Everything about Hermann G Ring totally explained
(
January 12,
1893 –
October 15,
1946) was a
German politician and
military leader, a leading member of the
Nazi Party, second in command of the
Third Reich, designated successor to
Adolf Hitler, and commander of the
Luftwaffe (German Air Force). Göring was a veteran of
World War I, with
22 confirmed kills as a fighter pilot, and was awarded the coveted
Pour le Mérite. He was the last commander of
Manfred von Richthofen's
famous air squadron.
He was convicted of
war crimes and
crimes against humanity at
Nuremberg in 1945-1946, and sentenced to death by hanging. However, he committed
suicide the night before he was to be executed.
Family background and relatives
Göring was born at the sanatorium
Marienbad in
Rosenheim,
Bavaria. His father
Heinrich Ernst Göring (
31st October,
1839 –
7th December,
1913) had been the first Governor-General of the German protectorate of South West Africa (modern day
Namibia) as well as being a former cavalry officer and member of the German consular service. Göring had among his patrilineal ancestors
Eberle/
Eberlin, a
Swiss-German family of high bourgeoisie. They were originally Jewish financiers who converted to Christianity in the 15th century and had numerous progeny in German speaking countries.
Göring was a relative of such Eberle/Eberlin descendants as the German aviation pioneer Count
Ferdinand von Zeppelin; German romantic nationalist
Hermann Grimm (1828-1901), an author of the concept of the German hero as a mover of history, whom the Nazis claimed as one of their ideological forerunners; the industrialist family
Merck, the owners of the pharmaceutical giant
Merck; one of the world major Catholic writers and poets of the 20th century German Baroness
Gertrud von LeFort, whose works were largely inspired by her revulsion against Nazism; and Swiss diplomat, historian and President of
International Red Cross,
Carl J. Burckhardt.
In an historical coincidence, Göring was related via the Eberle/Eberlin line to
Jacob Burckhardt (1818-1897), a great Swiss scholar of art and culture who was a major political and social thinker as well an opponent of nationalism and militarism, who rejected German claims of cultural and intellectual superiority and predicted a cataclysmic 20th century in which violent demagogues, whom he called "terrible simplifiers," would play central roles.
Göring's mother Franziska "Fanny" Tiefenbrunn (
1859-
July 15,
1923) came from a
Bavarian peasant family. The marriage of a gentleman to a woman from lower class (1885) occurred only because Heinrich Ernst Göring was a widower. Göring was one of five children; his brothers were
Albert Göring and Karl Ernst Göring, and his sisters were Olga Therese Sophia and Paula Elisabeth Rosa Göring, the last of whom were from his father's first marriage. While anti-Semitism became rampant in Germany of that time, his parents were not anti-Semitic.
Early life/Ritter von Epenstein
Göring later claimed his given name was chosen to honour the
Arminius who defeated the legions of Rome at
Teutoburg Forest. However the name was possibly to honour his godfather, a Christian of Jewish descent born Hermann Epenstein. Epenstein, whose father was an army surgeon in Berlin, became a wealthy physician and businessman and a major if not paternal influence on Göring's childhood. Much of Hermann's very early childhood, including a lengthy separation from his parents when his father took diplomatic posts in Africa and in Haiti (climates ruled too brutal for a young European child), was spent with governesses and with distant relatives. However, upon Heinrich Göring's retirement ca. 1898 his large family, supported solely on Heinrich's civil service pension, became for financially practical reasons the houseguests of their longtime friend and Göring's probable namesake, a man whose minor title (acquired through service and donation to the Crown) made him now known as Hermann,
Ritter von Epenstein.
Ritter von Epenstein purchased two largely dilapidated castles, Burg
Veldenstein in Bavaria and Schloss
Mauterndorf near
Salzburg,
Austria, whose very expensive restorations were ongoing by the time of Hermann Göring's birth. Both castles were to be residences to the Göring family, their official "caretakers" until 1913. Both castles were also ultimately to be his property. In 1914 he tried to commit suicide; however, he was found by his mother,and was sent to the hospital. He survived after cutting his wrist and was soon sent back home. In 1915 he joined the army and fought in the
Battle of the Somme.
According to some biographers of both Hermann Göring and his younger brother Albert Göring, soon after the family took residence in his castles, von Epenstein began an adulterous relationship with Frau Göring and may in fact have been Albert's father. (Albert's physical resemblance to von Epenstein was noted even during his childhood and is evident in photographs.) Whatever the nature of von Epenstein's relationship with his mother, the young Hermann Göring enjoyed a close relationship with his godfather. Göring was unaware of von Epenstein's Jewish ancestry and birth until, as a child at a prestigious Austrian boarding school (where his tuition was paid by von Epenstein), he wrote an essay in praise of his godfather and was mocked by the school's anti-Semitic headmaster for professing such admiration for a Jew. Göring initially denied the allegation, but when confronted with proof in the
"Semi-Gotha", a book of German heraldry (Ritter von Epenstein had purchased his minor title and castles with wealth garnered from speculation and trade and was thus included in a less than complimentary reference work on German speaking nobility), Göring, to his youthful credit, remained steadfast in his devotion to his family's friend and patron so adamantly that he was expelled from the school. The action seems to have tightened the already considerable bond between godfather and godson.
