fbpx
Wikipedia

Lothar von Richthofen

Lothar Siegfried Freiherr von Richthofen (27 September 1894 – 4 July 1922) was a German First World War fighter ace credited with 40 victories. He was a younger brother of top-scoring ace Manfred von Richthofen (the Red Baron) and a distant cousin of Luftwaffe Field Marshal Wolfram von Richthofen.


Lothar von Richthofen
Lothar von Richthofen wearing the Pour le Mérite.
Birth nameLothar Siegfried Freiherr von Richthofen
Born(1894-09-27)27 September 1894
Kleinburg, Germany (present-day Wrocław, Poland)
Died4 July 1922(1922-07-04) (aged 27)
Hamburg, Germany
Place of burial 50°03′37″N 8°15′57″E / 50.060260°N 8.265810°E / 50.060260; 8.265810Coordinates: 50°03′37″N 8°15′57″E / 50.060260°N 8.265810°E / 50.060260; 8.265810
Allegiance German Empire
Service/branch
Years of service1914–1918
RankOberleutnant
Unit
AwardsPour le Mérite, Iron Cross First and Second Class
RelationsManfred von Richthofen (brother), Wolfram von Richthofen (cousin)

Following the war, he worked for a while on a farm before taking an industrial position. He married in June 1919 and had two children. Yearning for aviation he accepted a position as a pilot, conveying passengers and postal mail between Berlin and Hamburg.

He died aged 27 on 4 July 1922 in a flying accident at Fuhlsbüttel.

Early career

Richthofen was born on 27 September 1894. He and his brothers, Manfred and Bolko,[1][note 1] hunted wild boar, elk, birds, and deer.[2]

Like his brother Manfred, Lothar began the war as a cavalry officer with the 4th Dragoon Regiment. He had remained in the public Gymnasium (high school), he was enrolled in compulsory military training at the Kriegsschule in Danzig (Gdańsk, Poland) when war began. On his own initiative Lothar returned to his unit. Lothar was nearly cut down by sniper fire while on patrol. In mid-October 1914, while stationed at Attigny, he was awarded the Iron Cross 2nd Class for valour. It was the only decoration that Lothar received during his cavalry service. The following month, his regiment was transferred to the Eastern Front.[3]

Jagdstaffel 11

In February 1915 Manfred "rescued" his brother Lothar from the boredom of training new troops in Luben and encouraged him to also transfer to the Fliegertruppe.[4]

Richthofen joined the German Army Air Service (Luftstreitkräfte) in late 1915. He served from January 1916 as an observer with Jasta 23,[citation needed] sometimes observing for Otto Creutzmann[5] and saw action during the Battle of Verdun. He won the Iron Cross 1st Class in December and then began training as a pilot.[citation needed]

 
Lothar von Richthofen (seated on the ground) with other members of Jasta 11. His brother, Manfred, is in the cockpit. Photographed April 23, 1917

His first posting as a pilot was to his brother's Jasta 11 on 6 March 1917. An impulsive and aggressive pilot, unlike his coolly calculating brother Manfred, Lothar's first victory claim followed on 28 March for an FE 2b of No. 25 Squadron, Royal Flying Corps.[6] The German high command appreciated the propaganda value of two Richthofens fighting together to defeat the enemy in the air.[7]

Taking part in the period of German dominance called Bloody April by the British, Lothar had won 15 more victories by the beginning of May. When his brother went on leave, Lothar von Richthofen assumed command of the squadron.[citation needed]

Albert Ball

During the first week of May 1917, Lothar von Richthofen scored three more victories. On the evening of 7 May near Douai, he led a flight of 5 Albatros D.III's from Jasta 11 that encountered 11 S.E.5s from the "elite" No. 56 Squadron RFC, including the top English ace of the time, Captain Albert Ball, as well as a SPAD S.VII from No. 19 Squadron, and a Sopwith Triplane of No 8 (Naval) Squadron.[citation needed] In a running battle in deteriorating visibility in the middle of a thunderstorm over Bourlon Wood, both sides became scattered. Richthofen engaged in single combat with the British Triplane. At about the same time, Ball was seen by fellow 56 Squadron pilot Cyril Crowe chasing a red Albatros into a thundercloud. Ball lost control of his plane and crashed fatally. Though forced to land his damaged aircraft, Richthofen escaped injury. The British Sopwith Triplane involved in the action returned to base undamaged.[8]

