Talk:Ernst Röhm: Difference between revisions
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== A BOLD claim needs to be sourced == |
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== Death of Roehm == |
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An editor has made the claims that if "[Röhm] had agreed to stand the SA down he would have survived", i.e. he would not have been purged in the [[Night of the Long Knives]]. The editor also claims that "Hitler needed the support of the industrialists more than he needed the army." I have seen absolutely no support for these claims in any of the literature I have read. Such [[WP:BOLD]] claims need to be supported with citations from extremely reliable (i.e. not [[WP:FRINGE]]) sources. |
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The exact day of Rohm's death is 1stJuly1934. |
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First, there is the question of what the editor means by "standing down". The conventional meaning of this is to (temporarily) stop activities. This is what Hitler ordered Röhm to do, stand down the SA, and Röhm complied. He and the SA's leadership were (putatively) at Bad Wiessee to confer with each other and then meet with Hitler, again at Hitler's orders. So the SA had indeed stood down, and Röhm was murdered anyway. |
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It's wrong 2ndJuly1934 of the article. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/200.211.95.158|200.211.95.158]] ([[User talk:200.211.95.158|talk]]) 21:46, 19 January 2009 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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It seems possible that the editor means by "stand down" to dis-establish the SA entirely. If so, this is a counter-factual opinion which is impossible to verify, because it did not happen, and it seems highly unlikely that Röhm would have willingly shut down his very power base. It's more likely that if Hitler had ordered it, Röhm would have returned to South America, or wherever, to be a military consultant again. In any case, the '''''opinion''''' that Röhm would have survived if he had shut down the SA for good is one that can only be expressed in a Wikipedia article if it is expressed by a verified subject expert, who are the only people that are allowed to express opinions; Wikipedia '''''editors''''' cannot do so as the editor has done in this instance. |
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==Better sources== |
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As for the industrialists vs. the military: the Army had long objected to the SA, and was concerned about their being a quasi-military force which could be used against them. Hitler very much needed to co-opt the Army, and the fact that he had gained the Chancellorship and virtually unfettered civil power meant that he no longer needed the SA to perform the anti-Communist rabble-rousing role they had played, which helped to create the circumstances under which he was made Chancellor. Now, he no longer needed the SA, he needed the Army, and Röhm's continuing push for a "Second Revolution" had become a thorn in his side, similar to the Strassers. Hitler had power, he no longer saw the need for revolution, which would simply upset everything he had achieved. These factors all came together in his decision to purge Röhm, the SA leadership Strasser and others who had long been on his list. The '''''Army''''' was who he was trying to appease, not industrialists. |
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This page needs better source material. Source 2 is particularly poor. While it looks respectable, it's actually from a right wing christian group calling itself a university - not an actual recognised educational institution. It should be removed and replaced with a better source, the information itself is avaliable from many more reliable sources. |
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Hitler, of course, needed the backing of the industrialists, but he already had that to some extent, and it is far from clear to me (and the editor does not present any evidence to support the idea) that getting rid of the SA was something that the industrialists wanted. The Sa was potentially direct competition for the Army, they presented no specific danger to the industrialists, except for being agents of general civil unrest. I have read nothing to indicate that the industrialists were urging Hitler to suppress the SA, were as the literature about the Army's qualms about the Nazi paramilitary is abundant. |
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this should be removed -> ^ * Scot Lively en Kevin Abrams, Excerpt fromThe Pink Swastika: Homosexuality in the Nazi Party, Founders Publishing Company, 1995, door Kevin Lively t.b.v. Cultre Wars, 1996 |
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In short "Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof." The editor is questions needs to '''''stop attempting to edit-war their desired changes into the article''''' and discuss them here, providing '''''proof''''' in the way of citations from '''''very''''' reliable sources. [[User:Beyond My Ken|Beyond My Ken]] ([[User talk:Beyond My Ken|talk]]) 19:33, 15 May 2021 (UTC) |
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==Roehm's homosexuality== |