Relations between the Göring family and von Epenstein became far more formal during Göring's adolescence (causing Mosley and other biographers to speculate that perhaps the theorised affair ended naturally or that the elderly Heinrich discovered he was a cuckold and threatened its exposure). By the time of Heinrich Göring's death, the family no longer lived in a residence supplied by or seemed to have much contact at all with von Epenstein (though the family's comfortable circumstances indicate the Ritter may have continued to support them financially). Late in his life, Ritter von Epenstein wed a singer, Lily, who was half his age, bequeathing her his estate in his will, but requesting that she in turn bequeath the castles at Mauterndorf and Veldenstein to his godson Hermann upon her own death.
World War I
Göring was sent to boarding school at
Ansbach,
Franconia and then attended the cadet institutes at
Karlsruhe and the military college at
Berlin Lichterfelde. Göring was commissioned in the
Prussian army on
June 22 1912 in the
Prinz Wilhelm Regiment (112th Infantry), headquartered at
Mulhouse.
During the first year of World War I, Göring served with an infantry regiment in the
Vosges region. He was hospitalised with
Rheumatism resulting from the damp of trench warfare. While he was recovering, his friend
Bruno Loerzer convinced him to transfer to the
Luftstreitkräfte. Göring's application to transfer was immediately turned down. But later that year Göring flew as Loerzer's observer in
Feldflieger Ableilung (FFA) 25 - Göring had arranged his own transfer. He was detected and sentenced to three weeks' confinement to barracks. The sentence was never carried out: by the time it was imposed Göring's association with Loerzer had been regularised. They were assigned as a team to the 25th Field Air Detachment of the
Crown Prince's Fifth Army - "though it seems that they'd to steal a plane in order to qualify." They flew reconnaissance and bombing missions for which the Crown Prince invested both Göring and Loerzer with the
Iron Cross, first class.
On completing his pilot's training course he was posted back to
Feldflieger Ableilung (FFA) 2 in October 1915. Göring had already claimed two air victories as an Observer (one unconfirmed). He gained another flying a Fokker EIII single-seater scout in March 1916. In October 1916 he was posted to
Jagdstaffel 5, but was wounded in action in November. In February 1917 he joined
Jagdstaffel 26. He now scored steadily until in May 1917 he got his first command,
Jasta 27. Serving with
Jastas 5, 26 and 27, he claimed 21 air victories. Besides the Iron Cross, he was awarded the
Zaehring Lion with swords, the
Karl Friedrich Order and the
House Order of Hohenzollern with swords, third class, and finally in May 1918 (despite not having the required 25 air victories) the coveted
Pour le Mérite. On
7th July 1918, after the death of Wilhelm Reinhard, the successor of
The Red Baron, he was made commander of
Jagdgeschwader Freiherr von Richthofen,
Jagdgeschwader 1.
In June 1917, after a lengthy dogfight, Göring shot down an
Australian pilot named
Frank Slee. The battle is recounted in
The Rise and Fall of Hermann Goering. Göring landed and met the Australian, and presented Slee with his Iron Cross. Years after, Slee gave Göring's
Iron Cross to a friend, who later died on the beaches of
Normandy on
D-Day. Also during the war Göring had through his generous treatment made a friend of his prisoner of war Captain
Frank Beaumont, a
Royal Flying Corps pilot. "It was part of Goering's creed to admire a good enemy, and he did his best to keep Captain Beaumont from being taken over by the Army."
Göring finished the war with 22 kills.
Because of his arrogance Göring's appointment as commander of
Jagdgeschwader 1 hadn't been well received. Though after demobilisation Göring and his officers spent most of their time during the first weeks of November 1918 in the Stiftskeller, the best restaurant and drinking place in
Aschaffenburg, he was the only veteran of
Jagdgeschwader 1 never invited to post-war reunions.
Göring was genuinely surprised (at least by his own account) at Germany's defeat in the First World War. He felt personally violated by the surrender, the
Kaiser's abdication, the humiliating terms, and the supposed treachery of the post-war German politicians who had "goaded the people [touprising] [and] who [had] stabbed our glorious Army in the back [thinking] of nothing but of attaining power and of enriching themselves at the expense of the people." Ordered to surrender the planes of his squadron to the Allies in December 1918, Göring and his fellow pilots intentionally wrecked the planes on landing. This endeavour paralleled the
scuttling of surrendered ships. Typical for the political climate of the day, he wasn't arrested or even officially reprimanded for his action.
Post World War I
He remained in flying after the war, worked briefly at
Fokker, tried "
barnstorming", and in 1920 he joined
Svenska Lufttrafik. He was also listed on the officer rolls of the
Reichswehr, the post-World War I peacetime army of Germany, and by 1933 had risen to the rank of
Generalmajor. He was made a
Generalleutnant in 1935 and then a General in the
Luftwaffe upon its founding later that year.
Göring as a veteran pilot was often hired to fly businessmen and others on private aircraft. On a winter's day in 1920 Count
Eric von Rosen, a widely-known and intrepid explorer, arrived at an aerodrome in
Sweden and requested a flight to his estate at
Rockelstad near
Sparreholm. It was a short journey by air and as it was snowing it seemed a flight would be the quick way home. The count relished the challenge of flying through snow if a brave enough pilot could be found. With only one or two hours' of daylight left, Göring readily agreed to make the journey. After take-off they got lost as the aircraft pitched and plunged over trees and valleys; the count was violently airsick. They finally touched down on the frozen Lake
Båven near
Rockelstad Castle. It was too late for Göring to go back that day so he accepted the count and countess's invitation to stay overnight at the castle.
