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Hermann Göring

Hermann Wilhelm Göring (or Goering;[a] German: [ˈɡøːʁɪŋ] (listen); 12 January 1893 – 15 October 1946) was a German politician, military leader and convicted war criminal. He was one of the most powerful figures in the Nazi Party, which ruled Germany from 1933 to 1945.

Hermann Göring
Göring on trial, c. 1946
16th President of the Reichstag
In office
30 August 1932 – 23 April 1945
PresidentPaul von Hindenburg
(1932–1934)
FührerAdolf Hitler
(1934–1945)
Chancellor
Preceded byPaul Löbe
Succeeded by
Office abolished
Oberbefehlshaber der Luftwaffe
In office
1 March 1935 – 24 April 1945
FührerAdolf Hitler
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byRobert Ritter von Greim
Reichsstatthalter of Prussia
Acting
25 April 1933[1] – 23 April 1945
Preceded byAdolf Hitler
Succeeded byOffice abolished
Ministerpräsident of Prussia
In office
11 April 1933 – 23 April 1945
Preceded byFranz von Papen
(Reichskommissar)
Succeeded byOffice abolished
Additional positions
1939–1945Chair of the Ministerial Council for Reich Defense[2]
1937–1938Reichsminister of Economics
1936–1945Reich Plenipotentiary of the Four Year Plan[3]
1934–1945Reichsminister of Forestry
1933–1945Reichsminister of Aviation
1923Oberste SA-Führer
Personal details
Born
Hermann Wilhelm Göring

(1893-01-12)12 January 1893
Rosenheim, Kingdom of Bavaria, German Empire
Died15 October 1946(1946-10-15) (aged 53)
Nuremberg Prison, Nuremberg, Allied-occupied Germany
Cause of deathSuicide by cyanide poisoning
Political partyNazi Party (1922–1945)
Spouses
(m. 1923; died 1931)
(m. 1935)
ChildrenEdda Göring
Parents
RelativesAlbert Göring (brother)
ResidenceCarinhall
Alma materUniversity of Munich
Occupation
  • Aviator
  • Politician
CabinetHitler cabinet
Signature
Military service
Allegiance
Branch/service
Years of service
  • 1912–1918
  • 1933–1945
Rank
CommandsJagdgeschwader 1
Battles/wars
Awards
Criminal conviction
Criminal statusDeceased
Conviction(s)Conspiracy to commit crimes against peace
Crimes of aggression
War crimes
Crimes against humanity
TrialNuremberg trials
Criminal penaltyCapital punishment

A veteran World War I fighter pilot ace, Göring was a recipient of the Pour le Mérite ("The Blue Max"). He was the last commander of Jagdgeschwader 1 (JG I), the fighter wing once led by Manfred von Richthofen. An early member of the Nazi Party, Göring was among those wounded in Adolf Hitler's failed Beer Hall Putsch in 1923. While receiving treatment for his injuries, he developed an addiction to morphine which persisted until the last year of his life. After Hitler became Chancellor of Germany in 1933, Göring was named as minister without portfolio in the new government. One of his first acts as a cabinet minister was to oversee the creation of the Gestapo, which he ceded to Heinrich Himmler in 1934.

Following the establishment of the Nazi state, Göring amassed power and political capital to become the second most powerful man in Germany. He was appointed commander-in-chief of the Luftwaffe (air force), a position he held until the final days of the regime. Upon being named Plenipotentiary of the Four Year Plan in 1936, Göring was entrusted with the task of mobilizing all sectors of the economy for war, an assignment which brought numerous government agencies under his control. In September 1939, Hitler designated him as his successor and deputy in all his offices. After the Fall of France in 1940, he was bestowed the specially created rank of Reichsmarschall, which gave him seniority over all officers in Germany's armed forces.

By 1941, Göring was at the peak of his power and influence. As the Second World War progressed, Göring's standing with Hitler and with the German public declined after the Luftwaffe proved incapable of preventing the Allied bombing of Germany's cities and resupplying surrounded Axis forces in Stalingrad. Around that time, Göring increasingly withdrew from military and political affairs to devote his attention to collecting property and artwork, much of which was stolen from Jewish victims of the Holocaust. Informed on 22 April 1945 that Hitler intended to commit suicide, Göring sent a telegram to Hitler requesting his permission to assume leadership of the Reich. Considering his request an act of treason, Hitler removed Göring from all his positions, expelled him from the party, and ordered his arrest. After the war, Göring was convicted of conspiracy, crimes against peace, war crimes and crimes against humanity at the Nuremberg trials in 1946. He was sentenced to death by hanging, but committed suicide by ingesting cyanide hours before the sentence was to be carried out.

Early life and education

 
Göring in 1907, at age 14

Göring was born on 12 January 1893[4] at the Marienbad Sanatorium in Rosenheim, Bavaria. His father, Heinrich Ernst Göring (31 October 1839 – 7 December 1913), a former cavalry officer, had been the first governor-general of German South West Africa (modern-day Namibia).[5] Heinrich had three children from a previous marriage. Göring was the fourth of five children by Heinrich's second wife, Franziska Tiefenbrunn (1859–15 July 1943), a Bavarian peasant. Göring's elder siblings were Karl, Olga, and Paula; his younger brother was Albert. At the time that Göring was born, his father was serving as consul general in Haiti, and his mother had returned home briefly to give birth. She left the six-week-old baby with a friend in Bavaria and did not see the child again for three years, when she and Heinrich returned to Germany.[6]

Göring's godfather was Hermann Epenstein [Wikidata], a wealthy Jewish physician and businessman his father had met in Africa. Epenstein provided the Göring family, who were surviving on Heinrich's pension, first with a family home in Berlin-Friedenau,[7] and then a small castle called Veldenstein, near Nuremberg. Göring's mother became Epenstein's mistress around this time, and remained so for some fifteen years. Epenstein acquired the minor title of Ritter (knight) von Epenstein through service and donations to the Crown.[8]

Interested in a career as a soldier from a very early age, Göring enjoyed playing with toy soldiers and dressing up in a Boer uniform his father had given him. He was sent to boarding school at age eleven, where the food was poor and discipline was harsh. He sold a violin to pay for his train ticket home, and then took to his bed, feigning illness, until he was told he would not have to return.[9] He continued to enjoy war games, pretending to lay siege to the castle Veldenstein and studying Teutonic legends and sagas. He became a mountain climber, scaling peaks in Germany, at the Mont Blanc massif, and in the Austrian Alps. At age 16, he was sent to a military academy at Berlin Lichterfelde, from which he graduated with distinction.[10]

Göring joined the Prince Wilhelm Regiment (112th Infantry, Garrison: Mülhausen) of the Prussian Army in 1912. The next year his mother had a falling-out with Epenstein. The family was forced to leave Veldenstein and moved to Munich; Göring's father died shortly afterwards. It was in Bavaria where Göring developed his "romantic sense of Germanness" that further evolved under National Socialism.[11] When World War I began in August 1914, Göring was stationed at Mülhausen with his regiment.[10]

World War I

Film clip of Göring in a Fokker D.VII during World War I (1918)

During the first year of World War I, Göring served with his infantry regiment in the area of Mülhausen, a garrison town less than 2 km from the French frontier. He was hospitalized with rheumatism, a result of the damp of trench warfare. While he was recovering, his friend Bruno Loerzer convinced him to transfer to what would become, by October 1916, the Luftstreitkräfte (transl. air combat forces) of the German army, but his request was turned down. Later that year, Göring flew as Loerzer's observer in Feldflieger Abteilung 25 (FFA 25); Göring had informally transferred himself. He was discovered and sentenced to three weeks' confinement to barracks, but the sentence was never carried out. By the time it was supposed to be imposed, Göring's association with Loerzer had been made official. They were assigned as a team to FFA 25 in the Crown Prince's Fifth Army. They flew reconnaissance and bombing missions, for which the Crown Prince invested both Göring and Loerzer with the Iron Cross, first class.[12]

 
Göring as a fighter pilot in 1918

After completing the pilot's training course, Göring was assigned to Jagdstaffel 5. Seriously wounded in the hip in aerial combat, he took nearly a year to recover. He then was transferred to Jagdstaffel 26, commanded by Loerzer, in February 1917. He steadily scored air victories until May, when he was assigned to command Jagdstaffel 27. Serving with Jastas 5, 26 and 27, he continued to win victories. In addition to his Iron Crosses (1st and 2nd Class), he received the Zähringer Lion with swords, the Friedrich Order, the House Order of Hohenzollern with swords third class, and finally, in May 1918, the coveted Pour le Mérite.[13] According to Hermann Dahlmann, who knew both men, Göring had Loerzer lobby for the award.[14] He finished the war with 22 victories.[15] A thorough post-war examination of Allied loss records showed that only two of his awarded victories were doubtful. Three were possible and 17 were certain, or highly likely.[16]

On 7 July 1918, following the death of Wilhelm Reinhard, successor to Manfred von Richthofen, Göring was made commander of the "Flying Circus", Jagdgeschwader 1.[17] His arrogance made him unpopular with the men of his squadron.[18]

In the last days of the war, Göring was repeatedly ordered to withdraw his squadron, first to Tellancourt airdrome, then to Darmstadt. At one point, he was ordered to surrender the aircraft to the Allies; he refused. Many of his pilots intentionally crash-landed their planes to keep them from falling into enemy hands.[19]

Like many other German veterans, Göring was a proponent of the stab-in-the-back myth, the belief which held that the German Army had not really lost the war, but instead was betrayed by the civilian leadership: Marxists, Jews, and especially the republicans, who had overthrown the German monarchy.[20] Atop the frustration of military defeat, Göring also experienced the personal disappointment of being snubbed by his fiancée's upper-class family, who broke off the engagement when he returned penniless from the front.[21]

After World War I

Göring remained in aviation after the war. He tried barnstorming and briefly worked at Fokker. After spending most of 1919 living in Denmark, he moved to Sweden and joined Svensk Lufttrafik, a Swedish airline. Göring was often hired for private flights. During the winter of 1920–1921, he was hired by Count Eric von Rosen to fly him to his castle from Stockholm. Invited to spend the night, Göring may at this time have first seen the swastika emblem, which Rosen had set in the chimney piece as a family badge.[22][b]

This was also the first time that Göring saw his future wife; the count introduced his sister-in-law, Baroness Carin von Kantzow (née Freiin von Fock). Estranged from her husband of 10 years, she had an eight-year-old son. Göring was immediately infatuated and asked her to meet him in Stockholm. They arranged a visit at the home of her parents and spent much time together through 1921, when Göring left to study political science at the University of Munich. Carin obtained a divorce, followed Göring to Munich, and married him on 3 February 1922.[23] Their first home together was a hunting lodge at Hochkreuth in the Bavarian Alps, near Bayrischzell, some 80 kilometres (50 mi) from Munich.[24] After Göring met Adolf Hitler and joined the Nazi Party in 1922, they moved to Obermenzing [de], a suburb of Munich.[25]

Early Nazi career

 
Göring (left) stands in front of Hitler at a Nazi Party rally in Nuremberg (1929)

Göring joined the Nazi Party in 1922 after hearing a speech by Hitler.[25][26] He was given command of the Sturmabteilung (SA) as the Oberster SA-Führer in 1923.[27] He was later appointed an SA-Gruppenführer (Lieutenant general) and held this rank on the SA rolls until 1945. At this time, Carin—who liked Hitler—often played hostess to meetings of leading Nazis, including her husband, Hitler, Rudolf Hess, Alfred Rosenberg, and Ernst Röhm.[28] Hitler later recalled his early association with Göring:

I liked him. I made him the head of my SA. He is the only one of its heads that ran the SA properly. I gave him a dishevelled rabble. In a very short time he had organised a division of 11,000 men.[29]

Hitler and the Nazi Party held mass meetings and rallies in Munich and elsewhere during the early 1920s, attempting to gain supporters in a bid for political power.[30] Inspired by Benito Mussolini's March on Rome, the Nazis attempted to seize power on 8–9 November 1923 in a failed coup known as the Beer Hall Putsch. Göring, who was with Hitler leading the march to the War Ministry, was shot in the groin.[31] Fourteen Nazis and four policemen were killed; many top Nazis, including Hitler, were arrested.[32] With Carin's help, Göring was smuggled to Innsbruck, where he received surgery and was given morphine for the pain. He remained in hospital until 24 December.[33] This was the beginning of his morphine addiction, which lasted until his imprisonment at Nuremberg.[34] Meanwhile, the authorities in Munich declared Göring a wanted man. The Görings—acutely short of funds and reliant on the good will of Nazi sympathizers abroad—moved from Austria to Venice. In May 1924 they visited Rome, via Florence and Siena. Sometime in 1924, Göring met Mussolini through his contacts with members of Italy's Fascist Party;[35] Mussolini had also expressed an interest in meeting Hitler, who was by then in prison.[36] Hitler penned his infamous tome Mein Kampf while incarcerated, before being released in December 1924.[37]

Meanwhile, personal problems continued to multiply for Göring. By 1925, Carin's mother was ill. The Görings—with difficulty—raised the money in the spring of 1925 for a journey to Sweden via Austria, Czechoslovakia, Poland, and Danzig (now Gdańsk). Göring had become a violent morphine addict; Carin's family were shocked by his deterioration. Carin, who was ill with epilepsy and a weak heart, had to allow the doctors to take charge of Göring; her son was taken by his father. Göring was certified a dangerous drug addict and was placed in Långbro Asylum on 1 September 1925.[38] He was violent to the point where he had to be confined in a straitjacket, but his psychiatrist felt he was sane; the condition was caused solely by the morphine.[39] Weaned off the drug, he left the facility briefly, but had to return for further treatment. He returned to Germany when an amnesty was declared in 1927 and resumed working in the aircraft industry.[40] Carin Göring, ill with epilepsy and tuberculosis,[41] died of heart failure on 17 October 1931.