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: I agree with your revert and analysis, BMK. The fact is, the inclusion of the first part of the edit, is mere speculation and conjecture. The second edit is not the main reason, as you stated; certainly the industrialists and conservative politicians for that matter wanted the SA brought to heel given the civil unrest caused and also the spouted Socialism aspects, but it was the army who were the competition for being the arms bearing military force for the country; they had the most to lose. Frankly, there’s no evidence that Ernst would have survived and there’s no evidence he would’ve ever “stood down”, either. The edits also involved [[WP:OR]]. [[User:Kierzek|Kierzek]] ([[User talk:Kierzek|talk]]) 23:19, 15 May 2021 (UTC) |
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{{ctop|Editor blocked as sock of HarveryCarter. [[User:Beyond My Ken|Beyond My Ken]] ([[User talk:Beyond My Ken|talk]]) 22:45, 7 June 2021 (UTC)}} |
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::The point is that both the army and the industrialists were concerned by the SA, and Hitler needed both on his side if he was to dismantle the Treaty of Versailles. ([[User:Westerhaley|Westerhaley]] ([[User talk:Westerhaley|talk]]) 14:02, 16 May 2021 (UTC)) |
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:::No, the point is that you wish to change the article '''''away''''' from the normal, conventional interpretation of events expressed by historians and scholars towards a '''''different''''' interpretation which emphasizes Hitler's need for support from industrialists over his need for support from the Army as being the reason for the purge, and you need a '''''very good source''''' to do that -- and even then, the opinion (which is what it would be) would have to be attributed to the source, since it differs from the conventional view. The same for the supposition that Rohm would not have been killed if he had "stood down" the SA. [[User:Beyond My Ken|Beyond My Ken]] ([[User talk:Beyond My Ken|talk]]) 23:38, 16 May 2021 (UTC) |
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::::Even my A-Level history textbook mentions both points. I would have thought this was common knowledge. ([[User:Westerhaley|Westerhaley]] ([[User talk:Westerhaley|talk]]) 11:10, 17 May 2021 (UTC)) |
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:::::A secondary school textbook is not a reliable source. perhaps you should read some more in-depth works written by reputable subject experts before you attempt to edit in this area again. [[User:Beyond My Ken|Beyond My Ken]] ([[User talk:Beyond My Ken|talk]]) 12:14, 17 May 2021 (UTC) |
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::::::I have. They all mentioned it too. Rohm was eliminated because he was a threat to the industrialists as well as to the army, and because he had resisted standing the SA down. Hitler did not want a second revolution. ([[User:Westerhaley|Westerhaley]] ([[User talk:Westerhaley|talk]]) 12:20, 17 May 2021 (UTC)) |
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:::::::Then you'll have little difficulty providing a citation from a reliable source to support your supposition. Please post it here. [[User:Beyond My Ken|Beyond My Ken]] ([[User talk:Beyond My Ken|talk]]) 12:26, 17 May 2021 (UTC) |
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::::::::BMK--I share the same sentiments. Nowhere can I recall anyone claiming that Röhm would have survived had he "stood down" on the second revolution. Moreover, I am quite familiar with historians who have claimed his homosexuality was an embarrassment to the Party leadership, how Hitler viewed his reign over the SA as a threat to himself and his standing, so much so that this too contributed to his execution. With that being said...I would find any source that claims Röhm would have survived to be "fringe" or speculative scholarship at best. --[[User:Obenritter|Obenritter]] ([[User talk:Obenritter|talk]]) 16:31, 17 May 2021 (UTC) |
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:::::::::Financers and industrialists were concerned by Röhm's policies: http://weimarandnazigermany.co.uk/ernst-rohm/#.YKO6EnmSnIU ([[User:Westerhaley|Westerhaley]] ([[User talk:Westerhaley|talk]]) 13:00, 18 May 2021 (UTC)) |
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::::::::::Sorry, you're not paying attention. To cite your extraordinary supposition that it was for the sake of the '''''industrialists''''', and '''''<u>not</u>''''' to alleviate the concerns of the '''''military''''' and get them on his side that Hitler had Rohm killed, you need a really '''''exemplary''''' source from a well-recognized subject expert. A WordPress-published page which merely says "Similarly financiers and Industrialists were concerned by the politics of Rohm." and nothing more is far from sufficient for this purpose. (Please see [[WP:SPS]] about citing from blogs, and [[WP:RSP]] under "WordPress".){{pb}}If you don't have the kind of source that is required, please stop wasting our time. [[User:Beyond My Ken|Beyond My Ken]] ([[User talk:Beyond My Ken|talk]]) |
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Westerhaley: first, what you’ve written does not support what you want to add. Secondly, that is not a good strong RS source. [[User:Kierzek|Kierzek]] ([[User talk:Kierzek|talk]]) 23:35, 18 May 2021 (UTC) |
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:The point is that the army, financers and industrialists all wanted Röhm and his SA to be eliminated in 1934. ([[User:Westerhaley|Westerhaley]] ([[User talk:Westerhaley|talk]]) 11:42, 19 May 2021 (UTC)) |