Richthofen posted a claim for shooting down the Sopwith Triplane. However, the propaganda value of Ball's death under the guns of a German pilot was obvious, and the German High Command awarded a victory over Ball to Lothar. The fallacy of the award was readily apparent. The idea that an experienced pilot such as Richthofen would confuse a triplane with a biplane was ludicrous. Leutnant Hailer, a German pilot on the ground who witnessed the crash and was the first German at the crash scene saw no battle damage to Ball's plane. The doctor who autopsied Ball reported massive injuries to Ball from the crash, but no bullet wounds. Nevertheless, the official line was that Lothar von Richthofen shot down Albert Ball.[8] Later research suggests that Ball became disoriented by vertigo, accidentally entering an inverted dive which choked his plane's carburetor and stopped the engine, causing him to crash.[9]

Pour le Mérite

Richthofen raised his total to 24 by 13 May, when, after shooting down a BE.2, he was wounded in the hip by anti-aircraft fire and crash-landed; his injuries kept him out of combat for five months. On 14 May he was awarded the Pour le Mérite, and he resumed command of Jasta 11 in September 1917. In early 1918 he suffered a severe ear infection and was hospitalised in Berlin.[citation needed]

Returning to his unit in February, he claimed 3 Bristol Fighter F2.Bs on 11 and 12 March, before he was again forced down on 13 March by a Sopwith Camel flown by Captain Augustus Orlebar of No. 73 Squadron. Nursing his crippled Fokker Dr1 Triplane into a landing, Richthofen clipped a high-tension wire and crashed heavily, suffering serious head injuries. He was still recovering when he learned of his brother's death.[citation needed]

Lothar returned to service with Jasta 11 in July 1918. He scored his final victory (a DH-9a) on 12 August 1918, flying a Fokker D.VII. The next day he was again wounded in action against Sopwith Camels, probably by Captain Field E. Kindley of the 148th Aero Squadron USAS.[10] Lothar may also have been forced down by Canadian RAF pilot William Stephenson, later known as the World War II spymaster code-named "Intrepid".[11] Lothar was promoted to Oberleutnant, and saw no further combat before the war ended in November.[citation needed]

Considering the amount of time Lothar von Richthofen spent on the front and in hospitals, he was one of the most combat efficient and prolific flying aces of the war, perhaps even more so than his brother Manfred. Of his total of 40 confirmed victories, Lothar scored 33 in just three months: 15 in April 1917, 8 in May 1917, and 10 in August 1918.[citation needed]

Post war

With the return of peace, Lothar von Richthofen worked briefly on a farm before accepting an industrial position. He married Countess Doris von Keyserlingk in Cammerau in June 1919, fathering a son, Wolf-Manfred (1922–2010) and a daughter, Carmen Viola (1920–1971), before the marriage was dissolved. He then became a commercial pilot, carrying passengers and mail between Berlin and Hamburg.[citation needed]

Death

On July 4, 1922 Richthofen died in a crash of his LVG C VI at Hamburg due to an engine failure. Also on board were actress Fern Andra and her director Georg Bluen. Both Bluen and Andra survived, Andra spending a year recovering from her injuries.[citation needed]

Lothar von Richthofen was interred next to his father at the Garrison Cemetery in Schweidnitz, but the cemetery was levelled by the Poles when the city was transferred to Poland after World War II. Today the area is a football field, although von Richthofen's headstone still exists.[citation needed]

A plaque to Lothar's memory is next to his brother Manfred von Richthofen's grave on the Südfriedhof in Wiesbaden.[citation needed]

Orders and medals

[citation needed] throughout section

Prussia/German Empire

Other German States

Other Central Powers

Prussian/Imperial German Badges

In popular culture

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ Not to be confused with the archaeologist Bolko von Richthofen, a distant cousin

Citations

  1. ^ Burrows 1970, p. 36.
  2. ^ Burrows 1970, pp. 37–38.
  3. ^ Kilduff 1994, p. 27.
  4. ^ Kilduff 1994, p. 41.
  5. ^ Franks et al 1993 p. 94.
  6. ^ von Richthofen, Mein Kriegstagebuch (1937), p. 101.
  7. ^ Richthofen, The Red Knight of the Air (n.d.), pp. 164–165.
  8. ^ a b Albert Ball, VC. p. 157.
  9. ^ Albert Ball, VC. pp. 212–213.
  10. ^ Richthofen: Beyond the Legend of the Red Baron, Peter Kilduff, 1993
  11. ^ A Man Called Intrepid, by William Stephenson (1977), Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, p. 9.