Meanwhile, the Nazi Party was in a period of rebuilding and waiting. The economy had recovered, which meant fewer opportunities for the Nazis to agitate. The SA was reorganised, but with Franz Pfeffer von Salomon as its head rather than Göring, and the Schutzstaffel (SS) was founded in 1925, initially as a bodyguard for Hitler. Membership in the party increased from 27,000 in 1925 to 108,000 in 1928 and 178,000 in 1929. In the May 1928 elections the Nazi Party only obtained 12 seats out of an available 491 in the Reichstag.[42] Göring was elected as a representative from Bavaria.[43] Having secured a seat in the Reichstag, Göring gained a more prominent place in the Nazi movement, since Hitler saw him as a public relations officer for Nazism in this capacity.[44] Göring continued to be elected to the Reichstag in all subsequent elections during the Weimar and Nazi regimes.[45] Electoral success also afforded Göring with access to powerful sympathizers to the Nazi cause, such as Prince August Wilhelm of Prussia and the conservative-minded businessmen, Fritz Thyssen and Hjalmar Schacht.[46] The Great Depression led to a disastrous downturn in the German economy, and in the 1930 election, the Nazi Party won 6,409,600 votes and 107 seats.[47][c] In May 1931, Hitler sent Göring on a mission to the Vatican, where he met the future Pope Pius XII.[49]

In the July 1932 election, the Nazis won 230 seats to become far and away the largest party in the Reichstag. By longstanding tradition, the Nazis were thus entitled to select the President of the Reichstag, and elected Göring to the post.[50] He would retain this position until 23 April 1945.

Reichstag fire

The Reichstag fire occurred on the night of 27 February 1933. Göring was one of the first to arrive on the scene. Marinus van der Lubbe, a Communist radical, was arrested and claimed sole responsibility for the fire. Göring immediately called for a crackdown on Communists.[51]

The Nazis took advantage of the fire to advance their own political aims. The Reichstag Fire Decree, passed the next day on Hitler's urging, suspended basic rights and allowed detention without trial. Activities of the German Communist Party were suppressed, and some 4,000 Party members were arrested.[52] Göring demanded that the prisoners should be shot, but Rudolf Diels, head of the Prussian political police, ignored the order.[53] Some researchers, including William L. Shirer and Alan Bullock, are of the opinion that the Nazi Party itself was responsible for starting the fire.[54][55]

At the Nuremberg trials, General Franz Halder testified that Göring admitted responsibility for starting the fire. He said that, at a luncheon held on Hitler's birthday in 1942, Göring said, "The only one who really knows about the Reichstag is I, because I set it on fire!"[56] In his own Nuremberg testimony, Göring denied this story.[57]

Second marriage

During the early 1930s, Göring was often in the company of Emmy Sonnemann, an actress from Hamburg.[58] They were married on 10 April 1935, in Berlin. The wedding was celebrated on a huge scale. A large reception was held the night before at the Berlin Opera House. Fighter aircraft flew overhead on the night of the reception and the day of the ceremony,[59] at which Hitler was best man.[60] Göring's daughter, Edda, was born on 2 June 1938.[61]

Nazi potentate

 
Hitler, Bormann, Göring and Baldur von Schirach in Obersalzberg, 1936.

When Hitler was named chancellor of Germany on 30 January 1933, Göring was appointed as Reichsminister without portfolio and Reichskommissar of Aviation.[62] This was followed on 11 April 1933 by his appointment as Minister-President of Prussia, Prussian interior minister and chief of the Prussian police.[63] In October 1933, Göring was made a member of Hans Frank's Academy for German Law at its inaugural meeting.[64]

Wilhelm Frick, the Reich interior minister, and the head of the SS, Heinrich Himmler, hoped to create a unified police force for all of Germany, but Göring on 26 April 1933 established a special Prussian police force, with Rudolf Diels at its head. The force was called the Geheime Staatspolizei (transl. Secret State Police), or Gestapo. Göring, thinking that Diels was not ruthless enough to use the Gestapo effectively to counteract the power of the SA, handed over control of the Gestapo to Himmler on 20 April 1934.[65] By this time, the SA numbered over two million men.[66]

 
Göring during the Grüne Woche in Berlin, 1937.

Hitler was deeply concerned that Ernst Röhm, the chief of the SA, was planning a coup. Himmler and Reinhard Heydrich plotted with Göring to use the Gestapo and SS to crush the SA.[67] Members of the SA got wind of the proposed action and thousands of them took to the streets in violent demonstrations on the night of 29 June 1934. Enraged, Hitler ordered the arrest of the SA leadership. Röhm was shot dead in his cell when he refused to commit suicide; Göring personally went over the lists of prisoners—numbering in the thousands—and determined who else should be shot. At least 85 people were killed in the period of 30 June to 2 July, which is now known as the Night of the Long Knives.[68] Hitler admitted in the Reichstag on 13 July that the killings had been entirely illegal, but claimed a plot had been under way to overthrow the Reich. A retroactive law was passed making the action legal. Any criticism was met with arrests.[69]

One of the terms of the Treaty of Versailles, which had been in place since the end of World War I, stated that Germany was not allowed to maintain an air force. After the 1926 signing of the Kellogg–Briand Pact, police aircraft were permitted. Göring was appointed Air Traffic Minister in May 1933. Germany began to accumulate aircraft in violation of the Treaty, and in 1935 the existence of the Luftwaffe was formally acknowledged,[70] with Göring as Reich Aviation Minister.[71]

During a cabinet meeting in September 1936, Göring and Hitler announced that the German rearmament programme must be sped up. On 18 October, Hitler named Göring as Plenipotentiary of the Four Year Plan to undertake this task. Göring created a new organisation to administer the Plan and drew the ministries of labour and agriculture under its umbrella. He bypassed the economics ministry in his policy-making decisions, to the chagrin of Hjalmar Schacht, the minister in charge. Huge expenditures were made on rearmament, in spite of growing deficits.[72] Schacht resigned on 8 December 1937,[73] and Walther Funk took over the position, as well as control of the Reichsbank. In this way, both of these institutions were brought under Göring's control under the auspices of the Four Year Plan.[74] In July 1937, the Reichswerke Hermann Göring was established under state ownership – though led by Göring – with the aim of boosting steel production beyond the level which private enterprise could economically provide.[75]

 
Göring with Lord Halifax at Schorfheide, 20 November 1937
 
Hitler with Göring on balcony of the Chancellery, Berlin, 16 March 1938

In 1938, Göring was involved in the Blomberg–Fritsch Affair, which led to the resignations of the War Minister, Generalfeldmarschall Werner von Blomberg, and the army commander, General Werner von Fritsch. Göring had acted as witness at Blomberg's wedding to Margarethe Gruhn, a 26-year-old typist, on 12 January 1938. Information received from the police showed that the young bride was a prostitute.[76] Göring felt obligated to tell Hitler, but also saw this event as an opportunity to dispose of Blomberg. Blomberg was forced to resign. Göring did not want Fritsch to be appointed to that position and thus be his superior. Several days later, Heydrich revealed a file on Fritsch that contained allegations of homosexual activity and blackmail. The charges were later proven to be false, but Fritsch had lost Hitler's trust and was forced to resign.[77] Hitler used the dismissals as an opportunity to reshuffle the leadership of the military. Göring asked for the post of War Minister, but was turned down; he was appointed to the rank of Generalfeldmarschall. Hitler took over as supreme commander of the armed forces and created subordinate posts to head the three main branches of service.[78]

As minister in charge of the Four Year Plan, Göring became concerned with the lack of natural resources in Germany, and began pushing for Austria to be incorporated into the Reich. The province of Styria had rich iron ore deposits, and the country as a whole was home to many skilled labourers that would also be useful. Hitler had always been in favour of a takeover of Austria, his native country. He met the Austrian Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg on 12 February 1938, threatening invasion if peaceful unification was not forthcoming. The Nazi Party was made legal in Austria to gain a power base, and a referendum on reunification was scheduled for March. When Hitler did not approve of the wording of the plebiscite, Göring telephoned Schuschnigg and Austrian head of state Wilhelm Miklas to demand Schuschnigg's resignation, threatening invasion by German troops and civil unrest by the Austrian Nazi Party members. Schuschnigg resigned on 11 March and the plebiscite was cancelled. By 5:30 the next morning, German troops that had been massing on the border marched into Austria, meeting no resistance.[79]

Although Joachim von Ribbentrop had been named Foreign Minister in February 1938, Göring continued to involve himself in foreign affairs.[61] That July, he contacted the British government with the idea that he should make an official visit to discuss Germany's intentions for Czechoslovakia. Neville Chamberlain was in favour of a meeting, and there was talk of a pact being signed between Britain and Germany. In February 1938, Göring visited Warsaw to quell rumours about the upcoming invasion of Poland. He had conversations with the Hungarian government that summer as well, discussing their potential role in an invasion of Czechoslovakia. At the Nuremberg Rally that September, Göring and other speakers denounced the Czechs as an inferior race that must be conquered.[80] Chamberlain and Hitler had a series of meetings that led to the signing of the Munich Agreement (29 September 1938), which turned over control of the Sudetenland to Germany.[81] In March 1939, Göring threatened Czechoslovak president Emil Hácha with the bombing of Prague. Hácha then agreed to sign a communique accepting the German occupation of the remainder of Bohemia and Moravia.[82]

Although many in the party disliked him,[83] before the war Göring enjoyed widespread personal popularity among the German public because of his perceived sociability, colour and humour.[84][85] As the Nazi leader most responsible for economic matters, he presented himself as a champion of national interests over allegedly corrupt big business and the old German elite. The Nazi press was on Göring's side. Other leaders, such as Hess and Ribbentrop, were envious of his popularity.[84] In Britain and the United States, some viewed Göring as more acceptable than the other Nazis and as a possible mediator between the western democracies and Hitler.[85]

World War II

 
Göring as Reichsmarshall.

Success on all fronts

Göring and other senior officers were concerned that Germany was not yet ready for war, but Hitler insisted on pushing ahead as soon as possible.[86] On 30 August 1939, immediately prior to the outbreak of the Second World War, Hitler appointed Göring as the chairman of a new six-person Council of Ministers for Defense of the Reich which was set up to operate as a war cabinet.[87] The invasion of Poland, the opening action of World War II, began at dawn on 1 September 1939.[88] Later in the day, speaking to the Reichstag, Hitler designated Göring as his successor as Führer of all Germany, "If anything should befall me",[89] with Hess as the second alternate.[83] Big German victories followed one after the other in quick succession. With the help of the Luftwaffe, the Polish Air Force was defeated within a week.[90][d] The Fallschirmjäger seized vital airfields in Norway (Operation Weserübung) and captured Fort Eben-Emael in Belgium on 10 May 1940, the first day of the Battle of France. Göring's Luftwaffe played critical roles in the Battles of the Netherlands, of Belgium and of France in May 1940.[93]

After the Fall of France, Hitler awarded Göring the Grand Cross of the Iron Cross for his successful leadership.[94] During the 1940 Field Marshal Ceremony, Hitler promoted Göring to the rank of Reichsmarschall des Grossdeutschen Reiches (transl. Reich Marshal of the Greater German Reich), a specially-created rank which made him senior to all field marshals in the military, including the Luftwaffe. As a result of this promotion, he was the highest-ranking soldier in Germany until the end of the war. Göring had already received the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross on 30 September 1939 as Commander in Chief of the Luftwaffe.[94]

The UK had declared war on Germany on 3 September 1939, the third day of the invasion of Poland.[95] In July 1940, Hitler began preparations for an invasion of Britain. As part of the plan, the Royal Air Force (RAF) had to be neutralized. Bombing raids commenced on British air installations and on cities and centres of industry.[96] Göring had by then already announced in a radio speech, "If as much as a single enemy aircraft flies over German soil, my name is Meier!",[97] something that would return to haunt him, when the RAF began bombing German cities on 11 May 1940.[98] Though he was confident the Luftwaffe could defeat the RAF within days, Göring, like Admiral Erich Raeder, commander-in-chief of the Kriegsmarine (navy),[99] was pessimistic about the chance of success of the planned invasion (codenamed Operation Sea Lion).[100] Göring hoped that a victory in the air would be enough to force peace without an invasion. The campaign failed, and Sea Lion was postponed indefinitely on 17 September 1940.[101] After their defeat in the Battle of Britain, the Luftwaffe attempted to defeat Britain via strategic bombing. On 12 October 1940 Hitler cancelled Sea Lion due to the onset of winter.[102] By the end of the year, it was clear that British morale was not being shaken by the Blitz, though the bombings continued through May 1941.[103]

Decline on all fronts

 
Göring issuing an order for German troops on the Eastern Front, 1941.

In spite of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, signed in 1939, Nazi Germany began Operation Barbarossa—the invasion of the Soviet Union—on 22 June 1941. Initially, the Luftwaffe was at an advantage, destroying thousands of Soviet aircraft in the first month of fighting.[104] Hitler and his top staff were sure that the campaign would be over by Christmas, and no provisions were made for reserves of men or equipment.[105] But, by July, the Germans had only 1,000 planes remaining in operation, and their troop losses were over 213,000 men. The choice was made to concentrate the attack on only one part of the vast front; efforts would be directed at capturing Moscow.[106] After the long, but successful, Battle of Smolensk, Hitler ordered Army Group Centre to halt its advance to Moscow and temporarily diverted its Panzer groups north and south to aid in the encirclement of Leningrad and Kiev.[107] The pause provided the Red Army with an opportunity to mobilize fresh reserves; 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 with the Battle of Moscow.[107] Poor weather conditions, fuel shortages, a delay in building aircraft bases in Eastern Europe, and overstretched supply lines were also factors. Hitler did not give permission for even a partial retreat until mid-January 1942; by this time the losses were comparable to those of the French invasion of Russia in 1812.[108]

 
Hitler meeting Göring and automotive engineer Ferdinand Porsche at the Wolf's Lair in 1942.
 
Göring with Hitler and Albert Speer, 10 August 1943.

