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Ernst von Weizsäcker

Ernst Heinrich Freiherr von Weizsäcker (25 May 1882 – 4 August 1951) was a German naval officer, diplomat and politician. He served as State Secretary at the Foreign Office of Nazi Germany from 1938 to 1943, and as its Ambassador to the Holy See from 1943 to 1945. He was a member of the prominent Weizsäcker family, and the father of German President Richard von Weizsäcker and physicist and philosopher Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker.

Ernst Freiherr von Weizsäcker
Secretary of State at the Foreign Office
Nazi Germany
In office
1938–1943
Preceded byHans Georg von Mackensen
Succeeded byGustav Adolf Steengracht von Moyland
Ambassador to the Holy See
Nazi Germany
In office
1943–1945
Preceded byDiego von Bergen
Succeeded byWolfgang Jaenicke (1954)
Personal details
Born25 May 1882
Stuttgart, Kingdom of Württemberg, German Empire
Died4 August 1951(1951-08-04) (aged 69)
Lindau, West Germany
NationalityGerman
Military career
Allegiance German Empire
 Weimar Republic
 Nazi Germany
Service/branch Imperial German Navy
 Reichsmarine
Schutzstaffel
Years of service1900–1920, 1938–1945
RankSS-Brigadeführer
Korvettenkapitän
Battles/warsFirst World War
Second World War
AwardsIron Cross (1st class)
Iron Cross (2nd class)

Early life edit

Weizsäcker was born in 1882 in Stuttgart to Karl Hugo von Weizsäcker, who would become minister president (the equivalent of prime minister) of the Kingdom of Württemberg and raised to personal nobility in 1897, and to Paula von Meibom. In 1911, he married Marianne von Graevenitz, who belonged to the old nobility. In 1916 he became a Freiherr (Baron), as his father and his family were raised to the inheritable nobility, less than two years before the fall of the Württembergish monarchy.

Naval career edit

In 1900, Weizsäcker joined the Imperial German Navy to become an officer, serving mainly in Berlin. In 1916, he served as Flag Lieutenant to Admiral Reinhard Scheer aboard the German flagship SMS Friedrich der Grosse during the Battle of Jutland. In 1917, during the latter portion of the First World War, he earned the Iron Cross (both classes) and was the next year was promoted to Korvettenkapitän (corvette captain) (equivalent to the British and American rank of lieutenant commander).

He was a member of the Naval Staff led by Admiral Reinhard Scheer from August 1918. From June 1919 to April 1920, he served as naval attaché to The Hague.

Diplomatic career edit

Weizsäcker joined the German Foreign Service in 1920. He was appointed as Consul to Basel in 1921, as Councillor in Copenhagen in 1924 and was stationed in Geneva from 1927. He became head of the department for disarmament in 1928 and was appointed as envoy to Oslo in 1931 and to Bern in 1933. In 1936, as ambassador to Bern, Weizsäcker played a key role in stripping Thomas Mann of his German citizenship.[1] He became Director of the Policy Department at the Foreign Office in 1937 and the following year he was appointed as Staatssekretär ("State Secretary") -- the second ranking official after the Foreign Minister in the German Foreign Office.

He was encouraged by his superior to join the ruling National Socialist German Workers' Party (German: Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei or NSDAP), which he did in 1938, and he was also awarded an honorary rank in the Schutzstaffel (SS). In 1938, Weizsäcker was opposed to the general trend in German foreign policy of attacking Czechoslovakia for fear that it might cause a general war that Germany would lose. He had no moral objections to the idea of destroying Czechoslovakia, only the timing of the attack.[2] Weizsäcker had some contacts with members of the German opposition, but during his interrogations after the war, he never claimed to be a member of the resistance.[3] It was only after he was brought to trial that Weizsäcker first claimed to be an anti-Nazi working with all his heart and might to overthrow the Nazi regime.[3]

On 19 August 1938, Weizsäcker wrote in a memo to Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop:

"I again opposed the whole theory of (an attack on Czechoslovakia) and observed that we should have to wait political developments until the English lose interest in the Czech matter and would tolerate our action, before we could tackle the affair without risk".[3]

