Heinz Linge (23 March 1913 – 9 March 1980) was a German SS officer who served as a valet for the leader of Nazi Germany, Adolf Hitler, and became known for his close personal proximity to historical events. Linge was present in the Führerbunker on 30 April 1945, when Hitler committed suicide. Linge's ten-year service to Hitler ended at that time. In the aftermath of the Second World War in Europe, Linge spent ten years in Soviet captivity.

Heinz Linge
Linge in 1935
Born(1913-03-23)23 March 1913
Bremen, German Empire
Died9 March 1980(1980-03-09) (aged 66)
Hamburg, West Germany
Allegiance Nazi Germany
Service / branch Schutzstaffel
Years of service1933–45
RankSS–Sturmbannführer
Unit1st SS Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler; Führerbegleitkommando
Battles / warsWorld War II

Early life and education

edit

Linge was born in Bremen, Germany. He was employed as a bricklayer prior to joining the SS in 1933. He served in the Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler (LSSAH), Hitler's bodyguard. In 1934, when he was part of No. 1 Guard to Hitler's residence on the Obersalzberg near Berchtesgaden, Linge was selected to serve at the Reich Chancellery.[1] By 1945, he had obtained the rank of SS-Sturmbannführer (major).[2][3]

Valet to Hitler

edit

On 24 January 1935, Linge was chosen to be a valet for Hitler. He was one of three valets at that time. In September 1939, Linge replaced Karl Wilhelm Krause as chief valet for Hitler.[4] Linge worked as a valet in the Reich Chancellery in Berlin, at Hitler's residence near Berchtesgaden, and at Wolfsschanze in Rastenburg. He stated that his daily routine was to wake Hitler each day at 11:00 AM and provide morning newspapers and messages. Linge would then keep him stocked with writing materials and spectacles for his morning reading session in bed. Hitler would then dress himself to a stopwatch with Linge acting as a "referee". He would take a light breakfast of tea, biscuits and an apple and a vegetarian lunch at 2:30 PM. Dinner with only a few guests present was at 8.00pm.[5] As Hitler's valet, Linge was also a member of the Führerbegleitkommando which provided personal security protection for Hitler.[6] By 1944, he was also head of Hitler's personal service staff. Besides accompanying Hitler on all his travels, he was responsible for the accommodations; all the servants, mess orderlies, cooks, caterers and maids were "subordinate" to Linge.[4]

Berlin 1945

edit

Linge was one of many soldiers, servants, secretaries, and officers who moved into the Reich Chancellery and Führerbunker in Berlin in 1945. There he continued as Hitler's chief valet and protocol officer and was one of those who closely witnessed the last days of Hitler's life during the Battle of Berlin. He was also Hitler's personal military orderly. Linge delivered messages to Hitler and escorted people in to meet with Hitler. In addition, after Hitler's personal physician Theodor Morell left Berlin on 23 April, Linge and Dr. Werner Haase administered to Hitler the prepared medicine which had been left behind.[7][8]

On 25 April, Hitler instructed Linge to ensure his body was burned to avoid falling into Soviet hands.[9] On 30 April, Hitler elaborated his suicide plan to Linge, telling him to wrap his and Eva Braun's bodies in blankets, take them up to the garden and burn them.[10] Linge later wrote that after Hitler and Braun were married, the dictator spent his final night lying awake and fully dressed on his bed.[11]

On 30 April, Hitler had a last midday meal with his secretaries. After the meal, Linge spoke briefly with Eva Braun. He described her as looking pale and of having had little sleep. She thanked him for his service.[12] Hitler then said farewell to each of his servants and subordinates. Thereafter, Hitler retired to his study at 3:15 p.m.[12] Hitler instructed Linge to join one of the break-out groups and try to get to the west. Linge asked for whom they should now fight and Hitler replied, "For the coming man." Linge then saluted and left.[13] In a 1974 episode of The World at War, Linge and Hitler's secretary, Traudl Junge, describe Hitler's last minutes in the bunker. Linge explains that Hitler and his wife committed suicide in Hitler's private room in the bunker. He recalled how he went into Hitler's private study after hearing a sudden bang and found that Hitler and Braun were dead. Hitler had shot himself in the right temple. Braun had taken what Linge concluded must have been cyanide poison.[14]

