fbpx
Wikipedia

Gustav Lombard

Gustav Lombard (10 April 1895 – 18 September 1992) was a high-ranking member in the SS during World War II. During the war, Lombard commanded 8th SS Cavalry Division Florian Geyer and the 31st SS Volunteer Grenadier Division. He was a recipient of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross of Nazi Germany for so-called "anti-partisan" operations around Kovel which involved killing of civilians and burning down villages.

Gustav Lombard
Born(1895-04-10)10 April 1895
Prenzlau, German Empire
Died18 September 1992(1992-09-18) (aged 97)
Mühldorf, Germany
Allegiance
Service/branch Waffen-SS
Years of service1933–45
RankSS-Brigadeführer and Generalmajor of the Waffen-SS
Service numberNSDAP #2,649,630
SS #185,023
Commands held1st Regiment, SS Cavalry Brigade
8th SS Cavalry Division Florian Geyer
31st SS Volunteer Grenadier Division
Battles/warsWorld War II
AwardsKnight's Cross of the Iron Cross
Other workAllianz Insurance

Lombard perpetrated mass murder in the Holocaust, serving as commanding officer of the 1st Regiment of the SS Cavalry Brigade during the German invasion of the Soviet Union. Lombard was convicted of war crimes by a Soviet military tribunal in 1947 and was released in 1955. He was subsequently tried by a West German court in the 1960s and found not guilty.

Early life and SS career edit

Gustav Lombard was born in Klein Spiegelberg, near Prenzlau, Province of Brandenburg, Germany. After his father's death in 1906 he visited his relatives in the United States in 1913, where he graduated from high school and started studying Modern Languages at the University of Missouri. After the end of World War I he returned to Germany in Autumn 1919 and worked for American Express and the Chrysler Motor Company in Berlin.[1]

Lombard joined the Nazi Party (NSDAP) and SS after the Machtergreifung, the Nazi takeover of power, in 1933; once in the Party, Lombard joined the SS Cavalry. As an instructor of equitation at the SS riding club, Lombard became acquainted with Jochen Peiper, a future adjutant to Heinrich Himmler; throughout the War, Peiper and Lombard remained comrades in arms.[2]

After months of Wehrmacht soldiering in the German invasion of Poland, Lombard was promoted to Commander of the 3rd Squadron of the SS Totenkopf-Reiter-Standarte in December 1939. In Poland, on 7 April 1940, Lombard's unit was ordered to occupy the district of Krolowiec, near the city of Warsaw. That in case of resistance, commander Lombard gave orders that his soldiers hunt and kill any non-German boy and man between the ages of 17 and 60 years. In the after-action report, Hermann Fegelein, commander, 1st SS Totenkopf-Reiter-Standarte, documented and reported a body count of 250 Polish men and boys executed throughout the district of Krolowiec.

Operation Barbarossa edit

In the end of July 1941 Lombard was commander of a mounted detachment of the 1st SS Cavalry Regiment deployed east of Brest-Litovsk, where he allegedly first used the term ”Entjudung” (De–jewification).

Pripyat Marshes massacres edit

On 19 July 1941, by order of Himmler, the 1st and 2nd SS Cavalry Regiments were assigned to the general command of Higher SS and Police Leader (HSSPF) Erich von dem Bach-Zalewski. Combined into the SS Cavalry Brigade under the command of Hermann Fegelein, they were to take part in the action in the area of the Pripet marshes, a large area of land that covered parts of Belorussia and Northern Ukraine. This action became known as the Pripyat Marshes massacres (German: "Pripiatsee"); it was conducted by the combined SS and Wehrmacht forces in July and August 1941 as the "systematic combing" of the area for Jews, 'partisans' and Red Army stragglers. The beginning date of the operation is considered to be 28 July 1941.[3]

