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Manfred von Richthofen

Manfred Albrecht Freiherr von Richthofen (German: [ˈmanfreːt fɔn ˈʁɪçthoːfn̩]; 2 May 1892 – 21 April 1918), known in English as Baron von Richthofen or the Red Baron, was a fighter pilot with the German Air Force during World War I. He is considered the ace-of-aces of the war, being officially credited with 80 air combat victories.

Manfred von Richthofen
Richthofen wears the Pour le Mérite, the "Blue Max", Prussia's highest military order, in this official portrait, c. 1917.
Birth nameManfred Albrecht von Richthofen
Nickname(s)"The Red Baron"
Born(1892-05-02)2 May 1892
Breslau, Prussia, German Empire (present-day Wrocław, Poland)
Died21 April 1918(1918-04-21) (aged 25)
Near Morlancourt, France
Place of burial 50°3′36.94″N 8°15′56.92″E / 50.0602611°N 8.2658111°E / 50.0602611; 8.2658111Coordinates: 50°3′36.94″N 8°15′56.92″E / 50.0602611°N 8.2658111°E / 50.0602611; 8.2658111
Allegiance German Empire
Service/branch
Years of service1911–1918
RankCaptain
Commands held
Battles
Awards
Signature

Originally a cavalryman, Richthofen transferred to the Air Service in 1915, becoming one of the first members of fighter squadron Jagdstaffel 2 in 1916. He quickly distinguished himself as a fighter pilot, and during 1917 became the leader of Jasta 11. Later he led the larger fighter wing Jagdgeschwader I, better known as "The Flying Circus" or "Richthofen's Circus" because of the bright colours of its aircraft, and perhaps also because of the way the unit was transferred from one area of Allied air activity to another – moving like a travelling circus, and frequently setting up in tents on improvised airfields. By 1918, Richthofen was regarded as a national hero in Germany, and respected by his enemies.

Richthofen was shot down and killed near Vaux-sur-Somme on 21 April 1918. There has been considerable discussion and debate regarding aspects of his career, especially the circumstances of his death. He remains one of the most widely known fighter pilots of all time, and has been the subject of many books, films, and other media.

Name and nicknames

Richthofen was a Freiherr (literally "Free Lord"), a title of nobility often translated as "baron."[1][2] This is not a given name nor strictly a hereditary title, since all male members of the family were entitled to it, even during the lifetime of their father.[a] Richthofen painted his aircraft red, and this combined with his title led to him being called the "Red Baron" ( "der Rote Baron" ), both inside and outside Germany.[1] During his lifetime, he was more frequently described in German as Der Rote Kampfflieger, variously translated as "The Red Battle Flyer" or "The Red Fighter Pilot". This name was used as the title of Richthofen's 1917 autobiography.[3]

Early life

 
Richthofen family coat of arms

Richthofen was born in Kleinburg, near Breslau, Lower Silesia (now part of the city of Wrocław, Poland), on 2 May 1892 into a prominent Prussian aristocratic family. His father was Major Albrecht Philipp Karl Julius Freiherr von Richthofen and his mother was Kunigunde von Schickfuss und Neudorff.[4] He had an elder sister, Ilse, and two younger brothers.

When he was four years old, Manfred moved with his family to nearby Schweidnitz (now Świdnica, Poland). He enjoyed riding horses and hunting as well as gymnastics at school. He excelled at parallel bars and won a number of awards at school.[5] He and his brothers, Lothar and Bolko,[6][b] hunted wild boar, elk, birds, and deer.[7]

After being educated at home he attended a school at Schweidnitz for a year before beginning cadet training at the Wahlstatt (now Legnickie Pole, Poland) military school when he was 11.[8] After completing cadet training at the Groß-Lichterfelde Preußische Hauptkadettenanstalt in 1911, he joined an Uhlan cavalry unit, the Ulanen-Regiment Kaiser Alexander der III. von Russland (1. Westpreußisches) Nr. 1 ("1st Emperor Alexander III of Russia Uhlan Regiment (1st West Prussian)") and was assigned to the regiment's 3. Eskadron ("No. 3 Squadron").[9]

Early war service

When World War I began, Richthofen served as a cavalry reconnaissance officer on both the Eastern and Western Fronts, seeing action in Russia, France, and Belgium; with the advent of trench warfare, which made traditional cavalry operations outdated and inefficient, Richthofen's regiment was dismounted, serving as dispatch runners and field telephone operators.[10] Disappointed and bored at not being able to directly participate in combat, the last straw for Richthofen was an order to transfer to the army's supply branch. His interest in the Air Service had been aroused by his examination of a German military aircraft behind the lines,[11] and he applied for a transfer to Die Fliegertruppen des deutschen Kaiserreiches (Imperial German Army Air Service), later to be known as the Luftstreitkräfte. He was widely reported to have written in his application for transfer, "I have not gone to war in order to collect cheese and eggs, but for another purpose."[12][c] His request was granted,[11] and Richthofen joined the flying service at the end of May 1915.[13]

From June to August 1915, Richthofen served as an observer on reconnaissance missions over the Eastern Front with Feldflieger Abteilung 69 ("No. 69 Flying Squadron").[11] In August 1915, he was transferred to a flying unit in Ostend, a coastal city in Belgium.[14] There he flew with a friend and fellow pilot Georg Zeumer, who would later teach him to fly solo.[15] On being transferred to the Champagne front, he is believed to have shot down an attacking French Farman aircraft with his observer's machine gun in a tense battle over French lines;[16] he was not credited with the kill, since it fell behind Allied lines and therefore could not be confirmed.

Piloting career

"I had been told the name of the place to which we were to fly and I was to direct the pilot. At first we flew straight ahead, then the pilot turned to the right, then left. I had lost all sense of direction over our own aerodrome! ... I didn't care a bit where I was, and when the pilot thought it was time to go down, I was disappointed. Already I was counting down the hours to the time we could start again."

John Simpson, quoting Richthofen's own description of his first flying experience.[17]

Manfred von Richthofen had a chance meeting with German ace fighter pilot Oswald Boelcke[18] which led him to enter training as a pilot in October 1915.[18] In February 1916, Manfred "rescued" his brother Lothar from the boredom of training new troops in Luben and encouraged him to transfer to the Fliegertruppe.[19] The next month, Manfred joined Kampfgeschwader 2 ("No. 2 Bomber Squadron") flying a two-seater Albatros C.III. Initially, he appeared to be a below-average pilot. He struggled to control his aircraft, and he crashed during his first flight at the controls.[18] Despite this poor start, he rapidly became attuned to his aircraft. He was over Verdun on 26 April 1916 and fired on a French Nieuport, shooting it down over Fort Douaumont[18]—although he received no official credit. A week later, he decided to ignore more experienced pilots' advice against flying through a thunderstorm. He later noted that he had been "lucky to get through the weather" and vowed never again to fly in such conditions unless ordered to do so.[20]

Richthofen met Oswald Boelcke again in August 1916, after another spell flying two-seaters on the Eastern Front. Boelcke was visiting the east in search of candidates for his newly formed Jasta 2, and he selected Richthofen to join this unit, one of the first German fighter squadrons.[21] Boelcke was killed during a midair collision with a friendly aircraft on 28 October 1916, and Richthofen witnessed the event.[21]

Richthofen scored his first confirmed victory when he engaged Second Lieutenant Lionel Morris and his observer Tom Rees in the skies over Cambrai, France, on 17 September 1916.[22] His autobiography states, "I honoured the fallen enemy by placing a stone on his beautiful grave."[23] He contacted a jeweller in Berlin and ordered a silver cup engraved with the date and the type of enemy aircraft.[d] He continued to celebrate each of his victories in the same manner until he had 60 cups, by which time the dwindling supply of silver in blockaded Germany meant that silver cups could no longer be supplied. Richthofen discontinued his orders at this stage, rather than accept cups made from base metal.[e]

His brother Lothar (40 victories) used risky, aggressive tactics, but Manfred observed a set of maxims known as the "Dicta Boelcke" to assure success for both the squadron and its pilots.[24] He was not a spectacular or aerobatic pilot like his brother or Werner Voss; however, he was a noted tactician and squadron leader and a fine marksman. Typically, he would dive from above to attack with the advantage of the sun behind him, with other pilots of his squadron covering his rear and flanks.

 
Major Lanoe Hawker VC

On 23 November 1916, Richthofen shot down his most famous adversary, British ace Major Lanoe Hawker VC, described by Richthofen as "the British Boelcke".[25] The victory came while Richthofen was flying an Albatros D.II and Hawker was flying the older DH.2. After a long dogfight, Hawker was shot in the back of the head as he attempted to escape back to his own lines.[26] After this combat, Richthofen was convinced that he needed a fighter aircraft with more agility, even with a loss of speed. He switched to the Albatros D.III in January 1917, scoring two victories before suffering an in-flight crack in the spar of the aircraft's lower wing on 24 January, and he reverted to the Albatros D.II or Halberstadt D.II for the next five weeks.

Richthofen was flying his Halberstadt on 6 March in combat with F.E.8s of 40 Squadron RFC when his aircraft was shot through the fuel tank, by Edwin Benbow, who was credited with a victory from this fight. Richthofen was able to make a forced landing near Hénin-Liétard without his aircraft catching fire.[27][28] He then scored a victory in the Albatros D.II on 9 March, but his Albatros D.III was grounded for the rest of the month so he switched again to a Halberstadt D.II.[29] He returned to his Albatros D.III on 2 April 1917 and scored 22 victories in it before switching to the Albatros D.V in late June.[25]

 
Richthofen's all-red Fokker Dr.I

Richthofen flew the celebrated Fokker Dr.I triplane from late July 1917, the distinctive three-winged aircraft with which he is most commonly associated—although he did not use the type exclusively until after it was reissued with strengthened wings in November.[30] Only 19 of his 80 kills were made in this type of aircraft, despite the popular link between Richthofen and the Fokker Dr.I. It was his Albatros D.III Serial No. 789/16 that was first painted bright red, in late January 1917, and in which he first earned his name and reputation.[31]

Richthofen championed the development of the Fokker D.VII with suggestions to overcome the deficiencies of the current German fighter aircraft.[32] He never had an opportunity to fly the new type in combat, as he was killed before it entered service.