After the suicides of Hitler and Braun, their corpses were reportedly carried up the stairs to ground level and through the bunker's emergency exit to the garden behind the Reich Chancellery, where they were doused with petrol.[15] After the first attempts to ignite the petrol did not work, Linge went back inside the bunker and returned with a thick roll of papers. Martin Bormann lit the papers and threw the torch onto the bodies. As the two corpses caught fire, a small group, including Bormann, Linge, Otto Günsche, Joseph Goebbels, Erich Kempka, Peter Högl, Ewald Lindloff, and Hans Reisser, raised their arms in salute as they stood just inside the bunker doorway.[15][16]

At around 16:15, Linge ordered SS-Untersturmführer Heinz Krüger and SS-Oberscharführer Werner Schwiedel to roll up the rug in Hitler's study to burn it. The two men removed the blood-stained rug, carried it up the stairs and outside to the Chancellery garden. There the rug was placed on the ground and burned.[17] On and off during the afternoon, the Soviets shelled the area in and around the Reich Chancellery. SS guards brought over additional cans of petrol to further burn the corpses, which lasted from 16:00 to around 18:30.[18] Linge later wrote that he burned other personal effects of Hitler's while an SS bodyguard oversaw the burial of the burnt bodies in a shell crater.[19]

Linge was one of the last to leave the Führerbunker in the early morning hours of 1 May 1945. He teamed up with Erich Kempka. Linge was later captured near See-Strasse. Several days later, after his identity was revealed, two Soviet officers escorted Linge by train to Moscow where he was thrown into the notorious Lubyanka Prison.[20]

Later life and death

edit

Linge spent ten years in Soviet captivity and was released in 1955.[2] Linge and Günsche were torturously interrogated by the Soviet People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs (NKVD; later superseded by the Ministry of Internal Affairs; MVD) about the circumstances of Hitler's death, at times kept in solitary confinement.[21] The two shared a cell from mid-1948 to the end of 1949, during part of the time they provided details for a dossier edited by Soviet NKVD officers and presented to Joseph Stalin on 30 December 1949 (published in 2005 as The Hitler Book).[22][23] Unlike Linge, Günsche hated working on the project and begrudgingly gave the Soviets truthful information. Günsche reportedly tried to bring Linge around to his viewpoint and even leveraged threats to try and influence him.[24]

Linge initially told the Soviets that he heard Hitler's suicide gunshot before explaining that he only said this to keep his account from appearing "frail" in light of "shadowy areas" of his memory.[25] He also claimed to have learned of the suicide from the smell of gunpowder, despite being separated by several doors and Hitler's rooms being well ventilated.[26] Linge told the Soviets that he and Bormann could tell that Hitler and Braun were dead by looking at them, but did not explain why they did not summon Hitler's doctors to confirm the deaths.[27] He stated that he saw a coin-sized wound to Hitler's right temple with one or two trails of blood running down his cheek,[28][29] and no exit wound or other damage to the skull.[30] Linge may have been one of only two witnesses to survive the war to make observations of Hitler's head wound in the aftermath of his suicide, the other being Hitler Youth leader Artur Axmann, who reported blood on both temples, but no clear entry wound.[31][a] Günsche reportedly told the Soviets that he only learned of Hitler's method of death from Linge,[34][35] but testified in 1956 that (like Linge) he saw an entry wound to the right temple, which convinced him that Hitler died by a suicide gunshot.[36][b] According to historian Mark Felton (who does not explain how he accessed the Soviet material), Linge reportedly told a Soviet agent—undercover as a captured German—that only he and Bormann knew the circumstances of Hitler's death; Linge repeatedly said he would not 'crack' to the Soviets and suggested that (from his apparently limited viewpoint) Hitler's temple wound seemed like it could have been painted on.[38][39]

In 1956, Linge provided testimony in a West German court investigating Hitler's death.[40][41] In light of theories that Hitler had survived, Linge asserted that the corpse was hidden in a "common grave", undiscovered somewhere about the Chancellery garden.[42]

In 1980, Linge died in Hamburg, West Germany. His memoir, originally published in German in 1980 as Bis zum Untergang (English: 'Until the Fall') was published in English in July 2009 as With Hitler to the End with an introduction by historian Roger Moorhouse, author of Killing Hitler. According to his memoir, "Linge was responsible for all aspects of Hitler's household". Despite the circumstances of the war, Linge's portrayal of the dictator has been described as "affectionate", although as a leader Hitler acted in an "unpredictable and demanding" manner.[43][44]

Film portrayals

edit

Linge is portrayed by actor Thomas Limpinsel in Oliver Hirschbiegel's 2004 German film Downfall. In Hans-Jürgen Syberberg's Hitler: A Film from Germany (1977),[45] he is played by Hellmut Lange. In the 1971 Eastern Bloc co-production Liberation V: The Final Assault, he was portrayed by East German actor Otto Busse.[46]

