The Death of Adolf Hitler

The Death of Adolf Hitler: Unknown Documents from Soviet Archives (German: Der Tod des Adolf Hitler) is a 1968 book by Soviet journalist Lev Bezymenski, who served as an interpreter in the Battle of Berlin under Red Army Marshal Georgy Zhukov.[1][2] The book gives details of the purported Soviet autopsies of Adolf Hitler, Eva Braun, Joseph and Magda Goebbels, their children, and General Hans Krebs. Each of these individuals are recorded as having been subjected to cyanide poisoning. Some of the theories the book presents concerning the death of Hitler have been discredited, including by the author.[3]

The Death of Adolf Hitler
AuthorLev Bezymenski
CountrySoviet Union
LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarcourt Brace & World
Publication date
1968
Media typeHardcover
Pages114
ISBN978-0718106348

Content

The book opens with a 66-page overview of the battle of Berlin and its aftermath by Bezymenski. Its appendix features a 4-page document of the discovery of the Goebbels family's corpses and 38 pages of autopsy reports.[4]

The Death of Adolf Hitler

Bezymenski gives an account of the battle of Berlin, the subsequent investigation by SMERSH, supplemented by later statements of pertinent Nazi officers. According to SMERSH commander Ivan Klimenko, Soviet Private Ivan Churakov discovered legs sticking out of the ground in a crater outside the Chancellery. Two corpses were exhumed, but Klimenko had them reburied, believing that another body might be Hitler's.[lower-alpha 1] On the morning of 5 May, the other corpse was debunked as being Hitler's and Klimenko had the other two bodies reexhumed. On 13 May, SMERSH produced a report of the initial disposal of the corpses based on the testimony of an SS guard.[6]

A report on the purported forensic examination of Hitler's body states that the "remains of a male corpse disfigured by fire were delivered in a wooden box[lower-alpha 2] ... On the body was found a piece of yellow jersey ... charred around the edges, resembling a knitted undervest." It notes that the corpse was "severely charred"[lower-alpha 3] and that "part of the cranium [was] missing." The height of the body was judged to be about 165 centimetres (5 ft 5 in).[8][lower-alpha 4] Both the left foot and testicle were missing.[10][lower-alpha 5] Hitler's dental remains consisted of nine upper teeth with dental work connected by a gold bridge[lower-alpha 6] and part of a lower jawbone with 15 teeth (10 of them artificial); the latter was found loose in the oral cavity. The tip of the tongue was "firmly locked between the teeth of the upper and lower jaws." The alveolar processes of the mandible were broken with "ragged edges".[8] Splinters of glass and a "thin-walled ampule" were found in the mouth (as from a cyanide capsule),[12] which was ruled to be the cause of death.[13]

Bezymenski also gives an account of discrepancies of certain reports. For instance, after being published in Der Spiegel, Heinz Linge changed his account of Hitler's suicide gunshot from being to the left temple to being to the right—Bezymenski points out that the former is unlikely as Hitler was right-handed.[14] Between 1950 and 1960, Otto Günsche changed his account of the position of Hitler and Braun's bodies from being on the couch to being in chairs.[14] Soviet forensic expert Faust Shkaravsky concludes from the examination held on 8 May that "No matter what is asserted ... our Commission could not detect any traces of a gun shot ... Hitler poisoned himself."[15] Bezymenski posits that Hitler may have died by the combination of cyanide poisoning and a coup de grâce by citing the little black dog found nearby, which was killed in a similar fashion.[15]

Appendix

The appendix includes the purported Soviet forensic reports on the bodies of Braun, the Goebbels family, General Krebs, Hitler's dog Blondi, and another small dog.

Eva Braun

The body presumed to be Braun's is noted as being "impossible to describe the features of", owing to its extensive charring. Almost the entire upper skull was missing. The occipital and temporal bones were fragmentary, as was the lower left of the face. Three molars and one detached root were found in the upper jaw, as well as a loose canine; the others were missing, as were the alveolar processes. Six of the lower jaw's left teeth were preserved, while those of the right side were missing. A gold bridge with two false molars was found, detached, under the tongue. The woman was judged to be no more than middle-aged due to her teeth being only slightly worn; her height was approximately 150 centimetres (4 ft 11 in). There was a splinter injury to the chest resulting in hemothorax, injuries to one lung and the pericardium—accompanied by six small metal fragments.[lower-alpha 7] Pieces of a glass ampule were found in the mouth cavity, and the smell of bitter almonds which accompanies death from cyanide poisoning was present; this was ruled to be the cause of death.[17]

