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Ordnungspolizei

The Ordnungspolizei (German: [ˈɔʁdnʊŋspoliˌtsaɪ]), abbreviated Orpo, meaning "Order Police", were the uniformed police force in Nazi Germany from 1936 to 1945.[2] The Orpo organisation was absorbed into the Nazi monopoly on power after regional police jurisdiction was removed in favour of the central Nazi government ("Reich-ification", Verreichlichung, of the police). The Orpo was controlled nominally by the Interior Ministry, but its executive functions rested with the leadership of the SS until the end of World War II.[2] Owing to their green uniforms, Orpo were also referred to as Grüne Polizei (green police). The force was first established as a centralised organisation uniting the municipal, city, and rural uniformed police that had been organised on a state-by-state basis.[2]

Order Police
Ordnungspolizei
Orpo flag
Common nameGrüne Polizei
AbbreviationOrpo
Agency overview
Formed26 June 1936; 87 years ago (26 June 1936)
Dissolved1945; 78 years ago (1945)
Employees401,300 (1944 est.)[1]
Legal personalityGovernmental: Government agency
Jurisdictional structure
Legal jurisdiction Nazi Germany
Occupied Europe
General nature
Operational structure
HeadquartersBerlin NW 7, Unter den Linden 72/74
52°30′26″N 13°22′57″E / 52.50722°N 13.38250°E / 52.50722; 13.38250
Elected officers responsible
Agency executives
Parent agencyInterior Ministry

The Ordnungspolizei encompassed virtually all of Nazi Germany's law-enforcement and emergency response organisations, including fire brigades, coast guard, and civil defence. In the prewar period, Heinrich Himmler, head of the SS, and Kurt Daluege, chief of the Order Police, cooperated in transforming the police force of the Weimar Republic into militarised formations ready to serve the regime's aims of conquest and racial annihilation. Police troops were first formed into battalion-sized formations for the invasion of Poland, where they were deployed for security and policing purposes, also taking part in executions and mass deportations.[3] During World War II, the force had the task of policing the civilian population of the occupied and colonised countries beginning in spring 1940.[4] Orpo's activities escalated to genocide with the invasion of the Soviet Union, Operation Barbarossa. Twenty-three Order Police battalions, formed into independent regiments or attached to Wehrmacht security divisions and Einsatzgruppen, perpetrated mass-murder in the Holocaust and were responsible for widespread crimes against humanity and genocide targeting the civilian population.

History

Heinrich Himmler, head of the SS, was named Chief of German Police in the Interior Ministry on 17 June 1936 after Hitler announced a decree which was to "unify the control of police duties in the Reich".[5] Traditionally, law enforcement in Germany had been a state and local matter. In this role, Himmler was nominally subordinate to Interior Minister Wilhelm Frick. However, the decree effectively subordinated the police to the SS. Himmler gained authority as all of Germany's uniformed law enforcement agencies were amalgamated into the new Ordnungspolizei, whose main office became populated by officers of the SS.[5]

The police were divided into the Ordnungspolizei (Orpo or order police) and the Sicherheitspolizei (SiPo or security police), which had been established in June 1936.[5] The Orpo assumed duties of regular uniformed law enforcement while the SiPo consisted of the secret state police (Geheime Staatspolizei or Gestapo) and criminal investigation police (Kriminalpolizei or Kripo). The Kriminalpolizei was a corps of professional detectives involved in fighting crime and the task of the Gestapo was combating espionage and political dissent. On 27 September 1939, the SS security service, the Sicherheitsdienst (SD) and the SiPo were folded into the Reich Security Main Office (Reichssicherheitshauptamt or RSHA). The RSHA symbolised the close connection between the SS (a party organisation) and the police (a state organisation).[6][7]

In broad terms, Himmler pursued the amalgamation of SS and police into a form of "State Protection Corps" (Staatsschutzkorps), and used the expanded reach the police powers gave him to persecute ideological opponents and "undesirables" of the Nazi regime such as Jews, freemasons, the churches, homosexuals, Jehovah's Witnesses, and other groups defined as "asocial". The Nazi conception of criminality was racial and biological, holding that criminal traits were hereditary, and had to be exterminated to purify German blood. As a result, even ordinary criminals were consigned to concentration camps to remove them from the German racial community (Volksgemeinschaft) and ultimately exterminate them.[8]

The Order Police played a central role in carrying out the Holocaust. By "both career professionals and reservists, in both battalion formations and precinct service" (Einzeldienst) through providing men for the tasks involved.[9]

Organization

The German Order Police had grown to 244,500 men by mid-1940.[4] The Orpo was under the overall control of Reichsführer-SS Himmler as Chief of the German Police in the Ministry of the Interior. It was initially commanded by SS-Oberstgruppenführer und Generaloberst der Polizei Kurt Daluege. In May 1943, Daluege had a massive heart attack and was removed from duty.[10] He was replaced by SS-Obergruppenführer und General der Waffen-SS und der Polizei Alfred Wünnenberg, who served until the end of the war. By 1941, the Orpo had been divided into the following offices covering every aspect of German law enforcement.

