
Adolf
Hitler was born in Braunau am Inn, Austria, on April 20th 1889 to Alois Hitler
(who, as an illegitimate child, had previously used his mother’s name of
Schickelgruber) and Klara Poelzl. A moody child, he grew hostile towards his
father, especially once the latter had retired and the family had moved to the
outskirts of Linz. Alois died in 1903 but left money to take care of the
family. Hitler was close to his mother, who was highly indulgent of Hitler, and
he was deeply affected when she died in 1907. He left school at 16 in 1905,
intending to become a painter.
Adolf
Hitler in Vienna:
Hitler
went to Vienna in 1907 where he applied to the Viennese Academy of Fine arts,
but was twice turned down. This experience further embittered the increasingly
angry Hitler, and he returned when his mother died, living first with a more
succesful friend (Kubizek), and then moving from hostel to hostel, a lonely,
vagabond figure, but he recovered to make a living selling his art cheaply and
resident in a community 'Men's Home'. During this period Hitler appears to have
developed the world view that would characterise his whole life: a hatred for
Jews and Marxists. Hitler was well placed to be influenced by the demagogy of
Karl Lueger, Vienna’s deeply anti-Semitic mayor, and a man who used hate to
help create a party of mass support. Hitler had previously been influenced by
Schonerer, an Austrian politician against liberals, socialists, catholics and
Jews. Vienna was also highly anti-Semitic with a press extolling it: Hitler's
hate was not unusual.
Adolf
Hitler and the First World War:
Hitler
moved to Munich in 1913 and avoided Austrian military service in early 1914 by
virtue of being unfit. However, when the First World War broke out in 1914 he
joined the 16th Bavarian Infantry Regiment (an oversight prevented him from
being sent to Austria), serving throughout the war, mostly as a corporal after
refusing promotion. He proved to be an able and brave soldier as a dispatch
runner, winning the Iron Cross on two occasions (First and Second Class) . He
was also wounded twice, and four weeks before the war ended suffered a gas
attack which temporarily blinded and hospitalised him. It was here he learnt of
Germany’s surrender, which he took as a betrayal. He especially hated the
Treaty of Versailles.
Adolf
Hitler Enters Politics:
After
WW1 Hitler became convinced he was destined to help Germany, but his first move
was to stay in the army, with its wages, for as long as possible, and to do so
he went along with the socialists now in charge. He was soon able to turn the
tables, and drew the attention of the army, who were setting up
anti-revolutionary units. Here Hitler realised he could speak well. Had he not
been picked out by one interested man, he may never have amounted to anything.
In 1919, working for an army unit, he was assigned to spy on a political party
of roughly 40 idealists called the German Workers Party. Instead he joined it,
swiftly rose to a position of dominance (he was chairman by 1921) and renamed
it the Socialist German Workers Party (NSDAP). He gave the party the Swastika
as a symbol and organised a personal army of ‘storm troopers’ (the SA or
Brownshirts) and a bodyguard of black shirted men, the SS, to attack opponents.
He also discovered, and used, his powerful ability for public speaking.
The
Beer Hall Putsch:
In
November 1923 Hitler organised Bavarian nationalists under a figurehead of
General Ludendorff into a coup (or 'putsch'). They declared their new
government in a beer hall in Munich and then 3000 marched through the streets,
but they were met by police, who opened fire, killing 16. Hitler was arrested
and tried in 1924, but was sentenced to only five years in prison, a sentence
often taken as a sign of tacit agreement with his views. Hitler served only
nine months in prison, during which he wrote Mein Kampf (My Struggle), a book
outlining his theories on race, Germany and Jews. It sold five million copies
by 1939. Only now, in prison, did Hitler come to believe he was the one who should
be leader, instead of just their drummer.
Adolf
Hitler as Politician:
After
the Beer-Hall Putsch Hitler resolved to seek power through subverting the
Weimar government system, and he carefully rebuilt the NSDAP, or Nazi, party,
allying with future key figures like Goering and propaganda mastermind
Goebbels. Over time he expanded the party’s support, partly by exploiting fears
of socialists and partly by appealing to everyone who felt their economic
livelihood threatened by the depression of the 1930s, until he had the ears of
big business, the press and the middle classes. Nazi votes jumped to 107 seats
in the Reichstag in 1930.
Adolf
Hitler as President and Führer:
In
1932 Hitler acquired German citizenship and ran for president, coming second to
von Hindenburg. Later that year the Nazi party acquired 230 seats in the
Reichstag, making them the largest party in Germany. Helped by support from
conservative politicians believing they could control Hitler, he was appointed
Chancellor of Germany on January 30th 1933. Hitler moved with great speed to
isolate and expel opponents from power, shutting trade unions, removing
communists, conservatives and Jews.
Later
that year Hitler perfectly exploited an act of arson on the Reichstag (which
some believe the Nazis helped cause) to begin the creation of a totalitarian
state, dominating the March 5th elections thanks to support from nationalist
groups. Hitler soon took over the role of president when Hindenburg died and
merged the role with that of Chancellor to become Führer (‘Leader’) of Germany.
Adolf
Hitler in Power:
Hitler
continued to move with speed in radically changing Germany, consolidating
power, locking up “enemies” in camps, bending culture to his will, rebuilding
the army and breaking the constraints of the Treaty of Versailles. He tried to
change the social fabric of Germany by encouraging women to breed more and
bringing in laws to secure racial purity; Jews were particularly targeted.
Employment, high elsewhere in a time of depression, fell to zero in Germany.
Hitler also made himself head of the army.
World War Two and the Failure of the Third Reich
Hitler engineered territorial expansion,
uniting with Austria in an anschluss, and dismembering Czechoslovakia. It was
in September 1939, when German forces invaded Poland, that other nations took a
stand, declaring war. This was not unappealing to Hitler who believed Germany
should make itself great through war, and invasions in 1940 went well. However,
arguably his fatal mistake occurred in 1941 with the invasion of Russia,
through which he wished to create lebensraum, or ‘living room’. After initial
success, German forces were pushed back by Russia, and defeats in Africa and
West Europe followed as Germany was slowly beaten. During this time Hitler
became gradually more paranoid and divorced from the world, retreating to a
bunker. As armies approached Berlin from two directions, Hitler married his
mistress, Eva Braun, and on April 30th 1945 killed himself.
Hitler and History
Hitler will forever be remembered for
starting the Second World War, the most costly conflict in world history,
thanks to his desire to expand Germany’s borders through force. He will equally
be remembered for his dreams of racial purity, which prompted him to order the
execution of millions of people, perhaps as high as eleven million. Although
every arm of German bureaucracy was turned to pursuing the executions, Hitler
was the chief driving force.
Adolf Hitler: Mentally Ill?
In the decades since
Hitler’s death many commentators have concluded that he must have been mentally
ill, and that if he wasn’t when he started his rule the pressures of his failed
wars must have driven him mad. Given that he ordered genocide and ranted and
raved it is easy to see why people have come to this conclusion, but it’s
important to state that there is no consensus among historians that he was
insane, or what psychological problems he may have had.
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