began in September 1933 under Fritz Todt's inspectorate, eventually employing up to 125,000 workers at peak but contributing modestly to overall job creation amid propaganda emphasis on its scale. Official statistics reflected a precipitous drop in unemployment—from 5.6 million in January 1933 to 1.2 million by mid-1936 and under 0.1 million by 1939—though these figures were manipulated by excluding women, Jews, and short-time workers, reclassifying military conscripts as employed, and pressuring the underemployed into low-wage roles. Economic output expanded robustly, with real GDP increasing by approximately 55% between 1933 and 1937, outpacing recoveries in comparable European economies like the Netherlands. This growth stemmed primarily from state-coordinated investment in infrastructure, which stimulated demand in heavy industry, though real wages stagnated or declined amid controlled prices and heightened workplace accidents. While these policies achieved apparent full employment and restored production levels surpassing those of 1929 by 1936, they relied on suppressed consumption, resource rationing, and unsustainable fiscal practices that deferred imbalances until wartime mobilization.

Rearmament and Autarky Efforts

Rearmament expenditures surged from 1.9 billion Reichsmarks in 1933 to 18.4 billion by 1938, though at the cost of suppressed wages and mounting debt financed by MEFO bills.[104]
Massed German troops on parade under large swastika banners at a Nazi rally
German army units assembled in formation at a Nazi Party rally, demonstrating the scale of military rearmament
These measures strained foreign exchange reserves due to massive imports of raw materials like iron ore, rubber, and oil, prompting a shift toward autarky to insulate the war economy from blockades and trade dependencies. Hjalmar Schacht's New Plan of September 1934 imposed bilateral barter agreements and import quotas to conserve currency, but by 1936, shortages threatened rearmament.[105] In a secret August 30, 1936, memorandum, Hitler argued that Germany's "problem cannot be solved by peaceful means" and ordered the economy's reorientation toward autarky within four years to enable sustained military production, explicitly linking self-sufficiency to offensive capabilities.[106] This culminated in the Four-Year Plan, decreed on October 18, 1936, and directed by Hermann Göring, which centralized control over industry, agriculture, and resources to prioritize synthetic substitutes—such as 4 million tons of artificial fuel annually from coal hydrogenation—and domestic extraction of metals and fertilizers.[107] The plan subordinated civilian consumption to armament output, with state-directed investments in firms like IG Farben for Buna rubber and steel cartels, achieving partial self-sufficiency in textiles and fuels by 1939 but failing in critical imports like tungsten and copper, which fueled expansionist pressures.[106]

Social Engineering and Propaganda

The Nazi regime under Adolf Hitler systematically engineered German society to align with National Socialist ideology through pervasive propaganda and state-controlled institutions, fostering a unified Volksgemeinschaft (people's community) marked by racial purity, militarism, and loyalty to the Führer. Propaganda campaigns portrayed Hitler as infallible, emphasizing national revival, anti-communism, and anti-Semitism.[108] Propaganda permeated media channels, including radio, which was made accessible via inexpensive "Volk's receivers" produced from 1933 onward to ensure widespread ideological indoctrination in homes.[109] Films such as Leni Riefenstahl's Triumph of the Will (1935), documenting the 1934 Nuremberg Rally, glorified mass spectacles attended by over 700,000 participants, reinforcing the regime's image of order, strength, and unity.[110] Annual Nuremberg Party Rallies from 1933 to 1938 served as choreographed events to build the cult of personality around Hitler and demonstrate Nazi dominance, with rituals including torchlight parades and synchronized marches designed to evoke emotional fervor and collective identity.[111]
Adolf Hitler with a young Hitler Youth member in uniform
Adolf Hitler pictured with a boy wearing Hitler Youth uniform and insignia
Education and youth organizations were key instruments of social engineering, with curricula revised from 1933 to prioritize physical fitness, racial biology, and obedience to the state over traditional subjects.[112] The Hitler Youth, originally formed in 1926, was restructured as a state agency on July 1, 1936, with membership becoming compulsory for Aryan boys aged 10-18 via the Law on the Hitler Youth of December 1, 1936, reaching over 5 million members by 1937 to instill militaristic values and prepare youth for service.[113][114] Parallel programs like Strength Through Joy, launched in 1933 under the German Labor Front, provided subsidized leisure activities—such as cruises, vacations, and sports events for 25 million participants by 1938—to integrate workers into the Nazi worldview, promoting productivity and ideological conformity without challenging class hierarchies.[115]
Nazi book burning event with students throwing books into fire
German students and SA members burning books during the 1933 Nazi book burnings
These mechanisms achieved short-term cohesion by exploiting economic recovery and national pride, but relied on coercion, as evidenced by the regime's intolerance for nonconformity, including book burnings in 1933 and pervasive surveillance.[116] Goebbels' approach, rooted in repetitive messaging and emotional appeals over rational discourse, sustained public support until military setbacks eroded credibility.[117]

Racial Policies

Nuremberg Laws and Early Persecutions

After Adolf Hitler's appointment as Chancellor on January 30, 1933, the Nazi regime began sporadic but intensifying persecutions of Jews, mainly through SA paramilitary actions. On April 1, it staged a nationwide one-day boycott of Jewish businesses and professionals, with SA members blocking entrances, intimidating customers, and scrawling anti-Jewish slogans on windows.[118] The April 7 Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service then dismissed Jews and political opponents from government roles, barring most Jews from public employment.[119] Other steps followed: quotas curbed Jewish university enrollment, bans prevented Jewish lawyers and doctors from serving non-Jews, and May 10 book burnings destroyed works by authors like Albert Einstein and Sigmund Freud.[120] These measures drew on improvised violence, local edicts, and economic coercion rather than nationwide laws, sparking random attacks, property destruction, and emigration—around 37,000 Jews departed Germany by 1933's end.[121] Joseph Goebbels' propaganda fueled racial antisemitism by casting Jews as economic parasites and cultural dangers, rationalizing further limits on their involvement in theater and press.[122] By mid-1935, with internal party conflicts and global attention before the Nuremberg Rally, Hitler moved to enshrine these practices in statutes for apparent legality and to forestall more extreme demands from radicals.[123]
Text of the 1935 Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honor
Original document of one of the Nuremberg Laws prohibiting marriages and relations between Jews and non-Jews, September 15, 1935
On September 15, 1935, during the annual Nazi Party rally in Nuremberg, the Reichstag enacted the Nuremberg Laws, comprising the Reich Citizenship Law and the Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honor.[124] The Reich Citizenship Law stripped Jews of citizenship, defining Reich citizens as only those of "German or kindred blood" with full political rights, while classifying Jews as mere state subjects without voting or equal protections; a Jew was identified by having three or four Jewish grandparents, with supplementary decrees later categorizing partial Jewish ancestry as "Mischlinge" subject to partial restrictions. In 1936, Germany classified Iranians (Persians) as pure-blooded Aryans, exempting them from the application of the Nuremberg Laws, reflecting the regime's pseudoscientific racial hierarchy and diplomatic considerations with Iran.[125][126][127] The accompanying Law for the Protection of German Blood prohibited marriages and extramarital relations between Jews and non-Jews, voided existing mixed marriages under certain conditions, banned Jews from employing German female domestics under 45 years old, and forbade Jews from displaying German national colors or flags.[128]
Elderly man having his nose measured with calipers during Nazi racial examination
Nazi racial pseudoscience: measuring facial features to determine ancestry and apply Nuremberg Laws classifications
These laws formalized racial pseudoscience into state policy, shifting persecution from extralegal to institutionalized discrimination and enabling further economic expropriation, such as the exclusion of Jews from professions and Aryanization of businesses.[129] Immediate effects included the annulment of hundreds of intermarriages and a surge in Jewish emigration, with over 100,000 departing Germany by 1939, though many faced asset freezes under new regulations.[130] While providing a temporary restraint on street violence to project order, the laws intensified social isolation, as Jews were required to register possessions and faced heightened surveillance, setting the stage for escalated measures like the 1938 Decree on the Exclusion of Jews from Economic Life.[123]