The central command office known as the Ordnungspolizei Hauptamt was located in Berlin. From 1943 it was considered a full SS-Headquarters command.[11] The Orpo main office consisted of Command Department (Kommandoamt), responsible for finance, personnel and medical; Administrative (Verwaltung) charged with pay, pensions and permits; Economic (Wirtschaftsverwaltungsamt); Technical Emergency Service (Technische Nothilfe); Fire Brigades Bureau (Feuerwehren); Colonial Police (Kolonialpolizei); and SS and Police Technical Training Academy (Technische SS-und Polizeiakademie).[12]

Branches of police

 
Ordnungspolizei in Minsk, Reichskommissariat Ostland, Weißruthenien, 1943
  • Administration police (Verwaltungspolizei) was the administrative branch of the Orpo and had overall command authority for all Orpo police stations. The Verwaltungspolizei also was the central office for record keeping and was the command authority for civilian law enforcement groups, which included the Gesundheitspolizei (health police), Gewerbepolizei (commercial or trade police), and the Baupolizei (building police). In the main towns, Verwaltungspolizei, Schutzpolizei and Kriminalpolizei would be organised into a police administration known as the Polizeipräsidium or Polizeidirektion, which had authority over these police forces in the urban district.
  • State protection police (Schutzpolizei), state uniformed police in cities and most large towns, which included police-station duties (Revierdienst) and barracked police units for riots and public safety (Kasernierte Polizei).
  • Municipal protection police (Gemeindepolizei),[11] municipal uniformed police in smaller and some large towns. Although fully integrated into the Ordnungspolizei-system, its police officers were municipal civil servants. The civilian law enforcement in towns with a municipal protection police was not done by the Verwaltungspolizei, but by municipal civil servants. Until 1943 they also had municipal criminal investigation departments, but that year, all such departments with more than 10 detectives, were integrated into the Kripo.
  • Gendarmerie (Rural police) were tasked with frontier law enforcement to include small communities, rural districts, and mountainous terrain. With the development of a network of motorways or Autobahnen, motorised gendarmerie companies were set up in 1937 to secure the traffic.
  • Traffic police (Verkehrspolizei) was the traffic-law enforcement agency and road safety administration of Germany. The organisation patrolled Germany's roads (other than motorways which were controlled by Motorized Gendarmerie) and responded to major accidents. The Verkehrspolizei was also the primary escort service for high Nazi leaders who travelled great distances by automobile.
  • Water protection police (Wasserschutzpolizei) was the equivalent of the coast guard and river police. Tasked with the safety and security of Germany's rivers, harbours, and inland waterways, the group also had authority over the SS-Hafensicherungstruppen ("harbour security troops") which were Allgemeine-SS units assigned as port security personnel.
  • Fire police (Feuerschutzpolizei)[11] consisted of all professional fire departments under a national command structure.

Hilfspolizei

  • The Orpo Hauptamt also had authority over the Freiwillige Feuerwehren, the local volunteer civilian fire brigades. At the height of the Second World War, in response to heavy bombing of Germany's cities, the combined Feuerschutzpolizei and Freiwillige Feuerwehren numbered nearly two million members.
  • Air raid protection police (Luftschutzpolizei) was the civil protection service in charge of air raid defence and rescue victims of bombings in connection with the Technische Nothilfe (Technical Emergency Service) and the Feuerschutzpolizei (professional fire departments). Created as the Security and Assistance Service (Sicherheits und Hilfsdienst) in 1935, it was renamed Luftschutzpolizei in April 1942. The air raid network was supported by the Reichsluftschutzbund (Reich Association for Air Raid Precautions) an organisation controlled from 1935 by the Air Ministry under Hermann Göring. The RLB set up an organisation of air raid wardens who were responsible for the safety of a building or a group of houses.
  • Technical Emergency Corps (Technische Nothilfe; TeNo) was a corps of engineers, technicians and specialists in construction work. The TeNo was created in 1919 to keep the public utilities and essential industries running during the wave of strikes. From 1937, the TeNo became a technical auxiliary corps of the police and was absorbed into Orpo Hauptamt. By 1943, the TeNo had over 100,000 members.
  • Volunteer Fire Department (Feuerwehren), volunteer fire departments, conscripted fire departments and industrial fire departments were auxiliary police subordinate to the Ordnungspolizei.
  • Radio protection (Funkschutz) was made up of SS and Orpo security personnel assigned to protect German broadcasting stations from attack and sabotage. The Funkschutz was also the primary investigating service which detected illegal reception of foreign radio broadcasts.
  • Urban and rural emergency police (Stadt- und Landwacht) created in 1942 as a part-time police reserve. Abolished in 1945 with the creation of the Volkssturm.
  • Auxiliary Police (Schutzmannschaft) was the collaborationist auxiliary police in occupied Eastern Europe.

Sonderpolizei

The Sonderpolizei were the special police authorities not subordinate to the Hauptamt Ordnungspolizei or the Reichssicherheitshauptamt:[13]

  • Reichsbahnfahndungsdienst, the "Railway criminal investigative service", subordinate to the Deutsche Reichsbahn.
  • Bahnschutzpolizei (Railway protection police), subordinate to the Deutsche Reichsbahn.
  • SS-Bahnschutz replaced the Bahnschutzpolizei within the Reich territory from 1944.
  • Postal protection (Postschutz) comprised roughly 45,000 members and was tasked with the security of Germany's Reichspost, which was responsible not only for the mail but other communications media such as the telephone and telegraph systems.
  • SS-Postschutz; created with the transfer of the Postschutz from the Reichministry of Post to the Allgemeine-SS in 1942.
  • Forest Protection Service, (Forstschutzkommando) under the Reichsforstamt.
  • Jagdpolizei (Hunting Police), under the Reichsforstamt. It was largely exercised through the Deutsche Jägerschaft.
  • Zollgrenzschutz (Customs Border Guards), exercised through the Border guard and the Customs Authorities under the Ministry of Finance.
  • Flurschutzpolizei (Agricultural Field Police), under the Ministry of Agriculture.
  • Factory protection police (Werkschutzpolizei) were security guard of Nazi Germany. Its personnel were civilians employed by industrial enterprises, and typically were issued paramilitary uniforms. They were ultimately subordinated to the Ministry of Aviation.
  • Deichpolizei (Dam and Dyke Police), subordinated to the Ministry of Economy.
  • Hafenpolizei (Harbour Police) under the Ministry of Transport.