The medieval castle, with its suits of armour, paintings, hunting relics and exploration trophies was suited to romance. It may have been here that Göring first saw the
swastika emblem, a family badge which was set in the chimney piece around the roaring fire.
This was also the first time Göring saw his future wife. A great staircase led down into the hall opposite the fireplace. As Göring looked up he saw a woman coming down the staircase as if toward him. He thought she was very beautiful. The count introduced his sister-in-law Baroness
Karin von Kantzow to the 27 year old Göring.
Karin was a tall, maternal, unhappy, sentimental woman five years Göring's senior, estranged from her husband and in delicate health. Göring was immediately smitten with her. Karin's eldest sister and biographer claimed that it was love at first sight. Karin was carefully looked after by her parents as well as by Count and Countess von Rosen. She was also married and had an eight year old son Thomas to whom she was devoted. No romance other than one of
courtly love was possible at this point.
At this time Karin, who liked Hitler, often played hostess to meetings of leading Nazis including her husband, Hitler,
Hess,
Rosenberg and
Röhm.
Göring was with Hitler in the
Beer Hall Putsch in Munich on
9 November 1923. He marched beside Hitler at the head of the SA. When the Bavarian police broke up the march with gunfire, Göring was seriously wounded in the groin.
Addiction and exile
Karin, herself unwell with pneumonia, arranged for Göring to be spirited away to Austria. Göring was in no fit state to travel and the journey may have aggravated his condition, although he did avoid arrest. Göring was x-rayed and operated on in the hospital at
Innsbruck. Karin wrote to her mother from Göring's bedside on
8 December 1923 describing the terrible pain Göring was in: "... in spite of being dosed with
morphine every day, his pain stays just as bad as ever." This was the beginning of his morphine addiction. Meanwhile in Munich the authorities declared Göring a wanted man.
Later Göring switched from morphine to
paracodeine.
The Görings, acutely short of funds and reliant on the goodwill of Nazi sympathisers abroad, moved from
Austria to
Venice then in May 1924 to
Rome via
Florence and
Siena. Göring met
Mussolini in
Rome. Mussolini expressed some interest in meeting Hitler, by then in prison, on his release. Personal problems, however, continued to multiply. Göring's mother had died in 1923. By
1925 it was Karin's mother who was ill. The Görings with difficulty raised the money for a journey in spring 1925 to Sweden via Austria,
Czechoslovakia,
Poland and the
Free City of Danzig. Göring had become a violent morphine addict and Karin's family were shocked by his deterioration when they saw him. Karin, herself an
epileptic, had to let the doctors and police take full charge of Göring. He was certified a dangerous drug addict and placed in the violent ward of Långbro asylum on
1 September 1925. Biographer
Roger Manvell interviewed a psychiatrist in Stockholm who had seen Göring at a private clinic before being placed in Långbro: Göring was very violent and had to be placed in a
straitjacket but wasn't insane.
The 1925 psychiatrist's reports claimed Göring to be weak of character, an hysteric, an unstable personality, sentimental yet callous, violent when afraid and a person who deployed bravado to hide a basic lack of
moral courage.
Like many men capable of great acts of physical courage which verge quite often on desperation, he lacked the finer kind of courage in the conduct of his life which was needed when serious difficulties overcame him.
At the time of Göring's detention all doctors' reports in Sweden were in the public domain. In 1925, Karin sued for custody of her son. Niels von Kantzow, her ex-husband, used a doctor's report on Karin and Göring as evidence to show that neither of them was fit to look after the boy, and so von Kantzow kept custody. The reports were also used by political opponents in Germany.
Political career
Göring returned to Germany in autumn
1927, after the newly elected President
von Hindenburg declared amnesty for participants in the 1923 Putsch. Göring resumed his political work for Hitler. He became the 'salon Nazi', the Party's representative in upper class circles.
Göring was elected to the
Reichstag in
1928. He was
Reichstag President from
1932 to
1933.
His wife Karin died on
17th October,
1931, aged 42, of
tuberculosis.
Nazi electoral victory
Hitler became
Chancellor on
30 January 1933, by a deal with the conservative intriguer
Franz von Papen. Only two other Nazis were included in the cabinet. One was Göring, who was named minister without portfolio. It was understood, however, that he'd be named minister of aviation once Germany built up an air force. At Hitler's insistence, Göring also was appointed
interior minister of
Prussia under Papen, who doubled as
Vice Chancellor of the Reich and minister-president of Prussia. (Prussia at this time, though a constituent state of Germany, included over half of the country.)
Although his appointment as Prussian interior minister was little noticed at the time, it made Göring commander of the largest police force in Germany. He moved quickly to Nazify the police and use them against the
Social Democrats and
Communists. On
22 February, Göring ordered the police to recruit "auxiliaries" from the Nazi party militia, and to cease all opposition to the street violence of the SA. New elections were scheduled for
5 March, and Göring's police minions harassed and suppressed political opponents and rivals of the Nazis. He also detached the political and intelligence departments from the Prussian police and reorganized them as the
Gestapo, a
secret police force.