Kristallnacht and Intensification

On November 7, 1938, Herschel Grynszpan, a 17-year-old Polish Jew, assassinated German diplomat Ernst vom Rath in Paris, motivated by the recent mass expulsion of Polish Jews from Germany, including Grynszpan's family, who were dumped at the Polish border near Zbaszyn on October 27–28 without provisions.[131][132] Nazi Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels seized the event as a pretext during a Munich commemoration of the 1923 Beer Hall Putsch on November 9, inciting party leaders to organize "spontaneous" demonstrations against Jews while ensuring no hindrance to Aryan property or lives.[131][132] Reinhard Heydrich, head of the Sicherheitsdienst, issued telegrams coordinating the violence, directing SA and SS units to participate under the guise of public outrage, with police instructed to stand by.[132]
Pedestrians passing a Jewish-owned shop with smashed windows and debris after Kristallnacht
Vandalized Jewish-owned storefront with broken glass during Kristallnacht
The pogrom, dubbed Kristallnacht or the Night of Broken Glass, unfolded across Germany, Austria, and the Sudetenland from November 9 to 10, resulting in over 1,400 synagogues destroyed or damaged by fire, approximately 7,500 Jewish-owned businesses looted or vandalized, and thousands of Jewish homes ransacked.[133][132] Official records report 91 Jews killed directly, though the toll reached nearly 100 including suicides and unreported deaths, with widespread beatings and humiliations targeting Jewish men, women, and children.[131][133] Around 30,000 Jewish males were arrested in the sweeps, interned in concentration camps such as Dachau, Buchenwald, and Sachsenhausen, where many faced brutal conditions; releases were conditional on commitments to emigrate and forfeit assets.[131][132]
Synagogue engulfed in flames and smoke with crowds watching during Kristallnacht
A synagogue burning during the Kristallnacht pogrom
Property damage was estimated at 25–30 million Reichsmarks, yet on November 12, Hermann Göring imposed a collective fine of 1 billion Reichsmarks on the Jewish community as "atonement" for vom Rath's death, equivalent to about 400 million U.S. dollars at the time, to be paid via bonds and deducted from Jewish assets.[132] Insurance payouts to Jews were confiscated by the state, funneling funds to the Reich, while Jews bore the costs of cleanup and repairs.[132] Kristallnacht accelerated the systematic exclusion of Jews from German society. On November 12, 1938, a decree barred Jews from operating retail shops, mail-order houses, or craft businesses, mandating Aryanization—the forced transfer of Jewish enterprises to non-Jews at undervalued prices.[132][133] Further regulations on November 15 expelled Jewish children from public schools and prohibited Jews from attending theaters, cinemas, or public events; by December, Jews were required to register all domestic and foreign property exceeding 5,000 Reichsmarks, facilitating state seizure.[133][132] Curfews confined Jews to their homes after 8 p.m. in winter and 9 p.m. in summer, and October 5 decrees had already invalidated Jewish passports, stamping them with a red "J" to restrict travel.[133] These measures intensified economic strangulation and social isolation, prompting a surge in emigration: approximately 115,000 Jews fled Germany and Austria in the months following, contributing to the exodus of about 300,000 of the roughly 500,000 German Jews by 1939.[133][132] However, international barriers, including the Evian Conference's failure in July 1938 to open borders and British limits on Palestine immigration, trapped many; the pogrom signaled a shift from discriminatory laws to state-sanctioned violence, eroding any pretense of restraint and foreshadowing wartime extermination policies.[133][131]

Eugenic Programs and Lebensraum Ideology

Hitler's eugenic programs formed a core component of Nazi racial hygiene policies, aimed at purifying the German Volk by eliminating perceived genetic defects and promoting Aryan reproduction. The Law for the Prevention of Offspring with Hereditary Diseases, enacted on July 14, 1933, mandated involuntary sterilization for individuals with hereditary conditions including congenital mental deficiency, schizophrenia, manic depression, epilepsy, Huntington's chorea, blindness, deafness, severe alcoholism, or physical deformities.[134] By 1939, approximately 300,000 to 400,000 people had been sterilized, with procedures overseen by state Hereditary Health Courts that reviewed medical reports and permitted limited appeals.[134]
Lebensborn program brochure cover with red Y rune and text
Cover of a promotional brochure for the Nazi Lebensborn program
To complement negative eugenics such as sterilization, the regime pursued "positive" measures to boost births among the racially fit. Established by Heinrich Himmler in late 1935 under SS auspices, the Lebensborn program created maternity homes and adoption networks for unmarried "Aryan" women bearing children from SS men or other approved fathers, aiming to expand the German racial stock.[135] By 1939, it operated around 20 homes in Germany and Austria, facilitating thousands of births after screening participants for "racial value" via anthropological exams.[135]
Hitler's signed authorization document for euthanasia program, 1939
Adolf Hitler's directive authorizing Reich officials to implement euthanasia for incurably ill patients
These efforts escalated to direct killing in the Aktion T4 euthanasia program, authorized by Hitler in October 1939 and launched in January 1940. It targeted institutionalized children and adults with disabilities using gas chambers and lethal injections to eliminate "life unworthy of life" and ease economic burdens.[136] By August 1941, official records show over 70,000 victims killed at six centers including Hartheim and Sonnenstein; the program foreshadowed broader extermination techniques. Public protests, such as those by Bishop Clemens von Galen in 1941, prompted partial suspension, but decentralized killings persisted.[136] Lebensraum ideology, articulated by Hitler in Mein Kampf (1925), posited that Germany's survival required territorial expansion eastward into Poland, Ukraine, and Russia to secure agricultural land and resources for the burgeoning Aryan population, viewing Slavic peoples as racially inferior obstacles to be subjugated, expelled, or eradicated.[137] This doctrine intertwined with eugenics by framing expansion as essential for sustaining a superior race: internal purification via eugenic culling would enhance quality, while conquest provided the quantitative space to prevent overpopulation and racial dilution, as Hitler argued that without new soil, even the strongest Volk would decay.[137] The Generalplan Ost, drafted in 1941–1942 by the Reich Security Main Office under Himmler, operationalized Lebensraum through a blueprint for colonizing eastern Europe, envisioning the deportation or extermination of 30 to 50 million Slavs and Jews to resettle up to 10 million Germans on vast estates, with surviving locals reduced to serfdom for German settlers. Implementation began with the 1941 invasion of the Soviet Union, involving mass executions and starvation policies in occupied territories, directly linking racial hygiene to imperial conquest as a causal mechanism for Nazi genocide.