After the attack on Pearl Harbor, Göring, along with Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel and Admiral Erich Raeder, urged Hitler to immediately declare war on the United States.[109]

Hitler decided that the summer 1942 campaign would be concentrated in the south; efforts would be made to capture the oilfields in the Caucasus.[110] The Battle of Stalingrad, a major turning point of the war,[111] began on 23 August 1942 with a bombing campaign by the Luftwaffe.[112] The German Sixth Army entered the city, but because of its location on the front line, it was still possible for the Soviets to encircle and trap it there without reinforcements or supplies. When the Sixth Army was surrounded by the end of November in Operation Uranus, Göring promised that the Luftwaffe would be able to deliver a minimum of 300 tons of supplies to the trapped men every day. On the basis of these assurances, Hitler demanded that there be no retreat; they were to fight to the last man. Though some airlifts were able to get through, the amount of supplies delivered never exceeded 120 tons per day.[113][114] The remnants of the Sixth Army—some 91,000 men out of an army of 285,000—surrendered in early February 1943; only 5,000 of these captives survived the Soviet prisoner of war camps to see Germany again.[115]

War over Germany

Meanwhile, the strength of the US and British bomber fleets had increased. Based in Britain, they began operations against German targets. The first thousand-bomber raid was staged on Cologne on 30 May 1942.[116] Air raids continued on targets farther from England after auxiliary fuel tanks were installed on US fighter aircraft. Göring refused to believe reports that American fighters had been shot down as far east as Aachen in winter 1942–1943. His reputation began to decline.[117]

The American P-51 Mustang, with a combat radius of over 1,800 miles (2,900 km) when using underwing drop tanks, began to escort the bombers in large formations to and from the target area in early 1944. From that point onwards, the Luftwaffe began to suffer casualties in aircrews it could not sufficiently replace. By targeting oil refineries and rail communications, Allied bombers crippled the German war effort by late 1944.[118] German civilians blamed Göring for his failure to protect the homeland.[119] Hitler began excluding him from conferences, but retained him in his positions at the head of the Luftwaffe and as plenipotentiary of the Four Year Plan.[120] As he lost Hitler's trust, Göring began to spend more time at his various residences.[121] On D-Day (6 June 1944), the Luftwaffe only had some 300 fighters and a small number of bombers in the area of the landings; the Allies had a total strength of 11,000 aircraft.[122]

End of the war

 
Göring in captivity 9 May 1945.

As the Soviets approached Berlin, Hitler's efforts to organise the defence of the city became ever more meaningless and futile.[123] His last birthday, celebrated at the Führerbunker in Berlin on 20 April 1945, was the occasion for leave-taking by many top Nazis, Göring included. By this time, Göring's hunting lodge Carinhall had been evacuated, the building destroyed,[124] and its art treasures moved to Berchtesgaden and elsewhere.[125] Göring arrived at his estate at Obersalzberg on 22 April, the same day that Hitler, in a lengthy diatribe against his generals, first publicly admitted that the war was lost and that he intended to remain in Berlin to the end and then commit suicide.[126] He also stated that Göring was in a better position to negotiate a peace settlement.[127]

OKW operations chief Alfred Jodl was present for Hitler's rant, and notified Göring's chief of staff, Karl Koller, at a meeting a few hours later. Sensing its implications, Koller immediately flew to Berchtesgaden to notify Göring of this development. A week after the start of the Soviet invasion, Hitler had issued a decree naming Göring his successor in the event of his death, thus codifying the declaration he had made soon after the beginning of the war. The decree also gave Göring full authority to act as Hitler's deputy if Hitler ever lost his freedom of action.[127]

Göring feared being branded a traitor if he tried to take power, but also feared being accused of dereliction of duty if he did nothing. After some hesitation, Göring reviewed his copy of the 1941 decree naming him Hitler's successor. After conferring with Koller and Hans Lammers (the state secretary of the Reich Chancellery), Göring concluded that by remaining in Berlin to face certain death, Hitler had incapacitated himself from governing. All agreed that under the terms of the decree, it was incumbent upon Göring to take power in Hitler's stead.[128] He was also motivated by fears that his rival, Martin Bormann, would seize power upon Hitler's death and would have him killed as a traitor. With this in mind, Göring sent a carefully worded telegram asking Hitler for permission to take over as the leader of Germany, stressing that he would be acting as Hitler's deputy. He added that, if Hitler did not reply by 22:00 that night (23 April), he would assume that Hitler had indeed lost his freedom of action, and would assume leadership of the Reich.[129]

The telegram was intercepted by Bormann, who convinced Hitler that Göring was a traitor. Bormann argued that Göring's telegram was not a request for permission to act as Hitler's deputy, but a demand to resign or be overthrown.[130] Bormann also intercepted another telegram in which Göring directed Ribbentrop to report to him if there was no further communication from Hitler or Göring before midnight.[131] Hitler sent a reply to Göring—prepared with Bormann's help—rescinding the 1941 decree and threatening him with execution for high treason unless he immediately resigned from all of his offices. Göring duly resigned. Afterwards, Hitler (or Bormann, depending on the source) ordered the SS to place Göring, his staff, and Lammers under house arrest at Obersalzberg.[130][132] Bormann made an announcement over the radio that Göring had resigned for health reasons.[133]

Göring after his capture (May 1945).

By 26 April, the complex at Obersalzberg was under attack by the Allies, so Göring was moved to his castle at Mauterndorf. In his last will and testament, Hitler expelled Göring from the party, formally rescinded the decree making him his successor, and upbraided Göring for "illegally attempting to seize control of the state."[134] He then appointed Karl Dönitz, the Navy's commander-in-chief, as president of the Reich and commander-in-chief of the armed forces. Hitler and his wife, Eva Braun, committed suicide on 30 April 1945, a few hours after a hastily arranged wedding. Göring was freed on 5 May by a passing Luftwaffe unit, and he made his way to the U.S. lines in hopes of surrendering to them rather than to the Soviets. He was taken into custody near Radstadt on 6 May by elements of the 36th Infantry Division of the US Army.[135][e] This move likely saved Göring's life; Bormann had ordered him executed if Berlin had fallen.[137]

Trial and death

 
Göring (first row, far left) at the Nuremberg trial

Göring was flown to Camp Ashcan, a temporary prisoner-of-war camp housed in the Palace Hotel at Mondorf-les-Bains, Luxembourg. Here he was weaned off dihydrocodeine (a mild morphine derivative)—he had been taking the equivalent of three or four grains (260 to 320 mg) of morphine a day—and was put on a strict diet; he lost 60 pounds (27 kg). His IQ was tested while in custody and found to be 138.[138] Top Nazi officials were transferred in September to Nuremberg, which was to be the location of a series of military tribunals beginning in November.[139]

Göring was the second-highest-ranking official tried at Nuremberg, behind Reich President (former Admiral) Karl Dönitz. The prosecution levelled an indictment of four charges, including a charge of conspiracy; waging a war of aggression; war crimes, including the plundering and removal to Germany of works of art and other property; and crimes against humanity, including the disappearance of political and other opponents under the Nacht und Nebel (transl. Night and Fog) decree; the torture and ill treatment of prisoners of war; and the murder and enslavement of civilians, including what was at the time estimated to be 5,700,000 Jews. Not permitted to present a lengthy statement, Göring declared himself to be "in the sense of the indictment not guilty."[140]

The trial lasted 218 days. The prosecution presented its case from November through March, and Göring's defence—the first to be presented—lasted from 8 to 22 March. The sentences were read on 30 September 1946.[141] Göring, forced to remain silent while seated in the dock, communicated his opinions about the proceedings using gestures, shaking his head, or laughing. He constantly took notes and whispered with the other defendants, and tried to control the erratic behaviour of Hess, who was seated beside him.[142] During breaks in the proceedings, Göring tried to dominate the other defendants, and he was eventually placed in solitary confinement when he attempted to influence their testimony.[143] Göring told American psychiatrist Leon Goldensohn that the court was "stupid" to try "little fellows" like Funk and Kaltenbrunner instead of letting Göring take all the blame on himself.[144] He also claimed that he had never heard of most of the other defendants before the trial.[144]

 
Göring at the Nuremberg Trials

On several occasions over the course of the trial, the prosecution showed films of the concentration camps and other atrocities. Everyone present, including Göring, found the contents of the films shocking; he said that the films must have been faked. Witnesses, including Paul Körner and Erhard Milch, tried to portray Göring as a peaceful moderate. Milch stated that it had been impossible to oppose Hitler or disobey his orders; to do so would likely have meant death for oneself and one's family.[145] When testifying on his own behalf, Göring emphasised his loyalty to Hitler, and claimed to know nothing about what had happened in the concentration camps, which were under Himmler's control. He provided evasive, convoluted answers to direct questions and had plausible excuses for all of his actions during the war. He used the witness stand as a venue to expound at great length on his own role in the Reich, attempting to present himself as a peacemaker and diplomat before the outbreak of the war.[146] During cross-examination, chief prosecutor Robert H. Jackson read the minutes of a meeting that had been held shortly after Kristallnacht, a major pogrom in November 1938. At the meeting, Göring had plotted to confiscate Jewish property in the wake of the pogrom.[147] Later, David Maxwell-Fyfe proved that Göring must have known about the killing of 50 airmen who had been recaptured after escaping from Stalag Luft III in time to have saved them.[148] He also presented clear evidence that Göring knew about the extermination of the Hungarian Jews.[149]

Göring was found guilty on all four counts and was sentenced to death by hanging. The judgment stated:

There is nothing to be said in mitigation. For Göring was often, indeed almost always, the moving force, second only to his leader. He was the leading war aggressor, both as political and as military leader; he was the director of the slave labour programme and the creator of the oppressive programme against the Jews and other races, at home and abroad. All of these crimes he has frankly admitted. On some specific cases there may be conflict of testimony, but in terms of the broad outline, his own admissions are more than sufficiently wide to be conclusive of his guilt. His guilt is unique in its enormity. The record discloses no excuses for this man.[150]

 
Göring's corpse

Göring made an appeal asking to be shot as a soldier instead of hanged as a common criminal, but the court refused.[151] He committed suicide with a potassium cyanide capsule the night before he was to be hanged.[152]

Speculation as to how Göring obtained the poison holds that US Army lieutenant Jack G. Wheelis, who was stationed at the trials, retrieved the capsules from their hiding place among Göring's confiscated personal effects and passed them to Göring,[153] who had earlier presented Wheelis with his gold watch, pen, and cigarette case.[154] In 2005, former US Army private Herbert Lee Stivers, who served in the 1st Infantry Division's 26th Infantry Regiment—the honour guard for the Nuremberg Trials—claimed he gave Göring "medicine" hidden inside a fountain pen that a German woman had asked him to smuggle into the prison. Stivers later said that he did not know what was in the pill until after Göring's suicide.[155]

Göring's body, as with those of the men who were executed, was displayed at the execution ground for witnesses. The bodies were cremated at Ostfriedhof, Munich, and the ashes were scattered in the Isar River.[156][157][158]

Personal properties

 
Göring's Reichsmarschall baton and Smith & Wesson Model 10 revolver. To the left is the silver-bound guest book from Carinhall. (West Point Museum)

Göring's name is closely associated with the Nazi plunder of Jewish property. His name appears 135 times on the OSS Art Looting Investigation Unit (ALIU) Red Flag Names List[159] compiled by US Army intelligence in 1945-6 and declassified in 1997.[160]

The confiscation of Jewish property gave Göring the opportunity to amass a personal fortune. Some properties he seized himself or acquired for a nominal price. In other cases, he collected bribes for allowing others to steal Jewish property. He took kickbacks from industrialists for favourable decisions as Four Year Plan director, and money for supplying arms to the Spanish Republicans in the Spanish Civil War via Pyrkal in Greece (although Germany was supporting Franco and the Nationalists).[161]

Göring was appointed Reich Master of the Hunt in 1933 and Master of the German Forests in 1934. He instituted reforms to the forestry laws and acted to protect endangered species. Around this time he became interested in Schorfheide Forest, where he set aside 100,000 acres (400 km2) as a state park, which is still extant. There he built an elaborate hunting lodge, Carinhall, in memory of his first wife, Carin. By 1934, her body had been transported to the site and placed in a vault on the estate.[162] Through most of the 1930s, Göring kept pet lion cubs, borrowed from the Berlin Zoo, both at Carinhall and at his house at Obersalzberg.[163] The main lodge at Carinhall had a large art gallery where Göring displayed works that had been plundered from private collections and museums around Europe from 1939 onward.[164][165] Göring worked closely with the Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg (transl.Reichsleiter Rosenberg Taskforce), an organisation tasked with the looting of artwork and cultural material from Jewish collections, libraries, and museums throughout Europe.[166] Headed by Alfred Rosenberg, the task force set up a collection centre and headquarters in Paris. Some 26,000 railroad cars full of art treasures, furniture, and other looted items were sent to Germany from France alone. Göring repeatedly visited the Paris headquarters to review the incoming stolen goods and to select items to be sent on a special train to Carinhall and his other homes.[167] The estimated value of his collection, which numbered some 1,500 pieces, was $200 million.[168]

 
Standard, on display at the Musée de la Guerre in Les Invalides, Paris

Göring was known for his extravagant tastes and garish clothing. He had various special uniforms made for the many posts he held;[169] his Reichsmarschall uniform included a jewel-encrusted baton. Hans-Ulrich Rudel, the top Stuka pilot of the war, recalled twice meeting Göring dressed in outlandish costumes: first, a medieval hunting costume, practicing archery with his doctor; and second, dressed in a red toga fastened with a golden clasp, smoking an unusually large pipe. Italian Foreign Minister Galeazzo Ciano once noted Göring wearing a fur coat that looked like what "a high-grade prostitute wears to the opera."[170] He threw lavish housewarming parties each time a round of construction was completed at Carinhall, and changed costumes several times throughout the evenings.[171]

Göring was noted for his patronage of music, especially opera. He entertained frequently and sumptuously, and hosted elaborate birthday parties for himself.[172] Armaments minister Albert Speer recalled that guests brought expensive gifts such as gold bars, Dutch cigars, and valuable artwork. For his birthday in 1944, Speer gave Göring an oversized marble bust of Hitler.[173] As a member of the Prussian Council of State, Speer was required to donate a considerable portion of his salary towards the council's birthday gift to Göring without even being asked. Generalfeldmarschall Erhard Milch told Speer that similar donations were required out of the Air Ministry's general fund.[174] For his birthday in 1940, Ciano decorated Göring with the coveted Collar of Annunziata. The award reduced him to tears.[175]

The design of the Reichsmarschall standard, on a light blue field, featured a gold German eagle grasping a wreath surmounted by two batons overlaid with a swastika. The reverse side of the flag had the Großkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes (transl. Grand Cross of the Iron Cross) surrounded by a wreath between four Luftwaffe eagles. The flag was carried by a personal standard-bearer at all public occasions.