Police battalions

Invasion of Poland

 
Ordnungspolizei conducting a raid (razzia) in the Kraków ghetto, 1941.

Between 1939 and 1945, the Ordnungspolizei maintained military formations, trained and outfitted by the main police offices within Germany.[14][15] Specific duties varied widely from unit to unit and from one year to another.[16] Generally, the Order Police were not directly involved in frontline combat,[17] except for Ardennes in May 1940, and the Siege of Leningrad in 1941.[18] The first 17 battalion formations (from 1943 renamed SS-Polizei-Bataillone) were deployed by Orpo in September 1939 along with the Wehrmacht army in the invasion of Poland.[15] The battalions guarded Polish prisoners of war behind the German lines, and carried out expulsion of Poles from Reichsgaue under the banner of Lebensraum.[19] They also committed atrocities against both the Catholic and the Jewish populations as part of those "resettlement actions".[20] After hostilities had ceased, the battalions – such as Reserve Police Battalion 101 – took up the role of security forces, patrolling the perimeters of the Jewish ghettos in German-occupied Poland (the internal ghetto security issues were managed by the SS, SD, and the Criminal Police, in conjunction with the Jewish ghetto administration).[21]

Each battalion consisted of approximately 500 men armed with light infantry weapons.[17] In the east, each company also had a heavy machine-gun detachment.[22] Administratively, the Police Battalions remained under the Chief of Police Kurt Daluege, but operationally they were under the authority of regional SS and Police Leaders (SS- und Polizeiführer), who reported up a separate chain of command directly to Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler.[23] The battalions were used for various auxiliary duties, including the so-called anti-partisan operations, support of combat troops, and construction of defence works (i.e. Atlantic Wall).[24] Some of them were focused on traditional security roles as an occupying force, while others were directly involved in actions designed to inflict terror and in the ensuing Holocaust.[25] While they were similar to Waffen-SS, they were not part of the thirty-eight Waffen-SS divisions, and should not be confused with them, including the national 4th SS Polizei Panzergrenadier Division.[24] The battalions were originally numbered in series from 1 to 325, but in February 1943 were renamed and renumbered from 1 to about 37,[24] to distinguish them from the Schutzmannschaft auxiliary battalions recruited from local population in German-occupied areas.[17]

 
Order Police descending to the cellars on a Jew-hunt in Lublin, December 1940. The Lublin Ghetto was set up in March 1941

Invasion of the Soviet Union

 
Members of the Ordnungspolizei shooting naked women and children during the Holocaust.[26]

The Order Police battalions, operating both independently and in conjunction with the Einsatzgruppen, became an integral part of the Final Solution in the two years following the attack on the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941, Operation Barbarossa. The first mass-murder of 3,000 Jews by Police Battalion 309 occurred in occupied Białystok on 12 July 1941.[27] Police battalions were part of the first and second wave of murders in 1941–42 in the territories of Poland annexed by the Soviet Union and also during the killing operations within the 1939 borders of the USSR, whether as part of Order Police regiments, or as separate units reporting directly to the local SS and Police Leaders.[28] They included the Reserve Police Battalion 101 from Hamburg, Battalion 133 of the Nürnberg Order Police, Police Battalions 45, 309 from Koln, and 316 from Bottrop-Oberhausen.[25] Their murder operations bore the brunt of the Holocaust by bullet on the Eastern Front.[29] In the immediate aftermath of World War II, this latter role was obscured both by the lack of court evidence and by deliberate obfuscation, while most of the focus was on the better-known Einsatzgruppen ("Operational groups") who reported to the Reichssicherheitshauptamt (RSHA) under Reinhard Heydrich.[30]

Order Police battalions involved in direct killing operations were responsible for at least 1 million murders.[31] Starting in 1941 the Battalions and local Order Police units helped to transport Jews from the ghettos in both Poland and the USSR (and elsewhere in occupied Europe) to the concentration and extermination camps, as well as operations to hunt down and murder Jews outside the ghettos.[32] The Order Police were one of the two primary sources from which the Einsatzgruppen drew personnel in accordance with manpower needs (the other being the Waffen-SS).[33]

In 1942, the majority of the police battalions were re-consolidated into thirty SS and Police Regiments. These formations were intended for garrison security duty, anti-partisan functions, and to support Waffen-SS units on the Eastern Front. Notably, the regular military police of the Wehrmacht (Feldgendarmerie, and Geheime Feldpolizei) were separate from the Ordnungspolizei.

Waffen-SS Police Division

 
21 October 1944. An SS Propaganda Company photograph of armed Volkssturm; a uniformed Orpo man is shown at the far right end of the line.

The primary combat arm of the Ordnungspolizei was the SS Polizei Division of the Waffen-SS. The division was formed in October 1939, when thousands of members of the Orpo were drafted and placed together with artillery and signals units transferred from the army.[34] The division consisted of four police regiments composed of Orpo personnel and was typically used to rotate police members into a military situation, so as not to lose police personnel to the general draft of the Wehrmacht or to the full SS divisions of the regular Waffen-SS. Very late in the war several Orpo SS-Police regiments were transferred to the Waffen-SS to form the 35th SS-Police Grenadier Division.[citation needed] Cossack Orpo units were rolled into the XV SS Cossack Cavalry Corps with other units to nominally form 2nd Cossack Division.

Orpo and SS relations

 
Troops from the SS Police Battalions load Jews into boxcars at Marseille, France, in January 1943.