Foreign Policy and Aggression

Rhineland Remilitarization and Rearmament

After Adolf Hitler's appointment as Chancellor in January 1933, Germany pursued secret rearmament programs, including expanded military production, covert reserve training, and Luftwaffe development under Hermann Göring.[138][139] Rearmament went public in 1935, accelerating economic recovery through arms industries and deficit spending on military infrastructure to support aggressive foreign policy aims. On March 16, Hitler reintroduced universal conscription, targeting 36 army divisions or about 550,000 men.[140] The Anglo-German Naval Agreement of June 18 allowed a surface fleet up to 35% of British tonnage and submarines to 45%.[138][139]
German troops marching under a bridge during the remilitarization of the Rhineland, 1936
Wehrmacht soldiers entering the demilitarized Rhineland zone with crowds watching, March 1936
Escalation intensified with the Rhineland remilitarization on March 7, 1936, as Hitler ordered three battalions—roughly 20,000–30,000 troops—across Rhine bridges into the zone.[141][142][143] Troops had orders to retreat without resistance if met by French forces, reflecting Wehrmacht unreadiness.[144] France and Britain issued diplomatic protests but mounted no military response; France hesitated without British support, while Britain favored appeasement.[141] This inaction emboldened Hitler, spurring further rearmament: by 1938, active army strength exceeded 700,000 with reserves over 2 million, and Luftwaffe aircraft numbered 2,500.[144][138] The move fortified the region into Westwall defenses, enhancing strategic positioning for eastern expansion.[145]

Anschluss and Munich Appeasement

Adolf Hitler in motorcade through Vienna streets, 1938
Hitler riding through cheering crowds in Vienna following the Anschluss, March 1938
Hitler pressed for the Anschluss, the incorporation of Austria into Germany. On February 12, 1938, Austrian Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg met Hitler at Berchtesgaden, yielding to demands to appoint pro-Nazi Arthur Seyss-Inquart as interior minister, release imprisoned Nazis, and declare Marxism illegal under threat of invasion.[146] When Schuschnigg announced a plebiscite on Austrian independence for March 13, Hitler mobilized the Wehrmacht and issued an ultimatum for resignation. German troops crossed the border unopposed on March 12, reaching Vienna that evening; Hitler proclaimed the Anschluss from the Hofburg.[147] [148] A Nazi-orchestrated plebiscite on April 10, 1938, yielded official results of 99.73% approval—4,453,912 yes votes to 11,929 no in Austria—amid non-secret ballots, suppressed opposition, and widespread intimidation.[148] The annexation added 6.7 million people and resources, including Austrian gold reserves transferred to Berlin, enhancing Hitler's domestic prestige. International reaction remained muted: Britain and France protested verbally, while Italy acquiesced after aligning with Hitler.[149][150] Emboldened, Hitler targeted the Sudetenland, Czechoslovakia's border regions with 3 million ethnic Germans. Agitation via the Berlin-backed Sudeten German Party under Konrad Henlein escalated to clashes and threats of intervention by September 1938. British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain pursued appeasement, meeting Hitler at Berchtesgaden on September 15 and Bad Godesberg on September 22, conceding self-determination but facing demands for immediate occupation; France deferred to Britain.[151]
Group photograph of leaders at the Munich Conference, 1938
Adolf Hitler with Neville Chamberlain, Édouard Daladier, Benito Mussolini, and other officials at the Munich Conference signing, September 1938
The Munich Conference of September 29–30, 1938, involving Hitler, Chamberlain, French Premier Édouard Daladier, and Benito Mussolini, mandated Sudetenland cession to Germany by October 10, verified by commission, with plebiscites in disputed areas and guarantees for new Czech borders—though unenforced militarily. German forces occupied the region, seizing fortifications, Skoda arms factories, and 660,000 rifles.[152] [151] Chamberlain declared "peace with honour," reflecting British relief amid war fears. The agreement dismantled Czechoslovakia's defenses, enabling economic exploitation—Sudetenland held 40% of its industry—and total dismemberment: Hungary and Poland seized territories, and Germany occupied Bohemia-Moravia on March 15, 1939, unopposed. Munich incentivized further invasions by demonstrating Western irresolution.[151][153]

Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact and Poland Invasion

In 1939, Hitler sought to neutralize eastern threats amid escalating tensions. Talks with the Soviet Union accelerated in July, culminating in the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact signed August 23 in Moscow, committing to ten years of non-aggression and neutrality.[154] A secret protocol divided Eastern Europe: western Poland to Germany, eastern Poland—52% of territory and 13 million people—to the Soviets, plus Soviet claims on the Baltics and Finland.[155] This freed 16 German divisions for the west, enabling invasion without immediate eastern opposition.[154]
Signing of the Soviet-German non-aggression pact in Moscow
Vyacheslav Molotov signs the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact as Joseph Stalin and Joachim von Ribbentrop observe, August 1939
On September 1, 1939, at 4:45 a.m., Germany launched Operation Fall Weiss, invading Poland with over 1.5 million troops in 52 divisions, 2,000 tanks, and 1,900 aircraft, using blitzkrieg to integrate armored advances, infantry, and air strikes.[156] The assault opened with the Gleiwitz false-flag operation and destroyed 65% of Poland's air force on the ground, with ground forces penetrating deeply within days. Poland's 950,000 troops, lacking mechanization, resisted fiercely but succumbed to superior forces. Britain and France declared war on September 3 but provided no aid, beginning the "Phoney War."[156]
German and Soviet officers meeting after the partition of Poland
German and Soviet military officers conferring following the joint invasion and partition of Poland, September 1939
Soviet forces invaded eastern Poland on September 17 with over 600,000 troops and 4,700 tanks, advancing to the demarcation line with minimal resistance.[157] Partition followed by early October, with German-Soviet meetings and a joint parade in Brest-Litovsk on September 22; a September 28 treaty adjusted borders, assigning Lithuania to Soviet sphere. Germany annexed 92,000 square kilometers of western Poland and created the General Government, while Soviets annexed eastern provinces, targeting Polish elites.[157] The invasions dismantled Poland and ignited broader European war, highlighting the pact's facilitation of coordinated aggression.[154]

World War II Conduct

Blitzkrieg and Early Conquests

The German strategy of Blitzkrieg, or "lightning war," emphasized rapid, coordinated advances using armored divisions supported by air power to achieve breakthroughs before enemies could fully mobilize, allowing encirclement and destruction of opposing forces.[158] This approach, advocated by generals such as Heinz Guderian and Erich von Manstein, was endorsed by Hitler, who had studied Guderian's 1937 work Achtung – Panzer! and observed armored maneuvers, viewing it as a means to avoid the attrition of World War I.[159] The tactic integrated tanks, motorized infantry, dive-bombers like the Stuka, and artillery to exploit narrow fronts, prioritizing speed over sustained supply lines in initial phases.
Crowds and Nazi banners welcoming Hitler in Danzig streets
Hitler parading through Danzig after the invasion of Poland, September 1939
The first application occurred with the invasion of Poland on September 1, 1939 (detailed in the "Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact and Poland Invasion" subsection), where pincer movements overwhelmed Polish defenses, validating the doctrine's capacity for swift encirclement and decisive victory.[160] Following the "Phony War" period of relative inaction, Hitler authorized Operation Weserübung on April 9, 1940, invading Denmark and Norway to secure iron ore supplies and naval bases, deploying combined arms assaults with troops, warships, and paratroopers.[161] Denmark capitulated within hours, while Norway's campaign involved Allied intervention but ultimately yielded German control of key ports.[162]
Adolf Hitler in front of the Eiffel Tower in Paris, June 1940
Hitler viewing the Eiffel Tower in Paris after the fall of France, June 1940
The pinnacle of early Blitzkrieg successes unfolded in the West with Fall Gelb, launched on May 10, 1940, where German forces executed Manstein's Sichelschnitt ("sickle cut") plan, thrusting through the Ardennes Forest to bypass the Maginot Line and sever Allied armies in Belgium.[159] Armored spearheads advanced rapidly to the Channel, encircling Allied troops, though a halt order enabled partial evacuation at Dunkirk. France fell after fragmented command and outdated tactics undermined its defenses, leading to an armistice and partition.[163] These victories expanded Nazi control over Western Europe, positioning Germany for further aggression while exposing vulnerabilities in overextended logistics.[164]