Though he liked to be called "der Eiserne" (transl. the Iron Man), the once-dashing and muscular fighter pilot had become corpulent. He was one of the few Nazi leaders who did not take offence at hearing jokes about himself, "no matter how rude", taking them as a sign of popularity. Germans joked about his ego, saying that he would wear an admiral's uniform with rubber medals to take a bath, and his obesity, joking that "he sits down on his stomach".[176][177] One joke claimed that he had sent a wire to Hitler after his visit to the Vatican: "Mission accomplished. Pope unfrocked. Tiara and pontifical vestments are a perfect fit."[178]

Role in the Holocaust

 
Göring's July 1941 letter to Reinhard Heydrich

Joseph Goebbels and Himmler were far more antisemitic than Göring, who mainly adopted that attitude because party politics required him to do so.[179] His deputy, Erhard Milch, had a Jewish parent. However, Göring supported the Nuremberg Laws of 1935, and later initiated economic measures unfavourable to Jews.[179] He required the registration of all Jewish property as part of the Four Year Plan, and at a meeting held after Kristallnacht was livid that the financial burden for the Jewish losses would have to be made good by German-owned insurance companies. He proposed that the Jews be fined one billion marks.[180]

At the same meeting, options for the disposition of the Jews and their property were discussed. Jews would be segregated into ghettos or encouraged to emigrate, and their property would be seized in a programme of Aryanization. Compensation for seized property would be low, if any was given at all.[180] Detailed minutes of this meeting and other documents were read out at the Nuremberg trial, proving his knowledge of and complicity with the persecution of the Jews.[147]

On 24 January 1939, Göring established in Berlin the head office of the Central Office for Jewish Emigration,[181] modelled on the similar organization established in Vienna in August 1938.[182] Under the direction of Heydrich, it was tasked with using any means necessary to prompt Jews to leave the Reich, and creating a Jewish organization that would co-ordinate emigration from the Jewish side.[183]

In July 1941, Göring issued a memo to Heydrich ordering him to organise the practical details of the Final Solution to the "Jewish Question". By the time that this letter was written, many Jews and others had already been killed in Poland, Russia, and elsewhere. At the Wannsee Conference, held six months later, Heydrich formally announced that genocide of the Jews was now official Reich policy. Göring did not attend the conference, but he was present at other meetings where the number of people killed was discussed.[184][185]

Göring directed anti-partisan operations by Luftwaffe security battalions in the Białowieża Forest between 1942 and 1944 that resulted in the murder of thousands of Jews and Polish civilians.[186]

At the Nuremberg trial Göring told first lieutenant and U.S. Army psychologist Gustave Gilbert that he would never have supported the anti-Jewish measures if he had known what was going to happen. "I only thought we would eliminate Jews from positions in big business and government", he claimed.[187][188]

Decorations and awards

 
Göring wearing his Pour le Mérite medal (1932)

German

Foreign

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Göring is the German spelling, but the name is commonly transliterated Goering in English and other languages, using oe the alternative German spelling for umlauts in general.
  2. ^ The swastika was a badge which the count and some friends had adopted at school, and he adopted it as a family emblem. See Manvell & Fraenkel 2011, pp. 403–404.
  3. ^ By 1930, the Nazi party claimed upwards of 293,000 members.[48]
  4. ^ Confident that the Luftwaffe was without peer and practically invincible in the wake of these victories, Göring commented to the German press that should the enemy ever penetrate German airspace, they could call him "Meyer".[91][92]
  5. ^ Upon being captured by American soldiers, Göring immediately asked to be taken before Eisenhower. He hoped to be treated as a "spokesman for Germany."[136]

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Further reading

  • Brandenburg, Erich (1995). Die Nachkommen Karls Des Grossen. Neustadt/Aisch: Degener. ISBN 3-7686-5102-9.
  • Burke, William Hastings (2009). Thirty Four. London: Wolfgeist. ISBN 978-0-9563712-0-1.
  • Butler, Ewan (1951). Marshal Without Glory. London: Hodder & Stoughton. OCLC 1246848.
  • Fest, Joachim (2004). Inside Hitler's Bunker. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 0-374-13577-0.
  • Frischauer, Willi (2013) [1950]. Goering. Unmaterial Books. ISBN 978-1-78301-221-3.
  • Göring, Hermann (1934). . London: E. Mathews & Marrot. OCLC 570220. Archived from the original on 3 August 2004.
  • Leffland, Ella (1990). The Knight, Death and the Devil. New York: Morrow. ISBN 0-688-05836-1.
  • Maser, Werner (2000). Hitlers janusköpfiger Paladin: die politische Biographie (in German). Berlin. ISBN 3-86124-509-4.
  • Maser, Werner (2004). Fälschung, Dichtung und Wahrheit über Hitler und Stalin (in German). Munich: Olzog. ISBN 3-7892-8134-4.
  • Paul, Wolfgang (1983). Wer War Hermann Göring: Biographie (in German). Esslingen: Bechtle. ISBN 3-7628-0427-3.

External links

  • Nuremberg Trial Proceedings Vol. 9 Transcript of Goering's testimony at the trial
  • "Lost Prison Interview with Hermann Goring: The Reichsmarschall's Revelations" published by World War II Magazine
  • The Goering Collection: online database (in German as Die Kunstsammlung Hermann Göring) of 4263 artworks in Hermann Göring's collection
  • Newspaper clippings about Hermann Göring in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
Military offices
Preceded by
Erich Wieland
Commanding Officer of Jasta 27
1917–1918
Succeeded by
Preceded by Commanding Officer of Jagdgeschwader 1
1918
Succeeded by
Erich von Wedel
Preceded by
Erich von Wedel
Commanding Officer of Jagdgeschwader 1
1918
Unit disbanded
New title
Luftwaffe re-established
Commander-in-Chief of the Luftwaffe
1935–1945
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Leader of the SA
1923
Vacant
Title next held by
Franz Pfeffer von Salomon
Preceded by President of the Reichstag
1932–1945
Reichstag abolished
Preceded by
Franz von Papen
(Reichskomissar)
Prime Minister of Prussia
1933–1945
Prussia abolished
Preceded by Reichsstatthalter of Prussia
1933–1945
Preceded by Reichsminister of Economics
1937–1938
Succeeded by