By the start of the Second World War in 1939, the SS had effectively gained complete operational control over the German Police, although outwardly the SS and Police still functioned as separate entities. The Ordnungspolizei maintained its own system of insignia and Orpo ranks as well as distinctive police uniforms. Under an SS directive known as the "Rank Parity Decree", policemen were highly encouraged to join the SS and, for those who did so, a special police insignia known as the SS Membership Runes for Order Police was worn on the breast pocket of the police uniform.

In 1940, standard practice in the German Police was to grant equivalent SS rank to all police generals. Police generals who were members of the SS were referred to simultaneously by both rank titles – for instance, a Generalleutnant in the Police who was also an SS member would be referred to as SS Gruppenführer und Generalleutnant der Polizei. In 1942, SS membership became mandatory for police generals, with SS collar insignia (overlaid on police green backing) worn by all police officers ranked Generalmajor and above.

The distinction between the police and the SS had virtually disappeared by 1943 with the creation of the SS and Police Regiments, which were consolidated from earlier police security battalions. SS officers now routinely commanded police troops and police generals serving in command of military troops were granted equivalent SS rank in the Waffen-SS. In August 1944, when Himmler was appointed Chef des Ersatzheeres (Chief of the Home Army), all police generals automatically were granted Waffen-SS rank because they had authority over the prisoner-of-war camps.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Burkhardt Müller-Hillebrandt: Das Heer (1933-1945), Vol. III Der Zweifrontenkrieg, Mittler, Frankfurt am Main 1969, p. 322
  2. ^ a b c Struan Robertson. . Hamburg Police Battalions during the Second World War. Archived from the original (Internet Archive) on February 22, 2008. Retrieved 2009-09-24.
  3. ^ Showalter 2005, p. xiii.
  4. ^ a b Browning, Christopher R. (1998). (PDF). Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland. Archived from the original on 19 October 2013. Retrieved 27 June 2014 – via Internet Archive, direct download 7.91 MB. also: {{cite book}}: External link in |quote= (help)CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  5. ^ a b c Williams 2001, p. 77.
  6. ^ Weale 2012, pp. 140–144.
  7. ^ Zentner & Bedürftig 1991, p. 783.
  8. ^ Longerich, Peter (2010). "Das Staatsschutzkorps". Himmler: Eine Biographie (in German). Pantheon Verlag. pp. 211–261. ISBN 978-3-570-55122-6.
  9. ^ Browning, Nazi Policy, p. 143.
  10. ^ McKale 2011, p. 104.
  11. ^ a b c Williamson, Gordon (2012). "Structure". World War II German Police Units. Osprey / Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 6–8. ISBN 978-1780963402..
  12. ^ McNab 2013, pp. 60, 61.
  13. ^ Davis, Brian L. (2007). The German Home Front 1939-1945. Oxford, p. 9.
  14. ^ Goldhagen 1997, p. 204.
  15. ^ a b Browning 1998, p. 38.
  16. ^ Breitman, Richard, Official Secrets, Hill and Wang: NY, 1998, p 5 & Goldhagen, Daniel J., Hitler's Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust, Random House: USA, 1996, p 186.
  17. ^ a b c Williamson, Gordon (2004). The SS: Hitler's Instrument of Terror. Zenith Imprint. p. 101. ISBN 0-7603-1933-2.
  18. ^ Browning 1992, p. 5 (22/298 in PDF).
  19. ^ Browning 1992, p. 38.
  20. ^ Rossino, Alexander B., Hitler Strikes Poland, University of Kansas Press: Lawrence, Kansas, 2003, pp 69–72, en passim.
  21. ^ Hillberg, p 81.
  22. ^ Browning 1992, p. 45 (72 in PDF).
  23. ^ Hillberg, pp 71–73.
  24. ^ a b c United States War Department (1995) [March 1945]. Handbook on German Military Forces. Louisiana State University Press. pp. 202–203. ISBN 0-8071-2011-1.
  25. ^ a b Browning 1998, pp. 11-12, 31-32.
  26. ^ "A German police officer shoots Jewish women still alive after a mass execution of Jews from the Mizocz ghetto". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
  27. ^ Browning 1998, pp. 9-12 (26/298 in PDF).
  28. ^ Hillberg, pp. 175, 192–198, en passim.
  29. ^ Patrick Desbois (27 October 2008). . Museum of Jewish Heritage, New York, NY. Archived from the original on 25 December 2014. Retrieved 2 January 2015.
  30. ^ Hillberg, Raul, The Destruction of the European Jews, Holmes & Meir: NY, NY, 1985, pp. 100–106.
  31. ^ Goldhagen, pp 202, 271–273, Goldhagen's citations include Israel Gutman, Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, NY: Macmillan 1990
  32. ^ Goldhagen, p 195.
  33. ^ Hillberg, pp 105–106.
  34. ^ Stein 1984, pp. 33–35.