On
28 February, the Reichstag building was gutted by fire. The
Reichstag fire was
arson, and the Nazis blamed the Communists. Göring himself met Hitler at the fire scene, and denounced it as "a Communist outrage," the first act in a planned uprising. Hitler agreed. The next day, the
Reichstag Fire Decree suspended civil liberties.
Göring ordered the complete suppression of the Communist party. Most German states banned party meetings and publications, but in Prussia, Göring's police summarily arrested 25,000 Communists and other leftists, including the entire Party leadership, save those that escaped abroad. Hundreds of other prominent anti-Nazis were also rounded up. Göring told the Prussian police
... all other restraints on police action imposed by Reich and state law are abolished...
On
5 March, the Nazi-DNVP coalition won a narrow majority in the election; on
23 March, the Reichstag passed the
Enabling Act, which effectively gave Hitler dictatorial powers.
As part of the anti-communist campaign, in the first executions in the
Third Reich, Göring declined to commute the August 1933 death sentences passed against
Bruno Tesch and three other communists for their alleged role in the deaths of two SA members and 16 others in the
Altona Bloody Sunday (
Altonaer Blutsonntag) riot, an
SA march on
17 July 1932 .
Possible responsibility for the Reichstag Fire
Marinus van der Lubbe, an ex-Communist radical, was arrested on the scene and claimed sole responsibility for the fire. But many observers believed that the Nazis set the fire to justify the subsequent crackdown. Göring in particular was suspected: he was first on the scene, and both Hitler and
Goebbels were apparently surprised by the news. At
Nuremberg, General
Franz Halder testified that Göring admitted responsibility:
At a luncheon on the birthday of Hitler in 1942... [Göringsaid]... "The only one who really knows about the Reichstag is I, because I set it on fire!" With that he slapped his thigh with the flat of his hand.
Göring in his own Nuremberg testimony denied this story. It remains unclear whether or not Göring was responsible for the fire.
The following is a transcript excerpt from the Nuremberg Trials:
GOERING: This conversation didn't take place and I request that I be confronted with Herr Halder. First of all I want to emphasize that what is written here's utter nonsense. It says, "The only one who really knows the Reichstag is I." The Reichstag was known to every representative in the Reichstag. The fire took place only in the general assembly room, and many hundreds or thousands of people knew this room as well as I did. A statement of this type is utter nonsense. How Herr Halder came to make that statement I don't know. Apparently that bad memory, which also let him down in military matters, is the only explanation.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: You know who Halder is?
GOERING: Only too well.
GOERING: That accusation that I'd set fire to the Reichstag came from a certain foreign press. That couldn't bother me because it wasn't consistent with the facts. I'd no reason or motive for setting fire to the Reichstag. From the artistic point of view I didn't at all regret that the assembly chamber was burned - I hoped to build a better one. But I did regret very much that I was forced to find a new meeting place for the Reichstag and, not being able to find one, I'd to give up my Kroll Opera House, that is, the second State Opera House, for that purpose. The opera seemed to me much more important than the Reichstag.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: Have you ever boasted of burning the Reichstag building, even by way of joking?
GOERING: No. I made a joke, if that's the one you're referring to, when I said that, after this, I should be competing with Nero and that probably people would soon be saying that, dressed in a red toga and holding a lyre in my hand, I looked on at the fire and played while the Reichstag was burning. That was the joke. But the fact was that I almost perished in the flames, which would have been very unfortunate for the German people, but very fortunate for their enemies.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: You never stated then that you burned the Reichstag?
GOERING: No. I know that Herr Rauschning said in the book which he wrote, and which has often been referred to here, that I'd discussed this with him. I saw Herr Rauschning only twice in my life and only for a short time on each occasion. If I'd set fire to the Reichstag, I'd presumably have let that be known only to my closest circle of confidants, if at all. I wouldn't have told it to a man whom I didn't know and whose appearance I couldn't describe at all today. That is an absolute distortion of the truth.
Second marriage
During the early 1930s Göring was often in the company of
Emmy Sonnemann (1893-1973), an actress from Hamburg. He proposed to her in Weimar in February 1935. The wedding took place on
10 April 1935 in Berlin and was celebrated like the marriage of an emperor. They had a daughter, Edda Göring (born
2 June 1938) who was then thought to be named after
Countess Edda Ciano, eldest child of
Benito Mussolini. Actually, Edda was named after a friend of her mother.
Nazi potentate
Göring was one of the key figures in the process of "forcible coordination" (
Gleichschaltung) that established the Nazi
dictatorship. For example, in 1933, Göring promulgated the ban all
Roman Catholic newspapers in
Germany as a means of removing not only resistance to National Socialism but also to deprive the population of alternative forms of association and means of political communication.
In the Nazi regime's early years, Göring served as minister in various key positions at both the
Reich (German national) level and at other levels as required. For example, in the state of Prussia, Göring was responsible for the economy as well as re-armament.
His police forces included the
Gestapo, which he converted into a political spy force. But in 1934 Hitler transferred the Gestapo to
Himmler's SS. Göring retained Special Police Battalion
Wecke, which he converted to a paramilitary unit attached to the
Landespolizei
(State Police),
Landespolizeigruppe General Göring. This formation participated in the
Night of the Long Knives, when the SA leaders were purged.
Göring was head of the Nazi underground monitoring services for telephone and radio communications, the "
Forschungsamt" (FA). This was connected to the
SS, the
SD, and
Abwehr intelligence services.