Weizsäcker never sent his memo to Ribbentrop.[3] Together with the Abwehr chief, Admiral Wilhelm Canaris, and the Army Chief of Staff, General Ludwig Beck, Weizsäcker was a leader of the antiwar group in the German government, which was determined to avoid a war in 1938 that it felt Germany would lose. The group was not necessarily committed to the overthrow of the regime but was loosely allied to another more radical group, the "anti-Nazi" faction centred on Colonel Hans Oster and Hans Bernd Gisevius, which wanted to use the crisis as an excuse for executing a putsch to overthrow the regime.[4] The divergent aims between these two factions produced considerable tension.[5] The historian Eckart Conze stated in a 2010 interview:

"An overthrow of Hitler was out of the question. The group wanted to avoid a major war and the potential catastrophic consequences for Germany. Their goal wasn't to get rid of the dictator but, as they saw it, to bring him to his senses".[1]

Weizsäcker was promoted to SS-Brigadeführer on 30 January 1942.

Ambassador to the Vatican edit

After the German defeat in the Battle of Stalingrad in 1943 and the changing German war fortunes, and following his own request, Weizsäcker resigned as State Secretary and was appointed German Ambassador to the Holy See from 1943 to 1945.

When received by the Cardinal Secretary of State Luigi Maglione on 6 January 1944, Weizsäcker stated, "If Germany as a bulwark against communism should fall, all of Europe will become communist". To this, Maglione replied, "What a misfortune, that Germany with its antireligious policies has stirred up such concerns".[6] Similar representations were repeated by Weizsäcker to Monsignore Giovanni Battista Montini, later Pope Paul VI.

Weizsäcker's record at the Vatican was mixed. In Berlin, he had refused to accept a papal note protesting against the treatment of occupied Poland.[7] During the German occupation of Rome, Weizsäcker did almost nothing to stop the deportation of Jews, albeit he helped individuals to avoid persecution, and helped to free Rome from all German military bases in an effort to discourage Allied bombing of the city.[8] He also advised the Foreign Office that drafting Jews for labour camps inside Italy would be less likely to draw a papal protest than deporting them.[9] According to Richard J. Evans, Weizsäcker shared the opinion of Ulrich von Hassell that the Final Solution was a "devilish campaign".[10]

"His messages and documents to Berlin were nothing but lies," his coworker Albrecht von Kessel later said.[11] In those messages to Berlin, Weizsäcker purposely painted Pope Pius XII as mild, diplomatic, indecisive and pro-German to help the Pope and to avoid anti-German sentiment in Italy.[11] Like the commanding Waffen SS General Karl Wolff, Weizsäcker was clearly opposed to Hitler's plan to occupy the Vatican during which Weizsäcker feared the Pope being shot "fleeing while avoiding arrest".[11]

Weizsäcker continued to present the Vatican with anticommunist slogans, and he both threatened a separate Soviet-German peace[6] and requested from Monsignore Domenico Tardini the immediate mounting of a papal peace initiative to end the war in the West so that Germany could finish communism in the East.[12] Tardini saw that as a transparent effort to obtain a military solution.[13]

Like several other German officials, Weizsäcker attempted to negotiate the survival of some segment of the government and to avoid the unconditional surrender of Germany, but his efforts failed in bringing up the subject of "a German transition government, and the likelihood of his being a member of it".[14]

Postwar edit

 
Ernst von Weizsäcker (right) with his son Richard at post war trial

After the end of the war, Weizsäcker initially remained in the Vatican City with his wife, as a guest of the Pope and a member of the diplomatic corps. He did not return to Germany until 1946. Weizsäcker was arrested on 25 July 1947 in Nuremberg and was put on trial in the Ministries Trial, also known as the Wilhelmstrasse Trial, after the location of the German Foreign Office in Berlin. The Ministries Trial was one of 12 trials conducted by Nuremberg Military Tribunals in the American occupation zone. The American military tribunals started before and finished during the Berlin blockade confrontation with the Soviets and proceeded without participation of the Soviet Union.