Flying Circus

 
Richthofen in the cockpit of his famous Rotes Flugzeug ("Red Aircraft") with other members of Jasta 11, including his brother Lothar (sitting, front), 23 April 1917

Richthofen received the Pour le Mérite in January 1917 after his 16th confirmed kill, the highest military honour in Germany at the time and informally known as "The Blue Max".[33] That same month, he assumed command of Jasta 11, which ultimately included some of the elite German pilots, many of whom he trained himself, and several of whom later became leaders of their own squadrons. Ernst Udet belonged to Richthofen's group and later became Generaloberst Udet. When Lothar joined, the German high command appreciated the propaganda value of two Richthofens fighting together to defeat the enemy in the air.[34]

Richthofen took the flamboyant step of having his Albatros painted red when he became a squadron commander. His autobiography states: "For whatever reasons, one fine day I came upon the idea of having my crate painted glaring red. The result was that absolutely everyone could not help but notice my red bird. In fact, my opponents also seemed to be not entirely unaware [of it]".[35] Thereafter he usually flew in red-painted aircraft, although not all of them were entirely red, nor was the "red" necessarily the brilliant scarlet beloved of model- and replica-builders.

Other members of Jasta 11 soon took to painting parts of their aircraft red. Their official reason seems to have been to make their leader less conspicuous, to avoid having him singled out in a fight. In practice, red colouration became a unit identification. Other units soon adopted their own squadron colours, and decoration of fighters became general throughout the Luftstreitkräfte. The German high command permitted this practice (in spite of obvious drawbacks from the point of view of intelligence), and German propaganda made much of it by referring to Richthofen as Der Rote Kampfflieger—"the Red Fighter Pilot".

 
Richthofen (centre) with Hermann Thomsen, German Air Service Chief of Staff (left) and Ernst von Hoeppner, Commanding General of the Air Service (right) at Imperial Headquarters in Bad Kreuznach

During a visit to her home, the Baron’s mother asked him why he risked his life every day, and he said: "For the man in the trenches. I want to ease his hard lot in life by keeping the enemy flyers away from him."[36]

Richthofen led his new unit to unparallelled success, peaking during "Bloody April" 1917. In that month alone, he shot down 22 British aircraft, including four in a single day,[37] raising his official tally to 52. By June, he had become the commander of the first of the new larger "fighter wing" formations; these were highly mobile, combined tactical units that could move at short notice to different parts of the front as required. Richthofen's new command, Jagdgeschwader 1, was composed of fighter squadrons No. 4, 6, 10, and 11. J.G. 1 became widely known as "The Flying Circus" due to the unit's brightly coloured aircraft and its mobility, including the use of tents, trains, and caravans, where appropriate.

Richthofen was a brilliant tactician, building on Boelcke's tactics. Unlike Boelcke, however, he led by example and force of will rather than by inspiration. He was often described as distant, unemotional, and rather humorless, though some colleagues contended otherwise.[38] He was cordial to officers and enlisted men alike; indeed, he urged his pilots to remain on good terms with the mechanics who maintained their aircraft.[39] He taught his pilots the basic rule which he wanted them to fight by: "Aim for the man and don't miss him. If you are fighting a two-seater, get the observer first; until you have silenced the gun, don't bother about the pilot."[40]

Although Richthofen was now performing the duties of a lieutenant colonel (a wing commander in modern Royal Air Force terms), he was never promoted past the relatively junior rank of Rittmeister, equivalent to captain in the British army.[41] The system in the British army was for an officer to hold the rank appropriate to his level of command, if only on a temporary basis, even if he had not been formally promoted. In the German army, it was not unusual for a wartime officer to hold a lower rank than his duties implied; German officers were promoted according to a schedule and not by battlefield promotion. It was also the custom for a son not to hold a higher rank than his father, and Richthofen's father was a reserve major.

Wounded in combat

 
Richthofen's Albatros D.V after forced landing near Wervik. This machine is not an all-red one

Richthofen sustained a serious head wound on 6 July 1917, during combat near Wervik, Belgium against a formation of F.E.2d two-seat fighters of No. 20 Squadron RFC, causing instant disorientation and temporary partial blindness.[37] He regained his vision in time to ease the aircraft out of a spin and execute a forced landing in a field in friendly territory. The injury required multiple operations to remove bone splinters from the impact area.[42][f]

The Red Baron returned to active service against doctor's orders on 25 July,[45] but took convalescent leave from 5 September to 23 October.[46] His wound is thought to have caused lasting damage; he later often suffered from post-flight nausea and headaches, as well as a change in temperament. There is a theory (see below) linking this injury with his eventual death.

Author and hero

 
Portrait by Nicola Perscheid

During his convalescent leave, Richthofen completed an autobiographic sketch, Der rote Kampfflieger (The Red Battle Flyer, 1917). Written on the instructions of the "Press and Intelligence" (propaganda) section of the Luftstreitkräfte (Air Force), it shows evidence of having been heavily censored and edited.[47] There are, however, passages that are most unlikely to have been inserted by an official editor. Richthofen wrote: "My father discriminates between a sportsman and a butcher. The latter shoots for fun. When I have shot down an Englishman, my hunting passion is satisfied for a quarter of an hour. Therefore I do not succeed in shooting down two Englishmen in succession. If one of them comes down, I have the feeling of complete satisfaction. Only much later have I overcome my instinct and have become a butcher".[48] In another passage, Richthofen wrote "I am in wretched spirits after every aerial combat. I believe that [the war] is not as the people at home imagine it, with a hurrah and a roar; it is very serious, very grim." An English translation by J. Ellis Barker was published in 1918 as The Red Battle Flyer.[23] Although Richthofen died before a revised version could be prepared, he is on record as repudiating the book, stating that it was "too insolent" and that he was no longer that kind of person.[49]

By 1918, Richthofen had become such a legend that it was feared that his death would be a blow to the morale of the German people.[50] He refused to accept a ground job after his wound, stating that "every poor fellow in the trenches must do his duty" and that he would therefore continue to fly in combat.[51] Certainly he had become part of a cult of officially encouraged hero-worship. German propaganda circulated various false rumours, including that the British had raised squadrons specially to hunt Richthofen and had offered large rewards and an automatic Victoria Cross to any Allied pilot who shot him down.[52] Passages from his correspondence indicate he may have at least half-believed some of these stories himself.[53]

Death

 
209 Squadron Badge – the red eagle falling – symbolizes the fall of the Red Baron

Richthofen received a fatal wound just after 11:00 am on 21 April 1918 while flying over Morlancourt Ridge near the Somme River, 49°56′0.60″N 2°32′43.71″E / 49.9335000°N 2.5454750°E / 49.9335000; 2.5454750. At the time, he had been pursuing, at very low altitude, a Sopwith Camel piloted by Canadian novice Wilfrid Reid "Wop" May of No. 209 Squadron, Royal Air Force.[54] May had just fired on the Red Baron's cousin, Lieutenant Wolfram von Richthofen. On seeing his cousin being attacked, Richtofen flew to his rescue and fired on May, causing him to pull away.[55] Richthofen pursued May across the Somme. The Baron was spotted and briefly attacked by a Camel piloted by May's school friend and flight commander, Canadian Captain Arthur "Roy" Brown. Brown had to dive steeply at very high speed to intervene, and then had to climb steeply to avoid hitting the ground.[54] Richthofen turned to avoid this attack, and then resumed his pursuit of May.[54]

It was almost certainly during this final stage in his pursuit of May that a single .303 bullet[g] hit Richthofen through the chest, severely damaging his heart and lungs; it would have killed Richthofen in less than a minute.[56][57] His aircraft stalled and went into a steep dive, hitting the ground at 49°55′56″N 2°32′16″E / 49.9321076°N 2.5376701°E / 49.9321076; 2.5376701 in a field on a hill near the Bray-Corbie road, just north of the village of Vaux-sur-Somme, in a sector defended by the Australian Imperial Force (AIF).[54] The aircraft bounced heavily upon hitting the ground: the undercarriage collapsed and the fuel tank was smashed before the aircraft skidded to a stop.[58] Several witnesses, including Gunner George Ridgway, reached the crashed plane and found Richthofen already dead, and his face slammed into the butts of his machine guns, breaking his nose, fracturing his jaw and creating contusions on his face.[57][h]

Australian soldiers and airmen examine the remnants of Richthofen's triplane.
 
Australian airmen with Richthofen's triplane 425/17 after it was looted by souvenir hunters

No. 3 Squadron, Australian Flying Corps was the nearest Allied air unit and assumed responsibility for the Baron's remains. His Fokker Dr.I 425/17 was soon taken apart by souvenir hunters.

In 2009, Richthofen's death certificate was found in the archives in Ostrów Wielkopolski, Poland. He had briefly been stationed in Ostrów before going to war, as it was part of Germany until the end of World War I. The document is a one-page, handwritten form in a 1918 registry book of deaths. It misspells Richthofen's name as "Richthoven" and simply states that he had "died 21 April 1918, from wounds sustained in combat".[64]

Debate over who fired the shot that killed Richthofen

Controversy and contradictory hypotheses continue to surround who actually fired the shot that killed Richthofen.

The RAF credited Brown with shooting down the Red Baron, but it is now generally agreed by historians, doctors, and ballistics experts that Richthofen was actually killed by an anti-aircraft (AA) machine gunner firing from the ground.[57][59][65] An autopsy showed the bullet that killed Richthofen penetrated from the right underarm and exited next to the left nipple. Brown's attack was probably from behind and above Richthofen's left. Even more conclusively, Richthofen could not have continued his pursuit of May for as long as he did (up to two minutes) had his wound come from Brown.[57] Brown himself never spoke much about what happened that day,[i] claiming, "There is no point in me commenting, as the evidence is already out there."

 
Officers and NCOs of the 24th Machine Gun Company in March 1918. Sergeant Cedric Popkin is second from the right in the middle row.

Many sources have suggested that Sergeant Cedric Popkin was the person most likely to have killed Richthofen, including a 1998 article by Geoffrey Miller, a physician, and historian of military medicine, and a 2002 edition of the British Channel 4 Secret History series.[57][59] Popkin was an AA machine gunner with the Australian 24th Machine Gun Company, and he was using a Vickers gun. He fired at Richthofen's aircraft on two occasions: first as the Baron was heading straight at his position, and then at long range from the plane's right. Given the nature of Richthofen's wounds, Popkin was in a position to fire the fatal shot when the pilot passed him for a second time.[57][59] Some confusion has been caused by a letter that Popkin wrote in 1935 to an Australian official historian. It stated Popkin's belief that he had fired the fatal shot as Richthofen flew straight at his position. In this respect, Popkin was incorrect; the bullet which caused the Baron's death came from the side (see above).