General instructions were given to 'cleanse' the area of partisans and Jewish collaborators. Jewish women and children were to be driven away. Fegelein interpreted these orders as follows: Enemy soldiers in uniform were to be taken prisoner, and those found out of uniform were to be shot. Jewish males, with the exception of a few skilled workers such as doctors and leather workers, would be shot. Fegelein split the territory to be covered into two sections divided by the Pripyat River, with Lombard's 1st Regiment taking the northern half and the 2nd Regiment the south, under the command of Franz Magill.[4]

On 1 August, Himmler met with Bach-Zelewski and Fegelein in Minsk, where Himmler ordered that 'all Jews must be shot. Drive female Jews into the swamps'. Following the meeting, Fegelein advised his men that Himmler told him that 'uncompromising severity' was necessary in dealing with the Jewish enemy. He reminded them that he would deal harshly with any commanders that showed weakness.[5] Historian Peter Longerich notes that most orders to carry out criminal activities such as the killing of civilians were vague, and couched in terminology that had a specific meaning for members of the regime. Leaders were given briefings that all Jews were to be viewed as potential enemies that had to be dealt with ruthlessly.[6]

The operation's command staff applied their own interpretation to the orders. On the evening of 1 August, Lombard informed his troops that 'in future not one male Jew is to remain alive, not one family in the villages.' In the following days, he "detailed a new action in which all Jews, including women and children, were murdered with liberal use of automatic weapons" (emphasis in the original).[7][8]

By 11 August Lombard reported that 11,000 men, women and children had been killed – more than 1,000 each day. His unit also killed 400 dispersed Soviet soldiers. Magill was apparently not as energetic, as, on 12 August, he had to explain that he had not completely eradicated the Jewish 'plunderers' because 'the swamps were not deep enough.'[9][8]

By 13 August, the combined forces reported 13,788 'plunderers' killed, with only 714 taken prisoner. At the same time, the entire SS cavalry brigade of 4,000 strong suffered 2 casualties dead and 15 wounded. Fegelein's final report on the operation, dated 18 September 1941, states that they killed 14,178 Jews, 1,001 partisans, 699 Red Army soldiers, with 830 prisoners taken and losses of 17 dead, 36 wounded, and 3 missing.[10][11] The historian Henning Pieper estimates the actual number of Jews killed was closer to 23,700.[12] Thus Fegelein's units were among the first in the Holocaust to wipe out entire Jewish communities.[13]

Lombard's zeal and initiative were noted as he was promoted to regimental commander, while Magill was not and saw himself soon reassigned to an unimportant posting.[7][8] On 3 September 1941, Lombard was awarded Iron Cross 1st class for 'bravery in battle'.

Mogilev conference edit

Despite low threat from insurgents in the rear in the first months of the invasion, Wehrmacht's aggressive rear security doctrine and the use of the civilian 'danger' as a cover for genocidal policies resulted in close cooperation between the army and the security apparatus behind the front lines. One of the examples of such cooperation was a three-day field conference organized in the town of Mogilev by General Max von Schenckendorff, chief of Army Group Center Rear Area, to create an 'exchange of experiences' for the benefit of Wehrmacht's rear unit commanders. Participating officers were selected based on their 'achievements' in operations already undertaken.[14][15]

The conference got underway on 24 September and focused on 'combatting partisans' (Bekämpfung von Partisanen). Talks presented included the evaluation of Soviet 'bandit' organisation and tactics; why it was necessary to execute political commissars immediately upon capture; and the connection between Jews and partisans. In addition to Lombard, the speakers included: Higher SS and Police Leader Erich von dem Bach-Zelewski; Max Montua, commander of Police Regiment Centre; Hermann Fegelein, commander of the SS Cavalry Brigade; Arthur Nebe, commander of Einsatzgruppe B; and others.[16][17]