Barbarossa and Eastern Front Atrocities

On December 18, 1940, Adolf Hitler issued Führer Directive No. 21, codenamed Operation Barbarossa, outlining preparations for the invasion of the Soviet Union as a decisive strike against Bolshevism to secure Lebensraum (living space) in the East.[165] The operation commenced on June 22, 1941, with German forces totaling over 3 million troops, supported by more than 3,000 tanks and 2,500 aircraft, launching a three-pronged assault across a 1,800-mile front from the Baltic to the Black Sea.[166] Hitler framed the campaign not as conventional warfare but as a racial-ideological struggle of annihilation, declaring in pre-invasion speeches that the conflict would pit Germanic superiority against "Judeo-Bolshevik" subhumans, justifying unrestricted brutality against civilians and combatants alike.[167] Prior to the launch, on June 6, 1941, the German High Command issued the Commissar Order, mandating the immediate execution of captured Soviet political commissars as bearers of the "Bolshevik worldview," with instructions to treat them as outside the norms of military honor.[168] This directive, rooted in Hitler's longstanding anti-communist and racial doctrines, exempted perpetrators from judicial review and extended to broader categories of perceived enemies, including intellectuals and partisans; it was implemented by Wehrmacht units, resulting in tens of thousands of summary executions in the war's opening months.[169] Complementing this, the Barbarossa Decree of May 13, 1941, suspended conventional military justice on the Eastern Front, granting troops impunity for acts against civilians deemed threats to security, thereby institutionalizing atrocities under the guise of counter-partisan operations.[167]
Crowd of people digging pits in a ravine
Civilians forced to dig mass graves during Einsatzgruppen operations, 1941
Accompanying the advancing armies were four Einsatzgruppen units—SS and police task forces totaling about 3,000 men—tasked with eliminating Jews, communists, and other "undesirables" in the rear areas.[170] Economic warfare underpinned the campaign's genocidal intent via the Hunger Plan, devised in May 1941 by Herbert Backe under Hermann Göring's oversight and aligned with Hitler's visions of resettling depopulated lands for German farmers.[171] The plan aimed to seize Soviet grain surpluses for the Reich while deliberately starving 20 to 30 million "racially inferior" urban dwellers and nomads in western Russia and Ukraine, prioritizing food diversion to the Wehrmacht and civilians back home; this policy contributed to the deaths of millions through enforced famine, as seen in the Leningrad siege from September 1941, where over 1 million perished from starvation by early 1942.[172]
Long column of ragged prisoners marching on a road
Soviet prisoners of war marched into German captivity on the Eastern Front, 1941
Soviet prisoners of war faced systematic extermination through neglect and direct killing, with Nazi ideology classifying them as subhuman and denying Geneva Convention protections.[173] Of approximately 5.7 million captured between June 1941 and 1945, around 3.3 million died—57 percent mortality—primarily from starvation rations averaging 200 grams of bread daily, exposure in open camps, disease epidemics, and executions under the Commissar Order or as "partisans."[173] In the first eight months alone, over 2 million perished in makeshift enclosures lacking shelter or sanitation, exemplifying Hitler's directive for a war without mercy that blurred combatant-civilian distinctions and prioritized ideological eradication over military necessity.[174]

Strategic Blunders and Allied Invasions

Declaration of War on the United States

Hitler's decision to declare war on the United States on December 11, 1941, four days after Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor, represented a pivotal strategic error that fully mobilized American industrial and military resources against Germany despite no prior U.S. declaration of war on the Axis powers.[175] This move, justified by Hitler through claims of U.S. aggression such as alleged attacks on German ships and Roosevelt's anti-Axis policies, ignored the Tripartite Pact's defensive nature and underestimated the U.S.'s capacity to sustain both Pacific and European theaters, ultimately channeling billions in Lend-Lease aid and millions of troops to bolster Allied efforts in Europe.[175] [176]

North Africa Campaign

The commitment to defending North Africa following Operation Torch, the Allied landings in Morocco and Algeria on November 8, 1942, compounded resource strains by diverting elite units to Tunisia rather than prioritizing evacuation or Eastern Front reinforcements.[176] Hitler's reinforcement of Erwin Rommel's Afrika Korps with over 200,000 troops, including air and armor assets, aimed to hold the region but resulted in the encirclement and surrender of 230,000 Axis personnel by May 13, 1943, after prolonged fighting that exhausted German logistics without securing vital Mediterranean supply lines.[176] This fixation prevented redeployment to counter Soviet advances, further diluting forces available for impending Western Allied operations.[176]

Battle of Kursk

The July 1943 Battle of Kursk, where Hitler overruled intelligence warnings of Soviet defensive preparations and insisted on a massive offensive with 900,000 troops and 2,700 tanks, marked the last major German initiative on the Eastern Front and eroded the Wehrmacht's offensive capacity.[176] Despite initial penetrations, Soviet defenses inflicted irreplaceable losses—over 200,000 German casualties and 700 tanks destroyed—shifting momentum permanently to the Red Army and freeing Allied planners from fears of a two-front German offensive, as resources remained locked in attritional eastern defenses.[176]

Italian Campaign

Hitler's response to the Allied invasion of Sicily on July 10, 1943, and subsequent mainland landings at Salerno on September 9, 1943, involved committing additional divisions to a defensive posture under Albert Kesselring, tying down up to 20 German divisions in Italy's mountainous terrain without prospect of decisive victory.[176] This strategy, prioritizing the "soft underbelly" defense over withdrawal to stronger lines, prolonged the campaign into 1945, costing Germany 435,000 casualties while diverting mechanized units from Normandy preparations and allowing Allies to hone amphibious tactics for larger operations.[176]
Adolf Hitler with German generals examining a map
Hitler and his generals during a military situation conference

Normandy Invasion

During the Normandy invasion on June 6, 1944 (D-Day), Hitler's miscalculations—anticipating the main assault at Pas-de-Calais rather than Normandy and retaining control over panzer reserves—delayed critical counterattacks by 19 divisions, including the 12th SS Panzer Division.[176] With Field Marshal Rommel absent inspecting fortifications and Hitler sleeping until noon due to sedatives, orders to release armored forces were withheld until midday, permitting 156,000 Allied troops to secure beachheads and expand inland, ultimately enabling the liberation of France by August 1944.[176] These delays, rooted in centralized command and distrust of subordinates, transformed a potentially containable landing into a breakout that exposed Germany's western flank.[176]