Weizsäcker's supporters claimed that he had been closely associated with the anti-Nazi resistance and a moderate force at the Foreign Office during the war.[15]

Weizsäcker was charged with active cooperation with the deportation of French Jews to Auschwitz, as a crime against humanity. Weizsäcker, with the assistance of his son, the future German President Richard von Weizsäcker, who appeared as his assistant defence counsel (Richard was a law student during the trial), claimed that he had no knowledge of the purpose for which Auschwitz had been designed and believed that Jewish prisoners would face less danger if they were deported to the East.[citation needed]

In 1949, Weizsäcker was found guilty of crimes against peace, war crimes, and crimes against humanity, and sentenced to 7 years in prison. Winston Churchill called his sentence a "deadly error".[16] The same year, the sentence was reduced to 5 years, after his conviction for crimes against peace was overturned. In October 1950, after 3 years and 3 months of detention, he obtained an early release from prison in Landsberg after a new examination of his case by the Legislative Affairs Office of the US High Commissioner for Germany, John J. McCloy.[17] Weizsäcker subsequently published his memoirs, written in prison, in which he portrayed himself as a supporter of the German Resistance.

Death and legacy edit

Weizsäcker died of a stroke on August 4, 1951, at the age of 69.

In 2010, the historian Eckart Conze assessed the belief that the German Federal Foreign Office had no involvement with war crimes in an interview:

"The legend stems from individuals associated with the Weizsäcker defense. Former diplomats, such as the brothers Erich and Theo Kordt, played a key role in the effort, as did other members of the traditional upper class, which Weizsäcker represented. One of them was his defense lawyer, Hellmut Becker, the son of the Prussian culture minister, Carl Heinrich Becker, and another was Marion Gräfin Dönhoff, a young journalist who sharply criticized the trial in Die Zeit. They all knew that if they succeeded in exonerating Weizsäcker, they would have rehabilitated the national conservative, aristocratic and bourgeois upper class."[1]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Conze, Eckart (October 27, 2010). "Hitler's Diplomats Historian Calls Wartime Ministry A 'Criminal Organization'". Der Spiegel. Retrieved 2011-07-07..
  2. ^ Wheeler-Bennett, John, The Nemesis of Power: The German Army in Politics, 1918–1945, 2nd ed. repr. London: Macmillan, 1967, pp. 416–17.
  3. ^ a b c d Wheeler-Bennett, p. 417.
  4. ^ Müller, Klaus-Jürgen, "The Structure and Nature of the National Conservative Opposition in Germany up to 1940", in Aspects of the Third Reich, ed. H.W. Koch, London: Macmillan, ISBN 978-0-333-35272-4, pp. 133–78, pp. 162–63, 166–67.
  5. ^ Müller, p. 170.
  6. ^ a b Blet, Pierre, Pius XII and the Second World War: According to the Archives of the Vatican, tr. Lawrence J. Johnson, New York: Paulist Press, 1999, ISBN 978-0-8091-0503-8, p. 256.
  7. ^ Blet, pp. 89–90.
  8. ^ Blet, pp. 219–24.
  9. ^ Richard J. Evans, The Third Reich at War, London: Allen Lane, 2008, repr. New York: Penguin, 2009, ISBN 978-1-59420-206-3, p. 475.
  10. ^ Evans, p. 630.
  11. ^ a b c von Kessel, Albrecht, "Der Papst und die Juden", in Summa iniuria, oder, Durfte der Papst schweigen? Hochhuths "Stellvertreter" in der öffentlichen Kritik, ed. Fritz J. Raddatz, Rororo Taschenbuch 591, Reinbek bei Hamburg: Rowohlt, 1963, p. 168.
  12. ^ "Notes de Mgr. Tardini", Actes et Documents du Saint Siège, p. 505.
  13. ^ Blet, p. 269.
  14. ^ Blet, p. 257.
  15. ^ Gerald Steinacher (2021). Humanitarians at War. Oxford University Press. pp. 120 to 136.
  16. ^ Heisenberg, Professor Dr. Martin (January 16, 1992). "Letter to the Editors: The Heisenberg Case: An Exchange, reply by Jeremy Bernstein". The New York Review of Books. Reichenberg, Germany. Retrieved December 18, 2012.
  17. ^ "Ernst von Weizsäcker". die Zeit (in German). October 19, 1950. Retrieved January 29, 2015. This is the first case in which a convicted at Nuremberg obtained his early release not by "good behavior" but after an in-depth examination of his case by the Legislative Affairs Office of the US High Commissioner.