General bibliography

  • Bowyer, Chaz (2004). Albert Ball VC. London, UK: Crecy Publications. ISBN 978-0-947554-89-7.
  • Franks, Norman; Bailey, Frank; Guest, Russell (1993). Above the Lines: A Complete Record of the Aces and Fighter Units of the German Air Service, Naval Air Service and Flanders Marine Corps 1914–1918. London, UK: Grub Street Publishing. ISBN 978-0-948817-73-1.
  • Franks, Norman; Giblin, Hal (2003). Under the Guns of the Kaiser's Aces. London, UK: Barnes & Noble Books. ISBN 978-1-904010-02-9.
  • Treadwell, Terry; Wood, Allan (1997). German Knights of the Air, 1914-1918: The Holders of the Orden Pour le Merite. New York, New York, USA: Grub Street Publishing. ISBN 978-0760707906.

External links

  • Lothar von Richthofen: 40 Aerial victories
  • firstworldwar.com biography
  • Lothar von Richthofen's page on theaerodrome.com
  • "Von Richthofen's mother, actress Fern Andra meet" 2009-01-13 at the Wayback Machine, Stars and Stripes article
  • Lothar von Richthofen at Find a Grave

lothar, richthofen, lothar, siegfried, freiherr, richthofen, september, 1894, july, 1922, german, first, world, fighter, credited, with, victories, younger, brother, scoring, manfred, richthofen, baron, distant, cousin, luftwaffe, field, marshal, wolfram, rich. Lothar Siegfried Freiherr von Richthofen 27 September 1894 4 July 1922 was a German First World War fighter ace credited with 40 victories He was a younger brother of top scoring ace Manfred von Richthofen the Red Baron and a distant cousin of Luftwaffe Field Marshal Wolfram von Richthofen OberleutnantLothar von RichthofenLothar von Richthofen wearing the Pour le Merite Birth nameLothar Siegfried Freiherr von RichthofenBorn 1894 09 27 27 September 1894Kleinburg Germany present day Wroclaw Poland Died4 July 1922 1922 07 04 aged 27 Hamburg GermanyPlace of burialSouth Cemetery Wiesbaden 50 03 37 N 8 15 57 E 50 060260 N 8 265810 E 50 060260 8 265810 Coordinates 50 03 37 N 8 15 57 E 50 060260 N 8 265810 E 50 060260 8 265810Allegiance German EmpireService wbr branchPrussian Army 1914 1915 German Air Force 1915 1918 Years of service1914 1918RankOberleutnantUnit4th Dragoon Regiment Battle Squadron No 23 Fighter Squadron No 11AwardsPour le Merite Iron Cross First and Second ClassRelationsManfred von Richthofen brother Wolfram von Richthofen cousin Following the war he worked for a while on a farm before taking an industrial position He married in June 1919 and had two children Yearning for aviation he accepted a position as a pilot conveying passengers and postal mail between Berlin and Hamburg He died aged 27 on 4 July 1922 in a flying accident at Fuhlsbuttel Contents 1 Early career 2 Jagdstaffel 11 3 Albert Ball 4 Pour le Merite 5 Post war 6 Death 7 Orders and medals 8 In popular culture 9 Explanatory notes 10 Citations 11 General bibliography 12 External linksEarly career EditRichthofen was born on 27 September 1894 He and his brothers Manfred and Bolko 1 note 1 hunted wild boar elk birds and deer 2 Like his brother Manfred Lothar began the war as a cavalry officer with the 4th Dragoon Regiment He had remained in the public Gymnasium high school he was enrolled in compulsory military training at the Kriegsschule in Danzig Gdansk Poland when war began On his own initiative Lothar returned to his unit Lothar was nearly cut down by sniper fire while on patrol In mid October 1914 while stationed at Attigny he was awarded the Iron Cross 2nd Class for valour It was the only decoration that Lothar received during his cavalry service The following month his regiment was transferred to the Eastern Front 3 Jagdstaffel 11 EditSee also List of aerial victories of Lothar von Richthofen and Aerial victory standards of World War I In February 1915 Manfred rescued his brother Lothar from the boredom of training new troops in Luben and encouraged him to also transfer to the Fliegertruppe 4 Richthofen joined the German Army Air Service Luftstreitkrafte in late 1915 He served from January 1916 as an observer with Jasta 23 citation needed sometimes observing for Otto Creutzmann 5 and saw action during the Battle of Verdun He won the Iron