After
Hjalmar Schacht was removed as Minister of Economics, Göring effectively took over. In 1936, he became Plenipotentiary of the Four Year Plan for German rearmament. The vast steel plant
Reichswerke Hermann Göring was named after him. He gained great influence with Hitler (who placed a high value on rearmament). He never seemed to accept the
Hitler Myth quite as much as Goebbels and Himmler did, but remained loyal nevertheless.
In 1938, Göring forced out the War Minister, Field Marshal
von Blomberg, and the Army commander, General
von Fritsch. They had welcomed Hitler's accession in 1933, but then annoyed him by criticising his plans for expansionist wars. Göring, who had been best man at Blomberg's recent wedding to a 26-year-old typist, discovered that the young woman was a former prostitute, and blackmailed him into resigning. Fritsch was accused of homosexual activity, and though completely innocent, resigned in shock and disgust. He was later exonerated by a "court of honour" presided over by Göring.
Also in 1938, it was Göring who spoke on the telephone to
Austrian Chancellor
Schuschnigg, using threats of war to bully him into surrendering to German occupation of Austria and the
Anschluss.
The confiscation of Jewish property gave Göring great opportunities to amass a personal fortune. Some properties he seized himself, or acquired for a nominal price. In other cases, he collected fat bribes for allowing others to grab Jewish property. He also took kickbacks from industrialists for favourable decisions as Four Year Plan director.
Göring also "collected" several other offices, such as
Reichsforst- und Jägermeister (Reich Master of the Forest and Hunt), for which he received high salaries. He was known for his extravagant tastes and garish clothing.
Hans Rudel, the top
Stuka pilot of the war, recalls in his war memoirs meeting Göring twice dressed in outlandish costumes: first, a medieval hunting costume, practicing archery with his doctor, and second, dressed in a russet
toga fastened with a golden clasp, smoking an abnormally large pipe.
Galeazzo Ciano, the Italian Foreign Minister, once noted Göring wearing a fur coat looking like what "a high grade
prostitute wears to the opera".
Göring acquired a vast Prussian estate in 1933, and built his great manor house there. It was named
Carinhall in memory of his first wife Karin. He exulted in
aristocratic trappings, such as a coat of arms, and ceremonial swords and daggers, such as the Wedding Sword (an oversized broadsword with elaborate gold hilts presented to Göring at his 1935 wedding to Emmy). He also owned a great deal of fancy uniforms and gaudy jewelry. Most infamously, he
collected art, looting from numerous museums (some in Germany itself), stealing from Jewish collectors, or buying for a song in occupied countries.
Göring was also noted for his patronage of music, especially
opera. He entertained frequently and lavishly. Though he liked to be called "
der Eiserne" (the Iron Man), he was flabby and overweight, over 280 lbs. He was one of the few Nazi leaders who didn't take offense at hearing jokes about himself, "no matter how rude". Germans joked about his ego, saying that he'd wear an admiral's uniform to take a bath, and his obesity, joking that "he sits down on his stomach".
Head of the Luftwaffe
When the Nazis took power, Göring was Minister of Civil Air Transport, which was a screen for the build-up of German war aviation, prohibited by the
Treaty of Versailles. When Hitler repudiated Versailles, in
1935, the
Luftwaffe was unveiled, with Göring as Minister and
Oberbefehlshaber (Supreme Commander). In
1938, he became the first
Generalfeldmarschall (Field Marshal) of the
Luftwaffe. Göring directed the rapid creation of this new branch of service. Within a few years, Germany produced large numbers of the world's most advanced military aircraft.
In 1936, Göring at Hitler's direction sent several hundred aircraft along with several thousand air and ground crew, to assist the Nationalists in the
Spanish Civil War as the
Condor Legion.
By 1939 the
Luftwaffe was the most advanced and one of the most powerful air forces in the world.
On
9 August 1939, Göring boasted "The
Ruhr won't be subjected to a single bomb. If an enemy bomber reaches the Ruhr, my name isn't Hermann Göring: you can call me Meier!" ("I want to be called Meier if ..." is a German idiom to express that something is impossible. Meier (in several spelling variants) is the second most common surname in Germany.) By the end of the war, Berlin's
air raid sirens were bitterly known to the city's residents as "Meier's trumpets", or "Meier's hunting horns."
Göring's private army
Unusually, the
Luftwaffe also included its own ground troops, which became Göring's private army. German
Fallschirmjäger (parachute and glider) troops were organised as part of the
Luftwaffe, not as part of the Army. These formations eventually grew to over 30 divisions, which almost never operated as airborne troops. About half were "field divisions", that is, plain infantry.
There was even a
Fallschirm-Panzer Division 1 Hermann Göring, which had originally been the special police battalion mentioned above.
Many of these divisions were led by officers with little or no training for ground combat, and performed badly as a result. In 1945, two
Fallschirmjäger divisions were deployed on the
Oder front. Göring said at a staff meeting "When both my airborne divisions attack, the entire Red Army can be thrown to hell." But when the Red Army attacked, Göring's
9th Parachute Division collapsed.
World War II
Göring was skeptical of Hitler's war plans. He believed Germany wasn't prepared for a new conflict and, in particular, that his
Luftwaffe wasn't yet ready to beat the British
Royal Air Force (RAF). His personal luxuries might be endangered, too. So he made contacts through various diplomats and emissaries to avoid war.