A 2002 Discovery Channel documentary suggests that Gunner W. J. "Snowy" Evans, a Lewis machine gunner with the 53rd Battery, 14th Field Artillery Brigade, Royal Australian Artillery is likely to have killed von Richthofen.[60] Miller and the Secret History documentary dismiss this theory because of the angle from which Evans fired at Richthofen.[57][59]

Other sources have suggested that Gunner Robert Buie (also of the 53rd Battery) may have fired the fatal shot. There is little support for this theory.[57][59] In 2007, a municipality in Sydney recognised Buie as the man who shot down Richthofen, placing a plaque near his former home.[66] Buie died in 1964 and has never been officially recognised in any other way.[citation needed]

Theories about last combat

Richthofen was a highly experienced and skilled fighter pilot—fully aware of the risk from ground fire. Further, he concurred with the rules of air fighting created by his late mentor Boelcke, who specifically advised pilots not to take unnecessary risks. In this context, Richthofen's judgement during his last combat was clearly unsound in several respects.[67] Several theories have been proposed to account for his behaviour.

In 1999, a German medical researcher, Henning Allmers, published an article in the British medical journal The Lancet, suggesting it was likely that brain damage from the head wound Richthofen suffered in July 1917 played a part in his death. This was supported by a 2004 paper by researchers at the University of Texas. Richthofen's behaviour after his injury was noted as consistent with brain-injured patients, and such an injury could account for his perceived lack of judgement on his final flight: flying too low over enemy territory and suffering target fixation.[68]

Richthofen may have been suffering from cumulative combat stress, which made him fail to observe some of his usual precautions. One of the leading British air aces, Major Edward "Mick" Mannock, was killed by ground fire on 26 July 1918 while crossing the lines at low level, an action he had always cautioned his younger pilots against. One of the most popular of the French air aces, Georges Guynemer, went missing on 11 September 1917, probably while attacking a two-seater without realizing several Fokkers were escorting it.[69][70]

There is a suggestion that on the day of Richthofen's death, the prevailing wind was about 40 km/h (25 mph) easterly, rather than the usual 40 km/h (25 mph) westerly. This meant that Richthofen, heading generally westward at an airspeed of about 160 km/h (100 mph), was travelling over the ground at up to 200 km/h (125 mph) rather than the more typical ground speed of 120 km/h (75 mph). This was considerably faster than normal and he could easily have strayed over enemy lines without realizing it.[67]

At the time of Richthofen's death, the front was in a highly fluid state, following the initial success of the German offensive of March–April 1918. This was part of Germany's last opportunity to win the war. In the face of Allied air superiority, the German air service was having difficulty acquiring vital reconnaissance information, and could do little to prevent Allied squadrons from completing effective reconnaissance and close support of their armies.

Burial

 
No. 3 Squadron AFC officers were pallbearers and other ranks from the squadron acted as a guard of honour during the Red Baron's funeral on 22 April 1918.

In common with most Allied air officers, No. 3 Squadron AFC's commanding officer Major David Blake, who was responsible for Richthofen's body, regarded the Red Baron with great respect, and he organised a full military funeral.[71]

The body was buried in the cemetery at the village of Bertangles, near Amiens, on 22 April 1918. Six of No. 3 Squadron's officers served as pallbearers, and a guard of honour from the squadron's other ranks fired a salute.[j]

Allied squadrons stationed nearby presented memorial wreaths, one of which was inscribed with the words, "To Our Gallant and Worthy Foe".[72]

The funeral of Manfred von Richthofen

In the early 1920s, the French authorities created a military cemetery at Fricourt, in which a large number of German war dead, including Richthofen, were reinterred.[k] In 1925 von Richthofen's youngest brother, Bolko, recovered the body from Fricourt and took it to Germany. The family's intention was for it to be buried in the Schweidnitz cemetery next to the graves of his father and his brother Lothar von Richthofen, who had been killed in a post-war air crash in 1922.[73] The German Government requested that the body should instead be interred at the Invalidenfriedhof Cemetery in Berlin, where many German military heroes and past leaders were buried, and the family agreed. Richthofen's body received a state funeral. Later the Third Reich held a further grandiose memorial ceremony at the site of the grave, erecting a massive new tombstone engraved with the single word: Richthofen.[74] During the Cold War, the Invalidenfriedhof was on the boundary of the Soviet zone in Berlin, and the tombstone became damaged by bullets fired at attempted escapees from East Germany. In 1975 the body was moved to a Richthofen family grave plot at the Südfriedhof in Wiesbaden.[75]

Number of victories

For decades after World War I, some authors questioned whether Richthofen had achieved 80 victories, insisting that his record was exaggerated for propaganda purposes. Some claimed that he took credit for aircraft downed by his squadron or wing.

In fact, Richthofen's victories are unusually well documented. A full list of the aircraft the Red Baron was credited with shooting down was published as early as 1958[76]—with documented RFC/RAF squadron details, aircraft serial numbers, and the identities of Allied airmen killed or captured—73 of the 80 listed match recorded British losses. A study conducted by British historian Norman Franks with two colleagues, published in Under the Guns of the Red Baron in 1998, reached the same conclusion about the high degree of accuracy of Richthofen's claimed victories. There were also unconfirmed victories that would put his actual total as high as 100 or more.[77]

For comparison, the highest-scoring Allied ace, the Frenchman René Fonck, achieved 75 confirmed victories[78] and a further 52 unconfirmed behind enemy lines.[77] The highest-scoring British Empire fighter pilots were Canadian Billy Bishop, who was officially credited with 72 victories,[79] British Mick Mannock, with 61 confirmed victories,[80] Canadian Raymond Collishaw, with 60,[81] and British James McCudden, with 57 confirmed victories.

Richthofen's early victories and the establishment of his reputation coincided with a period of German air superiority, but he achieved many of his successes later on against a numerically superior enemy, who flew fighter aircraft that were, on the whole, better than his own.[76]

Orders and decorations, tributes, and relics

 
Replica of Richthofen's Fokker Dr.I triplane, at the Berlin Air Show in 2006
 
Memorial in Polish at Richthofen's former home in Świdnica (formerly Schweidnitz)
 
Engine of Richthofen's Fokker DR.I

Orders and decorations

In order of date awarded

German Empire / German Federal States

Austro-Hungarian Empire

Ottoman Empire

Kingdom of Bulgaria

  • Military Order for Bravery, 4th Class (12 June 1917)

Tributes

At various times, several different German military aviation Geschwader (literally "squadrons"; equivalent to Commonwealth air force "groups", French escadrons or USAF "wings") have been named after the Baron:

In 1941 a newly launched Kriegsmarine (German navy) seaplane tender received the name ''Richthofen'' [de].

In 1968 Richthofen was inducted into the International Air & Space Hall of Fame.[82][83]

"Red Flag", the US Air Force's large scale training exercise held multiple times a year, was an outgrowth of Project Red Baron, which happened in three phases (c.  1966 to c.  1974) during the period of the Vietnam War.

Relics

Captain Roy Brown donated the seat of the Fokker triplane in which the German flying ace made his final flight to the Royal Canadian Military Institute (RCMI) in 1920.[84] Apart from the triplane's seat, the RCMI, in Toronto, also holds a side panel signed by the pilots of Brown's squadron. The engine of Richthofen's Dr.I was donated to the Imperial War Museum in London, where it is still on display. The museum also holds the Baron's machine guns. The control column (joystick) of Richthofen's aircraft can be seen at the Australian War Memorial in Canberra. The Australian National Aviation Museum has what is suspected to be the fuel tank of Richthofen's Dr.I, however there is no conclusive proof.

Published works

  • Richthofen, Captain Manfred Freiherr von (July 1918). The Red Battle Flyer. Translated by Barker, T. Ellis. preface and notes by C. G Grey, editor of The Aeroplane. New York: Robert M. McBride & Co – via Project Gutenberg.

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ For example, his brother Lothar also used it.
  2. ^ Not to be confused with Bolko von Richthofen the archaeologist, a distant cousin
  3. ^ Richthofen quotes this famous piece of insubordination in his autobiography, but hints that he did not actually write it – claiming that "evil tongues" report that he did.
  4. ^ Similar cups had been officially awarded to some earlier pilots on their first victories, although the practice had been discontinued by this time.
  5. ^ Burrows has suggested that he was simply bored with the procedure and that this was an excuse to discontinue it.
  6. ^ The air victory was credited to Captain Donald Cunnell of No. 20,[43] who was killed by German anti-aircraft fire a few days later (12 July 1917) near Wervik. Cunnell's observer Lt. A. G. Bill successfully flew the aircraft back to base.[44]
  7. ^ The actual bullet lodged in Richthofen's clothing. It was apparently recovered, but it has not been preserved for examination by modern historians. It was apparently a normal ball round, as fired by all British rifle-calibre arms, and thus would not be any help in resolving the controversy of who fired it.
  8. ^ Gunner Ernest W. Twycross,[59] and Sergeant Ted Smout of the Australian Medical Corps later claimed that Richthofen was still alive and tried to say something, with the last or only word being "kaputt", before he died. [60] The definition of "kaputt" is often in contention.[61][62][63] This is disputed by accounts which state that Richthofen was already dead and the nature of his wound, as well as his broken nose and fractured jaw.
  9. ^ Sensational accounts have been systematically discredited by several writers, even though they describe the attack in great detail and are allegedly given by Brown.
  10. ^ The official caption of the photograph on the right reads The funeral of Rittmeister Baron M. Von Richthofen. Firing party presenting arms as the coffin passes into the cemetery, borne on the shoulders of six pilots of No. 3 Squadron A.F.C. Bertangles, France 22nd April 1918. The Padre is Captain Reverend George H. Marshall, M.A., D.S.O.
  11. ^ Among other reasons to protect the graves from vandalism by disgruntled villagers, understandably resentful of former enemies being buried among their own relatives.