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::As explained already, that's not the point at all. You attempted to make two changes to the article, one which emphasized industrialists over the Army for the pressure on Hitler to eliminate Rohm, the other claiming that if Rohm had "stood down" the SA (whatever that means to you), he would not have been purged. You have introduced no references to support these two suppositions. Until you do, I will not be responding to your posts here anymore. [[User:Beyond My Ken|Beyond My Ken]] ([[User talk:Beyond My Ken|talk]]) 12:03, 19 May 2021 (UTC) |
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{{cbot}} |
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== "First openly gay politician" == |
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I've read both that he was gay AND that his homosexuality was fabricated as a pretext for his murder. |
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From the article: |
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It's widely accepted that he was indeed homosexual. But this fact was known long before his muder, so it's not really reason for this. |
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<blockquote> |
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Röhm acknowledged that the letters were genuine, and as a result of the [[Röhm scandal|scandal]], he became the first openly gay politician in history. |
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</blockquote> |
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But the reference for this doesn't state the latter half of the claim, only the former. The claim that Röhm was the first openly gay politician in <i>history</i> seems quite bold -- there's quite a bit of history, after all, and politics has been a part for all of it, and historically attitudes on homosexuality have varied. I'm no expert on queer history, nor can I name an earlier "out" politician, but a better source for this would be nice. [[Special:Contributions/82.95.254.249|82.95.254.249]] ([[User talk:82.95.254.249|talk]]) 18:04, 14 February 2022 (UTC) |
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:Not from an [[WP:RS]] source and so it has been removed. [[User:Kierzek|Kierzek]] ([[User talk:Kierzek|talk]]) 20:29, 14 February 2022 (UTC) |
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::It's worth noting then that the exact same information (with the same source) is prominently present on the article [[Röhm scandal]], which is now no longer linked to at all from this article (also, while the source has been removed from the bibliography, <code><nowiki>{{sfn|Marhoefer 2018}}</nowiki></code> is still present). Not an optimal situation. Also, rereading the page, while the "in history" bit is not <i>literally</i> there, it does state Röhm was "the first openly gay politician", which is presumably <i>meant</i> to cover all of history. This doesn't reduce the boldness of the claim, but then [[Laurie Marhoefer]] actually is a historian, and I'm not. She's written actual books, which might be better sources than a blog article. [[Special:Contributions/82.95.254.249|82.95.254.249]] ([[User talk:82.95.254.249|talk]]) 21:29, 14 February 2022 (UTC) |
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== Rohm's country of origin == |
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:On the Night of the Long Knives, several witnesses, who were in the hotel when the SS and [[Adolf Hitler]] stormed in on Rohm's bedroom, testified in later years that Rohm was found with a young 16 year old boy in his bed. This apparently threw Hitler into a rage and he scramed that Rohm would die. The testimony is generally accepted as truthful and it was used in the manslaugter trial of [[Sepp Dietrich]] (one of several trials he udnerwent) where Dietrich was convicted of manslaughter for leading the [[Leibstandarte]] on the Night of the Longt Knives -[[User:Husnock|Husnock]] 4Feb05 |
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Hello, I'm not really familiar with the tools of changing pages like this, but under early life it states he was born in the Kingdom of Bavaria, which ceased existing in 1871. This is listed correctly as German Empire not kingdom of Bavaria in the card, but not in the body of the early life section. It'd be really nice if someone with skills could fix this [[User:Zsessions1|Zsessions1]] ([[User talk:Zsessions1|talk]]) 21:21, 14 March 2023 (UTC) |
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Here are some more references for Rohm's sexuality: [http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/GERroehm.htm Spartacus Schoolnet] [http://www.boston.com/news/globe/living/articles/2004/04/20/was_hitler_in_closet_and_if_so_so_what/ Boston Globe] [http://www.petertatchell.net/international/homophobia.htm Peter Tatchell] [http://motlc.wiesenthal.com/resources/books/annual5/chap15.html Simon Wiesenthal Centre] [http://www.history.ucsb.edu/faculty/marcuse/classes/33d/projects/homo/SanjeNaziExtermination.htm University of California] [http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0786704233/002-0820274-5191251?v=glance&vi=reviews Book catalogue] [http://education.guardian.co.uk/higher/humanities/story/0,9850,508812,00.html The Guardian] [[User:DJ Clayworth|DJ Clayworth]] 17:30, 14 Jun 2005 (UTC) |
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::I do not believe there is any question Roehm was gay. According to biographies of Hitler and Goebbels, this seems to be a given; the following info I took from an essay in: Snyder, Louis L. Hitler's Elite. New York: Hippocrene Books, 1989. ISBN: 0-87052-738-X. |