hermann, göring, göring, goering, redirect, here, other, uses, göring, disambiguation, hermann, wilhelm, göring, goering, german, ˈɡøːʁɪŋ, listen, january, 1893, october, 1946, german, politician, military, leader, convicted, criminal, most, powerful, figures,. Goring and Goering redirect here For other uses see Goring disambiguation Hermann Wilhelm Goring or Goering a German ˈɡoːʁɪŋ listen 12 January 1893 15 October 1946 was a German politician military leader and convicted war criminal He was one of the most powerful figures in the Nazi Party which ruled Germany from 1933 to 1945 Hermann GoringGoring on trial c 194616th President of the ReichstagIn office 30 August 1932 23 April 1945PresidentPaul von Hindenburg 1932 1934 FuhrerAdolf Hitler 1934 1945 ChancellorHeinrich Bruning Franz von Papen Kurt von Schleicher Adolf HitlerPreceded byPaul LobeSucceeded byOffice abolished Erich Kohler President of the West German Bundestag in 1949 Johannes Dieckmann President of the East German People s Chamber in 1949 Oberbefehlshaber der LuftwaffeIn office 1 March 1935 24 April 1945FuhrerAdolf HitlerPreceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byRobert Ritter von GreimReichsstatthalter of PrussiaActing 25 April 1933 1 23 April 1945Preceded byAdolf HitlerSucceeded byOffice abolishedMinisterprasident of PrussiaIn office 11 April 1933 23 April 1945Preceded byFranz von Papen Reichskommissar Succeeded byOffice abolishedAdditional positions1939 1945Chair of the Ministerial Council for Reich Defense 2 1937 1938Reichsminister of Economics1936 1945Reich Plenipotentiary of the Four Year Plan 3 1934 1945Reichsminister of Forestry1933 1945Reichsminister of Aviation1923Oberste SA FuhrerPersonal detailsBornHermann Wilhelm Goring 1893 01 12 12 January 1893Rosenheim Kingdom of Bavaria German EmpireDied15 October 1946 1946 10 15 aged 53 Nuremberg Prison Nuremberg Allied occupied GermanyCause of deathSuicide by cyanide poisoningPolitical partyNazi Party 1922 1945 SpousesCarin von Kantzow m 1923 died 1931 wbr Emmy Sonnemann m 1935 wbr ChildrenEdda GoringParentsHeinrich Ernst Goring father Franziska Tiefenbrunn mother RelativesAlbert Goring brother ResidenceCarinhallAlma materUniversity of MunichOccupationAviator PoliticianCabinetHitler cabinetSignatureMilitary serviceAllegianceGerman EmpireNazi GermanyBranch serviceImperial German ArmyLuftstreitkrafteSturmabteilungLuftwaffeYears of service1912 1918 1933 1945RankReichsmarschallSA GruppenfuhrerReichsforst und ReichsjagermeisterCommandsJagdgeschwader 1Battles warsWorld War IWorld War IIAwardsPour le MeriteGrand Cross of the Iron CrossCriminal convictionCriminal statusDeceasedConviction s Conspiracy to commit crimes against peaceCrimes of aggressionWar crimesCrimes against humanityTrialNuremberg trialsCriminal penaltyCapital punishmentA veteran World War I fighter pilot ace Goring was a recipient of the Pour le Merite The Blue Max He was the last commander of Jagdgeschwader 1 JG I the fighter wing once led by Manfred von Richthofen An early member of the Nazi Party Goring was among those wounded in Adolf Hitler s failed Beer Hall Putsch in 1923 While receiving treatment for his injuries he developed an addiction to morphine which persisted until the last year of his life After Hitler became Chancellor of Germany in 1933 Goring was named as minister without portfolio in the new government One of his first acts as a cabinet minister was to oversee the creation of the Gestapo which he ceded to Heinrich Himmler in 1934 Following the establishment of the Nazi state Goring amassed power and political capital to become the second most powerful man in Germany He was appointed commander in chief of the Luftwaffe air force a position he held until the final days of the regime Upon being named Plenipotentiary of the Four Year Plan in 1936 Goring was entrusted with the task of mobilizing all sectors of the economy for war an assignment which brought numerous government agencies under his control In September 1939 Hitler designated him as his successor and deputy in all his offices After the Fall of France in 1940 he was bestowed the specially created rank of Reichsmarschall which gave him seniority over all officers in Germany s armed forces By 1941 Goring was at the peak of his power and influence As the Second World War progressed Goring s standing with Hitler and with the German public declined after the Luftwaffe proved incapable of preventing the Allied bombing of Germany s cities and resupplying surrounded Axis forces in Stalingrad Around that time Goring increasingly withdrew from military and political affairs to devote his attention to collecting property and artwork much of which was stolen from Jewish victims of the Holocaust Informed on 22 April 1945 that Hitler intended to commit suicide Goring sent a telegram to Hitler requesting his permission to assume leadership of the Reich Considering his request an act of treason Hitler removed Goring from all his positions expelled him from the party and ordered his arrest After the war Goring was convicted of conspiracy crimes against peace war crimes and crimes against humanity at the Nuremberg trials in 1946 He was sentenced to death by hanging but committed suicide by ingesting cyanide hours before the sentence was to be carried out Contents 1 Early life and education 2 World War I 3 After World War I 4 Early Nazi career 5 Reichstag fire 6 Second marriage 7 Nazi potentate 8 World War II 8 1 Success on all fronts 8 2 Decline on all fronts 8 3 War over Germany 8 4 End of the war 9 Trial and death 10 Personal properties 11 Role in the Holocaust 12 Decorations and awards 12 1 German 12 2 Foreign 13 See also 14 Notes 15 Citations 16 Sources 17 Further reading 18 External linksEarly life and education Edit Goring in 1907 at age 14 Goring was born on 12 January 1893 4 at the Marienbad Sanatorium in Rosenheim Bavaria His father Heinrich Ernst Goring 31 October 1839 7 December 1913 a former cavalry officer had been the first governor general of German South West Africa modern day Namibia 5 Heinrich had three children from a previous marriage Goring was the fourth of five children by Heinrich s second wife Franziska Tiefenbrunn 1859 15 July 1943 a Bavarian peasant Goring s elder siblings were Karl Olga and Paula his younger brother was Albert At the time that Goring was born his father was serving as consul general in Haiti and his mother had returned home briefly to give birth She left the six week old baby with a friend in Bavaria and did not see the child again for three years when she and Heinrich returned to Germany 6 Goring s godfather was Hermann Epenstein Wikidata a wealthy Jewish physician and businessman his father had met in Africa Epenstein provided the Goring family who were surviving on Heinrich s pension first with a family home in Berlin Friedenau 7 and then a small castle called Veldenstein near Nuremberg Goring s mother became Epenstein s mistress around this time and remained so for some fifteen years Epenstein acquired the minor title of Ritter knight von Epenstein through service and donations to the Crown 8 Interested in a career as a soldier from a very early age Goring enjoyed playing with toy soldiers and dressing up in a Boer uniform his father had given him He was sent to boarding school at age eleven where the food was poor and discipline was harsh He sold a violin to pay for his train ticket home and then took to his bed feigning illness until he was told he would not have to return 9 He continued to enjoy war games pretending to lay siege to the castle Veldenstein and studying Teutonic legends and sagas He became a mountain climber scaling peaks in Germany at the Mont Blanc massif and in the Austrian Alps At age 16 he was sent to a military academy at Berlin Lichterfelde from which he graduated with distinction 10 Goring joined the Prince Wilhelm Regiment 112th Infantry Garrison Mulhausen of the Prussian Army in 1912 The next year his mother had a falling out with Epenstein The family was forced to leave Veldenstein and moved to Munich Goring s father died shortly afterwards It was in Bavaria where Goring developed his romantic sense of Germanness that further evolved under National Socialism 11 When World War I began in August 1914 Goring was stationed at Mulhausen with his regiment 10 World War I Edit source source source source source source source source source source source source source source Film clip of Goring in a Fokker D VII during World War I 1918 During the first year of World War I Goring served with his infantry regiment in the area of Mulhausen a garrison town less than 2 km from the French frontier He was hospitalized with rheumatism a result of the damp of trench warfare While he was recovering his friend Bruno Loerzer convinced him to transfer to what would become by October 1916 the Luftstreitkrafte transl air combat forces of the German army but his request was turned down Later that year Goring flew as Loerzer s observer in Feldflieger Abteilung 25 FFA 25 Goring had informally transferred himself He was discovered and sentenced to three weeks confinement to barracks but the sentence was never carried out By the time it was supposed to be imposed Goring s association with Loerzer had been made official They were assigned as a team to FFA 25 in the Crown Prince s Fifth Army They flew reconnaissance and bombing missions for which the Crown Prince invested both Goring and Loerzer with the Iron Cross first class 12 Goring as a fighter pilot in 1918 After completing the pilot s training course Goring was assigned to Jagdstaffel 5 Seriously wounded in the hip in aerial combat he took nearly a year to recover He then was transferred to Jagdstaffel 26 commanded by Loerzer in February 1917 He steadily scored air victories until May when he was assigned to command Jagdstaffel 27 Serving with Jastas 5 26 and 27 he continued to win victories In addition to his Iron Crosses 1st and 2nd Class he received the Zahringer Lion with swords the Friedrich Order the House Order of Hohenzollern with swords third class and finally in May 1918 the coveted Pour le Merite 13 According to Hermann Dahlmann who knew both men Goring had Loerzer lobby for the award 14 He finished the war with 22 victories 15 A thorough post war examination of Allied loss records showed that only two of his awarded victories were doubtful Three were possible and 17 were certain or highly likely 16 On 7 July 1918 following the death of Wilhelm Reinhard successor to Manfred von Richthofen Goring was made commander of the Flying Circus Jagdgeschwader 1 17 His arrogance made him unpopular with the men of his squadron 18 In the last days of the war Goring was repeatedly ordered to withdraw his squadron first to Tellancourt airdrome then to Darmstadt At one point he was ordered to surrender the aircraft to the Allies he refused Many of his pilots intentionally crash landed their planes to keep them from falling into enemy hands 19 Like many other German veterans Goring was a proponent of the stab in the back myth the belief which held that the German Army had not really lost the war but instead was betrayed by the civilian leadership Marxists Jews and especially the republicans who had overthrown the German monarchy 20 Atop the frustration of military defeat Goring also experienced the personal disappointment of being snubbed by his fiancee s upper class family who broke off the engagement when he returned penniless from the front 21 After World War I EditGoring remained in aviation after the war He tried barnstorming and briefly worked at Fokker After spending most of 1919 living in Denmark he moved to Sweden and joined Svensk Lufttrafik a Swedish airline Goring was often hired for private flights During the winter of 1920 1921 he was hired by Count Eric von Rosen to fly him to his castle from Stockholm Invited to spend the night Goring may at this time have first seen the swastika emblem which Rosen had set in the chimney piece as a family badge 22 b This was also the first time that Goring saw his future wife the count introduced his sister in law Baroness Carin von Kantzow nee Freiin von Fock Estranged from her husband of 10 years she had an eight year old son Goring was immediately infatuated and asked her to meet him in Stockholm They arranged a visit at the home of her parents and spent much time together through 1921 when Goring left to study political science at the University of Munich Carin obtained a divorce followed Goring to Munich and married him on 3 February 1922 23 Their first home together was a hunting lodge at Hochkreuth in the Bavarian Alps near Bayrischzell some 80 kilometres 50 mi from Munich 24 After Goring met Adolf Hitler and joined the Nazi Party in 1922 they moved to Obermenzing de a suburb of Munich 25 Early Nazi career Edit Goring left stands in front of Hitler at a Nazi Party rally in Nuremberg 1929 Goring joined the Nazi Party in 1922 after hearing a speech by Hitler 25 26 He was given command of the Sturmabteilung SA as the Oberster SA Fuhrer in 1923 27 He was later appointed an SA Gruppenfuhrer Lieutenant general and held this rank on the SA rolls until 1945 At this time Carin who liked Hitler often played hostess to meetings of leading Nazis including her husband Hitler Rudolf Hess Alfred Rosenberg and Ernst Rohm 28 Hitler later recalled his early association with Goring I liked him I made him the head of my SA He is the only one of its heads that ran the SA properly I gave him a dishevelled rabble In a very short time he had organised a division of 11 000 men 29 Hitler and the Nazi Party held mass meetings and rallies in Munich and elsewhere during the early 1920s attempting to gain supporters in a bid for political power 30 Inspired by Benito Mussolini s March on Rome the Nazis attempted to seize power on 8 9 November 1923 in a failed coup known as the Beer Hall Putsch Goring who was with Hitler leading the march to the War Ministry was shot in the groin 31 Fourteen Nazis and four policemen were killed many top Nazis including Hitler were arrested 32 With Carin s help Goring was smuggled to Innsbruck where he received surgery and was given morphine for the pain He remained in hospital until 24 December 33 This was the beginning of his morphine addiction which lasted until his imprisonment at Nuremberg 34 Meanwhile the authorities in Munich declared Goring a wanted man The Gorings acutely short of funds and reliant on the good will of Nazi sympathizers abroad moved from Austria to Venice In May 1924 they visited Rome via Florence and Siena Sometime in 1924 Goring met Mussolini through his contacts with members of Italy s Fascist Party 35 Mussolini had also expressed an interest in meeting Hitler who was by then in prison 36 Hitler penned his infamous tome Mein Kampf while incarcerated before being released in December 1924 37 Meanwhile personal problems continued to multiply for Goring By 1925 Carin s mother was ill The Gorings with difficulty raised the money in the spring of 1925 for a journey to Sweden via Austria Czechoslovakia Poland and Danzig now Gdansk Goring had become a violent morphine addict Carin s family were shocked by his deterioration Carin who was ill with epilepsy and a weak heart had to allow the doctors to take charge of Goring her son was taken by his father Goring was certified a dangerous drug addict and was placed in Langbro Asylum on 1 September 1925 38 He was violent to the point where he had to be confined in a straitjacket but his psychiatrist felt he was sane the condition was caused solely by the morphine 39 Weaned off the drug he left the facility briefly but had to return for further treatment He returned to Germany when an amnesty was declared in 1927 and resumed working in the aircraft industry 40 Carin Goring ill with epilepsy and tuberculosis 41 died of heart failure on 17 October 1931 Meanwhile the Nazi Party was in a period of rebuilding and waiting The economy had recovered which meant fewer opportunities for the Nazis to agitate The SA was reorganised but with Franz Pfeffer von Salomon as its head rather than Goring and the Schutzstaffel SS was founded in 1925 initially as a bodyguard for Hitler Membership in the party increased from 27 000 in 1925 to 108 000 in 1928 and 178 000 in 1929 In the May 1928 elections the Nazi Party only obtained 12 seats out of an available 491 in the Reichstag 42 Goring was elected as a representative from Bavaria 43 Having secured a seat in the Reichstag Goring gained a more prominent place in the Nazi movement since Hitler saw him as a public relations officer for Nazism in this capacity 44 Goring continued to be elected to the Reichstag in all subsequent elections during the Weimar and Nazi regimes 45 Electoral success also afforded Goring with access to powerful sympathizers to the Nazi cause such as Prince August Wilhelm of Prussia and the conservative minded businessmen Fritz Thyssen and Hjalmar Schacht 46 The Great Depression led to a disastrous downturn in the German economy and in the 1930 election the Nazi Party won 6 409 600 votes and 107 seats 47 c In May 1931 Hitler sent Goring on a mission to the Vatican where he met the future Pope Pius XII 49 In the July 1932 election the Nazis won 230 seats to become far and away the largest party in the Reichstag By longstanding tradition the Nazis were thus entitled to select the President of the Reichstag and elected Goring to the post 50 He would retain this position until 23 April 1945 Reichstag fire EditThe Reichstag fire occurred on the night of 27 February 1933 Goring was one of the first to arrive on the scene Marinus van der Lubbe a Communist radical was arrested and claimed sole responsibility for the fire Goring immediately called for a crackdown on Communists 51 The Nazis took advantage of the fire to advance their own political aims The Reichstag Fire Decree passed the next day on Hitler s urging suspended basic rights and allowed detention without trial Activities of the German Communist Party were suppressed and some 4 000 Party members were arrested 52 Goring demanded that the prisoners should be shot but Rudolf Diels head of the Prussian political police ignored the order 53 Some researchers including William L Shirer and Alan Bullock are of the opinion that the Nazi Party