Citations

  1. ^ a b Kilduff, p. 6.
  2. ^ "Freiherr". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 16 July 2010.
  3. ^ Richthofen, Manfred von. Der Rote Baron (The Red Baron). 4 December 2012 at the Wayback Machine Norderstedt, Germany: BOD, 2008 (reprint). ISBN 978-3-8370-9217-2.
  4. ^ Stars and Strips Forever: "Von Richthofen's mother, actress Fern Andra meet"; 14 November 1954 Kuningunde von Richthofen and Fern Andra Retrieved 17 November 2016
  5. ^ Wright 1976, p. 31.
  6. ^ Burrows 1970, p. 36.
  7. ^ Burrows 1970, pp. 37–38.
  8. ^ Wright 1976, p. 30.
  9. ^ Preußen 1914, p. 400.
  10. ^ Von Richthofen 2007, pp. 49–51.
  11. ^ a b c McAllister 1982, p. 52.
  12. ^ Von Richthofen 1969, p. 24.
  13. ^ Von Richthofen 2007, p. 51.
  14. ^ Von Richthofen 1969, p. 31.
  15. ^ Von Richthofen 1969, p. 37.
  16. ^ McAllister 1982, pp. 53–54.
  17. ^ McAllister 1982, pp. 52–53.
  18. ^ a b c d McAllister 1982, p. 54.
  19. ^ Kilduff 1994, p. 41.
  20. ^ McAllister 1982, pp. 54–55.
  21. ^ a b McAllister 1982, p. 56.
  22. ^ Swopes, Bryan (17 September 2013). "This Day in Aviation — September 17, 1916". The Red Baron Archives. Retrieved 4 June 2014.
  23. ^ a b von Richthofen, Manfred et al. Der rote Kampfflieger. Deutscher Verlag (Ullstein), 1933.
  24. ^ English 2003, p. 62.
  25. ^ a b Burrows 1970, p. 103.
  26. ^ McAllister 1982, p. 57.
  27. ^ Guttman 2009, p. 64
  28. ^ Kilduff, p. 79.
  29. ^ Guttman 2009, pp. 64–65
  30. ^ Grey and Thetford, 1970, p. 100.
  31. ^ Guttman 2009, p. 63.
  32. ^ Baker 1991
  33. ^ "The Blue Max." American History, Volume 38, No. 1, April 2003, p. 9. ISSN 1076-8866.
  34. ^ Richthofen, The Red Knight of the Air, (n.d.) pp. 164–165.
  35. ^ Der rote Kampfflieger, open.cit., (n.d.) p. 120.
  36. ^ Kilduff 1994, p. 73.
  37. ^ a b McAllister 1982, p. 59.
  38. ^ Bodenschatz 1998
  39. ^ Kilduff, p. 77.
  40. ^ McAllister 1982, p. 61.
  41. ^ "Germany's 'Red Baron' dies". UPI. Retrieved 12 July 2020.
  42. ^ McAllister 1982, p. 60.
  43. ^ Guttman, 2009 pp. 86–88
  44. ^ Guttman & Dempsey (2009), pp. 88–89.
  45. ^ Burrows 1970, p. 154.
  46. ^ Burrows 1970, pp. 160–163.
  47. ^ Burrows 1970, pp. 162–163.
  48. ^ Richthofen 2008, p.177
  49. ^ Johnson, Karl (Contributing Editor for WTJ). "'The Red Fighter Pilot' by Manfred von Richthofen (online edition)". The War Times Journal. Retrieved: 27 May 2007.
  50. ^ Burrows 1970, p. 152.
  51. ^ Burrows 1970, p. 163.
  52. ^ Burrows 1970, p. 131.
  53. ^ Franks and Bennett 1997, p. 126.
  54. ^ a b c d McAllister 1982, p. 63.
  55. ^ Franks & Bennett (1997)
  56. ^ McAllister 1982, p. 64.
  57. ^ a b c d e f g h Miller, Dr. Geoffrey. "The Death of Manfred von Richthofen: Who fired the fatal shot?" Sabretache: Journal and Proceedings of the Military History Society of Australia, vol. XXXIX, no. 2, 1998.
  58. ^ Robertson 1958, p. 118.
  59. ^ a b c d e f Dogfight – The Mystery of the Red Baron, Channel 4, Secret History, 22 December 2003. US broadcast as "Who Killed the Red Baron? Explore Competing Theories." Pbs.org, (Public Broadcasting Service) Nova, 7 October 2003.
  60. ^ a b Unsolved History: Death of the Red Baron, 2002, Discovery Channel
  61. ^ "Synonym für gestorben – Synonyme | Antonyme (Gegenteile) – Fremdwörter von gestorben." google.com, 17 May 2009. Retrieved: 13 June 2009.
  62. ^ "kaputt" – via The Free Dictionary.
  63. ^ "Definition: Kaputt." Ego4u.com, German-English dictionary, 22 April 2009. Retrieved: 13 June 2009.
  64. ^ "Polish historian finds death certificate of WWI German flying ace 'Red Baron'." Daily News (New York). Retrieved: 8 December 2009.
  65. ^ "Richthofen - World War I Document Archive". wwi.lib.byu.edu.
  66. ^ Day, Mark. "Unsung No.1 with a bullet." The Australian, 7 April 2007.
  67. ^ a b Franks and Bennett 1997
  68. ^ Allmers, Dr. Henning. "Manfred Freiherr von Richthofen's medical record—Was the "Red Baron" fit to fly?" The Lancet, 354 (9177), 7 August 1999, pp. 502–504. Published online by anzacs.net. Retrieved: 23 September 2007.
  69. ^ "Georges Guynemer: Beloved French Ace, 53 victories." acepilots.com. Retrieved: 2 July 2009.
  70. ^ Guttman, Jon. "Georges Guynemer: France's World War I Ace Pilot." historynet.com. Retrieved: 2 July 2009.
  71. ^ "Burnley Roll of Honour Reverend/Chaplain George Herbert Marshall DSO MC".
  72. ^ "A Gallant and Worthy Foe: The Death of the "Red Baron"". www.thursdayreview.com. Retrieved 14 December 2017.
  73. ^ "Biography: Lothar Freiherr von Richthofen." Frontflieger.de. Retrieved: 13 June 2009.
  74. ^ Burrows 1970, p. 196.
  75. ^ Franks and Bennett 1997, p. 9.
  76. ^ a b Robertson 1958, pp. 150–155.
  77. ^ a b Franks and Bailey 1992
  78. ^ Ordre de la IVe Armée, n°1599, 23 January 1919
  79. ^ "Distinguished Flying Cross Citation", London Gazette, 3 August 1918.
  80. ^ Franks et al 1993, pp. 255–256.
  81. ^ Shores et al. 1990, pp. 115–116
  82. ^ Sprekelmeyer, Linda, editor. These We Honor: The International Aerospace Hall of Fame. Donning Co. Publishers, 2006. ISBN 978-1-57864-397-4.
  83. ^ "Manfred von Richthofen". San Diego Air and Space Museum. Retrieved 21 April 2021.
  84. ^ "Toronto Feature: Royal Military Institute". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 1 September 2019.

Bibliography

  • Baker, David. Manfred von Richthofen: The Man and the Aircraft He Flew. McGregor, Minnesota: Voyageur Press, 1991. ISBN 1-871547-06-7.
  • Bodenschatz, Karl. Hunting With Richthofen: Sixteen Months of Battle with J G Freiherr Von Richthofen No. 1. London: Grub Street, 1998. ISBN 1-898697-97-3.
  • Burrows, William E. Richthofen: A True History of the Red Baron. London: Rupert Hart-Davis, 1970. ISBN 0-15-177172-3.
  • English, Dave. The Air Up There: More Great Quotations on Flight. Chicago, Illinois: McGraw-Hill Professional, 2003. ISBN 0-07-141036-8.
  • Franks, Norman; Bailey, Frank W.; Guest, Russell. Above the Lines: The Aces and Fighter Units of the German Air Service, Naval Air Service and Flanders Marine Corps, 1914–1918. Grub Street, 1993. ISBN 0-948817-73-9, ISBN 978-0-948817-73-1.
  • Franks, Norman and Frank W. Bailey. Over the Front: A Complete Record of Fighter Aces and Units of the United States and French Air Services, 1914–1918. London: Grub Street, 1992. ISBN 978-0-948817-54-0.
  • Franks, Norman, Hal Giblin and Nigel McCrery. Under the Guns of the Red Baron: Complete Record of Von Richthofen's Victories and Victims. London: Grub Street, 2007, First edition 1995. ISBN 1-84067-145-9.
  • Gibbons, Floyd, The Red Knight of Germany: The Story of Baron von Richthofen, German's Great War Bird. New York: Doubleday, Page & Company, 1927.
  • Grey, Peter and Owen Thetford. German Aircraft of the First World War. London: Putnam, 2nd ed., 1970. ISBN 0-933852-71-1.
  • Guttman, Jon. Pusher Aces of World War 1 (Aircraft of the Aces #88). Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing Co, 2009. ISBN 978-1-84603-417-6.
  • Kilduff, Peter.The Red Baron: Beyond the Legend. London: Cassell, 1994. ISBN 0-304-35207-1.
  • McAllister, Hayden, ed. Flying Stories. London: Octopus Books, 1982. ISBN 0706417348.
  • O'Connor, Neal W. The Aviation Awards of the Grand Duchies of Baden and Oldenburg Foundation of Aviation World War I: Aviation Awards of Imperial Germany in World War I and the Men Who Earned Them – Volume VI. Stratford, Connecticut: Flying Machines Press, 1999. ISBN 0-7643-1626-5.
  • Preußen, Kriegsministerium, Geheime Kriegs-Kanzlei. Rangliste der Königlich Preußischen Armee und des XIII. Berlin: Ernst Siegfried Mittler und Sohn, 1914.
  • Robertson, Bruce (ed.) von Richthofen and the Flying Circus. Letchworth, UK: Harleyford, 1958.
  • Robertson, Linda R. The Dream of Civilized Warfare: World War I Flying Aces and the American Imagination. Minneapolis, Minnesota: University of Minnesota Press, 2005. ISBN 978-0-8166-4271-7.
  • Shores, Christopher; Norman Franks; Russell Guest. Above the Trenches: A Complete Record of the Fighter Aces and Units of the British Empire Air Forces 1915–1920. Grub Street, 1990. ISBN 0-948817-19-4, ISBN 978-0-948817-19-9.
  • Von Richthofen, Manfred. The Red Baron. Norderstedt, Germany: BOD, 2008 (reprint). ISBN 978-3-8370-9217-2.
  • Von Richthofen, Manfred. Red Fighter Pilot: The Autobiography of the Red Baron. St Petersburg, Florida: Red and Black Publishers, 2007 (reprint). ISBN 978-0-9791813-3-7.
  • Von Richthofen, Manfred. The Red Baron. Translated by Peter Kilduff. Garden City, New York: Doubleday, 1969.
  • Wright, Nicolas. The Red Baron. London: Sidgwick & Jackson, 1976. ISBN 0-283-98298-5.

Concerning death

  • Allmers, Dr. Henning. "Manfred Freiherr von Richthofen's Medical Record: Was the "Red Baron" fit to fly?" Lancet 1999, 354: pp. 502–504.
  • Day, Mark. The Australian News Corporation, 30 April 2007. Retrieved: 30 April 2007.
  • Franks, Norman and Alan Bennett. The Red Baron's Last Flight: A Mystery Investigated. London: Grub Street, 2007, First edition 1997. ISBN 1-904943-33-0
  • Miller, Geoffrey. "The Death of Manfred von Richthofen: Who fired the fatal shot?" Sabretache: Journal and Proceedings of the Military History Society of Australia, Vol. XXXIX, No. 2.
  • Titler, Dale. The Day the Red Baron Died. New York: Ballantine Books, 1970. ISBN 0-345-24923-2.