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::Roehm, as far as I can tell, was rather open about his homosexuality, and gladly drew parallels between himself and other homosexuals in history (most notably [[Frederick the Great]]). Hitler, according to these sources, was always well-aware of Roehm's proclivities. However, the scene described above - when Hitler (with Goebbels) caught Roehm in bed with a younger man, is likewise accurate. The reason is simply Machiavellian politics, as far as I could tell - while Hitler didn't personally care about Roehm's sexuality, it offered him a good excuse to wipe his hands of him once he decided to get rid of him. |
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::However, is there a reason Roehm isn't listed in the "Nazi Leader" category? I plan to add him in the near future - gay or not, betrayed by Hitler or not, he was nonetheless an SA leader. He was no martyr. --[[User:L.|L.]] 29 June 2005 21:21 (UTC) |
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Ernst Röhm was one of the most prominent of a number of early Nazi party members who was an alleged homosexual and his homosexuality was ultimately the pretext used for his removal during the purge of the SA. |
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:: Röhm was a homosexual, please remove the word ..> alleged. |
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:::No history of the era qualifies Röhm's sexuality. He was homosexual and, for the times, relatively open about it.--[[User:Mcattell|Mcattell]] 16:21, 8 July 2007 (UTC) |
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I have rewritten the section for several reasons - it was too much like a book review, contained errors (the name Schdtzl is obviously wrong - even German requires a vowel) and was not encyclopedic in style. That Rohm was gay is well-known and need not be based upon one or another book review. Further, this is not the place to discuss theories of Hitler's sexuality. [[User:Eusebeus|Eusebeus]] 20:45, 1 April 2006 (UTC) |
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I worry that some of the terms used in this article with reference to Röhm's sexuality have too much of a contemporary feel; words like 'outed' 'closet', and even 'gay' itself. Röhm made no great secret of his sexual inclinations, which arose, in large measure, from his military background, with a strong emphasis on both on misogyny and manliness. |
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[[User:White Guard|White Guard]] 00:42, 25 September 2006 (UTC) |
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You are quite right White Guard. Rohm's sexuality had more in common with the ancient greek practices of homosexuality within the military than with the modern connotations of homosexuality. [[User:Cauld1|Cauld1]] ([[User talk:Cauld1|talk]]) 15:34, 9 July 2008 (UTC) |
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''How open'' was Roehm about his homosexual lifestyle? Did all the high-ranking NSDAP members know he was a practising homosexual? If so, how did he rise to such a high position in a very anti-LGBT party? Why did Hitler turn a blind eye to it, and how was it not a source of ridicule toward Hitler and the party that one of its most prominent and powerful members was homosexual? [[User:Nietzsche 2|Nietzsche 2]] ([[User talk:Nietzsche 2|talk]]) 00:41, 28 March 2009 (UTC) |
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:Something which ought to be borne in mind is that, prior to the Nazis coming to power, homosexual activists (primarily [[Magnus Hirschfeld]]) had made great progress towards acceptance of homosexuality in Germany. The word itself is derived into English from ''die Homosexualität'', a medical term popularised by German sexual theorists. It's also worth noting that, before the [[Oscar Wilde|Wilde trial]], effeminacy and "artiness" were not associated with homosexuals; but, on the contrary, homosexuals were stereotyped as big, strong and bearlike, with an aggressively hearty manner and enthusiasm for outdoor pursuits, as attested by Graham Robb's book ''Strangers: Homosexual Love in the 19th Century''. |
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:[[User:Nuttyskin|Nuttyskin]] ([[User talk:Nuttyskin|talk]]) 14:28, 20 October 2009 (UTC) |
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== Picture gone == |
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I found a picture online of Ernst Roehm, but I cannot read German and cannot tell if it is copyrighted or not. [http://www.dhm.de/lemo/objekte/pict/roehmbio/index.html Picture]--[[User:Lucky13pjn|Lucky13pjn]] 19:39, Jun 12, 2004 (UTC) |
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: It doesn't seem to say, so the first question is whether German published photos are like US ones, in having protection whether they assert it or not. |
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::Surely, anything produced in 1933 would be out of copyright by now, anyway. The Disney Reich notwithstanding, of course ;) |
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::[[User:Nuttyskin|Nuttyskin]] ([[User talk:Nuttyskin|talk]]) 14:33, 20 October 2009 (UTC) |
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(Erich Retzlaff is the author of ''Wegbereiter und Vorkämpfer für das neue Deutschland'', which means roughly "Trailblaer and Early Combatant for the new Germany"; DHM turns out ''not'' to be the publisher (which was probably a NSDAP house organ) but the "German Historical Museum", located in the former East Berlin.)--[[User:Jerzy|Jerzy]][[User talk:Jerzy|(t)]] 17:47, 2004 Jun 13 (UTC) |