The Holocaust

Evolution from Persecution to Extermination

Pre-war racial policies, including discriminatory measures from 1933 such as boycotts and civil service purges, the Nuremberg Laws of 1935 stripping Jews of citizenship and prohibiting intermarriages, and the Kristallnacht pogrom of November 1938, emphasized segregation, economic exclusion, and forced emigration rather than immediate extermination, compelling around 250,000 Jews to flee Germany and Austria by 1939 despite international barriers.[121][130][132] Emigration remained official policy until October 1941, with initiatives like the Central Office for Jewish Emigration and the short-lived Madagascar Plan aimed at expulsion, but wartime conquests increasingly trapped Jews in occupied territories as borders closed.[177]
Group of Jewish people including children wearing yellow Star of David badges on their coats
Jews forced to wear yellow star badges under Nazi racial laws
The invasion of the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941, under Operation Barbarossa, catalyzed the transition to systematic extermination, as mobile killing units (Einsatzgruppen) accompanied Wehrmacht forces to murder Jews en masse.[170] By December 1941, these four Einsatzgruppen and auxiliary units had executed over 500,000 Jews in shootings, often in pits at sites like Babi Yar (33,771 killed September 29–30, 1941), framing the act as ideological warfare against "Judeo-Bolshevism" in pursuit of Lebensraum.[178] This "Holocaust by bullets" evolved from localized pogroms in Lithuania and Ukraine—where up to 80% of prewar Jewish populations were annihilated by late 1941—toward industrialized killing, driven by the impracticality of deportation amid total war and Hitler's escalating rhetoric, including his January 30, 1939, Reichstag prophecy of Jewish "annihilation" if war ensued.[179] The scale overwhelmed earlier persecution models, with reports like the Jäger Report documenting 137,346 killings by Einsatzkommando 3 alone by year's end, presaging the "Final Solution."[180]
Jewish civilians including women and children marching with raised hands under armed guard amid smoke from burning buildings
Jews rounded up and marched by Nazi forces during mass persecution

Wannsee Conference and Final Solution

Villa Marlier in Wannsee, pre-war postcard view
Villa Marlier, the Berlin suburb villa where the Wannsee Conference took place on January 20, 1942
By early 1942, mass shootings of Jews, particularly by Einsatzgruppen in the Soviet Union since mid-1941, had already claimed over a million victims; the Wannsee Conference aimed to coordinate bureaucratic implementation of the Final Solution across Nazi agencies rather than initiate extermination. The Wannsee Conference met on January 20, 1942, at a villa in Berlin's Wannsee suburb, chaired by Reinhard Heydrich, chief of the Reich Security Main Office (RSHA). Ordered by Heinrich Himmler, it sought to coordinate Nazi government branches for the "Final Solution of the Jewish Question" (Endlösung der Judenfrage)—exterminating Europe's Jews via deportation to killing sites in occupied Poland. Fifteen senior officials attended from the Reich Foreign Office (Martin Luther), Interior Ministry (Wilhelm Stuckart), Justice Ministry (Otto Hofmann for Roland Freisler), General Government (Josef Bühler), and SS branches like the Gestapo (Heinrich Müller) and Security Police (Otto Hoffmann). Adolf Eichmann, RSHA expert on Jewish emigration, served as secretary and prepared the surviving protocol, which employed euphemisms such as "evacuation to the East" and "natural diminution" to conceal genocide. The protocol targeted 11 million Jews across Europe, including from neutral states like Turkey and allies like Italy, for removal. It addressed logistics: eastward deportation from Western Europe; temporary exemptions for mixed marriages or Mischlinge (partial Jewish ancestry) pending review; and processing "evacuated" Jews via forced labor, with the unfit—elderly, women, children—determined through a selection (Selektion) process upon arrival at the ramp and facing "special treatment" (Sonderbehandlung), meaning immediate execution. Heydrich asserted RSHA authority to counter bureaucracy, citing Einsatzgruppen killings of over 1 million Soviet Jews since June 1941. No vote took place; Heydrich gained consensus, including Bühler's push for prioritizing Polish Jews. A planned March follow-up was canceled as operations sped up.
Jews crowded at freight train doors during deportation
Deportation of Jews to extermination camps by rail, part of the Final Solution's implementation

Camps, Methods, and Victim Statistics

Concentration Camps

The Nazi regime operated a vast network of camps, including concentration camps for indefinite detention, forced labor, and terrorization of political opponents, Jews, and other groups.[181] Camps like Dachau (opened March 22, 1933) and Buchenwald held over 2 million prisoners by 1945, with hundreds of thousands dying from starvation, disease, brutal labor, and executions; their main role was exploitation, not immediate extermination.[181]
Emaciated prisoners in Buchenwald concentration camp barracks upon liberation
Survivors in Buchenwald concentration camp barracks after liberation by U.S. forces, showing effects of starvation and disease
Concentration camp deaths arose chiefly from systemic neglect, typhus epidemics, and punishments rather than gassing, although sites like Mauthausen eventually used Zyklon B.[182] Additional techniques encompassed starvation rations under 1,000 calories daily, lethal medical experiments (such as Auschwitz sterilization tests conducted by doctors such as Carl Clauberg and Josef Mengele), and fatal forced labor exhaustion in subcamps.[181]

Extermination Camps

Alongside concentration camps, the regime established killing centers (extermination camps) for systematic mass murder of Jews under the Final Solution.[181] Killing centers in occupied Poland—Chełmno (from December 1941), Bełzec (March 1942–late 1942), Sobibór (May 1942–October 1943), Treblinka (July 1942–October 1943), Auschwitz-Birkenau (which functioned as both a concentration camp for forced labor and a killing center, with a documented selection process upon arrival where some prisoners were selected for labor while others were sent directly to gas chambers; gas chambers operational spring 1943–November 1944), and Majdanek—enabled industrialized genocide, killing most arrivals with minimal labor selection.[183] These sites handled rail deportees, deceiving many with resettlement promises before gas chambers.[183]
Piles of victims' shoes in a Nazi extermination camp warehouse
Confiscated shoes of murdered victims accumulated in a Nazi killing center
Extermination camp killing methods prioritized efficiency and concealment. Gassing built on euthanasia programs using carbon monoxide in fixed chambers (1939–1941) and mobile gas vans (from 1941), expanding to mass scale against Jews after the Soviet invasion.[182] Operation Reinhard camps (Bełzec, Sobibór, Treblinka) herded victims into sealed chambers fed diesel exhaust for carbon monoxide suffocation in 20–30 minutes, followed by body incineration in pits or crematoria to erase evidence.[182] Auschwitz-Birkenau dropped Zyklon B pellets through vents into shower-like chambers, releasing hydrogen cyanide to kill up to 6,000 daily at 1943–1944 peaks; the method suited its rapidity and supplier availability.[182] Chełmno used gas vans redirecting exhaust into compartments for up to 80 victims each.[183] Additional techniques encompassed guard mass shootings.[181] While exact records were often destroyed by the SS, demographic studies and postwar trials by historians such as Raul Hilberg and organizations like Yad Vashem estimate the total Jewish death toll at approximately 6 million.[184]
Jewish Death CategoryEstimated Victims
Extermination camps (gassing)~2.7 million
Concentration camps~800,000–1 million
Mass shootings (Einsatzgruppen and collaborators)~2 million
Death marches~250,000–375,000
Breakdowns for major killing centers include:[184][183]
Killing CenterEstimated Victims
Chełmno~152,000, mostly Jews from Łódź ghetto
Bełzec~435,000 Jews
Sobibór~167,000 Jews
Treblinka~925,000 Jews
Auschwitz-Birkenau~1.1 million total, nearly 1 million Jews from across Europe
MajdanekPart of ~78,000 total deaths, including Jews
Operation Reinhard (Bełzec, Sobibór, Treblinka) accounted for ~1.7 million Jewish deaths.[183] Non-Jewish victims in camps and related programs totaled millions:[184]
Non-Jewish Victim GroupEstimated Victims
Disabled (euthanasia gassings)~250,000–300,000
Roma~250,000–500,000
Political prisoners, Jehovah's Witnesses, homosexualsTens of thousands
Roma faced systematic extermination in the Porajmos (Romani genocide), differing in scale, centralization, and execution from the Jewish Final Solution; other groups endured internment and killings but not equivalent total extermination.[185] The main causes of deaths attributed to Adolf Hitler include the Holocaust (genocide of approximately 6 million Jews and millions from other groups via racial extermination policies) and non-combat deaths from aggressive wars and related policies, totaling an estimated 11-20 million direct victims (higher figures if including full WWII casualties, noting shared responsibility).[186] Total Nazi non-combatant deaths reached 11–20 million, with camp genocide targeting Jews disproportionately; estimates vary due to SS-destroyed records.[184]