Further reading edit

  • Chadwick, Owen. 1977. "Weizsäcker, the Vatican and the Jews of Rome". Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 28(2): 378.
  • Hill, Leonidas. 1967. "The Vatican Embassy of Ernst von Weizsäcker, 1943-1945". The Journal of Modern History. 39(2): 138–159.
  • Weizsäcker family

External links edit

Diplomatic posts
Preceded by German Ambassador to the Holy See
1943-1945
Succeeded by
Wolfgang Jaenicke (1954)

ernst, weizsäcker, confused, with, ernst, ulrich, weizsäcker, ernst, heinrich, freiherr, weizsäcker, 1882, august, 1951, german, naval, officer, diplomat, politician, served, state, secretary, foreign, office, nazi, germany, from, 1938, 1943, ambassador, holy,. Not to be confused with Ernst Ulrich von Weizsacker Ernst Heinrich Freiherr von Weizsacker 25 May 1882 4 August 1951 was a German naval officer diplomat and politician He served as State Secretary at the Foreign Office of Nazi Germany from 1938 to 1943 and as its Ambassador to the Holy See from 1943 to 1945 He was a member of the prominent Weizsacker family and the father of German President Richard von Weizsacker and physicist and philosopher Carl Friedrich von Weizsacker Ernst Freiherr von WeizsackerSecretary of State at the Foreign OfficeNazi GermanyIn office 1938 1943Preceded byHans Georg von MackensenSucceeded byGustav Adolf Steengracht von MoylandAmbassador to the Holy SeeNazi GermanyIn office 1943 1945Preceded byDiego von BergenSucceeded byWolfgang Jaenicke 1954 Personal detailsBorn25 May 1882Stuttgart Kingdom of Wurttemberg German EmpireDied4 August 1951 1951 08 04 aged 69 Lindau West GermanyNationalityGermanMilitary careerAllegiance German Empire Weimar Republic Nazi GermanyService wbr branch Imperial German Navy Reichsmarine SchutzstaffelYears of service1900 1920 1938 1945RankSS Brigadefuhrer KorvettenkapitanBattles warsFirst World WarSecond World WarAwardsIron Cross 1st class Iron Cross 2nd class Contents 1 Early life 2 Naval career 3 Diplomatic career 3 1 Ambassador to the Vatican 4 Postwar 5 Death and legacy 6 Notes 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly life editWeizsacker was born in 1882 in Stuttgart to Karl Hugo von Weizsacker who would become minister president the equivalent of prime minister of the Kingdom of Wurttemberg and raised to personal nobility in 1897 and to Paula von Meibom In 1911 he married Marianne von Graevenitz who belonged to the old nobility In 1916 he became a Freiherr Baron as his father and his family were raised to the inheritable nobility less than two years before the fall of the Wurttembergish monarchy Naval career editIn 1900 Weizsacker joined the Imperial German Navy to become an officer serving mainly in Berlin In 1916 he served as Flag Lieutenant to Admiral Reinhard Scheer aboard the German flagship SMS Friedrich der Grosse during the Battle of Jutland In 1917 during the latter portion of the First World War he earned the Iron Cross both classes and was the next year was promoted to Korvettenkapitan corvette captain equivalent to the British and American rank of lieutenant commander He was a member of the Naval Staff led by Admiral Reinhard Scheer from August 1918 From June 1919 to April 1920 he served as naval attache to The Hague Diplomatic career editWeizsacker joined the German Foreign Service in 1920 He was appointed as Consul to Basel in 1921 as Councillor in Copenhagen in 1924 and was stationed in Geneva from 1927 He became head of the department for disarmament in 1928 and was appointed as envoy to Oslo in 1931 and to Bern in 1933 In 1936 as ambassador to Bern Weizsacker played a key role in stripping Thomas Mann of his German citizenship 1 He became Director of the Policy Department at the Foreign Office in 1937 and the following year he was appointed as Staatssekretar State Secretary the second ranking official after the Foreign Minister in the German Foreign Office He was encouraged by his superior to join the ruling National Socialist German Workers Party German Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei or NSDAP which he did in 1938 and he was also awarded an honorary rank in the Schutzstaffel SS In 1938 Weizsacker was opposed to the general trend in German foreign policy of attacking Czechoslovakia for fear that it might cause a general war that Germany would lose He had no moral objections to the idea of destroying Czechoslovakia only the timing of the attack 2 Weizsacker had some contacts with members of the German opposition but during his interrogations after the war he never claimed to be a member of the resistance 3 It was only after he was brought to trial that Weizsacker first claimed to be an anti Nazi working with all his heart and might to