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German-language chronlogy of his life: [http://www.dhm.de/lemo/html/biografien/RoehmErnst/index.html]--[[User:Jerzy|Jerzy]][[User talk:Jerzy|(t)]] 17:47, 2004 Jun 13 (UTC) |
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I think there is some discrepancies here. Rohm did not start the SA nor was he a member of it. Please check out [[Kampfbund]] and we need to coordinate the information accordingly.[[User:WHEELER|WHEELER]] 20:49, 15 Jun 2004 (UTC) |
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Just a heads up - some of the images of Ernst are now broken links, and have empty picture boxes. Anyone know what the story was there? --[[User:NightMonkey|NightMonkey]] 01:37, 30 June 2006 (UTC) |
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== Roehm in prison == |
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There would appear to be some conflicting factual information in this article. If Röhm spent fifteen months in prison after the abortive Beer Hall Putsch in November 1923 he could not have formed the Frontbann in April 1924. Also the suggestion here is that he spent his time in prison in Landsberg alongside Hitler. Can this be correct? |
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[[User:White Guard|White Guard]] |
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I don't believe Roehm spent any time in prison following the Beer Hall Putsch, and certainly not 15 months: |
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"When the Munich police fired on the Nazi parade, leaving sixteen Nazis dead in the streets, the intended coup was smashed. Two hours later Roehm was persuaded to capitulate at Army headquarters and was taken into custody. Roehm was one of the nine in addition to Hitler who were accused of treason. Although found guilty, Roehm was discharged on the day sentence was pronounced." |
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--from page 67 of "Hitler's Henchmen" by Louis Leo Snyder; Publisher: David & Charles (November 15, 2005); ISBN-13: 978-0715320334 |
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[http://books.google.com/books?id=tG7z1pDLKyoC&pg=PA69&lpg=PA69&dq=Roehm+bolivia&source=bl&ots=22oZJQgD3F&sig=lmyP63qWYQEzXB5DDoUP4RKN_js&hl=en&ei=DxgPStrCOJ-Mtget6K2ICA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2#PPA67,M1] |
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"Whereas Rohm, released on probation immediately after the trial, at once tried to reassemble the shattered nationalist armed organizations, Hitler, even while still in Landsberg prison, began to dissociate himself from Rohm, to drop the military presuppositions of his plans for seizing power, and, as he proudly stressed later, remained 'immune to advice'." |
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--from Chapter 11 in the 1999 book "The Face Of The Third Reich" by Joachim C Fest; based on |
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"Die Geschichte eines Hochverraters" the autobiography of Ernst Röhm, published in Munich, 1928 |
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[http://www.ourcivilisation.com/smartboard/shop/festjc/chap11.htm] |
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[[User:Badlermd|Badlermd]] ([[User talk:Badlermd|talk]]) 21:38, 16 May 2009 (UTC) |
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Here's further evidence from Wikipedia itself that Roehm never served prison time for the Beer Hall Putsch: "Both Röhm and Dr. Wilhelm Frick, though found guilty, were released." |
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[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beer_Hall_Putsch#Trial_and_prison] |
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[[User:Badlermd|Badlermd]] ([[User talk:Badlermd|talk]]) 03:01, 18 May 2009 (UTC) |
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::That Roehm did not serve time because of the Beer Hall Putsch is also corroborated by a citation to author Robert Payne: |
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::::"Against all the evidence[,] Ludendorff was acquitted and walked out of the court a free man. Hitler was given the minimum sentence of five years' imprisonment. Poehner, Kriebel, and Dr. Weber received the same punishment. Roehm, Frick, Brueckner, Pernet, and Wagner were each sentenced to one year and three months imprisonment and immediately released on their promise of good behavior." |
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::--from Robert Payne, ''The Life and Death of Adolf Hitler'', p. 192 (Praeger Publishers, 1973). Yours, [[User:Famspear|Famspear]] ([[User talk:Famspear|talk]]) 03:38, 18 May 2009 (UTC) |
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::I have updated the article with this information. [[User:Famspear|Famspear]] ([[User talk:Famspear|talk]]) 03:44, 18 May 2009 (UTC) |
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== Improper usage of terms == |
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This article is swarming with inapplicable contemporary american political terms such as 'leftist', 'lefty', 'conservative', 'president', 'commander in chief', etc etc. This really has no place in this historical article, a general cleanup is required.[[User:145.97.223.119|145.97.223.119]] 23:32, 2 October 2006 (UTC) |