However, once Hitler decided on war, Göring supported him completely. On
1 September,
1939, the first day of the war, Hitler spoke to the
Reichstag at the
Kroll Opera House. In this speech he designated Göring as his successor "if anything should befall me."
Initially, decisive German victories followed quickly one after the other. The
Luftwaffe destroyed the Polish Air Force within two weeks. The
Fallschirmjäger seized key airfields in
Norway and captured
Fort Eben-Emael in Belgium. German air to ground attacks served as the "flying artillery" of the
panzer troops in the
blitzkrieg of France. "Leave it to my
Luftwaffe" became Göring's perpetual gloat.
After the defeat of France, Hitler awarded Göring the
Grand Cross of the Iron Cross for his successful leadership. By a decree on
19 June 1940, Hitler promoted Göring to the rank of
Reichsmarschall (Marshal of Germany), the highest military rank of the Greater German Reich.
Reichsmarschall was a special rank for Göring, which made him senior to all other Army and
Luftwaffe Field Marshals.
Göring's political and military careers were at their peak. Göring had already received the
Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross on
September 30 1939 as Commander in Chief of the Luftwaffe.
Göring promised Hitler that the
Luftwaffe would quickly destroy the RAF, or break British morale with devastating air raids. He personally directed the first attacks on Britain from his private luxury train. But the
Luftwaffe failed to gain control of the skies in the
Battle of Britain. This was Hitler's first defeat. And Britain withstood the worst the
Luftwaffe could do for the eight months of "
the Blitz".
However, the damage inflicted on British cities largely maintained Göring's prestige. The
Luftwaffe destroyed
Belgrade in April 1941, and
Fallschirmjäger captured
Crete from the British army.
The eastern front
If Göring was skeptical about war against Britain and France, he was absolutely certain that a new campaign against the
Soviet Union was doomed to defeat. After trying, completely in vain, to convince Hitler to give up
Operation Barbarossa, he embraced the campaign. Hitler still relied on him completely. On
29 June, Hitler composed a special 'testament', which was kept secret till the end of the war. This formally designated Göring as "my deputy in all my offices" if Hitler was unable to function, and his successor if he died. Ironically, Göring didn't know the contents of this testament, which was marked "To be opened only by the Reichsmarschall", until after leaving Berlin in April 1945 for Berchtesgaden, where it had been kept.
The
Luftwaffe shared in the initial victories in the east, destroying thousands of Soviet aircraft. But as Soviet resistance grew and the weather turned bad, the
Luftwaffe became overstretched and exhausted.
Göring by this time had lost interest in administering the
Luftwaffe. That duty was left to incompetent favorites such as
Udet and
Jeschonnek. Aircraft production lagged. Yet Göring persisted in outlandish promises. When the Soviets surrounded a German army in
Stalingrad in 1942, Göring encouraged Hitler to fight for the city rather than retreat. He asserted that the
Luftwaffe would deliver 500 tons per day of supplies to the trapped force. In fact no more than 100 tons were ever delivered in a day, and usually much less. While Göring's men struggled to fly in the savage Russian winter, Göring had his usual lavish birthday party.
Göring was in charge of exploiting the vast industrial resources captured during the war, particularly in the
Soviet Union. This proved to be an almost total failure, and little of the available potential was effectively harnessed for the service of the German military machine.
The bomber war
As early as 1940, British aircraft raided targets in Germany, debunking Göring's assurance that the Reich would never be attacked. By 1942, the bombers were coming by hundreds and thousands. Entire cities such as Cologne and Hamburg were devastated. The
Luftwaffe responded with night fighters,
radar, and anti-aircraft guns. Göring was still nominally in charge, but in practice he'd little to do with operations.
Göring's prestige, reputation, and influence with Hitler all declined, especially after the Stalingrad debacle. Hitler couldn't publicly repudiate him without embarrassment, but contact between them largely stopped. Göring withdrew from the military and political scene to enjoy the pleasures of life as a wealthy and powerful man. His reputation for extravagance made him particularly unpopular as ordinary Germans began to suffer deprivation.
The end of the war
In 1945, Göring fled the Berlin area with trainloads of treasures for the Nazi alpine resort in
Berchtesgaden. He was presented with Hitler's testament, which he read for the first time. On
23 April, as the
Red Army closed in around Berlin, Göring sent a radiogram to Hitler, suggesting that the testament should now come into force. He added that if he didn't hear back from Hitler by 10 PM, he'd assume Hitler was incapacitated, and would assume leadership of the Reich.
Hitler was enraged by this proposal, which
Bormann portrayed as an attempted
coup d'état. On
25 April, Hitler ordered the SS to arrest Göring. On
26 April, Hitler dismissed Göring as commander of the
Luftwaffe. In his
last will and testament, Hitler dismissed Göring from all his offices and expelled him from the Nazi Party. On
28 April, Hitler ordered the SS to execute Göring, his wife, and their daughter (Hitler's own goddaughter). But this order was ignored.
Instead, the Görings and their SS captors moved together, to the same
Schloß Mauterndorf where Göring had spent much of his childhood and which he'd inherited (along with Burg Veldenstein) from his godfather's widow upon her death in
1937. (Göring had arranged for preferential treatment for the woman after his rise to power, a consideration that guaranteed her immunity from the confiscation and arrest that may have been her fate as the widow of a wealthy Jew.)
