User:Stephen2nd/List of Nazi nobility
Appearance
1928
[edit]NSDAP | Title Name |
Image D.o.b |
Arms House |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
88835 1/5/1928 SS |
Hereditary Prince - Ernst of Lippe (German Wikipedia) |
12/6/1902 | Lippe | Prince Ernst was a member of the SS (Nr. 314 184), with honorary rank SS-Sturmbannführer. In 1938 Ernst was second adjutant to Walter Darré, (member of Hitler's first Cabinet), at the Nazi Minister of Agriculture. In 1939 he was a main aide to the Minister in his functions as Reich Minister, and Reichsleiter of the Nazi Party. At the Nuremberg trials Prince Ernst was put in the de-Nazification group, class III (a lesser offender), by the Detmold arbitration board. |
95146 1/8/1928 SA |
Prince Friedrich Christian of Schaumburg-Lippe | 5/1/1906 | Schaumburg-Lippe | Prince Friedrich was a SA-Standartenführer. An upper privy councillor and adjutant to the Nazi Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels, (member of Hitler's first Cabinet). He was an ardent Nazi Party supporter who worked to gain royal support for them. In 1947, Prince Friedrich, Prince Philipp of Hesse, and Prince Ernst of Lippe, were brought under arrest to the war crimes jail at Nuremberg, to appear as witnesses in the 16 trials of high-ranking Nazi criminals.[1] |
1929
[edit]NSDAP | Title Name |
Image D.o.b |
Arms House |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
119692 1/3/1929 |
Count - Josef of Reuttner | 12/10/1886 | Württemberg | |
144005 18/8/1929 |
Princess - Alexandra of Schaumburg-Lippe | 29/6/1904 | Schaumburg-Lippe | |
160025 1/11/1929 SS |
Josias, Hereditary Prince of Waldeck and Pyrmont | 13/5/1896 | Waldeck and Pyrmont | Prince Josias joined the SS in 1930, as adjutant to Waffen-SS General Sepp Dietrich, he then became Himmler's adjutant and Chief of Staff.[2] He was elected to the Reichstag in 1933, and promoted to SS Lieutenant General,[2] then in 1939, to SS-Obergruppenführer and Higher SS and Police Leader for Weimar, with supervisory authority over Buchenwald concentration camp.[3]In 1942, he was High Commissioner of Police in German-occupied France.[4] He was then made a Waffen-SS General in 1944.[3] Prince Josias was arrested in 1945 and sentenced to life imprisonment at the Buchenwald Trial in 1947, commuted to 20 years.[5] Released in 1950 after 3 years, [2] Prince Josias was granted amnesty by a Minister President of Hesse in 1953.[6] |
161001 1/11/1929 |
Duchess Altburg of Oldenburg | 19/5/1903 | Waldeck and Pyrmont | Duchess Altburg married Prince Josias, who was the eldest son of Prince Friedrich and Princess Bathildis. Duchess Altburg was a daughter of Grand Duke Frederick Augustus II by his second wife Duchess Elisabeth Alexandrine. Like her own parents, Josias' parents had lost their titles when Wilhelm II, their former German Kaiser, abdicated in 1918. |
1930
[edit]NSDAP | Title Name |
Image D.o.b |
Arms House |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
119692 1/3/1929 |
Count - Josef of Reuttner | 12/10/1886 | Reuttner | |
119692 1/3/1929 |
Count - Josef of Reuttner | 12/10/1886 | Reuttner | |
119692 1/3/1929 |
Count - Josef of Reuttner | 12/10/1886 | Reuttner | |
119692 1/3/1929 |
Count - Josef of Reuttner | 12/10/1886 | Reuttner | |
119692 1/3/1929 |
Count - Josef of Reuttner | 12/10/1886 | Reuttner | |
119692 1/3/1929 |
Count - Josef of Reuttner | 12/10/1886 | Reuttner | |
119692 1/3/1929 |
Count - Josef of Reuttner | 12/10/1886 | Reuttner | |
119692 1/3/1929 |
Count - Josef of Reuttner | 12/10/1886 | Reuttner | |
119692 1/3/1929 |
Count - Josef of Reuttner | 12/10/1886 | Reuttner | |
119692 1/3/1929 |
Count - Josef of Reuttner | 12/10/1886 | Reuttner | |
119692 1/3/1929 |
Count - Josef of Reuttner | 12/10/1886 | Reuttner | |
119692 1/3/1929 |
Count - Josef of Reuttner | 12/10/1886 | Reuttner | |
119692 1/3/1929 |
Count - Josef of Reuttner | 12/10/1886 | Reuttner | |
119692 1/3/1929 |
Count - Josef of Reuttner | 12/10/1886 | Reuttner |
- ^ "German Princes To Testify", The Irish Times, 12 July 1947
- ^ a b c Wistrich, Robert S. (1995). Who's Who in Nazi Germany. Routledge. p. 171. ISBN 0-415-26038-8.
- ^ a b Petropoulos 2006, p. 262
- ^ "Nazi Prince sent to subdue French". New York Times. 25 April 1942. p. 3.
- ^ Stein 2004, p. 255
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
P266
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).