References

Further reading

ordnungspolizei, german, ˈɔʁdnʊŋspoliˌtsaɪ, abbreviated, orpo, meaning, order, police, were, uniformed, police, force, nazi, germany, from, 1936, 1945, orpo, organisation, absorbed, into, nazi, monopoly, power, after, regional, police, jurisdiction, removed, f. The Ordnungspolizei German ˈɔʁdnʊŋspoliˌtsaɪ abbreviated Orpo meaning Order Police were the uniformed police force in Nazi Germany from 1936 to 1945 2 The Orpo organisation was absorbed into the Nazi monopoly on power after regional police jurisdiction was removed in favour of the central Nazi government Reich ification Verreichlichung of the police The Orpo was controlled nominally by the Interior Ministry but its executive functions rested with the leadership of the SS until the end of World War II 2 Owing to their green uniforms Orpo were also referred to as Grune Polizei green police The force was first established as a centralised organisation uniting the municipal city and rural uniformed police that had been organised on a state by state basis 2 Order PoliceOrdnungspolizeiOrpo flagClockwise from top left Kurt Daluege right Chief of the Order Police with Heinrich Himmler 1943 Unit inspection at Strasbourg 1940 Daluege centre with Bomhard and Winkler Ordnungspolizei in Minsk Reichskommissariat Ostland 1943 Police raid razzia in the Krakow Ghetto January 1941 Biala Podlaska Ghetto liquidation action 1942Common nameGrune PolizeiAbbreviationOrpoAgency overviewFormed26 June 1936 87 years ago 26 June 1936 Dissolved1945 78 years ago 1945 Employees401 300 1944 est 1 Legal personalityGovernmental Government agencyJurisdictional structureLegal jurisdiction Nazi GermanyOccupied EuropeGeneral natureCivilian policeOperational structureHeadquartersBerlin NW 7 Unter den Linden 72 74 52 30 26 N 13 22 57 E 52 50722 N 13 38250 E 52 50722 13 38250Elected officers responsibleHeinrich Himmler 1936 1943 Reichsfuhrer SS and Chief of German PoliceWilhelm Frick nominally 1936 1943 Interior MinisterHeinrich Himmler 1943 1945 Interior MinisterAgency executivesKurt Daluege Chief of Order Police 1936 1943Alfred Wunnenberg Chief of Order Police 1943 1945Parent agencyInterior MinistryThe Ordnungspolizei encompassed virtually all of Nazi Germany s law enforcement and emergency response organisations including fire brigades coast guard and civil defence In the prewar period Heinrich Himmler head of the SS and Kurt Daluege chief of the Order Police cooperated in transforming the police force of the Weimar Republic into militarised formations ready to serve the regime s aims of conquest and racial annihilation Police troops were first formed into battalion sized formations for the invasion of Poland where they were deployed for security and policing purposes also taking part in executions and mass deportations 3 During World War II the force had the task of policing the civilian population of the occupied and colonised countries beginning in spring 1940 4 Orpo s activities escalated to genocide with the invasion of the Soviet Union Operation Barbarossa Twenty three Order Police battalions formed into independent regiments or attached to Wehrmacht security divisions and Einsatzgruppen perpetrated mass murder in the Holocaust and were responsible for widespread crimes against humanity and genocide targeting the civilian population Contents 1 History 2 Organization 2 1 Branches of police 2 2 Hilfspolizei 3 Sonderpolizei 4 Police battalions 4 1 Invasion of Poland 4 2 Invasion of the Soviet Union 5 Waffen SS Police Division 6 Orpo and SS relations 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further readingHistory EditHeinrich Himmler head of the SS was named Chief of German Police in the Interior Ministry on 17 June 1936 after Hitler announced a decree which was to unify the control of police duties in the Reich 5 Traditionally law enforcement in Germany had been a state and local matter In this role Himmler was nominally subordinate to Interior Minister Wilhelm Frick However the decree effectively subordinated the police to the SS Himmler gained authority as all of Germany s uniformed law enforcement agencies were amalgamated into the new Ordnungspolizei whose main office became populated by officers of the SS 5 The police were divided into the Ordnungspolizei Orpo or order police and the Sicherheitspolizei SiPo or security police which had been established in June 1936 5 The Orpo assumed duties of regular uniformed law enforcement while the SiPo consisted of the secret state police Geheime Staatspolizei or Gestapo and criminal investigation police Kriminalpolizei or Kripo The Kriminalpolizei was a corps of professional detectives involved in fighting crime and the task of the Gestapo was combating espionage and political dissent On 27 September 1939 the SS security service the Sicherheitsdienst SD and the SiPo were folded into the Reich Security Main Office Reichssicherheitshauptamt or RSHA The RSHA symbolised the close connection between the SS a party organisation and the police a state organisation 6 7 In broad terms Himmler pursued the amalgamation of SS and police into a form of State Protection Corps Staatsschutzkorps and used the expanded reach the police powers gave him to persecute ideological opponents and undesirables of the Nazi regime such as Jews freemasons the churches homosexuals Jehovah s Witnesses and other groups defined as asocial The Nazi conception of criminality was racial and biological holding that criminal traits were hereditary and had to be exterminated to purify German blood As a result even ordinary criminals were consigned to concentration camps to remove them from the German racial community Volksgemeinschaft and ultimately exterminate them 8 The Order Police played a central role in carrying out the Holocaust By both career professionals and reservists in both battalion formations and precinct service Einzeldienst through providing men for the tasks involved 9 Organization EditThe German Order Police had grown to 244 500 men by mid 1940 4 The Orpo was under the overall control of Reichsfuhrer SS Himmler as Chief of the German Police in the Ministry of the Interior It was initially commanded by SS Oberstgruppenfuhrer und Generaloberst der Polizei Kurt Daluege In May 1943 Daluege had a massive heart attack and was removed from duty 10 He was replaced by SS Obergruppenfuhrer und General der Waffen SS und der Polizei Alfred Wunnenberg who served until the end of the war By 1941 the Orpo had been divided into the following offices covering every aspect of German law enforcement The central command office known as the Ordnungspolizei Hauptamt was located