Decline and Death

Late-War Paranoia and Health Decline

As Allied advances intensified from 1943, Hitler's paranoia grew, with him distrusting military commanders and aides as traitors influenced by foreign powers or Jewish conspiracies. This led to his refusal to permit retreats despite strategic needs. The 20 July plot, the July 20, 1944, assassination attempt at the Wolf's Lair—where Claus von Stauffenberg's bomb injured but did not kill him—worsened this mindset. The plot, involving senior Wehrmacht officers, confirmed his fears, prompting arrests of over 7,000 people and executions of about 200 conspirators by hanging or firing squad, plus purges of their families and associates.[187]
Adolf Hitler walking arm-in-arm with a military officer
Hitler walking while supported by an officer, reflecting physical dependence in his later years
His health deteriorated concurrently. Idiopathic Parkinson's disease symptoms emerged by 1933–1934 as an intermittent left-hand tremor, progressing to bilateral tremors, bradykinesia, masked facies, stooped posture, and shuffling gait by 1944, limiting mobility to Hoehn-Yahr stage 2–3 by April 1945. Eyewitness accounts, newsreels, and his worsening handwriting until April 29, 1945, recorded these changes, reducing public appearances and prompting concealment efforts, such as keeping his arm behind his back. Chronic gastrointestinal issues, skin lesions, and autonomic problems like excessive sweating and constipation further increased his frailty.[188][189] Theodor Morell, his physician from 1936 until death, prescribed over 90 substances, including daily amphetamine injections (e.g., Pervitin), cocaine eye drops, opiates like Eukodal, testosterone, and odd extracts such as animal testes or strychnine-laced gun fluid. These eased fatigue and gut pain temporarily but, with up to 28 daily pills and injections by 1944–1945, likely caused impulsivity, mood swings, and heightened paranoia—amphetamines can induce psychosis-like states with persecution delusions in long-term users.[190][189] Parkinson's progression and polypharmacy manifested in behavioral changes like temper tantrums, aide suspicion, and a "Messiah complex" fixating on his indispensability despite incapacity, as Albert Speer observed. In late 1944 and early 1945, paranoia intensified amid ongoing suspicions of disloyalty, while physical symptoms left him hunched, tremulous, and increasingly dependent on support. These factors compounded strategic irrationality, such as futile counteroffensives, though his risk-taking predated late-war decline.[188][190]

Battle of Berlin and Bunker Isolation

Soviet soldiers carrying broken Nazi eagle emblem from Reich Chancellery ruins, 1945
Soviet troops with the destroyed Reichsadler emblem from the Reich Chancellery entrance after the Battle of Berlin, 1945
The Battle of Berlin began on April 16, 1945, with Soviet forces of the 1st Belorussian Front under Marshal Georgy Zhukov launching a massive offensive from the Oder River, backed by over 2.5 million troops, 6,250 tanks, and 41,600 artillery pieces.[191] By April 20—Hitler's 56th birthday—Soviet artillery shelled central Berlin, while the 1st Ukrainian Front under Marshal Ivan Konev completed the encirclement, trapping around 500,000 German defenders including Wehrmacht remnants, SS units, and Volkssturm militiamen.[192] From the Führerbunker beneath the Reich Chancellery, where he had relocated on January 16, Hitler directed defenses and ordered counteroffensives like Army Detachment Steiner, which failed due to depleted resources and exhaustion.[193] By April 21, as Soviet troops breached outer defenses and approached the government district, command from the bunker relied on fragmented radio and courier reports amid constant shelling and shortages.[194] On April 22, in a conference, upon learning SS-Obergruppenführer Felix Steiner's relief attack had failed, Hitler declared the war and Third Reich lost, rejecting Hermann Göring's and Heinrich Himmler's proposals to evacuate or negotiate.[195] He refused to leave Berlin, directing continued defense from the bunker as Soviets advanced to sites like the Reichstag by April 30.[196]
Ruined Berlin street with destroyed vehicles, debris, and soldier on bicycle, 1945
A devastated Berlin street filled with wrecked cars and rubble after the Battle of Berlin, 1945
Bunker operations highlighted command limitations, with unreliable intelligence and no mobile reserves leading to orders for street fighting that deployed Hitler Youth battalions and elderly civilians against Soviet armor and infantry. This resulted in tens of thousands of German deaths in house-to-house combat that left Berlin in ruins.[197] By late April, Hitler named Karl Dönitz Reich President on April 29 and married Eva Braun as Soviet forces entered the Chancellery gardens, while dismissing and reinstating generals like Helmuth Weidling.[194] The battle concluded on May 2, 1945, with German surrender.[192]