The conference included three field exercises. On the second day, participants traveled to the settlement of Knyazhichi (Knjaschitschi in the German rendering). According to the after-action report, 'suspicious strangers' (Ortsfremde), that is 'partisans', could not be found, but the screening of the population revealed 51 Jewish civilians; of these, 32 were shot. Thus the conference participants were presented with the default targeting of Jews as part of the anti-partisan warfare. The conference, while ostensibly an 'anti-partisan training', was in fact a means 'to promote the annihilation of Jews for racial reasons', as a post-war West German court put it. The conference marked a dramatic increase in the violence against Jews and other civilians in the last three months of 1941.[18]

Later war edit

On 15 January 1944, Lombard was appointed Chief of Staff of Stossgruppe von dem Bach, a rapid deployment assault unit under the command of Bach-Zalewski. Established to defend Kovel, the unit was composed of the 17th SS Cavalry Regiment, and army artillery, pioneer and assault-gun detachments. Through March 1944, the unit conducted defensive operations and counter-strokes against both partisan formations in the rear and the Red Army forces trying to encircle the city. During the Kovel operations, SS troops and police allegedly perpetrated atrocities in the surrounding area, shooting civilians and burning down villages.[19]

Post-war edit

Lombard became a prisoner of war in the Soviet Union in April 1945 and was sentenced as a war criminal to 25 years in prison in 1947. In 1955 he returned to West Germany after Chancellor Konrad Adenauer negotiated the release of the remaining German POWs and war criminals from the Soviet Union. He was tried by a West German court in the 1960s; the court case lasted a decade and did not result in a conviction.

Lombard worked for the Allianz Insurance company in Munich. He died in 1992 in Mühldorf am Inn at the age of 97.

Awards edit

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Martin Cüppers, „Vorreiter der Shoah, Ein Vergleich der Einsätze der beiden SS-Kavallerieregimenter im August 1941“ in Timm C. Richter: „Krieg und Verbrechen“, Meidenbauer Martin Verlag 2006, ISBN 3-89975-080-2 [1]
  2. ^ Parker 2014, p. 11.
  3. ^ Pieper 2015, pp. 62, 79–80.
  4. ^ Pieper 2015, pp. 80–81.
  5. ^ Parker 2014, p. 81.
  6. ^ Longerich 2010, pp. 189–190.
  7. ^ a b Beorn 2014, p. 99.
  8. ^ a b c Parker 2014, pp. 81–82.
  9. ^ Martin Cüppers, "Vorreiter der Shoah, Ein Vergleich der Einsätze der beiden SS-Kavallerieregimenter im August 1941" in Timm C. Richter: "Krieg und Verbrechen", Meidenbauer Martin Verlag 2006, ISBN 3-89975-080-2
  10. ^ Pieper 2015, pp. 119–120.
  11. ^ Miller 2006, p. 310.
  12. ^ Pieper 2015, p. 120.
  13. ^ Pieper 2015, pp. 86, 88–89.
  14. ^ Boog et al. 1998, pp. 1204–05.
  15. ^ Beorn 2014, pp. 95–96.
  16. ^ Blood 2006, p. 167.
  17. ^ Beorn 2014, pp. 99–101.
  18. ^ Beorn 2014, pp. 101–106.
  19. ^ Blood 2006, p. 225-227.
  20. ^ Patzwall & Scherzer 2001, p. 284.
  21. ^ Scherzer 2007, p. 513.