overthrow the Nazi regime 3 On 19 August 1938 Weizsacker wrote in a memo to Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop I again opposed the whole theory of an attack on Czechoslovakia and observed that we should have to wait political developments until the English lose interest in the Czech matter and would tolerate our action before we could tackle the affair without risk 3 Weizsacker never sent his memo to Ribbentrop 3 Together with the Abwehr chief Admiral Wilhelm Canaris and the Army Chief of Staff General Ludwig Beck Weizsacker was a leader of the antiwar group in the German government which was determined to avoid a war in 1938 that it felt Germany would lose The group was not necessarily committed to the overthrow of the regime but was loosely allied to another more radical group the anti Nazi faction centred on Colonel Hans Oster and Hans Bernd Gisevius which wanted to use the crisis as an excuse for executing a putsch to overthrow the regime 4 The divergent aims between these two factions produced considerable tension 5 The historian Eckart Conze stated in a 2010 interview An overthrow of Hitler was out of the question The group wanted to avoid a major war and the potential catastrophic consequences for Germany Their goal wasn t to get rid of the dictator but as they saw it to bring him to his senses 1 Weizsacker was promoted to SS Brigadefuhrer on 30 January 1942 Ambassador to the Vatican edit After the German defeat in the Battle of Stalingrad in 1943 and the changing German war fortunes and following his own request Weizsacker resigned as State Secretary and was appointed German Ambassador to the Holy See from 1943 to 1945 When received by the Cardinal Secretary of State Luigi Maglione on 6 January 1944 Weizsacker stated If Germany as a bulwark against communism should fall all of Europe will become communist To this Maglione replied What a misfortune that Germany with its antireligious policies has stirred up such concerns 6 Similar representations were repeated by Weizsacker to Monsignore Giovanni Battista Montini later Pope Paul VI Weizsacker s record at the Vatican was mixed In Berlin he had refused to accept a papal note protesting against the treatment of occupied Poland 7 During the German occupation of Rome Weizsacker did almost nothing to stop the deportation of Jews albeit he helped individuals to avoid persecution and helped to free Rome from all German military bases in an effort to discourage Allied bombing of the city 8 He also advised the Foreign Office that drafting Jews for labour camps inside Italy would be less likely to draw a papal protest than deporting them 9 According to Richard J Evans Weizsacker shared the opinion of Ulrich von Hassell that the Final Solution was a devilish campaign 10 His messages and documents to Berlin were nothing but lies his coworker Albrecht von Kessel later said 11 In those messages to Berlin Weizsacker purposely painted Pope Pius XII as mild diplomatic indecisive and pro German to help the Pope and to avoid anti German sentiment in Italy 11 Like the commanding Waffen SS General Karl Wolff Weizsacker was clearly opposed to Hitler s plan to occupy the Vatican during which Weizsacker feared the Pope being shot fleeing while avoiding arrest 11 Weizsacker continued to present the Vatican with anticommunist slogans and he both threatened a separate Soviet German peace 6 and requested from Monsignore Domenico Tardini the immediate mounting of a papal peace initiative to end the war in the West so that Germany could finish communism in the East 12 Tardini saw that as a transparent effort to obtain a military solution 13 Like several other German officials Weizsacker attempted to negotiate the survival of some segment of the government and to avoid the unconditional surrender of Germany but his efforts failed in bringing up the subject of a German transition government and the likelihood of his being a member of it 14 Postwar edit nbsp Ernst von Weizsacker right with his son Richard at post war trial After the end of the war Weizsacker initially remained in the Vatican City with his wife as a guest of the Pope and a member of the diplomatic corps He did not return to Germany until 1946 Weizsacker was arrested on 25 July 1947 in Nuremberg and was put on trial in the Ministries Trial also known as the Wilhelmstrasse Trial after the location of the German Foreign Office in Berlin The Ministries Trial was one of 12 trials conducted by Nuremberg Military Tribunals in the American occupation zone The American military tribunals started before and finished during the Berlin blockade confrontation with the Soviets and proceeded without participation of the Soviet Union Weizsacker s