Cross 1st Class in December and then began training as a pilot citation needed Lothar von Richthofen seated on the ground with other members of Jasta 11 His brother Manfred is in the cockpit Photographed April 23 1917 His first posting as a pilot was to his brother s Jasta 11 on 6 March 1917 An impulsive and aggressive pilot unlike his coolly calculating brother Manfred Lothar s first victory claim followed on 28 March for an FE 2b of No 25 Squadron Royal Flying Corps 6 The German high command appreciated the propaganda value of two Richthofens fighting together to defeat the enemy in the air 7 Taking part in the period of German dominance called Bloody April by the British Lothar had won 15 more victories by the beginning of May When his brother went on leave Lothar von Richthofen assumed command of the squadron citation needed Albert Ball EditDuring the first week of May 1917 Lothar von Richthofen scored three more victories On the evening of 7 May near Douai he led a flight of 5 Albatros D III s from Jasta 11 that encountered 11 S E 5s from the elite No 56 Squadron RFC including the top English ace of the time Captain Albert Ball as well as a SPAD S VII from No 19 Squadron and a Sopwith Triplane of No 8 Naval Squadron citation needed In a running battle in deteriorating visibility in the middle of a thunderstorm over Bourlon Wood both sides became scattered Richthofen engaged in single combat with the British Triplane At about the same time Ball was seen by fellow 56 Squadron pilot Cyril Crowe chasing a red Albatros into a thundercloud Ball lost control of his plane and crashed fatally Though forced to land his damaged aircraft Richthofen escaped injury The British Sopwith Triplane involved in the action returned to base undamaged 8 Richthofen posted a claim for shooting down the Sopwith Triplane However the propaganda value of Ball s death under the guns of a German pilot was obvious and the German High Command awarded a victory over Ball to Lothar The fallacy of the award was readily apparent The idea that an experienced pilot such as Richthofen would confuse a triplane with a biplane was ludicrous Leutnant Hailer a German pilot on the ground who witnessed the crash and was the first German at the crash scene saw no battle damage to Ball s plane The doctor who autopsied Ball reported massive injuries to Ball from the crash but no bullet wounds Nevertheless the official line was that Lothar von Richthofen shot down Albert Ball 8 Later research suggests that Ball became disoriented by vertigo accidentally entering an inverted dive which choked his plane s carburetor and stopped the engine causing him to crash 9 Pour le Merite EditRichthofen raised his total to 24 by 13 May when after shooting down a BE 2 he was wounded in the hip by anti aircraft fire and crash landed his injuries kept him out of combat for five months On 14 May he was awarded the Pour le Merite and he resumed command of Jasta 11 in September 1917 In early 1918 he suffered a severe ear infection and was hospitalised in Berlin citation needed Returning to his unit in February he claimed 3 Bristol Fighter F2 Bs on 11 and 12 March before he was again forced down on 13 March by a Sopwith Camel flown by Captain Augustus Orlebar of No 73 Squadron Nursing his crippled Fokker Dr1 Triplane into a landing Richthofen clipped a high tension wire and crashed heavily suffering serious head injuries He was still recovering when he learned of his brother s death citation needed Lothar returned to service with Jasta 11 in July 1918 He scored his final victory a DH 9a on 12 August 1918 flying a Fokker D VII The next day he was again wounded in action against Sopwith Camels probably by Captain Field E Kindley of the 148th Aero Squadron USAS 10 Lothar may also have been forced down by Canadian RAF pilot William Stephenson later known as the World War II spymaster code named Intrepid 11 Lothar was promoted to Oberleutnant and saw no further combat before the war ended in November citation needed Considering the amount of time Lothar von Richthofen spent on the front and in hospitals he was one of the most combat efficient