itself was responsible for starting the fire 54 55 At the Nuremberg trials General Franz Halder testified that Goring admitted responsibility for starting the fire He said that at a luncheon held on Hitler s birthday in 1942 Goring said The only one who really knows about the Reichstag is I because I set it on fire 56 In his own Nuremberg testimony Goring denied this story 57 Second marriage EditDuring the early 1930s Goring was often in the company of Emmy Sonnemann an actress from Hamburg 58 They were married on 10 April 1935 in Berlin The wedding was celebrated on a huge scale A large reception was held the night before at the Berlin Opera House Fighter aircraft flew overhead on the night of the reception and the day of the ceremony 59 at which Hitler was best man 60 Goring s daughter Edda was born on 2 June 1938 61 Nazi potentate Edit Hitler Bormann Goring and Baldur von Schirach in Obersalzberg 1936 When Hitler was named chancellor of Germany on 30 January 1933 Goring was appointed as Reichsminister without portfolio and Reichskommissar of Aviation 62 This was followed on 11 April 1933 by his appointment as Minister President of Prussia Prussian interior minister and chief of the Prussian police 63 In October 1933 Goring was made a member of Hans Frank s Academy for German Law at its inaugural meeting 64 Wilhelm Frick the Reich interior minister and the head of the SS Heinrich Himmler hoped to create a unified police force for all of Germany but Goring on 26 April 1933 established a special Prussian police force with Rudolf Diels at its head The force was called the Geheime Staatspolizei transl Secret State Police or Gestapo Goring thinking that Diels was not ruthless enough to use the Gestapo effectively to counteract the power of the SA handed over control of the Gestapo to Himmler on 20 April 1934 65 By this time the SA numbered over two million men 66 Goring during the Grune Woche in Berlin 1937 Hitler was deeply concerned that Ernst Rohm the chief of the SA was planning a coup Himmler and Reinhard Heydrich plotted with Goring to use the Gestapo and SS to crush the SA 67 Members of the SA got wind of the proposed action and thousands of them took to the streets in violent demonstrations on the night of 29 June 1934 Enraged Hitler ordered the arrest of the SA leadership Rohm was shot dead in his cell when he refused to commit suicide Goring personally went over the lists of prisoners numbering in the thousands and determined who else should be shot At least 85 people were killed in the period of 30 June to 2 July which is now known as the Night of the Long Knives 68 Hitler admitted in the Reichstag on 13 July that the killings had been entirely illegal but claimed a plot had been under way to overthrow the Reich A retroactive law was passed making the action legal Any criticism was met with arrests 69 One of the terms of the Treaty of Versailles which had been in place since the end of World War I stated that Germany was not allowed to maintain an air force After the 1926 signing of the Kellogg Briand Pact police aircraft were permitted Goring was appointed Air Traffic Minister in May 1933 Germany began to accumulate aircraft in violation of the Treaty and in 1935 the existence of the Luftwaffe was formally acknowledged 70 with Goring as Reich Aviation Minister 71 During a cabinet meeting in September 1936 Goring and Hitler announced that the German rearmament programme must be sped up On 18 October Hitler named Goring as Plenipotentiary of the Four Year Plan to undertake this task Goring created a new organisation to administer the Plan and drew the ministries of labour and agriculture under its umbrella He bypassed the economics ministry in his policy making decisions to the chagrin of Hjalmar Schacht the minister in charge Huge expenditures were made on rearmament in spite of growing deficits 72 Schacht resigned on 8 December 1937 73 and Walther Funk took over the position as well as control of the Reichsbank In this way both of these institutions were brought under Goring s control under the auspices of the Four Year Plan 74 In July 1937 the Reichswerke Hermann Goring was established under state ownership though led by Goring with the aim of boosting steel production beyond the level which private enterprise could economically provide 75 Goring with Lord Halifax at Schorfheide 20 November 1937 Hitler with Goring on balcony of the Chancellery Berlin 16 March 1938 In 1938 Goring was involved in the Blomberg Fritsch Affair which led to the resignations of the War Minister Generalfeldmarschall Werner von Blomberg and the army commander General Werner von Fritsch Goring had acted as witness at Blomberg s wedding to Margarethe Gruhn a 26 year old typist on 12 January 1938 Information received from the police showed that the young bride was a prostitute 76 Goring felt obligated to tell Hitler but also saw this event as an opportunity to dispose of Blomberg Blomberg was forced to resign Goring did not want Fritsch to be appointed to that position and thus be his superior Several days later Heydrich revealed a file on Fritsch that contained allegations of homosexual activity and blackmail The charges were later proven to be false but Fritsch had lost Hitler s trust and was forced to resign 77 Hitler used the dismissals as an opportunity to reshuffle the leadership of the military Goring asked for the post of War Minister but was turned down he was appointed to the rank of Generalfeldmarschall Hitler took over as supreme commander of the armed forces and created subordinate posts to head the three main branches of service 78 Main article Anschluss As minister in charge of the Four Year Plan Goring became concerned with the lack of natural resources in Germany and began pushing for Austria to be incorporated into the Reich The province of Styria had rich iron ore deposits and the country as a whole was home to many skilled labourers that would also be useful Hitler had always been in favour of a takeover of Austria his native country He met the Austrian Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg on 12 February 1938 threatening invasion if peaceful unification was not forthcoming The Nazi Party was made legal in Austria to gain a power base and a referendum on reunification was scheduled for March When Hitler did not approve of the wording of the plebiscite Goring telephoned Schuschnigg and Austrian head of state Wilhelm Miklas to demand Schuschnigg s resignation threatening invasion by German troops and civil unrest by the Austrian Nazi Party members Schuschnigg resigned on 11 March and the plebiscite was cancelled By 5 30 the next morning German troops that had been massing on the border marched into Austria meeting no resistance 79 Main article German occupation of Czechoslovakia Although Joachim von Ribbentrop had been named Foreign Minister in February 1938 Goring continued to involve himself in foreign affairs 61 That July he contacted the British government with the idea that he should make an official visit to discuss Germany s intentions for Czechoslovakia Neville Chamberlain was in favour of a meeting and there was talk of a pact being signed between Britain and Germany In February 1938 Goring visited Warsaw to quell rumours about the upcoming invasion of Poland He had conversations with the Hungarian government that summer as well discussing their potential role in an invasion of Czechoslovakia At the Nuremberg Rally that September Goring and other speakers denounced the Czechs as an inferior race that must be conquered 80 Chamberlain and Hitler had a series of meetings that led to the signing of the Munich Agreement 29 September 1938 which turned over control of the Sudetenland to Germany 81 In March 1939 Goring threatened Czechoslovak president Emil Hacha with the bombing of Prague Hacha then agreed to sign a communique accepting the German occupation of the remainder of Bohemia and Moravia 82 Although many in the party disliked him 83 before the war Goring enjoyed widespread personal popularity among the German public because of his perceived sociability colour and humour 84 85 As the Nazi leader most responsible for economic matters he presented himself as a champion of national interests over allegedly corrupt big business and the old German elite The Nazi press was on Goring s side Other leaders such as Hess and Ribbentrop were envious of his popularity 84 In Britain and the United States some viewed Goring as more acceptable than the other Nazis and as a possible mediator between the western democracies and Hitler 85 World War II Edit Goring as Reichsmarshall Success on all fronts Edit Goring and other senior officers were concerned that Germany was not yet ready for war but Hitler insisted on pushing ahead as soon as possible 86 On 30 August 1939 immediately prior to the outbreak of the Second World War Hitler appointed Goring as the chairman of a new six person Council of Ministers for Defense of the Reich which was set up to operate as a war cabinet 87 The invasion of Poland the opening action of World War II began at dawn on 1 September 1939 88 Later in the day speaking to the Reichstag Hitler designated Goring as his successor as Fuhrer of all Germany If anything should befall me 89 with Hess as the second alternate 83 Big German victories followed one after the other in quick succession With the help of the Luftwaffe the Polish Air Force was defeated within a week 90 d The Fallschirmjager seized vital airfields in Norway Operation Weserubung and captured Fort Eben Emael in Belgium on 10 May 1940 the first day of the Battle of France Goring s Luftwaffe played critical roles in the Battles of the Netherlands of Belgium and of France in May 1940 93 After the Fall of France Hitler awarded Goring the Grand Cross of the Iron Cross for his successful leadership 94 During the 1940 Field Marshal Ceremony Hitler promoted Goring to the rank of Reichsmarschall des Grossdeutschen Reiches transl Reich Marshal of the Greater German Reich a specially created rank which made him senior to all field marshals in the military including the Luftwaffe As a result of this promotion he was the highest ranking soldier in Germany until the end of the war Goring had already received the Knight s Cross of the Iron Cross on 30 September 1939 as Commander in Chief of the Luftwaffe 94 The UK had declared war on Germany on 3 September 1939 the third day of the invasion of Poland 95 In July 1940 Hitler began preparations for an invasion of Britain As part of the plan the Royal Air Force RAF had to be neutralized Bombing raids commenced on British air installations and on cities and centres of industry 96 Goring had by then already announced in a radio speech If as much as a single enemy aircraft flies over German soil my name is Meier 97 something that would return to haunt him when the RAF began bombing German cities on 11 May 1940 98 Though he was confident the Luftwaffe could defeat the RAF within days Goring like Admiral Erich Raeder commander in chief of the Kriegsmarine navy 99 was pessimistic about the chance of success of the planned invasion codenamed Operation Sea Lion 100 Goring hoped that a victory in the air would be enough to force peace without an invasion The campaign failed and Sea Lion was postponed indefinitely on 17 September 1940 101 After their defeat in the Battle of Britain the Luftwaffe attempted to defeat Britain via strategic bombing On 12 October 1940 Hitler cancelled Sea Lion due to the onset of winter 102 By the end of the year it was clear that British morale was not being shaken by the Blitz though the bombings continued through May 1941 103 Decline on all fronts Edit Goring issuing an order for German troops on the Eastern Front 1941 In spite of the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact signed in 1939 Nazi Germany began Operation Barbarossa the invasion of the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941 Initially the Luftwaffe was at an advantage destroying thousands of Soviet aircraft in the first month of fighting 104 Hitler and his top staff were sure that the campaign would be over by Christmas and no provisions were made for reserves of men or equipment 105 But by July the Germans had only 1 000 planes remaining in operation and their troop losses were over 213 000 men The choice was made to concentrate the attack on only one part of the vast front efforts would be directed at capturing Moscow 106 After the long but successful Battle of Smolensk Hitler ordered Army Group Centre to halt its advance to Moscow and temporarily diverted its Panzer groups north and south to aid in the encirclement of Leningrad and Kiev 107 The pause provided the Red Army with an opportunity to mobilize fresh reserves 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 with the Battle of Moscow 107 Poor weather conditions fuel shortages a delay in building aircraft bases in Eastern Europe and overstretched supply lines were also factors Hitler did not give permission for even a partial retreat until mid January 1942 by this time the losses were comparable to those of the French invasion of Russia in 1812 108 Hitler meeting Goring and automotive engineer Ferdinand Porsche at the Wolf s Lair in 1942 Goring with Hitler and Albert Speer 10 August 1943 After the attack on Pearl Harbor Goring along with Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel and Admiral Erich Raeder urged Hitler to immediately declare war on the United States 109 Hitler decided that the summer 1942 campaign would be concentrated in the south efforts would be made to capture the oilfields in the Caucasus 110 The Battle of Stalingrad a major turning point of the war 111 began on 23 August 1942 with a bombing campaign by the Luftwaffe 112 The German Sixth Army entered the city but because of its location on the front line it was still possible for the Soviets to encircle and trap it there without reinforcements or supplies When the Sixth Army was surrounded by the end of November in Operation Uranus Goring promised that the Luftwaffe would be able to deliver a minimum of 300 tons of supplies to the trapped men every day On the basis of these assurances Hitler demanded that there be no retreat they were to fight to the last man Though some airlifts were able to get through the amount of supplies delivered never exceeded 120 tons per day 113 114 The remnants of the Sixth Army some 91 000 men out of an army of 285 000 surrendered in early February 1943 only 5 000 of these captives survived the Soviet prisoner of war camps to see Germany again 115 War over Germany Edit Meanwhile the strength of the US and British bomber fleets had increased Based in Britain they began operations against German targets The first thousand bomber raid was staged on Cologne on 30 May 1942 116 Air raids continued on targets farther from England after auxiliary fuel tanks were installed on US fighter aircraft Goring refused to believe reports that American fighters had been shot down as far east as Aachen in winter 1942 1943 His reputation began to decline 117 The American P 51 Mustang with a combat radius of over 1 800 miles 2 900 km when using underwing drop tanks began to escort the bombers in large formations to and from the target area in early 1944 From that point onwards the Luftwaffe began to suffer casualties in aircrews it could not sufficiently replace By targeting oil refineries and rail communications Allied bombers crippled the German war effort by late 1944 118 German civilians blamed Goring for his failure to protect the homeland 119 Hitler began excluding him from conferences but retained him in his positions at the head of the Luftwaffe and as plenipotentiary of the Four Year Plan 120 As he lost Hitler s trust Goring began to spend more time at his various residences 121 On D Day 6 June 1944 the Luftwaffe only had some 300 fighters and a small number of bombers in the area of the landings the Allies had a total strength of 11 000 aircraft 122 End of the war Edit Goring in captivity 9 May 1945 See also Goring Telegram As the Soviets approached Berlin Hitler s efforts to organise the defence of the city became ever more meaningless and futile 123 His last birthday celebrated at the Fuhrerbunker in Berlin on 20 April 1945 was the occasion for leave taking by many top Nazis Goring included By this time Goring s hunting lodge Carinhall had been evacuated the building destroyed 124 and its art treasures moved to Berchtesgaden and elsewhere 125 Goring arrived at his estate at Obersalzberg on 22 April the same day that Hitler in a lengthy diatribe against his generals first publicly admitted that the war was lost and that he intended to remain in Berlin to the end and then commit suicide 126 He also stated that Goring was in a better position to negotiate a peace settlement 127 OKW operations chief Alfred Jodl was present for Hitler s rant and notified Goring s chief of staff Karl Koller at a meeting a few hours later Sensing its implications Koller immediately flew to Berchtesgaden to notify Goring of this development A week after the start of the Soviet invasion Hitler had issued a decree naming Goring his successor in the event of his death thus codifying the declaration he had made soon after the beginning of the war The decree also gave Goring full authority to act as Hitler s deputy if Hitler ever lost his freedom of action 127 Goring feared being branded a traitor if he tried to take power but also feared being accused of dereliction of duty if he did nothing After some hesitation Goring reviewed his copy of the 1941 decree naming him Hitler s successor After conferring with Koller and Hans Lammers the state secretary of the Reich Chancellery Goring concluded that by remaining in Berlin to face certain death Hitler had incapacitated himself from governing All agreed that under the terms of the decree it was incumbent upon Goring to take power in Hitler s stead 128 He was also motivated by fears that his rival Martin Bormann would seize power upon Hitler s death and would have him killed as a traitor With this in mind Goring sent a carefully worded telegram asking Hitler for permission to take over as the leader of Germany stressing that he would be acting as Hitler s deputy He added that if Hitler