Goebbels family

The remains of Joseph and Magda Goebbels were discovered near the bunker door by Ivan Klimenko on 2 May 1945.[lower-alpha 8] The next day, Senior Lieutenant Ilyin found the bodies of the Goebbels children in one of the rooms of the bunker. The bodies were identified by Vizeadmiral Hans-Erich Voss, cook Wilhelm Lange, and garage mechanic Karl Friedrich Wilhelm Schneider, "all of whom knew [the Goebbels family] well."[19]

Joseph Goebbels' body was "heavily scorched", but was identified by his size, estimated age, shortened right leg and related orthopedic appliance, as well as his head characteristics and dental remains, which included many fillings. His genitals were "greatly reduced in size, shrunken, dry." Chemical testing revealed cyanide compounds in the internal organs and blood; cyanide poisoning was judged to be the cause of death.[20]

Voss identified two items found on Magda's corpse as having been in her possession: a cigarette case inscribed "Adolf Hitler—29.X.34", which she had used for the last three weeks of her life, and Hitler's Golden Party Badge, which the dictator had given her three days before his suicide.[21][22] Additionally, a reddish-blond hairpiece was identified as matching the color of one Magda wore. Her dental remains were found loose on the corpse along with splinters from a thin-walled ampule; the cause of death was ruled to be cyanide poisoning.[21]

General Krebs

General Krebs is erroneously listed in the autopsy report as "Major General Krips".[lower-alpha 9] Cyanide compounds were detected in the internal organs and the smell of bitter almonds was recorded, leading the commission to conclude that Krebs' death was "obviously caused by poisoning with cyanide compounds." Three light head wounds are presumed to have been obtained from his death fall onto a protruding object.[23]

Dogs

A large German Shepherd matching Hitler's dog Blondi's description appears to have died from cyanide poisoning.[24]

A small black bitch, about 60 centimetres (2 ft) long and 28 centimetres (1 ft) tall, was poisoned by cyanide before being shot in the head.[25]

Photographs

The 16 pages of photographs include those of Ivan Klimenko, head of autopsy commission Faust Shkaravsky, the locations of Hitler's burning and burying site outside the Führerbunker's emergency exit, SMERSH agents exhuming Hitler and Braun's remains, a diagram of where the corpses of Hitler, Braun, Joseph and Magda Goebbels were burned, Hitler and Braun's corpses in boxes,[lower-alpha 2] Hitler's dental remains and a sketch drawn by Hitler's dentist's assistant Käthe Heusermann on 11 May 1945 to identify them, Braun's dental bridge, the first and last page of Hitler's autopsy report, the Soviet autopsy commission with both Kreb's and Joseph Goebbels' corpses, the bodies of the Goebbels family, the bodies of Krebs and the Goebbels children at Plötzensee Prison,[26] and Blondi's corpse.[27]

History and criticism

On why the autopsy reports were not released earlier, Bezymenski says:

Not because of doubts as to the credibility of the experts. ... Those who were involved in the investigation remember that other considerations played a far larger role. First, it was resolved not to publish the results of the forensic-medical report but to "hold it in reserve" in case someone might try to slip into the role of 'the Führer saved by a miracle'. Secondly, it was resolved to continue the investigations in order to exclude any possibility of error or deliberate deception.[28]

The Soviet forensic examination of Hitler's corpse was used by forensic odontologists Reidar F. Sognnaes and Ferdinand Strøm to reconfirm Hitler's dental remains at UCLA in 1972; this was originally done by Käthe Heusermann and dental technician Fritz Echtmann in 1945.[29]

In 1995, Western historians Ada Petrova and Peter Watson wrote that they considered Bezymenski's account at odds with British MI6 intelligence officer Hugh Trevor-Roper's report, published as The Last Days of Hitler (1947).[30] However, Petrova and Watson used Bezymenski's book as a source for theirs.[31] They also cited Hitler's autopsy report to refute Hugh Thomas's theory that Hitler's remains were not his own, saying the entire jawbone structure would have had to have been found loose on the body while clamping down on the tongue, which "would presumably be a very difficult arrangement to fake."[32][lower-alpha 10] Also in 1995, Bezymenski admitted that his work included "deliberate lies".[3] In their addendum to The Hitler Book, Henrik Eberle and Matthias Uhl say that Bezymenski's work advocates theories promulgated by the Soviet Union that Hitler died by poisoning or a coup de grâce.[34][35]