Suicide and Postmortem Verification

Interior of Adolf Hitler's room in the Führerbunker
The damaged sofa in Hitler's private study in the Führerbunker where he and Eva Braun committed suicide
On April 30, 1945, Adolf Hitler committed suicide in his private study within the Führerbunker beneath the Reich Chancellery in Berlin.[198] Eyewitness accounts from valet Heinz Linge and adjutant Otto Günsche, who did not directly observe the suicides but discovered the bodies immediately afterward, corroborated by postwar interrogations, describe him biting a cyanide capsule while shooting himself in the right temple with a Walther PPK 7.65 mm pistol, leading to death around 3:30 p.m. His wife of one day, Eva Braun, died by cyanide poisoning shortly before, without a gunshot wound.[199]
Shell crater in the Reich Chancellery garden with Soviet soldiers
Soviet soldiers beside the shell crater in the Chancellery garden where Hitler's and Eva Braun's bodies were burned with gasoline
The bodies, wrapped in blankets, were carried to the Chancellery garden under Soviet artillery fire, doused with about 200 liters of gasoline, and burned in a shell crater per Hitler's instructions to prevent capture or display. Cremation remained incomplete owing to fuel shortages and disruptions, leaving charred remains partially buried in soil and debris. Soviet forces recovered these fragments on May 5, 1945, via SMERSH operatives after interrogating bunker survivors who indicated the site.[200] A Soviet postmortem on May 8–9, 1945, by a medico-legal team in Buch confirmed cyanide poisoning through almond odor and tissue discoloration in both bodies; Hitler's skull showed a gunshot entry wound and basal exit. Identification centered on dental remains: the jawbone and teeth matched records from dentist Hugo Blaschke, verified by interrogations of assistant Käthe Heusermann and technician Fritz Echtmann, who noted unique bridges, crowns, and missing teeth aligning with 1944–1945 X-rays and schematics. Soviet-held fragments underwent re-examination in the 1960s and 1970s by Western odontologists Reidar Sognnaes and Ferdinand Strøm, confirming the match.[201][202] Post-Cold War access to Russian archives and independent analyses validated the findings. A 2018 French forensic study of the teeth detected cyanide residues and no meat fibers—consistent with Hitler's vegetarianism—and confirmed the prosthetics' metallurgy and morphology matched pre-1945 records via microscopy and trace element analysis, ruling out survival theories.[199] [200] A 2009 DNA test showed a skull fragment with a bullet hole, once attributed to Hitler, belonged to a woman under 40; this unrelated to the jawbone, the main forensic evidence.[203] Declassified 2018 Soviet documents, including aide testimonies, confirmed the suicide sequence.[204] Soviet secrecy initially fueled rumors, but eyewitnesses, autopsies, and forensics establish the suicide as fact, with no credible alternatives, including claims of escape to Latin America or Argentina. Comprehensive historical records document Hitler's travels exclusively within Europe before 1945, such as to Austria, Germany, Italy, France, Poland, and occupied territories during World War II.[205]

Personal Life

[206]

Family

Hitler created a public image as a celibate man without a domestic life, dedicated entirely to his political mission and the nation [Sexuality of Adolf Hitler]. He met his lover, Eva Braun, in 1929 [Eva Braun], and married her on 29 April 1945, one day before they both committed suicide [Adolf and Eva marry]. In September 1931, his half-niece, Geli Raubal, committed suicide with Hitler's gun in his Munich apartment. It was rumoured among contemporaries that Geli was in a romantic relationship with him, and her death was a source of deep, lasting pain [Geli Raubal]. Paula Hitler, the younger sister of Hitler and the last living member of his immediate family, died in June 1960 [Paula Hitler].

Views on religion

Hitler was born to a practising Catholic mother and an anti-clerical father; after leaving home, Hitler never again attended Mass or received the sacraments [Religious views of Adolf Hitler]. Historians such as Alan Bullock have argued that Hitler did not believe in God, was anticlerical, and held Christian ethics in contempt because they contravened his preferred view of "survival of the fittest" Hitler: A Study in Tyranny. He favoured aspects of Protestantism that suited his own views, and adopted some elements of the Catholic Church's hierarchical organisation, liturgy, and phraseology. In a conversation with Albert Speer, Hitler said, "Through me the Evangelical Church could become the established church, as in England." [Inside the Third Reich]. Hitler shaking hands with Bishop Ludwig Müller in 1934 Hitler viewed the church as an important politically conservative influence on society, and he adopted a strategic relationship with it that "suited his immediate political purposes" [Religious views of Adolf Hitler]. In public, Hitler often praised Christian heritage and German Christian culture, though professing a belief in an "Aryan Jesus" who fought against the Jews [The Aryan Jesus]. Privately, he described Christianity as "absurdity" and nonsense founded on lies, as recorded in Hitler's Table Talk Wikiquote: Religious views of Adolf Hitler. According to a US Office of Strategic Services (OSS) report, "The Nazi Master Plan", the Nazis planned to destroy the influence of Christian churches within the Reich, with Hitler's eventual goal being the total elimination of Christianity Cornell University Digital Library. This goal informed Hitler's movement early on, but he saw it as inexpedient to publicly express this extreme position.

Health

Researchers have variously suggested that Hitler suffered from irritable bowel syndrome, skin lesions, irregular heartbeat, coronary sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, syphilis, giant-cell arteritis, tinnitus, and monorchism. Researchers have documented that Hitler likely suffered from Parkinson's disease, with symptoms such as tremors appearing as early as the 1930s and worsening over time. Other reported issues included irritable bowel syndrome, skin lesions, irregular heartbeat, and coronary sclerosis. Speculations about syphilis, monorchism, and some other conditions remain unproven or debunked by reliable medical and historical analyses. Sometime in the 1930s, Hitler adopted a mainly vegetarian diet, becoming strictly meat- and fish-free from 1942 onwards. At social events, he sometimes gave graphic accounts of animal slaughter to discourage meat consumption. Martin Bormann arranged a greenhouse near the Berghof to supply fresh produce. Hitler largely abstained from alcohol after becoming vegetarian, drinking only occasionally on social occasions, and was a non-smoker in adulthood after quitting youthful heavy smoking, which he called "a waste of money." He incentivized associates to quit smoking with gold watches. His later health was also impacted by polypharmacy under physician Theodor Morell, who administered numerous substances including amphetamines (e.g., Pervitin) and cocaine derivatives Doyle, 2005. Moral Acrobatics, Ch. 5: Hitler Was a Vegetarian

Legacy and Historiography

The Holocaust, which claimed approximately six million Jewish lives, bolstered international backing for a Jewish homeland—despite Zionism's prewar origins—and reshaped Middle Eastern geopolitics. Post-1945, over 250,000 survivors migrated to Palestine, supporting Israel's declaration of independence on May 14, 1948, and igniting the Arab-Israeli conflict.[207][208] Concurrently, Britain's debt exceeding its GDP and France's waning colonial hold accelerated decolonization; from 1945 to 1960, 36 Asian and African countries gained independence, dismantling empires and shifting global influence toward new states amid U.S.-Soviet rivalry.[209][210]