External links

  • Works by Freiherr von Manfred Richthofen at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Manfred von Richthofen at Internet Archive
  • Works by or about Red Baron at Internet Archive
  • Works by Manfred von Richthofen at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Complete text of The Red Fighter Pilot by Manfred von Richthofen 8 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine at The War Times Journal
  • Combat record
  • Historic footage of Manfred von Richthofen posing and conversing with fellow pilots, circa 1917.
  • Silent historical film of the 1918 funeral of Captain Baron von Richthofen provided by Australian Screen Online
  • Footage of the reburial of The Red Baron in 1925
  • Newspaper clippings about Manfred von Richthofen in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
Military offices
Preceded by
Rudolf Lang
Commanding Officer of Jasta 11 (German Empire)
1917
Succeeded by
New creation Commanding Officer of Jagdgeschwader I (German Empire)
1917–1918
Succeeded by

manfred, richthofen, baron, richthofen, redirect, here, other, uses, baron, disambiguation, richthofen, disambiguation, manfred, albrecht, freiherr, richthofen, german, ˈmanfreːt, fɔn, ˈʁɪçthoːfn, 1892, april, 1918, known, english, baron, richthofen, baron, fi. Red Baron and Richthofen redirect here For other uses see Red Baron disambiguation and Richthofen disambiguation Manfred Albrecht Freiherr von Richthofen German ˈmanfreːt fɔn ˈʁɪcthoːfn 2 May 1892 21 April 1918 known in English as Baron von Richthofen or the Red Baron was a fighter pilot with the German Air Force during World War I He is considered the ace of aces of the war being officially credited with 80 air combat victories Manfred von RichthofenRichthofen wears the Pour le Merite the Blue Max Prussia s highest military order in this official portrait c 1917 Birth nameManfred Albrecht von RichthofenNickname s The Red Baron Born 1892 05 02 2 May 1892Breslau Prussia German Empire present day Wroclaw Poland Died21 April 1918 1918 04 21 aged 25 Near Morlancourt FrancePlace of burialSouth Cemetery Wiesbaden Germany 50 3 36 94 N 8 15 56 92 E 50 0602611 N 8 2658111 E 50 0602611 8 2658111 Coordinates 50 3 36 94 N 8 15 56 92 E 50 0602611 N 8 2658111 E 50 0602611 8 2658111Allegiance German EmpireService wbr branchPrussian Army 1911 15 Luftstreitkrafte 1915 18 Years of service1911 1918RankCaptainCommands heldJasta 11 Jagdgeschwader IBattlesFirst World War Battle of the Lys AwardsPour le Merite Order of the Red Eagle House Order of Hohenzollern Iron CrossSignatureOriginally a cavalryman Richthofen transferred to the Air Service in 1915 becoming one of the first members of fighter squadron Jagdstaffel 2 in 1916 He quickly distinguished himself as a fighter pilot and during 1917 became the leader of Jasta 11 Later he led the larger fighter wing Jagdgeschwader I better known as The Flying Circus or Richthofen s Circus because of the bright colours of its aircraft and perhaps also because of the way the unit was transferred from one area of Allied air activity to another moving like a travelling circus and frequently setting up in tents on improvised airfields By 1918 Richthofen was regarded as a national hero in Germany and respected by his enemies Richthofen was shot down and killed near Vaux sur Somme on 21 April 1918 There has been considerable discussion and debate regarding aspects of his career especially the circumstances of his death He remains one of the most widely known fighter pilots of all time and has been the subject of many books films and other media Contents 1 Name and nicknames 2 Early life 3 Early war service 4 Piloting career 5 Flying Circus 5 1 Wounded in combat 6 Author and hero 7 Death 7 1 Debate over who fired the shot that killed Richthofen 7 2 Theories about last combat 7 3 Burial 8 Number of victories 9 Orders and decorations tributes and relics 9 1 Orders and decorations 9 1 1 German Empire German Federal States 9 1 2 Austro Hungarian Empire 9 1 3 Ottoman Empire 9 1 4 Kingdom of Bulgaria 9 2 Tributes 9 3 Relics 10 Published works 11 See also 12 References 12 1 Notes 12 2 Citations 12 3 Bibliography 13 External linksName and nicknames EditRichthofen was a Freiherr literally Free Lord a title of nobility often translated as baron 1 2 This is not a given name nor strictly a hereditary title since all male members of the family were entitled to it even during the lifetime of their father a Richthofen painted his aircraft red and this combined with his title led to him being called the Red Baron der Rote Baron help info both inside and outside Germany 1 During his lifetime he was more frequently described in German as Der Rote Kampfflieger variously translated as The Red Battle Flyer or The Red Fighter Pilot This name was used as the title of Richthofen s 1917 autobiography 3 Early life Edit Richthofen family coat of arms Richthofen was born in Kleinburg near Breslau Lower Silesia now part of the city of Wroclaw Poland on 2 May 1892 into a prominent Prussian aristocratic family His father was Major Albrecht Philipp Karl Julius Freiherr von Richthofen and his mother was Kunigunde von Schickfuss und Neudorff 4 He had an elder sister Ilse and two younger brothers When he was four years old Manfred moved with his family to nearby Schweidnitz now Swidnica Poland He enjoyed riding horses and hunting as well as gymnastics at school He excelled at parallel bars and won a number of awards at school 5 He and his brothers Lothar and Bolko 6 b hunted wild boar elk birds and deer 7 After being educated at home he attended a school at Schweidnitz for a year before beginning cadet training at the Wahlstatt now Legnickie Pole Poland military school when he was 11 8 After completing cadet training at the Gross Lichterfelde Preussische Hauptkadettenanstalt in 1911 he joined an Uhlan cavalry unit the Ulanen Regiment Kaiser Alexander der III von Russland 1 Westpreussisches Nr 1 1st Emperor Alexander III of Russia Uhlan Regiment 1st West Prussian and was assigned to the regiment s 3 Eskadron No 3 Squadron 9 Early war service EditWhen World War I began Richthofen served as a cavalry reconnaissance officer on both the Eastern and Western Fronts seeing action in Russia France and Belgium with the advent of trench warfare which made traditional cavalry operations outdated and inefficient Richthofen s regiment was dismounted serving as dispatch runners and field telephone operators 10 Disappointed and bored at not being able to directly participate in combat the last straw for Richthofen was an order to transfer to the army s supply branch His interest in the Air Service had been aroused by his examination of a German military aircraft behind the lines 11 and he applied for a transfer to Die Fliegertruppen des deutschen Kaiserreiches Imperial German Army Air Service later to be known as the Luftstreitkrafte He was widely reported to have written in his application for transfer I have not gone to war in order to collect cheese and eggs but for another purpose 12 c His request was granted 11 and Richthofen joined the flying service at the end of May 1915 13 From June to August 1915 Richthofen served as an observer on reconnaissance missions over the Eastern Front with Feldflieger Abteilung 69 No 69 Flying Squadron 11 In August 1915 he was transferred to a flying unit in Ostend a coastal city in Belgium 14 There he flew with a friend and fellow pilot Georg Zeumer who would later teach him to fly solo 15 On being transferred to the Champagne front he is believed to have shot down an attacking French Farman aircraft with his observer s machine gun in a tense battle over French lines 16 he was not credited with the kill since it fell behind Allied lines and therefore could not be confirmed Piloting career Edit I had been told the name of the place to which we were to fly and I was to direct the pilot At first we flew straight ahead then the pilot turned to the right then left I had lost all sense of direction over our own aerodrome I didn t care a bit where I was and when the pilot thought it was time to go down I was disappointed Already I was counting down the hours to the time we could start again John Simpson quoting Richthofen s own description of his first flying experience 17 Manfred von Richthofen had a chance meeting with German ace fighter pilot Oswald Boelcke 18 which led him to enter training as a pilot in October 1915 18 In February 1916 Manfred rescued his brother Lothar from the boredom of training new troops in Luben and encouraged him to transfer to the Fliegertruppe 19 The next month Manfred joined Kampfgeschwader 2 No 2 Bomber Squadron flying a two seater Albatros C III Initially he appeared to be a below average pilot He struggled to control his aircraft and he crashed during his first flight at the controls 18 Despite this poor start he rapidly became attuned to his aircraft He was over Verdun on 26 April 1916 and fired on a French Nieuport shooting it down over Fort Douaumont 18 although he received no official credit A week later he decided to ignore more experienced pilots advice against flying through a thunderstorm He later noted that he had been lucky to get through the weather and vowed never again to fly in such conditions unless ordered to do so 20 Richthofen met Oswald Boelcke again in August 1916 after another spell flying two seaters on the Eastern Front Boelcke was visiting the east in search of candidates for his newly formed Jasta 2 and he selected Richthofen to join this unit one of the first German fighter squadrons 21 Boelcke was killed during a midair collision with a friendly aircraft on 28 October 1916 and Richthofen witnessed the event 21 Richthofen scored his first confirmed victory when he engaged Second Lieutenant Lionel Morris and his observer Tom Rees in the skies over Cambrai France on 17 September 1916 22 His autobiography states I honoured the fallen enemy by placing a stone on his beautiful grave 23 He contacted a jeweller in Berlin and ordered a silver cup engraved with the date and the type of enemy aircraft d He continued to celebrate each of his victories in the same manner until he had 60 cups by which time the dwindling supply of silver in blockaded Germany meant that silver cups could no longer be supplied Richthofen discontinued his orders at this stage rather than accept cups made from base metal e His brother Lothar 40 victories used risky aggressive tactics but Manfred observed a set of maxims known as the Dicta Boelcke to assure success for both the squadron and its pilots 24 He was not a spectacular or aerobatic pilot like his brother or Werner Voss however he was a noted tactician and squadron leader and a fine marksman Typically he would dive from above to attack with the advantage of the sun behind him with other pilots of his squadron covering his rear and flanks Major Lanoe Hawker VC On 23 November 1916 Richthofen shot down his most famous adversary British ace Major Lanoe Hawker VC described by Richthofen as the British Boelcke 25 The victory came while Richthofen was flying an Albatros D II and Hawker was flying the older DH 2 After a long dogfight Hawker was shot in the back of the head as he attempted to escape back to his own lines 26 After this combat Richthofen was convinced that he needed a fighter aircraft with more agility even with a loss of speed He switched to the Albatros D III in January 1917 scoring two victories before suffering an in flight crack in the spar of the aircraft s lower wing on 24 January and he reverted to the Albatros D II or Halberstadt D II for the next five weeks Richthofen was flying his Halberstadt on 6 March in combat with F E 8s of 40 Squadron RFC when his aircraft was shot through the fuel tank by Edwin Benbow who was credited with a victory from this fight Richthofen