did not reply by 22 00 that night 23 April he would assume that Hitler had indeed lost his freedom of action and would assume leadership of the Reich 129 The telegram was intercepted by Bormann who convinced Hitler that Goring was a traitor Bormann argued that Goring s telegram was not a request for permission to act as Hitler s deputy but a demand to resign or be overthrown 130 Bormann also intercepted another telegram in which Goring directed Ribbentrop to report to him if there was no further communication from Hitler or Goring before midnight 131 Hitler sent a reply to Goring prepared with Bormann s help rescinding the 1941 decree and threatening him with execution for high treason unless he immediately resigned from all of his offices Goring duly resigned Afterwards Hitler or Bormann depending on the source ordered the SS to place Goring his staff and Lammers under house arrest at Obersalzberg 130 132 Bormann made an announcement over the radio that Goring had resigned for health reasons 133 source source source source source source source source source source Goring after his capture May 1945 By 26 April the complex at Obersalzberg was under attack by the Allies so Goring was moved to his castle at Mauterndorf In his last will and testament Hitler expelled Goring from the party formally rescinded the decree making him his successor and upbraided Goring for illegally attempting to seize control of the state 134 He then appointed Karl Donitz the Navy s commander in chief as president of the Reich and commander in chief of the armed forces Hitler and his wife Eva Braun committed suicide on 30 April 1945 a few hours after a hastily arranged wedding Goring was freed on 5 May by a passing Luftwaffe unit and he made his way to the U S lines in hopes of surrendering to them rather than to the Soviets He was taken into custody near Radstadt on 6 May by elements of the 36th Infantry Division of the US Army 135 e This move likely saved Goring s life Bormann had ordered him executed if Berlin had fallen 137 Trial and death EditMain article Nuremberg trials Goring first row far left at the Nuremberg trial Goring was flown to Camp Ashcan a temporary prisoner of war camp housed in the Palace Hotel at Mondorf les Bains Luxembourg Here he was weaned off dihydrocodeine a mild morphine derivative he had been taking the equivalent of three or four grains 260 to 320 mg of morphine a day and was put on a strict diet he lost 60 pounds 27 kg His IQ was tested while in custody and found to be 138 138 Top Nazi officials were transferred in September to Nuremberg which was to be the location of a series of military tribunals beginning in November 139 Goring was the second highest ranking official tried at Nuremberg behind Reich President former Admiral Karl Donitz The prosecution levelled an indictment of four charges including a charge of conspiracy waging a war of aggression war crimes including the plundering and removal to Germany of works of art and other property and crimes against humanity including the disappearance of political and other opponents under the Nacht und Nebel transl Night and Fog decree the torture and ill treatment of prisoners of war and the murder and enslavement of civilians including what was at the time estimated to be 5 700 000 Jews Not permitted to present a lengthy statement Goring declared himself to be in the sense of the indictment not guilty 140 The trial lasted 218 days The prosecution presented its case from November through March and Goring s defence the first to be presented lasted from 8 to 22 March The sentences were read on 30 September 1946 141 Goring forced to remain silent while seated in the dock communicated his opinions about the proceedings using gestures shaking his head or laughing He constantly took notes and whispered with the other defendants and tried to control the erratic behaviour of Hess who was seated beside him 142 During breaks in the proceedings Goring tried to dominate the other defendants and he was eventually placed in solitary confinement when he attempted to influence their testimony 143 Goring told American psychiatrist Leon Goldensohn that the court was stupid to try little fellows like Funk and Kaltenbrunner instead of letting Goring take all the blame on himself 144 He also claimed that he had never heard of most of the other defendants before the trial 144 Goring at the Nuremberg Trials On several occasions over the course of the trial the prosecution showed films of the concentration camps and other atrocities Everyone present including Goring found the contents of the films shocking he said that the films must have been faked Witnesses including Paul Korner and Erhard Milch tried to portray Goring as a peaceful moderate Milch stated that it had been impossible to oppose Hitler or disobey his orders to do so would likely have meant death for oneself and one s family 145 When testifying on his own behalf Goring emphasised his loyalty to Hitler and claimed to know nothing about what had happened in the concentration camps which were under Himmler s control He provided evasive convoluted answers to direct questions and had plausible excuses for all of his actions during the war He used the witness stand as a venue to expound at great length on his own role in the Reich attempting to present himself as a peacemaker and diplomat before the outbreak of the war 146 During cross examination chief prosecutor Robert H Jackson read the minutes of a meeting that had been held shortly after Kristallnacht a major pogrom in November 1938 At the meeting Goring had plotted to confiscate Jewish property in the wake of the pogrom 147 Later David Maxwell Fyfe proved that Goring must have known about the killing of 50 airmen who had been recaptured after escaping from Stalag Luft III in time to have saved them 148 He also presented clear evidence that Goring knew about the extermination of the Hungarian Jews 149 Goring was found guilty on all four counts and was sentenced to death by hanging The judgment stated There is nothing to be said in mitigation For Goring was often indeed almost always the moving force second only to his leader He was the leading war aggressor both as political and as military leader he was the director of the slave labour programme and the creator of the oppressive programme against the Jews and other races at home and abroad All of these crimes he has frankly admitted On some specific cases there may be conflict of testimony but in terms of the broad outline his own admissions are more than sufficiently wide to be conclusive of his guilt His guilt is unique in its enormity The record discloses no excuses for this man 150 Goring s corpse Goring made an appeal asking to be shot as a soldier instead of hanged as a common criminal but the court refused 151 He committed suicide with a potassium cyanide capsule the night before he was to be hanged 152 Speculation as to how Goring obtained the poison holds that US Army lieutenant Jack G Wheelis who was stationed at the trials retrieved the capsules from their hiding place among Goring s confiscated personal effects and passed them to Goring 153 who had earlier presented Wheelis with his gold watch pen and cigarette case 154 In 2005 former US Army private Herbert Lee Stivers who served in the 1st Infantry Division s 26th Infantry Regiment the honour guard for the Nuremberg Trials claimed he gave Goring medicine hidden inside a fountain pen that a German woman had asked him to smuggle into the prison Stivers later said that he did not know what was in the pill until after Goring s suicide 155 Goring s body as with those of the men who were executed was displayed at the execution ground for witnesses The bodies were cremated at Ostfriedhof Munich and the ashes were scattered in the Isar River 156 157 158 Personal properties EditSee also Nazi plunder and Reichswerke Hermann Goring Goring s Reichsmarschall baton and Smith amp Wesson Model 10 revolver To the left is the silver bound guest book from Carinhall West Point Museum Goring s name is closely associated with the Nazi plunder of Jewish property His name appears 135 times on the OSS Art Looting Investigation Unit ALIU Red Flag Names List 159 compiled by US Army intelligence in 1945 6 and declassified in 1997 160 The confiscation of Jewish property gave Goring the opportunity to amass a personal fortune Some properties he seized himself or acquired for a nominal price In other cases he collected bribes for allowing others to steal Jewish property He took kickbacks from industrialists for favourable decisions as Four Year Plan director and money for supplying arms to the Spanish Republicans in the Spanish Civil War via Pyrkal in Greece although Germany was supporting Franco and the Nationalists 161 Goring was appointed Reich Master of the Hunt in 1933 and Master of the German Forests in 1934 He instituted reforms to the forestry laws and acted to protect endangered species Around this time he became interested in Schorfheide Forest where he set aside 100 000 acres 400 km2 as a state park which is still extant There he built an elaborate hunting lodge Carinhall in memory of his first wife Carin By 1934 her body had been transported to the site and placed in a vault on the estate 162 Through most of the 1930s Goring kept pet lion cubs borrowed from the Berlin Zoo both at Carinhall and at his house at Obersalzberg 163 The main lodge at Carinhall had a large art gallery where Goring displayed works that had been plundered from private collections and museums around Europe from 1939 onward 164 165 Goring worked closely with the Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg transl Reichsleiter Rosenberg Taskforce an organisation tasked with the looting of artwork and cultural material from Jewish collections libraries and museums throughout Europe 166 Headed by Alfred Rosenberg the task force set up a collection centre and headquarters in Paris Some 26 000 railroad cars full of art treasures furniture and other looted items were sent to Germany from France alone Goring repeatedly visited the Paris headquarters to review the incoming stolen goods and to select items to be sent on a special train to Carinhall and his other homes 167 The estimated value of his collection which numbered some 1 500 pieces was 200 million 168 Standard on display at the Musee de la Guerre in Les Invalides Paris Goring was known for his extravagant tastes and garish clothing He had various special uniforms made for the many posts he held 169 his Reichsmarschall uniform included a jewel encrusted baton Hans Ulrich Rudel the top Stuka pilot of the war recalled twice meeting Goring dressed in outlandish costumes first a medieval hunting costume practicing archery with his doctor and second dressed in a red toga fastened with a golden clasp smoking an unusually large pipe Italian Foreign Minister Galeazzo Ciano once noted Goring wearing a fur coat that looked like what a high grade prostitute wears to the opera 170 He threw lavish housewarming parties each time a round of construction was completed at Carinhall and changed costumes several times throughout the evenings 171 Goring was noted for his patronage of music especially opera He entertained frequently and sumptuously and hosted elaborate birthday parties for himself 172 Armaments minister Albert Speer recalled that guests brought expensive gifts such as gold bars Dutch cigars and valuable artwork For his birthday in 1944 Speer gave Goring an oversized marble bust of Hitler 173 As a member of the Prussian Council of State Speer was required to donate a considerable portion of his salary towards the council s birthday gift to Goring without even being asked Generalfeldmarschall Erhard Milch told Speer that similar donations were required out of the Air Ministry s general fund 174 For his birthday in 1940 Ciano decorated Goring with the coveted Collar of Annunziata The award reduced him to tears 175 The design of the Reichsmarschall standard on a light blue field featured a gold German eagle grasping a wreath surmounted by two batons overlaid with a swastika The reverse side of the flag had the Grosskreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes transl Grand Cross of the Iron Cross surrounded by a wreath between four Luftwaffe eagles The flag was carried by a personal standard bearer at all public occasions Though he liked to be called der Eiserne transl the Iron Man the once dashing and muscular fighter pilot had become corpulent He was one of the few Nazi leaders who did not take offence at hearing jokes about himself no matter how rude taking them as a sign of popularity Germans joked about his ego saying that he would wear an admiral s uniform with rubber medals to take a bath and his obesity joking that he sits down on his stomach 176 177 One joke claimed that he had sent a wire to Hitler after his visit to the Vatican Mission accomplished Pope unfrocked Tiara and pontifical vestments are a perfect fit 178 Role in the Holocaust EditSee also Luftwaffe War crimes and bombing of non military targets Goring s July 1941 letter to Reinhard Heydrich Joseph Goebbels and Himmler were far more antisemitic than Goring who mainly adopted that attitude because party politics required him to do so 179 His deputy Erhard Milch had a Jewish parent However Goring supported the Nuremberg Laws of 1935 and later initiated economic measures unfavourable to Jews 179 He required the registration of all Jewish property as part of the Four Year Plan and at a meeting held after Kristallnacht was livid that the financial burden for the Jewish losses would have to be made good by German owned insurance companies He proposed that the Jews be fined one billion marks 180 At the same meeting options for the disposition of the Jews and their property were discussed Jews would be segregated into ghettos or encouraged to emigrate and their property would be seized in a programme of Aryanization Compensation for seized property would be low if any was given at all 180 Detailed minutes of this meeting and other documents were read out at the Nuremberg trial proving his knowledge of and complicity with the persecution of the Jews 147 On 24 January 1939 Goring established in Berlin the head office of the Central Office for Jewish Emigration 181 modelled on the similar organization established in Vienna in August 1938 182 Under the direction of Heydrich it was tasked with using any means necessary to prompt Jews to leave the Reich and creating a Jewish organization that would co ordinate emigration from the Jewish side 183 In July 1941 Goring issued a memo to Heydrich ordering him to organise the practical details of the Final Solution to the Jewish Question By the time that this letter was written many Jews and others had already been killed in Poland Russia and elsewhere At the Wannsee Conference held six months later Heydrich formally announced that genocide of the Jews was now official Reich policy Goring did not attend the conference but he was present at other meetings where the number of people killed was discussed 184 185 Goring directed anti partisan operations by Luftwaffe security battalions in the Bialowieza Forest between 1942 and 1944 that resulted in the murder of thousands of Jews and Polish civilians 186 At the Nuremberg trial Goring told first lieutenant and U S Army psychologist Gustave Gilbert that he would never have supported the anti Jewish measures if he had known what was going to happen I only thought we would eliminate Jews from positions in big business and government he claimed 187 188 Decorations and awards Edit Goring wearing his Pour le Merite medal 1932 German Edit Iron Cross 2nd Class on 15 September 1914 189 1st Class on 22 March 1915 189 Pour le Merite 2 June 1918 189 Blood Order Commemorative Medal of 9 November 1923 189 Clasp to the Iron Cross 2nd Class on 30 September 1939 189 1st Class on 30 September 1939 189 Knight s Cross of the Iron Cross on 30 September 1939 189 Grand Cross of the Iron Cross for the victories of the Luftwaffe in 1940 during the French campaign the only award of this decoration during World War II 19 August 1940 190 Order from the Grand Duke of Baden Orden vom Zahringer Lowen de Knights Cross 2nd Class with Swords 190 Golden Party Badge 189 Knights Cross with Swords of the House Order of Hohenzollern 190 Knights Cross of the Military Karl Friedrich Merit Order 190 Danzig Cross 1st and 2nd class 189 Foreign Edit Knight of the Order of Saints Cyril and Methodius Kingdom of Bulgaria 191 Grand Cross of the Order of the Dannebrog with Breast Star in Diamonds Kingdom of Denmark 25 July 1938 192 193 Grand Cross of the Order of the White Rose of Finland 6 March 1935 194 Grand Cross with Collar of the Order of the White Rose of Finland 21 April 1941 195 Grand Cross with Swords of the Order of the Cross of Liberty Finland 25 March 1942 196 Grand Cross of the Order of St Stephen Kingdom of Hungary 197 Knight of the Supreme Order of the Most Holy Annunciation Kingdom of Italy 12 January 1940 198 Commander Grand Cross of the Order of the Sword with Collar Kingdom of Sweden 1939 199 Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun with Paulownia Flowers Empire of Japan 4 October 1943 200 See also Edit Biography portal Germany portal Military of Germany portal World War II portal World War I portal Politics portal Aviation portalAerial victory standards of World War I Air warfare of World War II Fallschirm Panzer Division 1 Hermann Goring Glossary of Nazi Germany Glossary of German military terms Goring s Green Folder List of Nazi Party leaders and officialsNotes Edit Goring is the German spelling but the name is commonly transliterated Goering in English and other languages using oe the alternative German spelling for umlauts in general The swastika was a badge which the count and some friends had adopted at school and he adopted it as a family emblem See Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 403 404 By 1930 the Nazi party claimed upwards of 293 000 members 48 Confident that the Luftwaffe was without peer and practically invincible in the wake of these victories Goring commented to the German press that should the enemy ever penetrate German airspace they could call him Meyer 91 92 Upon