supporters claimed that he had been closely associated with the anti Nazi resistance and a moderate force at the Foreign Office during the war 15 Weizsacker was charged with active cooperation with the deportation of French Jews to Auschwitz as a crime against humanity Weizsacker with the assistance of his son the future German President Richard von Weizsacker who appeared as his assistant defence counsel Richard was a law student during the trial claimed that he had no knowledge of the purpose for which Auschwitz had been designed and believed that Jewish prisoners would face less danger if they were deported to the East citation needed In 1949 Weizsacker was found guilty of crimes against peace war crimes and crimes against humanity and sentenced to 7 years in prison Winston Churchill called his sentence a deadly error 16 The same year the sentence was reduced to 5 years after his conviction for crimes against peace was overturned In October 1950 after 3 years and 3 months of detention he obtained an early release from prison in Landsberg after a new examination of his case by the Legislative Affairs Office of the US High Commissioner for Germany John J McCloy 17 Weizsacker subsequently published his memoirs written in prison in which he portrayed himself as a supporter of the German Resistance Death and legacy editWeizsacker died of a stroke on August 4 1951 at the age of 69 In 2010 the historian Eckart Conze assessed the belief that the German Federal Foreign Office had no involvement with war crimes in an interview The legend stems from individuals associated with the Weizsacker defense Former diplomats such as the brothers Erich and Theo Kordt played a key role in the effort as did other members of the traditional upper class which Weizsacker represented One of them was his defense lawyer Hellmut Becker the son of the Prussian culture minister Carl Heinrich Becker and another was Marion Grafin Donhoff a young journalist who sharply criticized the trial in Die Zeit They all knew that if they succeeded in exonerating Weizsacker they would have rehabilitated the national conservative aristocratic and bourgeois upper class 1 Notes edit a b c Conze Eckart October 27 2010 Hitler s Diplomats Historian Calls Wartime Ministry A Criminal Organization Der Spiegel Retrieved 2011 07 07 Wheeler Bennett John The Nemesis of Power The German Army in Politics 1918 1945 2nd ed repr London Macmillan 1967 pp 416 17 a b c d Wheeler Bennett p 417 Muller Klaus Jurgen The Structure and Nature of the National Conservative Opposition in Germany up to 1940 in Aspects of the Third Reich ed H W Koch London Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 35272 4 pp 133 78 pp 162 63 166 67 Muller p 170 a b Blet Pierre Pius XII and the Second World War According to the Archives of the Vatican tr Lawrence J Johnson New York Paulist Press 1999 ISBN 978 0 8091 0503 8 p 256 Blet pp 89 90 Blet pp 219 24 Richard J Evans The Third Reich at War London Allen Lane 2008 repr New York Penguin 2009 ISBN 978 1 59420 206 3 p 475 Evans p 630 a b c von Kessel Albrecht Der Papst und die Juden in Summa iniuria oder Durfte der Papst schweigen Hochhuths Stellvertreter in der offentlichen Kritik ed Fritz J Raddatz Rororo Taschenbuch 591 Reinbek bei Hamburg Rowohlt 1963 p 168 Notes de Mgr Tardini Actes et Documents du Saint Siege p 505 Blet p 269 Blet p 257 Gerald Steinacher 2021 Humanitarians at War Oxford University Press pp 120 to 136 Heisenberg Professor Dr Martin January 16 1992 Letter to the Editors The Heisenberg Case An Exchange reply by Jeremy Bernstein The New York Review of Books Reichenberg Germany Retrieved December 18 2012 Ernst von Weizsacker die Zeit in German October 19 1950 Retrieved January 29 2015 This is the first case in which a convicted at Nuremberg obtained his early release not by good behavior but after an in depth examination of his case by the Legislative Affairs Office of the US High Commissioner Further reading edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ernst von Weizsacker Chadwick Owen 1977 Weizsacker the Vatican and the Jews of Rome Journal of Ecclesiastical History 28 2 378 Hill Leonidas 1967 The Vatican Embassy of Ernst von Weizsacker 1943 1945 The Journal of Modern History 39 2 138 159 Weizsacker familyExternal links editNewspaper clippings about Ernst von Weizsacker in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Diplomatic posts Preceded byDiego von Bergen German Ambassador to the Holy See1943 1945 Succeeded byWolfgang Jaenicke 1954 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ernst von Weizsacker amp oldid 1218199147, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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