in Berlin From 1943 it was considered a full SS Headquarters command 11 The Orpo main office consisted of Command Department Kommandoamt responsible for finance personnel and medical Administrative Verwaltung charged with pay pensions and permits Economic Wirtschaftsverwaltungsamt Technical Emergency Service Technische Nothilfe Fire Brigades Bureau Feuerwehren Colonial Police Kolonialpolizei and SS and Police Technical Training Academy Technische SS und Polizeiakademie 12 Branches of police Edit Ordnungspolizei in Minsk Reichskommissariat Ostland Weissruthenien 1943Administration police Verwaltungspolizei was the administrative branch of the Orpo and had overall command authority for all Orpo police stations The Verwaltungspolizei also was the central office for record keeping and was the command authority for civilian law enforcement groups which included the Gesundheitspolizei health police Gewerbepolizei commercial or trade police and the Baupolizei building police In the main towns Verwaltungspolizei Schutzpolizei and Kriminalpolizei would be organised into a police administration known as the Polizeiprasidium or Polizeidirektion which had authority over these police forces in the urban district State protection police Schutzpolizei state uniformed police in cities and most large towns which included police station duties Revierdienst and barracked police units for riots and public safety Kasernierte Polizei Municipal protection police Gemeindepolizei 11 municipal uniformed police in smaller and some large towns Although fully integrated into the Ordnungspolizei system its police officers were municipal civil servants The civilian law enforcement in towns with a municipal protection police was not done by the Verwaltungspolizei but by municipal civil servants Until 1943 they also had municipal criminal investigation departments but that year all such departments with more than 10 detectives were integrated into the Kripo Gendarmerie Rural police were tasked with frontier law enforcement to include small communities rural districts and mountainous terrain With the development of a network of motorways or Autobahnen motorised gendarmerie companies were set up in 1937 to secure the traffic Traffic police Verkehrspolizei was the traffic law enforcement agency and road safety administration of Germany The organisation patrolled Germany s roads other than motorways which were controlled by Motorized Gendarmerie and responded to major accidents The Verkehrspolizei was also the primary escort service for high Nazi leaders who travelled great distances by automobile Water protection police Wasserschutzpolizei was the equivalent of the coast guard and river police Tasked with the safety and security of Germany s rivers harbours and inland waterways the group also had authority over the SS Hafensicherungstruppen harbour security troops which were Allgemeine SS units assigned as port security personnel Fire police Feuerschutzpolizei 11 consisted of all professional fire departments under a national command structure Hilfspolizei Edit Main article Hilfspolizei The Orpo Hauptamt also had authority over the Freiwillige Feuerwehren the local volunteer civilian fire brigades At the height of the Second World War in response to heavy bombing of Germany s cities the combined Feuerschutzpolizei and Freiwillige Feuerwehren numbered nearly two million members Air raid protection police Luftschutzpolizei was the civil protection service in charge of air raid defence and rescue victims of bombings in connection with the Technische Nothilfe Technical Emergency Service and the Feuerschutzpolizei professional fire departments Created as the Security and Assistance Service Sicherheits und Hilfsdienst in 1935 it was renamed Luftschutzpolizei in April 1942 The air raid network was supported by the Reichsluftschutzbund Reich Association for Air Raid Precautions an organisation controlled from 1935 by the Air Ministry under Hermann Goring The RLB set up an organisation of air raid wardens who were responsible for the safety of a building or a group of houses Technical Emergency Corps Technische Nothilfe TeNo was a corps of engineers technicians and specialists in construction work The TeNo was created in 1919 to keep the public utilities and essential industries running during the wave of strikes From 1937 the TeNo became a technical auxiliary corps of the police and was absorbed into Orpo Hauptamt By 1943 the TeNo had over 100 000 members Volunteer Fire Department Feuerwehren volunteer fire departments conscripted fire departments and industrial fire departments were auxiliary police subordinate to the Ordnungspolizei Radio protection Funkschutz was made up of SS and Orpo security personnel assigned to protect German broadcasting stations from attack and sabotage The Funkschutz was also the primary investigating service which detected illegal reception of foreign radio broadcasts Urban and rural emergency police Stadt und Landwacht created in 1942 as a part time police reserve Abolished in 1945 with the creation of the Volkssturm Auxiliary Police Schutzmannschaft was the collaborationist auxiliary police in occupied Eastern Europe Sonderpolizei EditThe Sonderpolizei were the special police authorities not subordinate to the Hauptamt Ordnungspolizei or the Reichssicherheitshauptamt 13 Reichsbahnfahndungsdienst the Railway criminal investigative service subordinate to the Deutsche Reichsbahn Bahnschutzpolizei Railway protection police subordinate to the Deutsche Reichsbahn SS Bahnschutz replaced the Bahnschutzpolizei within the Reich territory from 1944 Postal protection Postschutz comprised roughly 45 000 members and was tasked with the security of Germany s Reichspost which was responsible not only for the mail but other communications media such as the telephone and telegraph systems SS Postschutz created with the transfer of the Postschutz from the Reichministry of Post to the Allgemeine SS in 1942 Forest Protection Service Forstschutzkommando under the Reichsforstamt Jagdpolizei Hunting Police under the Reichsforstamt It was largely exercised through the Deutsche Jagerschaft Zollgrenzschutz Customs Border Guards exercised through the Border guard and the Customs Authorities under the Ministry of Finance Flurschutzpolizei Agricultural Field Police under the Ministry of Agriculture Factory protection police Werkschutzpolizei were security guard of Nazi Germany Its personnel were civilians employed by industrial enterprises and typically were issued paramilitary uniforms They were ultimately subordinated to the Ministry of Aviation Deichpolizei Dam and Dyke Police