was able to make a forced landing near Henin Lietard without his aircraft catching fire 27 28 He then scored a victory in the Albatros D II on 9 March but his Albatros D III was grounded for the rest of the month so he switched again to a Halberstadt D II 29 He returned to his Albatros D III on 2 April 1917 and scored 22 victories in it before switching to the Albatros D V in late June 25 Richthofen s all red Fokker Dr I Richthofen flew the celebrated Fokker Dr I triplane from late July 1917 the distinctive three winged aircraft with which he is most commonly associated although he did not use the type exclusively until after it was reissued with strengthened wings in November 30 Only 19 of his 80 kills were made in this type of aircraft despite the popular link between Richthofen and the Fokker Dr I It was his Albatros D III Serial No 789 16 that was first painted bright red in late January 1917 and in which he first earned his name and reputation 31 Richthofen championed the development of the Fokker D VII with suggestions to overcome the deficiencies of the current German fighter aircraft 32 He never had an opportunity to fly the new type in combat as he was killed before it entered service Flying Circus Edit Richthofen in the cockpit of his famous Rotes Flugzeug Red Aircraft with other members of Jasta 11 including his brother Lothar sitting front 23 April 1917 Richthofen received the Pour le Merite in January 1917 after his 16th confirmed kill the highest military honour in Germany at the time and informally known as The Blue Max 33 That same month he assumed command of Jasta 11 which ultimately included some of the elite German pilots many of whom he trained himself and several of whom later became leaders of their own squadrons Ernst Udet belonged to Richthofen s group and later became Generaloberst Udet When Lothar joined the German high command appreciated the propaganda value of two Richthofens fighting together to defeat the enemy in the air 34 Richthofen took the flamboyant step of having his Albatros painted red when he became a squadron commander His autobiography states For whatever reasons one fine day I came upon the idea of having my crate painted glaring red The result was that absolutely everyone could not help but notice my red bird In fact my opponents also seemed to be not entirely unaware of it 35 Thereafter he usually flew in red painted aircraft although not all of them were entirely red nor was the red necessarily the brilliant scarlet beloved of model and replica builders Other members of Jasta 11 soon took to painting parts of their aircraft red Their official reason seems to have been to make their leader less conspicuous to avoid having him singled out in a fight In practice red colouration became a unit identification Other units soon adopted their own squadron colours and decoration of fighters became general throughout the Luftstreitkrafte The German high command permitted this practice in spite of obvious drawbacks from the point of view of intelligence and German propaganda made much of it by referring to Richthofen as Der Rote Kampfflieger the Red Fighter Pilot Richthofen centre with Hermann Thomsen German Air Service Chief of Staff left and Ernst von Hoeppner Commanding General of the Air Service right at Imperial Headquarters in Bad Kreuznach During a visit to her home the Baron s mother asked him why he risked his life every day and he said For the man in the trenches I want to ease his hard lot in life by keeping the enemy flyers away from him 36 Richthofen led his new unit to unparallelled success peaking during Bloody April 1917 In that month alone he shot down 22 British aircraft including four in a single day 37 raising his official tally to 52 By June he had become the commander of the first of the new larger fighter wing formations these were highly mobile combined tactical units that could move at short notice to different parts of the front as required Richthofen s new command Jagdgeschwader 1 was composed of fighter squadrons No 4 6 10 and 11 J G 1 became widely known as The Flying Circus due to the unit s brightly coloured aircraft and its mobility including the use of tents trains and caravans where appropriate Richthofen was a brilliant tactician building on Boelcke s tactics Unlike Boelcke however he led by example and force of will rather than by inspiration He was often described as distant unemotional and rather humorless though some colleagues contended otherwise 38 He was cordial to officers and enlisted men alike indeed he urged his pilots to remain on good terms with the mechanics who maintained their aircraft 39 He taught his pilots the basic rule which he wanted them to fight by Aim for the man and don t miss him If you are fighting a two seater get the observer first until you have silenced the gun don t bother about the pilot 40 Although Richthofen was now performing the duties of a lieutenant colonel a wing commander in modern Royal Air Force terms he was never promoted past the relatively junior rank of Rittmeister equivalent to captain in the British army 41 The system in the British army was for an officer to hold the rank appropriate to his level of command if only on a temporary basis even if he had not been formally promoted In the German army it was not unusual for a wartime officer to hold a lower rank than his duties implied German officers were promoted according to a schedule and not by battlefield promotion It was also the custom for a son not to hold a higher rank than his father and Richthofen s father was a reserve major Wounded in combat Edit Richthofen s Albatros D V after forced landing near Wervik This machine is not an all red one Richthofen sustained a serious head wound on 6 July 1917 during combat near Wervik Belgium against a formation of F E 2d two seat fighters of No 20 Squadron RFC causing instant disorientation and temporary partial blindness 37 He regained his vision in time to ease the aircraft out of a spin and execute a forced landing in a field in friendly territory The injury required multiple operations to remove bone splinters from the impact area 42 f The Red Baron returned to active service against doctor s orders on 25 July 45 but took convalescent leave from 5 September to 23 October 46 His wound is thought to have caused lasting damage he later often suffered from post flight nausea and headaches as well as a change in temperament There is a theory see below linking this injury with his eventual death Author and hero Edit Portrait by Nicola Perscheid During his convalescent leave Richthofen completed an autobiographic sketch Der rote Kampfflieger The Red Battle Flyer 1917 Written on the instructions of the Press and Intelligence propaganda section of the Luftstreitkrafte Air Force it shows evidence of having been heavily censored and edited 47 There are however passages that are most unlikely to have been inserted by an official editor Richthofen wrote My father discriminates between a sportsman and a butcher The latter shoots for fun When I have shot down an Englishman my hunting passion is satisfied for a quarter of an hour Therefore I do not succeed in shooting down two Englishmen in succession If one of them comes down I have the feeling of complete satisfaction Only much later have I overcome my instinct and have become a butcher 48 In another passage Richthofen wrote I am in wretched spirits after every aerial combat I believe that the war is not as the people at home imagine it with a hurrah and a roar it is very serious very grim An English translation by J Ellis Barker was published in 1918 as The Red Battle Flyer 23 Although Richthofen died before a revised version could be prepared he is on record as repudiating the book stating that it was too insolent and that he was no longer that kind of person 49 By 1918 Richthofen had become such a legend that it was feared that his death would be a blow to the morale of the German people 50 He refused to accept a ground job after his wound stating that every poor fellow in the trenches must do his duty and that he would therefore continue to fly in combat 51 Certainly he had become part of a cult of officially encouraged hero worship German propaganda circulated various false rumours including that the British had raised squadrons specially to hunt Richthofen and had offered large rewards and an automatic Victoria Cross to any Allied pilot who shot him down 52 Passages from his correspondence indicate he may have at least half believed some of these stories himself 53 Death Edit 209 Squadron Badge the red eagle falling symbolizes the fall of the Red Baron Richthofen received a fatal wound just after 11 00 am on 21 April 1918 while flying over Morlancourt Ridge near the Somme River 49 56 0 60 N 2 32 43 71 E 49 9335000 N 2 5454750 E 49 9335000 2 5454750 At the time he had been pursuing at very low altitude a Sopwith Camel piloted by Canadian novice Wilfrid Reid Wop May of No 209 Squadron Royal Air Force 54 May had just fired on the Red Baron s cousin Lieutenant Wolfram von Richthofen On seeing his cousin being attacked Richtofen flew to his rescue and fired on May causing him to pull away 55 Richthofen pursued May across the Somme The Baron was spotted and briefly attacked by a Camel piloted by May s school friend and flight commander Canadian Captain Arthur Roy Brown Brown had to dive steeply at very high speed to intervene and then had to climb steeply to avoid hitting the ground 54 Richthofen turned to avoid this attack and then resumed his pursuit of May 54 It was almost certainly during this final stage in his pursuit of May that a single 303 bullet g hit Richthofen through the chest severely damaging his heart and lungs it would have killed Richthofen in less than a minute 56 57 His aircraft stalled and went into a steep dive hitting the ground at 49 55 56 N 2 32 16 E 49 9321076 N 2 5376701 E 49 9321076 2 5376701 in a field on a hill near the Bray Corbie road just north of the village of Vaux sur Somme in a sector defended by the Australian Imperial Force AIF 54 The aircraft bounced heavily upon hitting the ground the undercarriage collapsed and the fuel tank was smashed before the aircraft skidded to a stop 58 Several witnesses including Gunner George Ridgway reached the crashed plane and found Richthofen already dead and his face slammed into the butts of his machine guns breaking his nose fracturing his jaw and creating contusions on his face 57 h source source source source source source Australian soldiers and airmen examine the remnants of Richthofen s triplane Australian airmen with Richthofen s triplane 425 17 after it was looted by souvenir hunters No 3 Squadron Australian Flying Corps was the nearest Allied air unit and assumed responsibility for the Baron s remains His Fokker Dr I 425 17 was soon taken apart by souvenir hunters In 2009 Richthofen s death certificate was found in the archives in Ostrow Wielkopolski Poland He had briefly been stationed in Ostrow before going to war as it was part of Germany until the end of World War I The document is a one page handwritten form in a 1918 registry book of deaths It misspells Richthofen s name as Richthoven and simply states that he had died 21 April 1918 from wounds sustained in combat 64 Debate over who fired the shot that killed Richthofen Edit Controversy and contradictory hypotheses continue to surround who actually fired the shot that killed Richthofen Arthur Roy Brown The RAF credited Brown with shooting down the Red Baron but it is now generally agreed by historians doctors and ballistics experts that Richthofen was actually killed by an anti aircraft AA machine gunner firing from the ground 57 59 65 An autopsy showed the bullet that killed Richthofen penetrated from the right underarm and exited next to