Capture, trial, and death
Göring surrendered on
9 May 1945 in
Bavaria. He was the third-highest-ranking Nazi official tried at
Nuremberg, behind Reich President (former Admiral)
Karl Dönitz and former
Deputy Führer Hess. Göring's last days were spent with Captain
Gustave Gilbert, a German-speaking American intelligence officer and
psychologist (and a Jew), who had access to all the prisoners held in the Nuremberg jail. Gilbert classified Göring as having an
IQ of 138, the same as Dönitz. Gilbert kept a journal which he later published as
Nuremberg Diary. Here he describes Göring on the evening of
18 April 1946, as the trials were halted for a three-day
Easter recess.
Sweating in his cell in the evening, Göring was defensive and deflated and not very happy over the turn the trial was taking. He said that he'd no control over the actions or the defence of the others, and that he'd never been anti-Semitic himself, hadn't believed these atrocities, and that several Jews had offered to testify on his behalf.
Despite claims that he wasn't anti-Semitic, while in the prison yard at Nuremberg, after hearing a remark about Jewish survivors in Hungary,
Albert Speer reported overhearing Göring say, "So, there are still some there? I thought we'd knocked off all of them. Somebody slipped up again." Despite his claims of non-involvement, he was confronted with orders he'd signed for the murder of Jews and prisoners of war.
Though he defended himself vigorously, and actually appeared to be winning the trial early on (partly by building popularity with the audience by making jokes and finding holes in the prosecution's case) he was sentenced to death by hanging. The judgment stated that:
There is nothing to be said in mitigation. For Goering was often, indeed almost always, the moving force, second only to his leader. He was the leading war aggressor, both as political and as military leader; he was the director of the slave labour programme and the creator of the oppressive programme against the Jews and other races, at home and abroad. All of these crimes he's frankly admitted. On some specific cases there may be conflict of testimony, but in terms of the broad outline, his own admissions are more than sufficiently wide to be conclusive of his guilt. His guilt is unique in its enormity. The record discloses no excuses for this man.
Göring made an appeal, offering to accept the court's death sentence if he were shot as a soldier instead of hanged as a common criminal, but the court refused.
Defying the sentence imposed by his captors, he committed suicide with a
potassium cyanide capsule the night before he was to be hanged. Where Göring obtained the cyanide, and how he concealed it during his entire imprisonment at Nuremberg, remains unknown. In the 1950s, Karl von Kaiser claimed that he'd given Göring the cyanide shortly before Göring's death. However, this claim is usually dismissed. Later theories speculate that Göring befriended U.S. Army Lieutenant
Jack G. "Tex" Wheelis, who was stationed at the Nuremberg Trials and helped Göring obtain cyanide which had been hidden among Göring's personal effects when they were confiscated by the Army. In
2005, former U.S. Army Private Herbert Lee Stivers claimed he gave Göring "medicine" hidden inside a gift fountain pen from a German woman the private had met and flirted with. Stivers served in the
1st Infantry Division's 26th Regiment, who formed the honour guard for the Nuremberg Trials. Stivers claims to have been unaware of what the "medicine" he delivered actually was until after Göring's death. After his death, Hermann Göring was
cremated and his ashes were scattered in the
Conwentzbach in Munich, which runs into the
Isar river.
He and
Alfred Rosenberg were born on the same day (12 January 1893), and had Göring not committed suicide the night before his planned execution, they'd also have died on the same day.
Relatives
Hermann Göring had an older brother Karl, who migrated to the U.S. Karl's son,
Werner G. Göring, became a Captain in the Army Air Force and piloted
B-17s on bombing missions over Europe.
Hermann's younger brother
Albert Göring was opposed to the Nazi regime, and helped Jews and dissidents in Germany during the Nazi era. He is said to have forged Hermann's signature on transit papers to enable escapes, among other acts.
The official flags of Hermann Göring
When Göring was promoted to the unique rank of
Reichsmarschall on
19 July 1940, he chose a personal flag, or standard, for himself. The design in the centre of the left side displayed a German eagle embroidered in gold-yellow thread and clutching in its talons a gold swastika standing on its point. Set behind the swastika was a pair of crossed marshal's batons. The right side displayed in the centre a large black Iron Cross. It was the unique
Großkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes that was bestowed on him by Hitler. Set in each of the four sections of the field was a gold-yellow Luftwaffe eagle and swastika. The basic field was light blue on both sides, which indicated that he was also the Commander-In-Chief of the German Air Force. In February 1941 he ordered the design modified to look more "fashionable". The standard was used for all purposes and was carried by a personal standard-bearer.
Image:Hermann Göring1 (Vorderseite).jpg|1. pattern (right side)
Image:Hermann Göring1 (Rückseite).jpg|1. pattern (left side)
Image:Hermann Göring2 (Vorderseite).jpg|2. pattern (right side)
Image:Hermann Göring2 (Rückseite).jpg|2. pattern (left side)
Image:Musee-de-lArmee-IMG 1056.jpg|Standard, on display at the Musée de la Guerre in the Invalides
Quotations
Göring spoke about war and extreme nationalism to Captain Gilbert (see
Nuremberg Diary):
Naturally the common people don't want war; neither in Russia, nor in England, nor in America, nor in Germany. That is understood. But after all, it's the leaders of the country who determine policy, and it's always a simple matter to drag the people along, whether it's a democracy, or a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist dictatorship. ...Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you've to do is to tell them they're being attacked, and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same in any country.