subordinated to the Ministry of Economy Hafenpolizei Harbour Police under the Ministry of Transport Police battalions EditInvasion of Poland Edit Ordnungspolizei conducting a raid razzia in the Krakow ghetto 1941 Between 1939 and 1945 the Ordnungspolizei maintained military formations trained and outfitted by the main police offices within Germany 14 15 Specific duties varied widely from unit to unit and from one year to another 16 Generally the Order Police were not directly involved in frontline combat 17 except for Ardennes in May 1940 and the Siege of Leningrad in 1941 18 The first 17 battalion formations from 1943 renamed SS Polizei Bataillone were deployed by Orpo in September 1939 along with the Wehrmacht army in the invasion of Poland 15 The battalions guarded Polish prisoners of war behind the German lines and carried out expulsion of Poles from Reichsgaue under the banner of Lebensraum 19 They also committed atrocities against both the Catholic and the Jewish populations as part of those resettlement actions 20 After hostilities had ceased the battalions such as Reserve Police Battalion 101 took up the role of security forces patrolling the perimeters of the Jewish ghettos in German occupied Poland the internal ghetto security issues were managed by the SS SD and the Criminal Police in conjunction with the Jewish ghetto administration 21 Each battalion consisted of approximately 500 men armed with light infantry weapons 17 In the east each company also had a heavy machine gun detachment 22 Administratively the Police Battalions remained under the Chief of Police Kurt Daluege but operationally they were under the authority of regional SS and Police Leaders SS und Polizeifuhrer who reported up a separate chain of command directly to Reichsfuhrer SS Heinrich Himmler 23 The battalions were used for various auxiliary duties including the so called anti partisan operations support of combat troops and construction of defence works i e Atlantic Wall 24 Some of them were focused on traditional security roles as an occupying force while others were directly involved in actions designed to inflict terror and in the ensuing Holocaust 25 While they were similar to Waffen SS they were not part of the thirty eight Waffen SS divisions and should not be confused with them including the national 4th SS Polizei Panzergrenadier Division 24 The battalions were originally numbered in series from 1 to 325 but in February 1943 were renamed and renumbered from 1 to about 37 24 to distinguish them from the Schutzmannschaft auxiliary battalions recruited from local population in German occupied areas 17 Order Police descending to the cellars on a Jew hunt in Lublin December 1940 The Lublin Ghetto was set up in March 1941Invasion of the Soviet Union Edit Members of the Ordnungspolizei shooting naked women and children during the Holocaust 26 The Order Police battalions operating both independently and in conjunction with the Einsatzgruppen became an integral part of the Final Solution in the two years following the attack on the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941 Operation Barbarossa The first mass murder of 3 000 Jews by Police Battalion 309 occurred in occupied Bialystok on 12 July 1941 27 Police battalions were part of the first and second wave of murders in 1941 42 in the territories of Poland annexed by the Soviet Union and also during the killing operations within the 1939 borders of the USSR whether as part of Order Police regiments or as separate units reporting directly to the local SS and Police Leaders 28 They included the Reserve Police Battalion 101 from Hamburg Battalion 133 of the Nurnberg Order Police Police Battalions 45 309 from Koln and 316 from Bottrop Oberhausen 25 Their murder operations bore the brunt of the Holocaust by bullet on the Eastern Front 29 In the immediate aftermath of World War II this latter role was obscured both by the lack of court evidence and by deliberate obfuscation while most of the focus was on the better known Einsatzgruppen Operational groups who reported to the Reichssicherheitshauptamt RSHA under Reinhard Heydrich 30 Order Police battalions involved in direct killing operations were responsible for at least 1 million murders 31 Starting in 1941 the Battalions and local Order Police units helped to transport Jews from the ghettos in both Poland and the USSR and elsewhere in occupied Europe to the concentration and extermination camps as well as operations to hunt down and murder Jews outside the ghettos 32 The Order Police were one of the two primary sources from which the Einsatzgruppen drew personnel in accordance with manpower needs the other being the Waffen SS 33 In 1942 the majority of the police battalions were re consolidated into thirty SS and Police Regiments These formations were intended for garrison security duty anti partisan functions and to support Waffen SS units on the Eastern Front Notably the regular military police of the Wehrmacht Feldgendarmerie and Geheime Feldpolizei were separate from the Ordnungspolizei Waffen SS Police Division EditMain article 4th SS Polizei Division 21 October 1944 An SS Propaganda Company photograph of armed Volkssturm a uniformed Orpo man is shown at the far right end of the line The primary combat arm of the Ordnungspolizei was the SS Polizei Division of the Waffen SS The division was formed in October 1939 when thousands of members of the Orpo were drafted and placed together with artillery and signals units transferred from the army 34 The division consisted of four police regiments composed of Orpo personnel and was typically used to rotate police members into a military situation so as not to lose police personnel to the general draft of the Wehrmacht or to the full SS divisions of the regular Waffen SS Very late in the war several Orpo SS Police regiments were transferred to the Waffen SS to form the 35th SS Police Grenadier Division citation needed Cossack Orpo units were rolled into the XV SS Cossack Cavalry Corps with other units to nominally form 2nd Cossack Division Orpo and SS relations Edit Troops from the SS Police Battalions load Jews into boxcars at Marseille France in January 1943 By the start of the Second World War in 1939 the SS had effectively gained complete operational control over the German Police although outwardly the SS and Police still functioned as separate entities The Ordnungspolizei maintained its own system of insignia and Orpo ranks as well as distinctive police uniforms Under an SS directive known as the Rank Parity Decree policemen were highly encouraged to join the SS and for those who did so a special