the left nipple Brown s attack was probably from behind and above Richthofen s left Even more conclusively Richthofen could not have continued his pursuit of May for as long as he did up to two minutes had his wound come from Brown 57 Brown himself never spoke much about what happened that day i claiming There is no point in me commenting as the evidence is already out there Officers and NCOs of the 24th Machine Gun Company in March 1918 Sergeant Cedric Popkin is second from the right in the middle row Many sources have suggested that Sergeant Cedric Popkin was the person most likely to have killed Richthofen including a 1998 article by Geoffrey Miller a physician and historian of military medicine and a 2002 edition of the British Channel 4 Secret History series 57 59 Popkin was an AA machine gunner with the Australian 24th Machine Gun Company and he was using a Vickers gun He fired at Richthofen s aircraft on two occasions first as the Baron was heading straight at his position and then at long range from the plane s right Given the nature of Richthofen s wounds Popkin was in a position to fire the fatal shot when the pilot passed him for a second time 57 59 Some confusion has been caused by a letter that Popkin wrote in 1935 to an Australian official historian It stated Popkin s belief that he had fired the fatal shot as Richthofen flew straight at his position In this respect Popkin was incorrect the bullet which caused the Baron s death came from the side see above A 2002 Discovery Channel documentary suggests that Gunner W J Snowy Evans a Lewis machine gunner with the 53rd Battery 14th Field Artillery Brigade Royal Australian Artillery is likely to have killed von Richthofen 60 Miller and the Secret History documentary dismiss this theory because of the angle from which Evans fired at Richthofen 57 59 Other sources have suggested that Gunner Robert Buie also of the 53rd Battery may have fired the fatal shot There is little support for this theory 57 59 In 2007 a municipality in Sydney recognised Buie as the man who shot down Richthofen placing a plaque near his former home 66 Buie died in 1964 and has never been officially recognised in any other way citation needed Theories about last combat Edit Richthofen was a highly experienced and skilled fighter pilot fully aware of the risk from ground fire Further he concurred with the rules of air fighting created by his late mentor Boelcke who specifically advised pilots not to take unnecessary risks In this context Richthofen s judgement during his last combat was clearly unsound in several respects 67 Several theories have been proposed to account for his behaviour In 1999 a German medical researcher Henning Allmers published an article in the British medical journal The Lancet suggesting it was likely that brain damage from the head wound Richthofen suffered in July 1917 played a part in his death This was supported by a 2004 paper by researchers at the University of Texas Richthofen s behaviour after his injury was noted as consistent with brain injured patients and such an injury could account for his perceived lack of judgement on his final flight flying too low over enemy territory and suffering target fixation 68 Richthofen may have been suffering from cumulative combat stress which made him fail to observe some of his usual precautions One of the leading British air aces Major Edward Mick Mannock was killed by ground fire on 26 July 1918 while crossing the lines at low level an action he had always cautioned his younger pilots against One of the most popular of the French air aces Georges Guynemer went missing on 11 September 1917 probably while attacking a two seater without realizing several Fokkers were escorting it 69 70 There is a suggestion that on the day of Richthofen s death the prevailing wind was about 40 km h 25 mph easterly rather than the usual 40 km h 25 mph westerly This meant that Richthofen heading generally westward at an airspeed of about 160 km h 100 mph was travelling over the ground at up to 200 km h 125 mph rather than the more typical ground speed of 120 km h 75 mph This was considerably faster than normal and he could easily have strayed over enemy lines without realizing it 67 At the time of Richthofen s death the front was in a highly fluid state following the initial success of the German offensive of March April 1918 This was part of Germany s last opportunity to win the war In the face of Allied air superiority the German air service was having difficulty acquiring vital reconnaissance information and could do little to prevent Allied squadrons from completing effective reconnaissance and close support of their armies Burial Edit No 3 Squadron AFC officers were pallbearers and other ranks from the squadron acted as a guard of honour during the Red Baron s funeral on 22 April 1918 In common with most Allied air officers No 3 Squadron AFC s commanding officer Major David Blake who was responsible for Richthofen s body regarded the Red Baron with great respect and he organised a full military funeral 71 The body was buried in the cemetery at the village of Bertangles near Amiens on 22 April 1918 Six of No 3 Squadron s officers served as pallbearers and a guard of honour from the squadron s other ranks fired a salute j Allied squadrons stationed nearby presented memorial wreaths one of which was inscribed with the words To Our Gallant and Worthy Foe 72 source source source source source source The funeral of Manfred von Richthofen In the early 1920s the French authorities created a military cemetery at Fricourt in which a large number of German war dead including Richthofen were reinterred k In 1925 von Richthofen s youngest brother Bolko recovered the body from Fricourt and took it to Germany The family s intention was for it to be buried in the Schweidnitz cemetery next to the graves of his father and his brother Lothar von Richthofen who had been killed in a post war air crash in 1922 73 The German Government requested that the body should instead be interred at the Invalidenfriedhof Cemetery in Berlin where many German military heroes and past leaders were buried and the family agreed Richthofen s body received a state funeral Later the Third Reich held a further grandiose memorial ceremony at the site of the grave erecting a massive new tombstone engraved with the single word Richthofen 74 During the Cold War the Invalidenfriedhof was on the boundary of the Soviet zone in Berlin and the tombstone became damaged by bullets fired at attempted escapees from East Germany In 1975 the body was moved to a Richthofen family grave plot at the Sudfriedhof in Wiesbaden 75 Richthofen s former grave at Fricourt later Sebastian Paustian section 4 row 7 grave 1177 Richthofen family grave at the Sudfriedhof in WiesbadenNumber of victories EditMain article List of victories of Manfred von Richthofen For decades after World War I some authors questioned whether Richthofen had achieved 80 victories insisting that his record was exaggerated for propaganda purposes Some claimed that he took credit for aircraft downed by his squadron or wing In fact Richthofen s victories are unusually well documented A full list of the aircraft the Red Baron was credited with shooting down was published as early as 1958 76 with documented RFC RAF squadron details aircraft serial numbers and the identities of Allied airmen killed or captured 73 of the 80 listed match recorded British losses A study conducted by British historian Norman Franks with two colleagues published in Under the Guns of the Red Baron in 1998 reached the same conclusion about the high degree of accuracy of Richthofen s claimed victories There were also unconfirmed victories that would put his actual total as high as 100 or more 77 For comparison the highest scoring Allied ace the Frenchman Rene Fonck achieved 75 confirmed victories 78 and a further 52 unconfirmed behind enemy lines 77 The highest scoring British Empire fighter pilots were Canadian Billy Bishop who was officially credited with 72 victories 79 British Mick Mannock with 61 confirmed victories 80 Canadian Raymond Collishaw with 60 81 and British James McCudden with 57 confirmed victories Richthofen s early victories and the establishment of his reputation coincided with a period of German air superiority but he achieved many of his successes later on against a numerically superior enemy who flew fighter aircraft that were on the whole better than his own 76 Orders and decorations tributes and relics EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Replica of Richthofen s Fokker Dr I triplane at the Berlin Air Show in 2006 Memorial in Polish at Richthofen s former home in Swidnica formerly Schweidnitz Engine of Richthofen s Fokker DR I Orders and decorations Edit In order of date awarded German Empire German Federal States Edit Prussian Military Pilot Badge Honour Goblet for the Winner in Air Combat Iron Cross 1st Class 10 April 1916 2nd Class 23 September 1914 Duke Carl Eduard Medal with Sword Clasp 9 November 1916 Knight s Cross of the Royal House Order of Hohenzollern with Swords 11 November 1916 Pour le Merite 12 January 1917 Knight s Cross of the Military Order of St Henry 16 April 1917 Order of the Red Eagle 3rd Class with Crown and Swords 2 April 1918 Knight s Cross of the Saxe Ernestine House Order 1st Class with Crown and Swords Military Merit Order Bavaria 4th Class with Swords Knight s Cross of the Wurttemberg Military Merit Order Hessian Bravery Medal Cross for Faithful Service Lippe War Merit Cross 2nd Class Cross of War of Honour for a Heroic Deed Brunswick War Merit Cross 2nd Class Wound Badge 3rd Class 1918 Hanseatic Crosses of the Three Hanseatic Cities of Bremen Hamburg and LubeckAustro Hungarian Empire Edit Order of the Iron Crown 3rd Class Austro Hungarian Military Merit Cross 3rd Class with War Decorations Field Pilot BadgeOttoman Empire Edit Iron Crescent Silver Imtiyaz Medal Silver Liakat MedalKingdom of Bulgaria Edit Military Order for Bravery 4th Class 12 June 1917 Tributes Edit At various times several different German military aviation Geschwader literally squadrons equivalent to Commonwealth air force groups French escadrons or USAF wings have been named after the Baron Jagdgeschwader 132 Richthofen 1 April 1936 1 November 1938 Wehrmacht aviation unit Jagdgeschwader 131 Richthofen 1 November 1938 1 May 1939 Luftwaffe Jagdgeschwader 2 Richthofen 1 May 1939 7 May 1945 Luftwaffe Jagdgeschwader 71 Richthofen from 6 June 1959 the first jet fighter unit established by the post World War II German Bundeswehr federal defence force its founding commander was the most successful air ace in history Erich Hartmann In 1941 a newly launched Kriegsmarine German navy seaplane tender received the name Richthofen de In 1968 Richthofen was inducted into the International Air amp Space Hall of Fame 82 83 Red Flag the US Air Force s large scale training exercise held multiple times a year was an outgrowth of Project Red Baron which happened in three phases c 1966 to c 1974 during the period of the Vietnam War Relics Edit Captain Roy Brown donated the seat of the Fokker triplane in which the German flying ace made his final flight to the Royal Canadian Military Institute RCMI in 1920 84 Apart from the triplane s seat the RCMI in Toronto also holds a side panel signed by the pilots of Brown s squadron The engine of Richthofen s Dr I was donated to the Imperial War Museum in London where it is still on display The museum also holds the Baron s machine guns The control column joystick of Richthofen s aircraft can be seen at the Australian War Memorial in Canberra The Australian National Aviation Museum has what is suspected to be the fuel tank of Richthofen s Dr I however there is no conclusive proof Published works EditMain article The Red Fighter