and prolific flying aces of the war perhaps even more so than his brother Manfred Of his total of 40 confirmed victories Lothar scored 33 in just three months 15 in April 1917 8 in May 1917 and 10 in August 1918 citation needed Post war EditWith the return of peace Lothar von Richthofen worked briefly on a farm before accepting an industrial position He married Countess Doris von Keyserlingk in Cammerau in June 1919 fathering a son Wolf Manfred 1922 2010 and a daughter Carmen Viola 1920 1971 before the marriage was dissolved He then became a commercial pilot carrying passengers and mail between Berlin and Hamburg citation needed Death EditOn July 4 1922 Richthofen died in a crash of his LVG C VI at Hamburg due to an engine failure Also on board were actress Fern Andra and her director Georg Bluen Both Bluen and Andra survived Andra spending a year recovering from her injuries citation needed Lothar von Richthofen was interred next to his father at the Garrison Cemetery in Schweidnitz but the cemetery was levelled by the Poles when the city was transferred to Poland after World War II Today the area is a football field although von Richthofen s headstone still exists citation needed A plaque to Lothar s memory is next to his brother Manfred von Richthofen s grave on the Sudfriedhof in Wiesbaden citation needed Orders and medals Edit citation needed throughout sectionPrussia German Empire Pour le Merite 14 May 1917 in recognition of his 24th aerial victory Royal House Order of Hohenzollern Knight s Cross with Swords 10 May 1917 Iron Cross of 1914 1st and 2nd ClassOther German States Military Merit Order 4th Class with Swords Bavaria Hanseatic Cross HamburgOther Central Powers Liakat Medal in Silver with Sabers Ottoman Empire Turkish War Medal of 1915 a k a Gallipoli Star or Iron Crescent Ottoman EmpirePrussian Imperial German Badges Prussian Military Pilot Badge Wound Badge in SilverIn popular culture EditLothar von Richthofen and his brother Manfred are featured in the popular PC game Red Baron In the 1971 film Von Richthofen and Brown Lothar von Richthofen is portrayed by Brian Foley In the 2008 biopic The Red Baron Lothar von Richthofen is portrayed by actor Volker Bruch He and his brothers also appeared in the 2006 video game Snoopy vs the Red Baron He may have appeared in the 2010 sequel Snoopy Flying Ace He appears in the Riverworld book series by fantasy author Philip Jose Farmer Players can play as Lothar von Richthofen in the Flying Corps video game Explanatory notes Edit Not to be confused with the archaeologist Bolko von Richthofen a distant cousinCitations Edit Burrows 1970 p 36 Burrows 1970 pp 37 38 Kilduff 1994 p 27 Kilduff 1994 p 41 Franks et al 1993 p 94 von Richthofen Mein Kriegstagebuch 1937 p 101 Richthofen The Red Knight of the Air n d pp 164 165 a b Albert Ball VC p 157 Albert Ball VC pp 212 213 Richthofen Beyond the Legend of the Red Baron Peter Kilduff 1993 A Man Called Intrepid by William Stephenson 1977 Harcourt Brace Jovanovich p 9 General bibliography EditBowyer Chaz 2004 Albert Ball VC London UK Crecy Publications ISBN 978 0 947554 89 7 Franks Norman Bailey Frank Guest Russell 1993 Above the Lines A Complete Record of the Aces and Fighter Units of the German Air Service Naval Air Service and Flanders Marine Corps 1914 1918 London UK Grub Street Publishing ISBN 978 0 948817 73 1 Franks Norman Giblin Hal 2003 Under the Guns of the Kaiser s Aces London UK Barnes amp Noble Books ISBN 978 1 904010 02 9 Treadwell Terry Wood Allan 1997 German Knights of the Air 1914 1918 The Holders of the Orden Pour le Merite New York New York USA Grub Street Publishing ISBN 978 0760707906 External links EditLothar von Richthofen 40 Aerial victories firstworldwar com biography Lothar von Richthofen s page on theaerodrome com Von Richthofen s mother actress Fern Andra meet Archived 2009 01 13 at the Wayback Machine Stars and Stripes article Lothar von Richthofen at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lothar von Richthofen amp oldid 1127505039, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

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