police insignia known as the SS Membership Runes for Order Police was worn on the breast pocket of the police uniform In 1940 standard practice in the German Police was to grant equivalent SS rank to all police generals Police generals who were members of the SS were referred to simultaneously by both rank titles for instance a Generalleutnant in the Police who was also an SS member would be referred to as SS Gruppenfuhrer und Generalleutnant der Polizei In 1942 SS membership became mandatory for police generals with SS collar insignia overlaid on police green backing worn by all police officers ranked Generalmajor and above The distinction between the police and the SS had virtually disappeared by 1943 with the creation of the SS and Police Regiments which were consolidated from earlier police security battalions SS officers now routinely commanded police troops and police generals serving in command of military troops were granted equivalent SS rank in the Waffen SS In August 1944 when Himmler was appointed Chef des Ersatzheeres Chief of the Home Army all police generals automatically were granted Waffen SS rank because they had authority over the prisoner of war camps See also EditRanks and insignia of the Ordnungspolizei Police Long Service Award Glossary of Nazi Germany Schutzmannschaft auxiliary policemen raised from local populations in occupied Eastern Europe during World War II Hilfspolizei a type of German police unit Reichssicherheitsdienst Reich Security Service Sonderdienst Special Services Polizei Regiment Mitte Police Regiment Centre Judische Ghetto Polizei Jewish Ghetto Police German Croatian PoliceNotes Edit Burkhardt Muller Hillebrandt Das Heer 1933 1945 Vol III Der Zweifrontenkrieg Mittler Frankfurt am Main 1969 p 322 a b c Struan Robertson The 1936 Verreichlichung of the Police Hamburg Police Battalions during the Second World War Archived from the original Internet Archive on February 22 2008 Retrieved 2009 09 24 Showalter 2005 p xiii a b Browning Christopher R 1998 Arrival in Poland PDF Ordinary Men Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland Archived from the original on 19 October 2013 Retrieved 27 June 2014 via Internet Archive direct download 7 91 MB also PDF cache archived by WebCite a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a External link in code class cs1 code quote code help CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link a b c Williams 2001 p 77 Weale 2012 pp 140 144 Zentner amp Bedurftig 1991 p 783 Longerich Peter 2010 Das Staatsschutzkorps Himmler Eine Biographie in German Pantheon Verlag pp 211 261 ISBN 978 3 570 55122 6 Browning Nazi Policy p 143 McKale 2011 p 104 a b c Williamson Gordon 2012 Structure World War II German Police Units Osprey Bloomsbury Publishing pp 6 8 ISBN 978 1780963402 McNab 2013 pp 60 61 Davis Brian L 2007 The German Home Front 1939 1945 Oxford p 9 Goldhagen 1997 p 204 a b Browning 1998 p 38 Breitman Richard Official Secrets Hill and Wang NY 1998 p 5 amp Goldhagen Daniel J Hitler s Willing Executioners Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust Random House USA 1996 p 186 a b c Williamson Gordon 2004 The SS Hitler s Instrument of Terror Zenith Imprint p 101 ISBN 0 7603 1933 2 Browning 1992 p 5 22 298 in PDF Browning 1992 p 38 Rossino Alexander B Hitler Strikes Poland University of Kansas Press Lawrence Kansas 2003 pp 69 72 en passim Hillberg p 81 Browning 1992 p 45 72 in PDF Hillberg pp 71 73 a b c United States War Department 1995 March 1945 Handbook on German Military Forces Louisiana State University Press pp 202 203 ISBN 0 8071 2011 1 a b Browning 1998 pp 11 12 31 32 A German police officer shoots Jewish women still alive after a mass execution of Jews from the Mizocz ghetto United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Browning 1998 pp 9 12 26 298 in PDF Hillberg pp 175 192 198 en passim Patrick Desbois 27 October 2008 The Shooting of Jews in Ukraine Holocaust By Bullets Museum of Jewish Heritage New York NY Archived from the original on 25 December 2014 Retrieved 2 January 2015 Hillberg Raul The Destruction of the European Jews Holmes amp Meir NY NY 1985 pp 100 106 Goldhagen pp 202 271 273 Goldhagen s citations include Israel Gutman Encyclopedia of the Holocaust NY Macmillan 1990 Goldhagen p 195 Hillberg pp 105 106 Stein 1984 pp 33 35 References EditBrowning Christopher Nazi Policy Jewish Workers German Killers Cambridge University Press 2000 ISBN 0 521 77490 X Browning Christopher 1998 1992 Ordinary Men Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland New York HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 019013 2 Goldhagen Daniel 1997 Hitler s Willing Executioners Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust Amazon Kindle book look inside Alfred A Knopf 1996 Vintage 1997 ISBN 0679772685 McKale Donald M 2011 Nazis after Hitler How Perpetrators of the Holocaust Cheated Justice and Truth Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4422 1316 6 McNab Chris 2013 Hitler s Elite The SS 1939 45 Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1782000884 Showalter Dennis 2005 Foreword Hitler s Police Battalions Enforcing Racial War in the East Kansas City University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 1724 1 Stein George 1984 1966 The Waffen SS Hitler s Elite Guard at War 1939 1945 Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 9275 0 Weale Adrian 2012 Army of Evil A History of the SS New York Toronto NAL Caliber Penguin Group ISBN 978 0 451 23791 0 Westermann Edward B 2005 Hitler s Police Battalions Enforcing Racial War in the East Kansas City University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 1724 1 Williams Max 2001 Reinhard Heydrich The Biography Volume 1 Road To War Church Stretton Ulric Publishing ISBN 978 0 9537577 5 6 Williamson Gordon 2012 2004 World War II German Police Units Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1780963402 Zentner Christian Bedurftig Friedemann 1991 The Encyclopedia of the Third Reich New York MacMillan Publishing ISBN 0 02 897500 6 Further reading EditMegargee Geoffrey P ed 2009 Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos 1933 1945 Vol II Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 35328 3 Nix Philip and Jerome Georges 2006 The Uniformed Police Forces of the Third Reich 1933 1945 Leandoer amp Ekholm ISBN 91 975894 3 8 Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ordnungspolizei Nazi Germany Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ordnungspolizei amp oldid 1165488323, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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