Pilot Richthofen Captain Manfred Freiherr von July 1918 The Red Battle Flyer Translated by Barker T Ellis preface and notes by C G Grey editor of The Aeroplane New York Robert M McBride amp Co via Project Gutenberg See also EditThe Red Baron in popular culture List of World War I flying acesReferences EditNotes Edit For example his brother Lothar also used it Not to be confused with Bolko von Richthofen the archaeologist a distant cousin Richthofen quotes this famous piece of insubordination in his autobiography but hints that he did not actually write it claiming that evil tongues report that he did Similar cups had been officially awarded to some earlier pilots on their first victories although the practice had been discontinued by this time Burrows has suggested that he was simply bored with the procedure and that this was an excuse to discontinue it The air victory was credited to Captain Donald Cunnell of No 20 43 who was killed by German anti aircraft fire a few days later 12 July 1917 near Wervik Cunnell s observer Lt A G Bill successfully flew the aircraft back to base 44 The actual bullet lodged in Richthofen s clothing It was apparently recovered but it has not been preserved for examination by modern historians It was apparently a normal ball round as fired by all British rifle calibre arms and thus would not be any help in resolving the controversy of who fired it Gunner Ernest W Twycross 59 and Sergeant Ted Smout of the Australian Medical Corps later claimed that Richthofen was still alive and tried to say something with the last or only word being kaputt before he died 60 The definition of kaputt is often in contention 61 62 63 This is disputed by accounts which state that Richthofen was already dead and the nature of his wound as well as his broken nose and fractured jaw Sensational accounts have been systematically discredited by several writers even though they describe the attack in great detail and are allegedly given by Brown The official caption of the photograph on the right reads The funeral of Rittmeister Baron M Von Richthofen Firing party presenting arms as the coffin passes into the cemetery borne on the shoulders of six pilots of No 3 Squadron A F C Bertangles France 22nd April 1918 The Padre is Captain Reverend George H Marshall M A D S O Among other reasons to protect the graves from vandalism by disgruntled villagers understandably resentful of former enemies being buried among their own relatives Citations Edit a b Kilduff p 6 Freiherr Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 16 July 2010 Richthofen Manfred von Der Rote Baron The Red Baron Archived 4 December 2012 at the Wayback Machine Norderstedt Germany BOD 2008 reprint ISBN 978 3 8370 9217 2 Stars and Strips Forever Von Richthofen s mother actress Fern Andra meet 14 November 1954 Kuningunde von Richthofen and Fern Andra Retrieved 17 November 2016 Wright 1976 p 31 Burrows 1970 p 36 Burrows 1970 pp 37 38 Wright 1976 p 30 Preussen 1914 p 400 Von Richthofen 2007 pp 49 51 a b c McAllister 1982 p 52 Von Richthofen 1969 p 24 Von Richthofen 2007 p 51 Von Richthofen 1969 p 31 Von Richthofen 1969 p 37 McAllister 1982 pp 53 54 McAllister 1982 pp 52 53 a b c d McAllister 1982 p 54 Kilduff 1994 p 41 McAllister 1982 pp 54 55 a b McAllister 1982 p 56 Swopes Bryan 17 September 2013 This Day in Aviation September 17 1916 The Red Baron Archives Retrieved 4 June 2014 a b von Richthofen Manfred et al Der rote Kampfflieger Deutscher Verlag Ullstein 1933 English 2003 p 62 a b Burrows 1970 p 103 McAllister 1982 p 57 Guttman 2009 p 64 Kilduff p 79 Guttman 2009 pp 64 65 Grey and Thetford 1970 p 100 Guttman 2009 p 63 Baker 1991 The Blue Max American History Volume 38 No 1 April 2003 p 9 ISSN 1076 8866 Richthofen The Red Knight of the Air n d pp 164 165 Der rote Kampfflieger open cit n d p 120 Kilduff 1994 p 73 a b McAllister 1982 p 59 Bodenschatz 1998 Kilduff p 77 McAllister 1982 p 61 Germany s Red Baron dies UPI Retrieved 12 July 2020 McAllister 1982 p 60 Guttman 2009 pp 86 88 Guttman amp Dempsey 2009 pp 88 89 Burrows 1970 p 154 Burrows 1970 pp 160 163 Burrows 1970 pp 162 163 Richthofen 2008 p 177 Johnson Karl Contributing Editor for WTJ The Red Fighter Pilot by Manfred von Richthofen online edition The War Times Journal Retrieved 27 May 2007 Burrows 1970 p 152 Burrows 1970 p 163 Burrows 1970 p 131 Franks and Bennett 1997 p 126 a b c d McAllister 1982 p 63 Franks amp Bennett 1997 McAllister 1982 p 64 a b c d e f g h Miller Dr Geoffrey The Death of Manfred von Richthofen Who fired the fatal shot Sabretache Journal and Proceedings of the Military History Society of Australia vol XXXIX no 2 1998 Robertson 1958 p 118 a b c d e f Dogfight The Mystery of the Red Baron Channel 4 Secret History 22 December 2003 US broadcast as Who Killed the Red Baron Explore Competing Theories Pbs org Public Broadcasting Service Nova 7 October 2003 a b Unsolved History Death of the Red Baron 2002 Discovery Channel Synonym fur gestorben Synonyme Antonyme Gegenteile Fremdworter von gestorben google com 17 May 2009 Retrieved 13 June 2009 kaputt via The Free Dictionary Definition Kaputt Ego4u com German English dictionary 22 April 2009 Retrieved 13 June 2009 Polish historian finds death certificate of WWI German flying ace Red Baron Daily News New York Retrieved 8 December 2009 Richthofen World War I Document Archive wwi lib byu edu Day Mark Unsung No 1 with a bullet The Australian 7 April 2007 a b Franks and Bennett 1997 Allmers Dr Henning Manfred Freiherr von Richthofen s medical record Was the Red Baron fit to fly The Lancet 354 9177 7 August 1999 pp 502 504 Published online by anzacs net Retrieved 23 September 2007 Georges Guynemer Beloved French Ace 53 victories acepilots com Retrieved 2 July 2009 Guttman Jon Georges Guynemer France s World War I Ace Pilot historynet com Retrieved 2 July 2009 Burnley Roll of Honour Reverend Chaplain George Herbert Marshall DSO MC A Gallant and Worthy Foe The Death of the Red Baron www thursdayreview com Retrieved 14 December 2017 Biography Lothar Freiherr von Richthofen Frontflieger de Retrieved 13 June 2009 Burrows 1970 p 196 Franks and Bennett 1997 p 9 a b Robertson 1958 pp 150 155 a b Franks and Bailey 1992 Ordre de la IVe Armee n 1599 23 January 1919 Distinguished Flying Cross Citation London Gazette 3 August 1918 Franks et al 1993 pp 255 256 Shores et al 1990 pp 115 116 Sprekelmeyer Linda editor These We Honor The International Aerospace Hall of Fame Donning Co Publishers 2006 ISBN 978 1 57864 397 4 Manfred von Richthofen San Diego Air and Space Museum Retrieved 21 April 2021 Toronto Feature Royal Military Institute The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved 1 September 2019 Bibliography Edit Baker David Manfred von Richthofen The Man and the Aircraft He Flew McGregor Minnesota Voyageur Press 1991 ISBN 1 871547 06 7 Bodenschatz Karl Hunting With Richthofen Sixteen Months of Battle with J G Freiherr Von Richthofen No 1 London Grub Street 1998 ISBN 1 898697 97 3 Burrows William E Richthofen A True History of the Red Baron London Rupert Hart Davis 1970 ISBN 0 15 177172 3 English Dave The Air Up There More Great Quotations on Flight Chicago Illinois McGraw Hill Professional 2003 ISBN 0 07 141036 8 Franks Norman Bailey Frank W Guest Russell Above the Lines The Aces and Fighter Units of the German Air Service Naval Air Service and Flanders Marine Corps 1914 1918 Grub Street 1993 ISBN 0 948817 73 9 ISBN 978 0 948817 73 1 Franks Norman and Frank W Bailey Over the Front A Complete Record of Fighter Aces and Units of the United States and French Air Services 1914 1918 London Grub Street 1992 ISBN 978 0 948817 54 0 Franks Norman Hal Giblin and Nigel McCrery Under the Guns of the Red Baron Complete Record of Von Richthofen s Victories and Victims London Grub Street 2007 First edition 1995 ISBN 1 84067 145 9 Gibbons Floyd The Red Knight of Germany The Story of Baron von Richthofen German s Great War Bird New York Doubleday Page amp Company 1927 Grey Peter and Owen Thetford German Aircraft of the First World War London Putnam 2nd ed 1970 ISBN 0 933852 71 1 Guttman Jon Pusher Aces of World War 1 Aircraft of the Aces 88 Oxford UK Osprey Publishing Co 2009 ISBN 978 1 84603 417 6 Kilduff Peter The Red Baron Beyond the Legend London Cassell 1994 ISBN 0 304 35207 1 McAllister Hayden ed Flying Stories London Octopus Books 1982 ISBN 0706417348 O Connor Neal W The Aviation Awards of the Grand Duchies of Baden and Oldenburg Foundation of Aviation World War I Aviation Awards of Imperial Germany in World War I and the Men Who Earned Them Volume VI Stratford Connecticut Flying Machines Press 1999 ISBN 0 7643 1626 5 Preussen Kriegsministerium Geheime Kriegs Kanzlei Rangliste der Koniglich Preussischen Armee und des XIII Berlin Ernst Siegfried Mittler und Sohn 1914 Robertson Bruce ed von Richthofen and the Flying Circus Letchworth UK Harleyford 1958 Robertson Linda R The Dream of Civilized Warfare World War I Flying Aces and the American Imagination Minneapolis Minnesota University of Minnesota Press 2005 ISBN 978 0 8166 4271 7 Shores Christopher Norman Franks Russell Guest Above the Trenches A Complete Record of the Fighter Aces and Units of the British Empire Air Forces 1915 1920 Grub Street 1990 ISBN 0 948817 19 4 ISBN 978 0 948817 19 9 Von Richthofen Manfred The Red Baron Norderstedt Germany BOD 2008 reprint ISBN 978 3 8370 9217 2 Von Richthofen Manfred Red Fighter Pilot The Autobiography of the Red Baron St Petersburg Florida Red and Black Publishers 2007 reprint ISBN 978 0 9791813 3 7 Von Richthofen Manfred The Red Baron Translated by Peter Kilduff Garden City New York Doubleday 1969 Wright Nicolas The Red Baron London Sidgwick amp Jackson 1976 ISBN 0 283 98298 5 Concerning death Allmers Dr Henning Manfred Freiherr von Richthofen s Medical Record Was the Red Baron fit to fly Lancet 1999 354 pp 502 504 Day Mark Unsung No 1 with a bullet World War I ace Manfred von Richthofen seems to have met his match in an Australian gunner The Australian News Corporation 30 April 2007 Retrieved 30 April 2007 Franks Norman and Alan Bennett The Red Baron s Last Flight A Mystery Investigated London Grub Street 2007 First edition 1997 ISBN 1 904943 33 0 Miller Geoffrey The Death of Manfred von Richthofen Who fired the fatal shot Sabretache Journal and Proceedings of the Military History Society of Australia Vol XXXIX No 2 Titler Dale The Day the Red Baron Died New York Ballantine Books 1970 ISBN 0 345 24923 2 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Manfred von Richthofen Works by Freiherr von Manfred Richthofen at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Manfred von Richthofen at Internet Archive Works by or about Red Baron at Internet Archive Works by Manfred von Richthofen at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Complete text of The Red Fighter Pilot by Manfred von Richthofen Archived 8 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine at The War Times Journal Combat record Historic footage of Manfred von Richthofen posing and conversing with fellow pilots circa 1917 Silent historical film of the 1918 funeral of Captain Baron von Richthofen provided by Australian Screen Online Footage of the reburial of The Red Baron in 1925 Newspaper clippings about Manfred von Richthofen in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWMilitary officesPreceded byRudolf Lang Commanding Officer of Jasta 11 German Empire 1917 Succeeded byKarl AllmenroderNew creation Commanding Officer of Jagdgeschwader I German Empire 1917 1918 Succeeded byWilhelm ReinhardPortals Aviation Biography German Empire Military history of Germany World War I Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Manfred von Richthofen amp oldid 1137038136, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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