Bibliography edit

  • Beorn, Waitman Wade (2014). Marching into Darkness: The Wehrmacht and the Holocaust in Belarus. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674725508.
  • Blood, Phillip W. (2006). Hitler's Bandit Hunters: The SS and the Nazi Occupation of Europe. Potomac Books. ISBN 978-1597970211.
  • Boog, Horst; Förster, Jürgen; Hoffmann, Joachim; Klink, Ernst; Müller, Rolf-Dieter; Ueberschär, Gerd R. (1998). Attack on the Soviet Union. Germany and the Second World War. Vol. IV. Translated by Dean S. McMurry; Ewald Osers; Louise Willmot. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-822886-4.
  • Cüppers, Martin (2005). Wegbereiter der Shoah. Die Waffen-SS, der Kommandostab Reichsführer-SS und die Judenvernichtung 1939–1945 (in German). Darmstadt, Germany: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft. ISBN 3-534-16022-3.
  • Mahlmann, Klaus-Michael; Paul, Gerhard; Cüppers, Martin (2004). "Gustav Lombard. Ein engagierter Judenmörder der Waffen-SS.". Karrieren der Gewalt. Nationalsozialistische Täterbiographien (in German). Darmstadt, Germany: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft. ISBN 3-534-16654-X.
  • Longerich, Peter (2010). Holocaust: The Nazi Persecution and Murder of the Jews. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-280436-5.
  • Miller, Michael (2006). Leaders of the SS and German Police, Vol. 1. San Jose, CA: R. James Bender. ISBN 978-93-297-0037-2.
  • Parker, Danny S. (2014). . Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0306821547. Archived from the original on 2017-06-29. Retrieved 2015-12-28.
  • Patzwall, Klaus D.; Scherzer, Veit (2001). Das Deutsche Kreuz 1941 – 1945 Geschichte und Inhaber Band II [The German Cross 1941 – 1945 History and Recipients Volume 2] (in German). Norderstedt, Germany: Verlag Klaus D. Patzwall. ISBN 978-3-931533-45-8.
  • Pieper, Henning (2015). Fegelein's Horsemen and Genocidal Warfare: The SS Cavalry Brigade in the Soviet Union. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-137-45631-1.
  • Scherzer, Veit (2007). Die Ritterkreuzträger 1939–1945 Die Inhaber des Ritterkreuzes des Eisernen Kreuzes 1939 von Heer, Luftwaffe, Kriegsmarine, Waffen-SS, Volkssturm sowie mit Deutschland verbündeter Streitkräfte nach den Unterlagen des Bundesarchives [The Knight's Cross Bearers 1939–1945 The Holders of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross 1939 by Army, Air Force, Navy, Waffen-SS, Volkssturm and Allied Forces with Germany According to the Documents of the Federal Archives] (in German). Jena, Germany: Scherzers Militaer-Verlag. ISBN 978-3-938845-17-2.