Assessments of Policies: Successes and Unsustainabilities

Hitler's economic policies rapidly reduced unemployment from about 6 million in January 1933 to under 1 million by 1938, mainly through public works, rearmament, and deficit financing via Mefo bills that hid debt buildup.[211] These steps boosted industrial output and expanded GDP by roughly 50% in real terms from 1933 to 1938, although real wages stagnated or fell due to wage suppression, longer hours, and labor restrictions.[212] Yet the recovery proved unsustainable, prioritizing military needs over civilian goods and causing raw material shortages, foreign exchange gaps, and inflation curbs via price controls and rationing; by 1939, conquest became essential for resources, as domestic output could not sustain expansion alone.[213] Adam Tooze contends the Nazi economy faced built-in constraints, with rearmament forging a "fiscal cliff" where concealed debts and autarky efforts hid weaknesses that war briefly eased but ultimately intensified.[214]
Construction workers laboring on a large stone block
Workers engaged in heavy construction during the Nazi era
Domestic projects like the Autobahn employed up to 125,000 workers at peak, symbolized efficiency, and boosted support in nearby areas via propaganda framing it as an austerity escape.[215] By 1938, over 3,000 kilometers stood built or planned, aiding military movement and civilian travel, though its scope fell short of hype and functioned more as propaganda than broad economic fix.[216] Still, it fostered imbalances by initially pulling labor and steel from rearmament and ignoring inefficiencies from bureaucracy and ideology.[217] Militarily, blitzkrieg emphasis secured quick wins, such as Poland's fall in under five weeks from September 1, 1939, and France's defeat in six weeks starting May 10, 1940, via tank thrusts and air dominance evading fixed lines.[159] These gains temporarily enlarged territory and harnessed European industry.[218] Overreach emerged with the 1941 Soviet invasion, stretching forces thin without reserves, while delaying full war mobilization until 1943—owing to aversion to attrition warfare—lagged aircraft and tank production behind Allies.[219]
Nazi document on Jewish property confiscation, December 1938
Official directive outlining the exclusion of Jews from economic life and property transfer
Racial policies, from Aryanization to extermination, bred inefficiencies by ousting Jewish experts whose pre-1933 roles in science and business were vital, and by siphoning rail and troops for Holocaust tasks during dire needs.[220] Post-1942, camp operations drained fuel and staff usable on the Eastern Front, while purity demands repelled occupied allies, hampering local resource use.[221] Victim forced labor yielded brief gains but high oversight costs and poor yields from starvation and resistance, ultimately weakening war cohesion.[222] In the mid-1950s, nearly half of all Germans polled said ‘yes’ to the proposition that ‘were it not for the war, Hitler would have been one of the greatest statesmen of the 20th century.’[223]

Controversies and Viewpoint Spectrum

Intentionalist-Structuralist Debate

The intentionalist-structuralist debate centers on the origins of the Final Solution. Intentionalists argue Hitler conceived and directed Jewish extermination as a premeditated goal, evident in early writings like his 1939 Reichstag speech prophesying their annihilation in war. Scholars such as Eberhard Jäckel and Gerald Fleming highlight his central role, tracing genocide to the antisemitic worldview in Mein Kampf (1925), with policies shifting toward extermination by the late 1930s.[224] Structuralists (or functionalists) contend the Holocaust resulted from cumulative radicalization amid bureaucratic competition, wartime strains, and decentralized decisions in the Nazi polycratic state, without a singular Hitler directive. Historians like Raul Hilberg and Hans Mommsen depict mid-level officials "working toward the Führer," escalating anti-Jewish actions under pressure, with mass killings firming in 1941 during the Soviet invasion and codified at the Wannsee Conference in January 1942.[224] Modern syntheses by Ian Kershaw and Christopher Browning merge views, portraying Hitler's ideology as fostering a self-amplifying system needing no granular orders.[224][225]

Economic Historiography

Historiographical debates on pre-war economic policies contrast mainstream attributions of short-term recovery to unsustainable deficit spending and rearmament with revisionist emphases on state-led prosperity; Richard Overy's analyses reject Keynesian framings in favor of coerced reinvestment, while Götz Aly's plunder-financed racial welfare state idea faces critique from Adam Tooze.[249][237][250][251]

Holocaust Denial and Revisionism

Holocaust denial and revisionism — fringe viewpoints rejecting the scholarly consensus on the Holocaust — typically assert that mainstream death toll estimates are exaggerated (such as disputing the approximately 6 million Jewish victims), dispute the existence of gas chambers, or claim no direct Hitler order existed, often citing alleged forensic discrepancies or archival gaps. Fabricated quotes attributed to Hitler, such as claims about leaving some Jews alive as proof of motive, lack any primary or scholarly source and circulate primarily on social media. Propagated by figures such as David Irving, these claims are rejected by historians on the basis of extensive counterevidence: Nazi records including the Höfle Telegram documenting 1.27 million killings by 1942, perpetrator confessions, physical evidence at Auschwitz including Zyklon B residues and crematoria blueprints, Einsatzgruppen reports of over one million shootings, and demographic data showing two-thirds of European Jews perished. Post-1990s declassified archives, Wiener Holocaust Library records dating to 1933, and Father Patrick Desbois's Yahad-In Unum project — which has mapped Eastern European mass graves through eyewitness testimony and excavation — further corroborate the genocide's scale. Historiographical assessments of Hitler emphasize his role as architect of total war and genocide, with records attributing 50-85 million deaths to the regime, while fringe apologetics highlight pre-war stabilizations or question prevailing narratives but lack scholarly support.[213]

Modern Debates and Causal Analyses

Books like Ron Rosenbaum's 1998 Explaining Hitler: The Search for the Origins of His Evil, surveying scholarly explanations of Hitler's motivations, underscore ongoing interest in causal analyses. Historians debate structural economic pressures versus Hitler's agency in his rise. The Great Depression boosted Nazi votes from 2.6% in 1928 to 37.3% in July 1932, with unemployment at 6 million (30% of the workforce) by early 1933, especially in industrial and agricultural distress areas.[226] [66] Brüning's 1930–1932 austerity, including wage cuts and tax hikes, eroded centrists according to Knut Borchardt, though some argue collapse was inevitable; post-1923 hyperinflation, with the mark at trillions per dollar, cast Nazis as stabilizers.[227] Structuralists prioritize impersonal forces in consolidation, yet voting patterns, oratory, and paramilitary violence—over 400 deaths in 1932 clashes—point to Hitler's exploitation of Weimar Republic weaknesses.[228][229] Scholars use biography to probe psychological influences on decisions, tying aggressive foreign policy and purges to narcissism and paranoia, evident in post-1944 distrust and rooted in early life plus World War I trauma.[230] 1943 OSS profiles term it "counteractive narcissism," linking 1918 armistice humiliations to megalomania expressed in Mein Kampf's Lebensraum and antisemitism.[231] [232] These views explain strategic deviations, like the 1941 Soviet invasion amid warnings, as ideological rather than opportunistic; retrospective psychiatry, however, is speculative by modern standards, risking overpathologizing amid pre-1933 pragmatic shifts within ideology.[233] Holocaust origin syntheses blend Hitler's ideology with wartime bureaucracy, setting Nazi extermination apart from more contingent genocides, though causal interplay remains debated.[224] Economic policy analyses link short-term recovery to rearmament and autarky, which escalated war risks tied to Lebensraum, rendering gains temporary against blockade vulnerabilities.[234][235] [236]

See also

Bibliography

  • Konrad Heiden, Hitler: A Biography (1936);
  • Hugh Trevor-Roper, The Last Days of Hitler (1947);
  • Alan Bullock, Hitler: A Study in Tyranny (1952);
  • Joachim Fest, Hitler (1973);
  • John Toland, Adolf Hitler (1976);
  • Brigitte Hamann, Hitler’s Vienna (1996);
  • Ian Kershaw, Hitler: 1889–1936 Hubris (1998) and Hitler: 1936–1945 Nemesis (2000);
  • Volker Ullrich, Hitler: Ascent 1889–1939 (2013);
  • Peter Longerich, Hitler. Biographie (2015; English: Hitler: A Biography, 2019);
  • Volker Ullrich, Hitler: Downfall 1939–1945 (2016);
  • Hans-Ulrich Thamer, Adolf Hitler: Biographie eines Diktators (2018);
  • Brendan Simms, Hitler: A Global Biography (2019);
  • Hannes Leidinger and Christian Rapp, Hitler – prägende Jahre: Kindheit und Jugend 1889–1914 (2020).

References

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