The famous quotation, "When I hear the word culture, I reach for my
Browning" is frequently attributed to Göring during the inter-war period. Whether or not he actually used this phrase, it didn't originate with him. The line comes from Nazi
playwright Hanns Johst's play
Schlageter, "Wenn ich
Kultur höre ... entsichere ich meinen Browning," "Whenever I hear of culture... I release the safety-catch of my Browning!" (Act 1, Scene 1). Nor was Göring the only Nazi official to use this phrase:
Rudolf Hess used it as well, and it was a popular cliché in Germany, often in the form: "Wenn ich 'Kultur' höre, nehme ich meine Pistole."
In film
He has been portrayed by:
- Curly Howard parodied Göring as "Field Marshal Curly Gallstone" - 1940, in the Three Stooges short You Nazty Spy!
- Billy Gilbert parodied Göring as "Minister Herring" - 1940 - Charlie Chaplin's The Great Dictator
- Jan Werich - 1949, Padeniye Berlina (both parts)
- Hein Reiss - 1969, Battle of Britain.
- Barry Primus - 1971, Von Richthofen and Brown.
- David King - 1981 The Bunker (television movie).
- Reinhard Kolldehoff - 1983 The Winds of War (television miniseries).
- Joss Ackland - 1988 The Man Who Lived at the Ritz (television movie).
- Volker Spengler - 1996, The Ogre, directed by Volker Schlöndorff, also starring John Malkovich.
- Glenn Shadix - 1996, The Empty Mirror.
- Brian Cox - 2000, Nuremberg (television movie), also starring Alec Baldwin and Jill Hennessy.
- Chris Larkin - 2003, (television movie).
- Mathias Gnädinger - 2004, Der Untergang.
- Hannes Hellmann - 2006, Nuremberg: Goering's Last Stand.
- Robert Pugh in the 2006 BBC docudrama
Footage of Göring has been included in many films, notably in the 1935 Triumph of the Will by Leni Riefenstahl. See his page at IMDb (External Link
).
In fiction
In Frederic Raphael's The Glittering Prizes Adam Morris' roommate Donald Donaldson tells the group of friends that his uncle once went hunting with Göring, and that the uncle actually liked him.
In Philip José Farmer's Riverworld, where all humanity is reincarnated, Göring repents his crimes and becomes a missionary for the pacifist Church of the Second Chance.
In Eric Koch's C.R.U.P.P-novels the protagonist is a former assistant of Hermann Göring.
Philip K. Dick's 1962 science fiction alternate history novel The Man in the High Castle mentions Göring, who, by 1962 is aging, morbidly obese, and the subject of much rumor and speculation regarding his indulgent lifestyle (which is seen by some as akin to that of a corrupt Roman emperor). He resides in his large estate within the Alps. Göring also appears as a character in Dick's 1964 novel The Simulacra, which is set in a fictional America of the late 21st century. A time machine is used to pluck Göring out of 1944 and deposit him in the novel's "present" (his and our future).
Neal Stephenson's 1999 novel Cryptonomicon includes a florid portrait of the Reichsmarschall.
Göring, along with Adolf Hitler, was an early foe of Captain America.
Göring is represented by the character Emmanuel Giri in The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui by Bertolt Brecht. The play is a parody of the rise of Hitler, largely written in exile (1941), with various scenes added afterwards. It has been translated into English by Ralph Manheim and published by Methuen modern plays.
More humorously, the character of "General Hering" stands in for Göring in Charlie Chaplin's 1940 film The Great Dictator.
In the BBC sci-fi comedy Red Dwarf, Göring is denounced on multiple occasions.
In The Winds of War, the pre-war half of Herman Wouk's pair of epic World War Two historical novels, the main character, a naval attaché in 1939 Berlin, attends a party at Carinhall and translates during a meeting between a secret American envoy, Göring, Ribbentrop and Hitler. Göring is described as grotesquely obese and dressed in ludicrous jewels and finery. Hitler is also described playing with Göring's young daughter before the meeting.
In the Bugs Bunny cartoon "Herr Meets Hare", Hermann Göring was depicted as a hunter trying to kill Bugs Bunny. Bugs tricks him by dressing up as Adolf Hitler in one scene.
The Daily Show in one sketch stated that the Republicans defeat in the 2006 Congressional elections was due to a number of Congressional scandals, including one GOP Congressmen actually having been discovered to be Hermann Göring.
At the beginning of the episode of the Donald Duck cartoon Der Fuehrer's Face, Göring is marching in a procession with other Nazi figures in a dream sequence.
In A Matter of Honour by Jeffrey Archer, Hermann Göring's suicide is the cause of Adam Scott's father's downfall, as he was guarding Göring at the time. He is also the one who left the Czar's Icon to Scott.
In the show Hogan's Heroes in one episode Sergeant Schultz, dresses as Göring.
In Sinclair Lewis' "Lanny Budd" series, Hermann Göring makes numerable appearances, along with Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini.
Books about Göring
Excerpt from Germany Reborn, by Hermann Göring, 1934
Further Information
Get more info on 'Hermann G Ring'.
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