gustav, lombard, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, december, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Gustav Lombard news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2015 Learn how and when to remove this message Gustav Lombard 10 April 1895 18 September 1992 was a high ranking member in the SS during World War II During the war Lombard commanded 8th SS Cavalry Division Florian Geyer and the 31st SS Volunteer Grenadier Division He was a recipient of the Knight s Cross of the Iron Cross of Nazi Germany for so called anti partisan operations around Kovel which involved killing of civilians and burning down villages Gustav LombardBorn 1895 04 10 10 April 1895Prenzlau German EmpireDied18 September 1992 1992 09 18 aged 97 Muhldorf GermanyAllegiance German Empire Weimar Republic Nazi GermanyService wbr branchWaffen SSYears of service1933 45RankSS Brigadefuhrer and Generalmajor of the Waffen SSService numberNSDAP 2 649 630SS 185 023Commands held1st Regiment SS Cavalry Brigade8th SS Cavalry Division Florian Geyer31st SS Volunteer Grenadier DivisionBattles warsWorld War IIAwardsKnight s Cross of the Iron CrossOther workAllianz Insurance Lombard perpetrated mass murder in the Holocaust serving as commanding officer of the 1st Regiment of the SS Cavalry Brigade during the German invasion of the Soviet Union Lombard was convicted of war crimes by a Soviet military tribunal in 1947 and was released in 1955 He was subsequently tried by a West German court in the 1960s and found not guilty Contents 1 Early life and SS career 2 Operation Barbarossa 2 1 Pripyat Marshes massacres 2 2 Mogilev conference 3 Later war 4 Post war 5 Awards 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 BibliographyEarly life and SS career editGustav Lombard was born in Klein Spiegelberg near Prenzlau Province of Brandenburg Germany After his father s death in 1906 he visited his relatives in the United States in 1913 where he graduated from high school and started studying Modern Languages at the University of Missouri After the end of World War I he returned to Germany in Autumn 1919 and worked for American Express and the Chrysler Motor Company in Berlin 1 Lombard joined the Nazi Party NSDAP and SS after the Machtergreifung the Nazi takeover of power in 1933 once in the Party Lombard joined the SS Cavalry As an instructor of equitation at the SS riding club Lombard became acquainted with Jochen Peiper a future adjutant to Heinrich Himmler throughout the War Peiper and Lombard remained comrades in arms 2 After months of Wehrmacht soldiering in the German invasion of Poland Lombard was promoted to Commander of the 3rd Squadron of the SS Totenkopf Reiter Standarte in December 1939 In Poland on 7 April 1940 Lombard s unit was ordered to occupy the district of Krolowiec near the city of Warsaw That in case of resistance commander Lombard gave orders that his soldiers hunt and kill any non German boy and man between the ages of 17 and 60 years In the after action report Hermann Fegelein commander 1st SS Totenkopf Reiter Standarte documented and reported a body count of 250 Polish men and boys executed throughout the district of Krolowiec Operation Barbarossa editIn the end of July 1941 Lombard was commander of a mounted detachment of the 1st SS Cavalry Regiment deployed east of Brest Litovsk where he allegedly first used the term Entjudung De jewification Pripyat Marshes massacres edit On 19 July 1941 by order of Himmler the 1st and 2nd SS Cavalry Regiments were assigned to the general command of Higher SS and Police Leader HSSPF Erich von dem Bach Zalewski Combined into the SS Cavalry Brigade under the command of Hermann Fegelein they were to take part in the action in the area of the Pripet marshes a large area of land that covered parts of Belorussia and Northern Ukraine This action became known as the Pripyat Marshes massacres German Pripiatsee it was conducted by the combined SS and Wehrmacht forces in July and August 1941 as the systematic combing of the area for Jews partisans and Red Army stragglers The beginning date of the operation is considered to be 28 July 1941 3 General instructions were given to cleanse the area of partisans and Jewish collaborators Jewish women and children were to be driven away Fegelein interpreted these orders as follows Enemy soldiers in uniform were to be taken prisoner and those found out of uniform were to be shot Jewish males with the exception of a few skilled workers such as doctors and leather workers would be shot Fegelein split the territory to be covered into two sections divided by the Pripyat River with Lombard s 1st Regiment taking the northern half and the 