See also

edit

References

edit

Footnotes

edit
  1. ^ Although Linge said he was able to see the corpse's face well enough to notice that its eyes were open, Axmann incongruously attributed the damage to an oral gunshot and claimed the mouth was bloody.[31][32][33]
  2. ^ Additionally, Günsche believed the suicides took place at 15:30 based on a reading of his watch. Linge placed them at 15:50 per a grandfather clock (personally maintained by him) in the study antechamber.[37]

Citations

edit
  1. ^ Linge 2009, p. 10.
  2. ^ a b Joachimsthaler 1999, p. 283.
  3. ^ Eberle & Uhl 2005, p. xxix.
  4. ^ a b Linge 2009, p. 20.
  5. ^ Linge 2009, pp. 55–58.
  6. ^ Hoffmann 2000, p. 56.
  7. ^ Joachimsthaler 1999, p. 98.
  8. ^ O'Donnell 2001, pp. 37, 125, 317.
  9. ^ Eberle & Uhl 2005, p. 244.
  10. ^ Linge 2009, p. 192.
  11. ^ Linge 2009, p. 197.
  12. ^ a b Linge 2009, p. 198.
  13. ^ Linge 2009, p. 199.
  14. ^ The World at War, ep. 21. "The Two Deaths of Adolf Hitler", 1974
  15. ^ a b Linge 2009, p. 200.
  16. ^ Joachimsthaler 1999, pp. 197, 198.
  17. ^ Joachimsthaler 1999, pp. 162, 175.
  18. ^ Joachimsthaler 1999, pp. 210–211, 220.
  19. ^ Linge 2009, p. 201.
  20. ^ Linge 2009, pp. 209–212.
  21. ^ Eberle & Uhl 2005, p. xxviii.
  22. ^ Eberle & Uhl 2005, pp. x, xviii.
  23. ^ Joachimsthaler 1999, p. 255.
  24. ^ Eberle & Uhl 2005, pp. xxviii, 292.
  25. ^ Brisard & Parshina 2018, pp. 259–262.
  26. ^ Brisard & Parshina 2018, pp. 260–261.
  27. ^ Brisard & Parshina 2018, pp. 293–294.
  28. ^ Eberle & Uhl 2005, pp. 271, 291.
  29. ^ Joachimsthaler 1999, p. 155.
  30. ^ Brisard & Parshina 2018, pp. 231–232.
  31. ^ a b "Axmann, Artur, interviewed on October 10, 1947. - Musmanno Collection -- Interrogations of Hitler Associates". Gumberg Library Digital Collections. Retrieved 8 October 2021 – via Duquesne University.
  32. ^ "Axmann, Artur, interviewed on January 7, 1948 and January 9, 1948. - Musmanno Collection -- Interrogations of Hitler Associates". Gumberg Library Digital Collections. pp. 30–31. Retrieved 8 October 2021 – via Duquesne University.
  33. ^ Joachimsthaler 1999, pp. 155, 166.
  34. ^ Brisard & Parshina 2018, pp. 177–178, 217, 219, 259, 297–298.
  35. ^ Joachimsthaler 1999, pp. 155–156, 158.
  36. ^ Joachimsthaler 1999, pp. 155–156, 161, 164.
  37. ^ Joachimsthaler 1999, pp. 153–154.
  38. ^ Felton, Mark (2023). "The 'Hitler' Body". Find the Führer: The Secret Soviet Investigation. Episode 3. 21 minutes in.
  39. ^ Brisard & Parshina 2018, p. 262.
  40. ^ Joachimsthaler 1999, pp. 154–155.
  41. ^ O'Malley, J. P. (4 September 2018). "Putin grants authors partial access to secret Soviet archives on Hitler's death". The Times of Israel. Retrieved 22 August 2024.
  42. ^ Felton, Mark; Linge, Heinz (2023). "The Forgotten Theory". Find the Führer: The Secret Soviet Investigation. Episode 6. The Russians have never found Hitler's body. I know that because—uh... he uh, they never—they questioned me repeatedly about it.
  43. ^ "With Hitler to the End". SimonAndSchuster.com. Archived from the original on 16 August 2022. Retrieved 3 November 2022.
  44. ^ Linge 2009, pp. xi.
  45. ^ "Hitler: A Film from Germany". Retrieved 20 July 2019 – via www.imdb.com.
  46. ^ Otto Busse filmography Archived 2012-05-30 at the Wayback Machine. defa-sternstunden.de.

Bibliography

edit

Further reading

edit
edit

  Media related to Heinz Linge at Wikimedia Commons