References

Footnotes

  1. Possibly that of Gustav Weler[5]
  2. The boxes containing the remains of Hitler and Braun were ammunition crates.[7]
  3. "On the face and body the skin is completely missing; only remnants of charred muscles are preserved." (Bezymenski 1968, p. 45)
  4. Hitler is believed to have been 175 centimetres (5 ft 9 in) tall.[9]
  5. Bezymenski says that "This congenital defect [of a missing testicle] had not been mentioned anywhere in the existing literature. But Professor Karl von Hasselbach, one of Hitler's physicians, remembers that the Führer always refused categorically to have a medical check-up."[11]
  6. The upper 'teeth' consist entirely of gold, but according to Bezymenski, Hitler's dentist's assistant Käthe Heusermann identified traces of where it had been sawn through by Blaschke in 1944.[11]
  7. Bezymenski attributes this to splinters from Soviet shelling while the bodies were burning in the garden.[16]
  8. According to Klimenko, a German alerted him to the presence of the couple's corpses.[18]
  9. Corrected by Bezymenski in a footnote
  10. The autopsy report only says that the lower jawbone was loose in the oral cavity.[33]

Citations

  1. Trevor-Roper, Hugh (26 September 1968). "Hitler's Last Minute". The New York Review of Books.
  2. Bezymenski 1968, note about the author.
  3. Eberle & Uhl 2005, pp. 287, 288.
  4. Bezymenski 1968, pp. 3–76, 79–82, 85–114.
  5. Petrova & Watson 1995, pp. 52, 90.
  6. Bezymenski 1968, pp. 32–37.
  7. Petrova & Watson 1995, p. 54.
  8. Bezymenski 1968, pp. 44–45.
  9. Flood, Charles Bracelen (1985). "Lance Corporal Adolf Hitler on the Western Front, 1914–1918". The Kentucky Review. University of Kentucky. 5 (3): 4.
  10. Bezymenski 1968, pp. 46–47.
  11. Petrova & Watson 1995, p. 57.
  12. Marchetti, Daniela, M.D., PhD; Boschi, Ilaria, PhD; Polacco, Matteo, M.D.; Rainio, Juha, M.D., PhD (2005). "The Death of Adolf Hitler—Forensic Aspects". Journal of Forensic Sciences (50(5)): 1. JFS2004314.
  13. Bezymenski 1968, p. 49.
  14. Bezymenski 1968, p. 71.
  15. Bezymenski 1968, p. 75.
  16. Bezymenski 1968, p. 51.
  17. Bezymenski 1968, pp. 110–114.
  18. Bezymenski 1968, p. 30.
  19. Bezymenski 1968, pp. 80–81.
  20. Bezymenski 1968, pp. 95–99.
  21. Bezymenski 1968, pp. 81–82, 99–103.
  22. Angolia, John (1989). For Führer and Fatherland: Political & Civil Awards of the Third Reich. R. James Bender Publishing. p. 183. ISBN 978-0-912-13816-9.
  23. Bezymenski 1968, pp. 103–107.
  24. Bezymenski 1968, pp. 89–90, 92.
  25. Bezymenski 1968, pp. 92–94.
  26. Erickson, John (2015). The Road to Berlin. Orion Publishing Group. p. 435. ISBN 9781474602808.
  27. Bezymenski 1968, index of illustrations.
  28. Petrova & Watson 1995, pp. 59–60.
  29. Senn, David R.; Weems, Richard A. (2013). Manual of Forensic Odontology. Boca Raton: CRC Press. p. 43. ISBN 978-1-439-85134-0.
  30. Petrova & Watson 1995, p. 162.
  31. Gimbert, Robert A. (1996). "The Death of Hitler: The Full Story with New Evidence from Secret Russian Archives". Military Review. US Army Command and General Staff College: 93.
  32. Petrova & Watson 1995, pp. 96–97.
  33. Bezymenski 1968, p. 45.
  34. Eberle & Uhl 2005, pp. 288, 341.
  35. Kershaw 2001, p. 1037.

Sources

Further reading

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