2nd Regiment the south under the command of Franz Magill 4 On 1 August Himmler met with Bach Zelewski and Fegelein in Minsk where Himmler ordered that all Jews must be shot Drive female Jews into the swamps Following the meeting Fegelein advised his men that Himmler told him that uncompromising severity was necessary in dealing with the Jewish enemy He reminded them that he would deal harshly with any commanders that showed weakness 5 Historian Peter Longerich notes that most orders to carry out criminal activities such as the killing of civilians were vague and couched in terminology that had a specific meaning for members of the regime Leaders were given briefings that all Jews were to be viewed as potential enemies that had to be dealt with ruthlessly 6 The operation s command staff applied their own interpretation to the orders On the evening of 1 August Lombard informed his troops that in future not one male Jew is to remain alive not one family in the villages In the following days he detailed a new action in which all Jews including women and children were murdered with liberal use of automatic weapons emphasis in the original 7 8 By 11 August Lombard reported that 11 000 men women and children had been killed more than 1 000 each day His unit also killed 400 dispersed Soviet soldiers Magill was apparently not as energetic as on 12 August he had to explain that he had not completely eradicated the Jewish plunderers because the swamps were not deep enough 9 8 By 13 August the combined forces reported 13 788 plunderers killed with only 714 taken prisoner At the same time the entire SS cavalry brigade of 4 000 strong suffered 2 casualties dead and 15 wounded Fegelein s final report on the operation dated 18 September 1941 states that they killed 14 178 Jews 1 001 partisans 699 Red Army soldiers with 830 prisoners taken and losses of 17 dead 36 wounded and 3 missing 10 11 The historian Henning Pieper estimates the actual number of Jews killed was closer to 23 700 12 Thus Fegelein s units were among the first in the Holocaust to wipe out entire Jewish communities 13 Lombard s zeal and initiative were noted as he was promoted to regimental commander while Magill was not and saw himself soon reassigned to an unimportant posting 7 8 On 3 September 1941 Lombard was awarded Iron Cross 1st class for bravery in battle Mogilev conference edit Main article Mogilev conference Despite low threat from insurgents in the rear in the first months of the invasion Wehrmacht s aggressive rear security doctrine and the use of the civilian danger as a cover for genocidal policies resulted in close cooperation between the army and the security apparatus behind the front lines One of the examples of such cooperation was a three day field conference organized in the town of Mogilev by General Max von Schenckendorff chief of Army Group Center Rear Area to create an exchange of experiences for the benefit of Wehrmacht s rear unit commanders Participating officers were selected based on their achievements in operations already undertaken 14 15 The conference got underway on 24 September and focused on combatting partisans Bekampfung von Partisanen Talks presented included the evaluation of Soviet bandit organisation and tactics why it was necessary to execute political commissars immediately upon capture and the connection between Jews and partisans In addition to Lombard the speakers included Higher SS and Police Leader Erich von dem Bach Zelewski Max Montua commander of Police Regiment Centre Hermann Fegelein commander of the SS Cavalry Brigade Arthur Nebe commander of Einsatzgruppe B and others 16 17 The conference included three field exercises On the second day participants traveled to the settlement of Knyazhichi Knjaschitschi in the German rendering According to the after action report suspicious strangers Ortsfremde that is partisans could not be found but the screening of the population revealed 51 Jewish civilians of these 32 were shot Thus the conference participants were presented with the default targeting of Jews as part of the anti partisan warfare The conference while ostensibly an anti partisan training was in fact a means to promote the annihilation of Jews for racial reasons as a post war West German court put it The conference marked a dramatic increase in the violence against Jews and other civilians in the last three months of 1941 18 Later war editOn 15 January 1944 Lombard was appointed Chief of Staff of Stossgruppe von dem Bach a rapid deployment assault unit under the command of Bach Zalewski Established to defend Kovel the unit was composed of the 17th SS Cavalry Regiment and army artillery pioneer and