being captured by American soldiers Goring immediately asked to be taken before Eisenhower He hoped to be treated as a spokesman for Germany 136 Citations Edit Kershaw 2008 p 284 Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression 1946 pp 100 101 Evans 2005 p 358 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 p 21 Block amp Trow 1971 pp 327 330 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 21 22 Freitag 2015 pp 25 45 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 22 24 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 24 25 a b Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 24 28 Overy 2012 p 5 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 28 29 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 31 32 Franks 1993 pp 95 117 156 Franks 1993 p 117 Kilduff 2013 pp 165 166 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 31 33 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 p 403 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 34 36 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 p 39 Overy 2012 pp 5 6 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 39 41 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 p 43 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 41 43 a b Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 45 47 Miller 2006 p 426 Kershaw 2008 p 112 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 p 47 Hitler 1988 p 168 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 49 51 Holland 2011 p 54 Kershaw 2008 p 131 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 57 58 Speer 1971 p 644 Overy 2012 p 7 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 59 60 Kershaw 2008 p 160 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 p 61 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 p 404 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 p 62 64 Shirer 1960 p 146 Shirer 1960 pp 118 121 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 p 66 Overy 2012 p 8 Reichstag databank Overy 2012 p 9 Shirer 1960 pp 136 138 Childers 2017 p 131 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 p 74 Evans 2003 p 297 Evans 2003 pp 329 330 Shirer 1960 p 194 Evans 2003 p 331 Shirer 1960 p 192 Bullock 1999 p 262 Shirer 1960 p 193 Nuremberg Trial Proceedings 18 March 1946 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 p 111 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 139 140 Gunther 1940 p 63 a b Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 p 187 Miller amp Schulz 2015 p 47 Miller amp Schulz 2015 pp 50 51 Frank 1933 1934 p 253 Evans 2005 p 54 Goldhagen 1996 p 95 Kershaw 2008 p 306 Evans 2005 pp 31 35 39 Evans 2005 pp 38 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 116 117 Evans 2005 p 364 Evans 2005 pp 357 360 Shirer 1960 p 311 Evans 2005 p 361 Overy 2002 p 145 Gerwarth 2011 p 116 Gerwarth 2011 pp 116 117 Evans 2005 pp 642 644 Evans 2005 pp 646 652 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 194 197 Evans 2005 p 674 Noakes amp Pridham 2001 p 119 a b Gunther 1940 p 19 a b Overy 2002 p 73 a b Overy 2002 p 236 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 197 211 Broszat 1981 pp 308 309 Shirer 1960 p 597 Shirer 1960 p 599 Hooton 1999 pp 177 189 Moorhouse 2012 p 350 Perry 2013 p 45fn Shirer 1960 pp 721 723 725 a b Fellgiebel 2000 p 198 Shirer 1960 p 615 Evans 2008 pp 113 136 143 Oestermann 2001 p 157 Selwood 2015 Raeder 2001 pp 324 325 Bungay 2000 p 337 Evans 2008 p 144 Taylor 1965 p 500 Evans 2008 p 145 Evans 2008 pp 178 179 Evans 2008 p 187 Evans 2008 p 201 a b Stolfi 1982 Evans 2008 pp 207 213 Fleming 1987 Evans 2008 pp 404 405 Evans 2008 p 421 Evans 2008 p 409 Evans 2008 pp 412 413 Speer 1971 p 329 Shirer 1960 p 932 Evans 2008 pp 438 441 Speer 1971 p 378 Evans 2008 p 461 Evans 2008 p 447 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 296 297 299 Evans 2008 p 510 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 295 302 Evans 2008 p 725 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 p 310 Evans 2008 p 722 Evans 2008 p 723 a b Shirer 1960 pp 1115 1116 Shirer 1960 p 1116 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 p 315 a b Shirer 1960 p 1118 Speer 1971 pp 608 609 Evans 2008 p 724 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 p 318 Shirer 1960 p 1126 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 320 325 Overy 2012 p 228 Shirer 1960 p 1128 Gilbert 1995 p 31 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 329 331 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 336 337 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 p 337 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 p 339 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 341 342 a b Goldensohn 2004 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 343 347 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 359 367 a b Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 p 369 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 p 371 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 374 375 International Military Tribunal 1946 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 392 393 Kershaw 2008 p 964 Taylor 1992 p 623 Botting 2006 p 280 BBC News 2005 Darnstadt 2005 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 p 393 Overy 2001 p 205 OSS Reports NARA Records Beevor 2006 pp 366 368 538 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 120 123 Kellerhoff 2018 Speer 1971 pp 244 245 Rothfeld 2002 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 283 285 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 283 285 291 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 p 281 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 115 116 Fussell 2002 pp 24 25 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 p 122 Speer 1971 p 417 Speer 1971 pp 416 417 Speer 1971 pp 417 418 Mosley 1974 p 280 Block amp Trow 1971 p 330 Gunther 1940 p 65 Evans 2005 p 409 a b Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 136 137 a b Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 189 191 Hilberg 1985 p 160 Cesarani 2005 p 62 Cesarani 2005 p 77 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 259 260 Blood 2001 p 75 Blood 2010 pp 261 262 266 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 p 378 Gilbert 1995 p 208 a b c d e f g h i Miller 2006 p 442 a b c d Miller amp Schulz 2015 p 89 Petrov 2005 p 56 Gade 2011 Bille Hansen amp Holck 1943 p 20 Matikkala 2017 p 36 Matikkala 2017 p 515 Matikkala 2017 p 511 Lajos 2011 p 41 Overy 2012 p 233 Statskalender 1940 p 10 Gazeta Lwowska 1943 p 1 Sources Edit Art Provenance and Claims Records and Research National Archives and Records Administration 15 August 2016 Retrieved 16 July 2017 Beevor Antony 2006 The Battle for Spain The Spanish Civil War 1936 1939 London Phoenix ISBN 978 0 7538 2165 7 Bille Hansen A C Holck Harald eds 1943 Statshaandbog for Kongeriget Danmark for Aaret 1943 State Manual of the Kingdom of Denmark for the Year 1943 PDF Kongelig Dansk Hof og Statskalender in Danish Copenhagen J H Schultz A S Universitetsbogtrykkeri Retrieved 20 January 2021 via da DIS Danmark Block Maxine Trow E Mary 1971 Current Biography Who s News and Why 1941 New York H W Wilson OCLC 16655369 Blood Philip W 2001 Holmes E R ed Bandenbekampfung Nazi occupation security in Eastern Europe and Soviet Russia 1942 45 PhD thesis Cranfield University Blood Philip W 3 August 2010 Securing Hitler s Lebensraum The Luftwaffe and Bialowieza Forest 1942 1944 Holocaust and Genocide Studies 24 2 247 272 doi 10 1093 hgs dcq024 Botting Douglas 2006 In the Ruins of The Reich Germany 1945 1949 London Methuen Publishing ISBN 978 0 413 77511 5 Broszat Martin 1981 The Hitler State The Foundation and Development of the Internal Structure of the Third Reich New York Longman Inc ISBN 0 582 49200 9 Bullock Alan 1999 1952 Hitler A Study in Tyranny New York Konecky amp Konecky ISBN 978 1 56852 036 0 Bungay Stephen 2000 The Most Dangerous Enemy A History of the Battle of Britain London Aurum Press ISBN 978 1 85410 721 3 Cesarani David 2005 2004 Eichmann His Life and Crimes London Vintage ISBN 978 0 09 944844 0 Childers Thomas 2017 The Third Reich A History of Nazi Germany New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1 45165 113 3 Darnstadt Thomas 4 April 2005 Ein Glucksfall der Geschichte Der Spiegel Retrieved 13 September 2016 Datenbank der deutschen Parlamentsabgeordneten Basis Parlamentsalmanache Reichstagshandbucher 1867 1938 www reichstag abgeordnetendatenbank de Retrieved 18 September 2020 Evans Richard J 2003 The Coming of the Third Reich New York Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 303469 8 Evans Richard J 2005 The Third Reich in Power New York Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 303790 3 Evans Richard J 2008 The Third Reich at War New York Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 311671 4 Fellgiebel Walther Peer 2000 1986 Die Trager des Ritterkreuzes des Eisernen Kreuzes 1939 1945 in German Friedberg Podzun Pallas ISBN 978 3 7909 0284 6 Fleming Thomas December 1987 The Big Leak American Heritage 38 8 Archived from the original on 14 February 2008 Retrieved 28 June 2022 Frank Hans ed 1933 1934 Jahrbuch der Akademie fur Deutsches Recht Yearbook of the Academy for German Law 1st ed Munchen Berlin Leipzig Schweitzer Verlag Franks Norman 1993 Above the Lines The Aces and Fighter Units of the German Air Service Naval Air Service and Flanders Marine Corps 1914 1918 Oxford Grub Street ISBN 978 0 948817 19 9 Freitag Christian H 2015 Ritter Reichsmarschall amp Revoluzzer Aus der Geschichte eines Berliner Landhauses in German Berlin Friedenauer Brucke ISBN 978 3 9816130 2 5 Fussell Paul 2002 Uniforms Why We Are What We Wear New York Houghton Mifflin ISBN 978 0 618 38188 3 Gade Ida K Richter 21 February 2011 Herman Goring berlingske dk in Danish Berlingske Media A S Retrieved 23 April 2020 Odznaczenie japonskie dla marsz Goeringa PDF Gazeta Lwowska in Polish No 233 5 October 1943 p 1 Retrieved 20 January 2021 Gerwarth Robert 2011 Hitler s Hangman The Life of Heydrich New Haven CT Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 11575 8 Gilbert Gustave 1995 Nuremberg Diary New York Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 80661 2 Goldensohn Leon N 2004 The Nuremberg Interviews Conversations with the Defendants and Witnesses New York NY Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0 375 41469 5 Goldhagen Daniel 1996 Hitler s Willing Executioners Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust New York Knopf ISBN 978 0 679 44695 8 Guard gave Goering suicide pill BBC News 8 February 2005 Retrieved 8 May 2012 Gunther John 1940 Inside Europe New York Harper amp Brothers OCLC 836676034 Hilberg Raul 1985 The Destruction of the European Jews New York Holmes amp Meier ISBN 0 8419 0910 5 Hitler Adolf 1988 Hitler s Table Talk 1941 1944 Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 285180 2 Holland James 2011 The Battle of Britain Five Months That Changed History May October 1940 Manhattan New York City St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 31 267500 4 Hooton Edward 1999 Phoenix Triumphant The Rise and Rise of the Luftwaffe Garden City Arms amp Armour ISBN 1 85409 181 6 Judgment of International Military Tribunal on Hermann Goering The Avalon Project New Haven Connecticut Yale Law School Lillian Goldman Law Library 30 September 1946 Retrieved 8 May 2012 Kellerhoff Sven Felix 23 March 2018 Raubkunst Fur Lowen hatte Hermann Goring eine Schwache Die Welt in German Retrieved 22 January 2020 Kershaw Ian 2008 Hitler A Biography New York NY W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 06757 6 Kilduff Peter 2013 Herman Goring Fighter Ace The World War I Career of Germany s Most Infamous Airman London Grub Street ISBN 978 1 906502 66 9 Kungl Svenska Riddarordnarna Bihang till Sveriges Statskalender 1940 in Swedish Uppsala Almqvist amp Wiksells Boktryckeri 1940 Lajos Pallos 2011 A Magyar Kiralyi Szent Istvan Rend jelvenyei a Magyar Nemzeti Muzeum Eremtaraban In Tibor Kovacs ed 2010 2011 A Magyar Nemzeti Muzeum torteneti evkonyve Folia Historica Magyar Nemzeti Muzeum Evkonyve in Hungarian Budapest Hungarian National Museum pp 39 65 ISSN 0133 6622 Manvell Roger Fraenkel Heinrich 2011 1962 Goering The Rise and Fall of the Notorious Nazi Leader London Skyhorse ISBN 978 1 61608 109 6 Matikkala Antti 2017 Kunnian ruletti Korkeimmat ulkomaalaisille 1941 1944 annetut suomalaiset kunniamerkit in Finnish Helsinki Suomalaisen Kirjallisuuden Seura ISBN 978 952 222 847 5 Miller Michael D 2006 Leaders of the SS and German Police Vol 1 San Jose CA R James Bender ISBN 978 93 297 0037 2 Miller Michael D Schulz Andreas 2015 Leaders of the Storm Troops Vol 1 Solihull West Midlands Helion amp Company ISBN 978 1 909982 87 1 Moorhouse Roger 2012 Berlin at War New York Basic Books ISBN 978 0 46502 855 9 Mosley Leonard 1974 The Reich Marshal A Biography of Hermann Goering Garden City Doubleday ISBN 0 385 04961 7 Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression Volume 2 Chapter XV Part 3 The Reich Cabinet PDF Office of United States Chief of Counsel For Prosecution of Axis Criminality 1946 Retrieved 20 August 2017 Noakes Jeremy Pridham Geoffrey eds 2001 1988 Nazism 1919 1945 Foreign Policy War and Racial Extermination Exeter Studies in History Vol 3 Exeter University of Exeter Press Nuremberg Trial Proceedings Volume 9 Eighty fourth day Monday 18 March 1946 morning session The Avalon Project New Haven Connecticut Yale Law School Lillian Goldman Law Library Retrieved 28 March 2012 Oestermann Gunter 2001 Junger Wolf im Nebel Ein Junge in Deutschland 1930 1945 in German Hamburg Norderstedt Books on Demand ISBN 978 3 8311 2487 9 OSS USS Office of Strategic Services Art Looting Intelligence Unit ALIU Reports 1945 1946 and ALIU Red Flag Names List and Index Central Registry of Information on Looted Cultural Property 1933 1945 Retrieved 16 July 2017 Overy Richard 2012 1984 Goering Hitler s Iron Knight London and New York I B Taurus ISBN 978 1 84885 932 6 Overy Richard J 2001 Interrogations The Nazi Elite in Allied Hands 1945 New York Viking ISBN 978 0 670 03008 8 Overy Richard J 2002 1994 War and Economy in the Third Reich Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 164737 6 Perry Marvin 2013 World War II in Europe A Concise History Boston Wadsworth ISBN 978 1 11183 652 8 Petrov Todor 2005 Bulgarian Orders and Medals 1878 2005 Sofia Military Publishing House Ltd ISBN 954 509 317 X Raeder Erich 2001 Erich Rader Grand Admiral The Personal Memoir of the Commander in Chief of the German Navy From 1935 Until His Final Break With Hitler in 1943 London New York Da Capo Press United States Naval Institute ISBN 0 306 80962 1 Rothfeld Anne 2002 Nazi Looted Art The Holocaust Records Preservation Project Part 1 Prologue Magazine U S National Archives and Records Administration 34 3 Selwood Dominic 13 February 2015 Dresden was a civilian town with no military significance Why did we burn its people The Telegraph Archived from the original on 13 February 2015 Retrieved 14 February 2015 Shirer William L 1960 The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 671 62420 0 Speer Albert 1971 1969 Inside the Third Reich New York Avon ISBN 978 0 380 00071 5 Stolfi Russel March 1982 Barbarossa Revisited A Critical Reappraisal of the Opening Stages of the Russo German Campaign June December 1941 PDF Journal of Modern History 54 1 27 46 doi 10 1086 244076 S2CID 143690841 Taylor A J P 1965 English History 1914 1945 Reading Berkshire Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 280140 6 Taylor Telford 1992 The Anatomy of the Nuremberg Trials New York Knopf ISBN 978 0 394 58355 6 Further reading EditBrandenburg Erich 1995 Die Nachkommen Karls Des Grossen Neustadt Aisch Degener ISBN 3 7686 5102 9 Burke William Hastings 2009 Thirty Four London Wolfgeist ISBN 978 0 9563712 0 1 Butler Ewan 1951 Marshal Without Glory London Hodder amp Stoughton OCLC 1246848 Fest Joachim 2004 Inside Hitler s Bunker New York Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 0 374 13577 0 Frischauer Willi 2013 1950 Goering Unmaterial Books ISBN 978 1 78301 221 3 Goring Hermann 1934 Germany Reborn London E Mathews amp Marrot OCLC 570220 Archived from the original on 3 August 2004 Leffland Ella 1990 The Knight Death and the Devil New York Morrow ISBN 0 688 05836 1 Maser Werner 2000 Hitlers januskopfiger Paladin die politische Biographie in German Berlin ISBN 3 86124 509 4 Maser Werner 2004 Falschung Dichtung und Wahrheit uber Hitler und Stalin in German Munich Olzog ISBN 3 7892 8134 4 Paul Wolfgang 1983 Wer War Hermann Goring Biographie in German Esslingen Bechtle ISBN 3 7628 0427 3 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hermann Goring Wikiquote has quotations related to Hermann Goring Nuremberg Trial Proceedings Vol 9 Transcript of Goering s testimony at the trial Lost Prison Interview with Hermann Goring The Reichsmarschall s Revelations published by World War II Magazine Goring at Langbro asylum The Goering Collection online database in German as Die Kunstsammlung Hermann Goring of 4263 artworks in Hermann Goring s collection Newspaper clippings about Hermann Goring in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWMilitary officesPreceded byErich Wieland Commanding Officer of Jasta 271917 1918 Succeeded byHermann FrommherzPreceded byWilhelm Reinhard Commanding Officer of Jagdgeschwader 11918 Succeeded byErich von WedelPreceded byErich von Wedel Commanding Officer of Jagdgeschwader 11918 Unit disbandedNew titleLuftwaffe re established Commander in Chief of the Luftwaffe1935 1945 Succeeded byRobert Ritter von GreimPolitical officesPreceded byHans Ulrich Klintzsch Leader of the SA1923 VacantTitle next held byFranz Pfeffer von SalomonPreceded byPaul Lobe President of the Reichstag1932 1945 Reichstag abolishedPreceded byFranz von Papen Reichskomissar Prime Minister of Prussia1933 1945 Prussia abolishedPreceded byAdolf Hitler Reichsstatthalter of Prussia1933 1945Preceded byHjalmar Schacht Reichsminister of Economics1937 1938 Succeeded byWalther Funk Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hermann Goring amp oldid 1144325870, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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