assault gun detachments Through March 1944 the unit conducted defensive operations and counter strokes against both partisan formations in the rear and the Red Army forces trying to encircle the city During the Kovel operations SS troops and police allegedly perpetrated atrocities in the surrounding area shooting civilians and burning down villages 19 Post war editLombard became a prisoner of war in the Soviet Union in April 1945 and was sentenced as a war criminal to 25 years in prison in 1947 In 1955 he returned to West Germany after Chancellor Konrad Adenauer negotiated the release of the remaining German POWs and war criminals from the Soviet Union He was tried by a West German court in the 1960s the court case lasted a decade and did not result in a conviction Lombard worked for the Allianz Insurance company in Munich He died in 1992 in Muhldorf am Inn at the age of 97 Awards editGerman Cross on 11 February 1943 as SS Obersturmbannfuhrer in Reiter Regiment 1 SS Kavallerie Division 20 Knight s Cross of the Iron Cross on 10 March 1943 as SS Obersturmbannfuhrer and commander of SS Kavallerie Regiment 1 21 See also editList SS BrigadefuhrerReferences editCitations edit Martin Cuppers Vorreiter der Shoah Ein Vergleich der Einsatze der beiden SS Kavallerieregimenter im August 1941 in Timm C Richter Krieg und Verbrechen Meidenbauer Martin Verlag 2006 ISBN 3 89975 080 2 1 Parker 2014 p 11 Pieper 2015 pp 62 79 80 Pieper 2015 pp 80 81 Parker 2014 p 81 Longerich 2010 pp 189 190 a b Beorn 2014 p 99 a b c Parker 2014 pp 81 82 Martin Cuppers Vorreiter der Shoah Ein Vergleich der Einsatze der beiden SS Kavallerieregimenter im August 1941 in Timm C Richter Krieg und Verbrechen Meidenbauer Martin Verlag 2006 ISBN 3 89975 080 2 Pieper 2015 pp 119 120 Miller 2006 p 310 Pieper 2015 p 120 Pieper 2015 pp 86 88 89 Boog et al 1998 pp 1204 05 Beorn 2014 pp 95 96 Blood 2006 p 167 Beorn 2014 pp 99 101 Beorn 2014 pp 101 106 Blood 2006 p 225 227 Patzwall amp Scherzer 2001 p 284 Scherzer 2007 p 513 Bibliography edit Beorn Waitman Wade 2014 Marching into Darkness The Wehrmacht and the Holocaust in Belarus Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674725508 Blood Phillip W 2006 Hitler s Bandit Hunters The SS and the Nazi Occupation of Europe Potomac Books ISBN 978 1597970211 Boog Horst Forster Jurgen Hoffmann Joachim Klink Ernst Muller Rolf Dieter Ueberschar Gerd R 1998 Attack on the Soviet Union Germany and the Second World War Vol IV Translated by Dean S McMurry Ewald Osers Louise Willmot Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 822886 4 Cuppers Martin 2005 Wegbereiter der Shoah Die Waffen SS der Kommandostab Reichsfuhrer SS und die Judenvernichtung 1939 1945 in German Darmstadt Germany Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft ISBN 3 534 16022 3 Mahlmann Klaus Michael Paul Gerhard Cuppers Martin 2004 Gustav Lombard Ein engagierter Judenmorder der Waffen SS Karrieren der Gewalt Nationalsozialistische Taterbiographien in German Darmstadt Germany Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft ISBN 3 534 16654 X Longerich Peter 2010 Holocaust The Nazi Persecution and Murder of the Jews Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 280436 5 Miller Michael 2006 Leaders of the SS and German Police Vol 1 San Jose CA R James Bender ISBN 978 93 297 0037 2 Parker Danny S 2014 Hitler s Warrior The Life and Wars of SS Colonel Jochen Peiper Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0306821547 Archived from the original on 2017 06 29 Retrieved 2015 12 28 Patzwall Klaus D Scherzer Veit 2001 Das Deutsche Kreuz 1941 1945 Geschichte und Inhaber Band II The German Cross 1941 1945 History and Recipients Volume 2 in German Norderstedt Germany Verlag Klaus D Patzwall ISBN 978 3 931533 45 8 Pieper Henning 2015 Fegelein s Horsemen and Genocidal Warfare The SS Cavalry Brigade in the Soviet Union Houndmills Basingstoke Hampshire Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 137 45631 1 Scherzer Veit 2007 Die Ritterkreuztrager 1939 1945 Die Inhaber des Ritterkreuzes des Eisernen Kreuzes 1939 von Heer Luftwaffe Kriegsmarine Waffen SS Volkssturm sowie mit Deutschland verbundeter Streitkrafte nach den Unterlagen des Bundesarchives The Knight s Cross Bearers 1939 1945 The Holders of the Knight s Cross of the Iron Cross 1939 by Army Air Force Navy Waffen SS Volkssturm and Allied Forces with Germany According to the Documents of the Federal Archives in German Jena Germany Scherzers Militaer Verlag ISBN 978 3 938845 17 2 Portal nbsp BiographyGustav Lombard at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gustav Lombard amp oldid 1206642602, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.