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I agree. Please see my comments concerning the terms used to describe his sexuality-they are completely out of place. |
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[[User:White Guard|White Guard]] 23:47, 2 October 2006 (UTC) |
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Paul von Hindenburg, until his death, was both "president" of Germany and "commander-in-chief" of the army, or Reichswehr. Communists and even Social Democrats in 1930s Germany may fairly be described as "leftists," although not "lefty." Historical figures such as Hindenburg, Von Papen, and Blomberg, may fairly be described as "conservatives." Nazis may fairly be described as "rightists" or "right-wing," but probably not "conservative," as the Nazi vision of society is more properly described as "radical." |
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In any article about the era, the text should use English-language equivalents. Hitler in 1933 should therefore be described as "chancellor," not "Reichskanzler."--[[User:Mcattell|Mcattell]] 17:37, 8 July 2007 (UTC) |
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:With ''that'' logic, Hitler ought to be called [[Prime Minister]], since term ''chancellor'' is now only historical in English, and the only political appointment including this word is the [[Chancellor of the Exchequer]]. Both these terms were originally pejorative, but are now standard. |
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:[[User:Nuttyskin|Nuttyskin]] ([[User talk:Nuttyskin|talk]]) 14:36, 20 October 2009 (UTC) |
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== Vandalism == |
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I have removed vandalism from this page, I suggest this article should be semi-locked for the time being to stop blatant and anonymous vandalism. |
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[[User:Neil Evans|Neil Evans]] |
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==Excusing Hitler== |
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I've been intently working on the article Night of the Long Knives, and some of its ancillary articles. As I initially found them, these articles seemed to share a common myth: that Hitler was hoodwinked by others in the party, including Göring, Himmler, and Heydrich, into believing that Röhm was planning a putsch against him, and that Hitler only very reluctantly ordered Röhm's arrest and death. |
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''This is most emphatically not the case''. Hitler was an shrewd political operator. He gained control of the movement, kept control of it during his time in prison, and used it to seize absolute power in Germany by remorselessly calculating the usefulness of his subordinates, and had no compunction about eliminating them if they had become a hindrance to him. |
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This is precisely what he did in ordering the purge that became known as the Night of the Long Knives. Röhm and the SA were very useful to Hitler during the years of his ascent because they could be counted on to terrorize political opponents. Because of that, Hitler tolerated the notorious reputation of the SA and its leadership for drinking and brawling. He also therefore tolerated Röhm's homosexuality. |
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One Hitler had seized power, however, there was no longer a need for a private militia that could smash up political meetings. He now had the full apparatus of the modern state, including the police forces, jails, and concentration camps to take care of that. |
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Röhm and the SA had outlived their usefulness to Hitler. That alone might not have resulted in a purge. However, Röhm's politics and especially his insistence that the SA supplant the Reichswehr was direct threat to the traditional army, including Hindenburg. By 1934, Blomberg, Hindenburg, and the rest of the army leadership made it clear to Hitler that if Röhm and the SA were not immediately brought to heel, they would declare martial law. |
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Once Hitler knew he had to act, he did so relentlessly. ''Hitler ordered'' Himmler and the rest to fabricate evidence implicating that Röhm was involved in a plot, so that he could later show this "evidence" to a grateful nation. It is very similar to Hitler's ''modus operandi'' when he fabricated evidence of a Polish raid on Germany, in order to create a pretext for the invasion of Poland. |
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Every serious history of the era, by reputable historians, agree on this: Hitler wanted Röhm eliminated because he was a threat to the army and, to a lesser extent, the Nazi's principle supporters among the wealthy and the middle classes. Hitler did not reluctantly order the purge because other Nazis had fooled him. Let's get our facts straight. --[[User:Mcattell|Mcattell]] 16:47, 8 July 2007 (UTC) |
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::Yep, AH may have not been thrilled about having ER killed, but he was nonetheless ruthless about his wider goals. [[User:Gwen Gale|Gwen Gale]] 20:16, 22 September 2007 (UTC) |
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==Article length and proper sourcing== |
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Parts of this article are too long. The section marked "downfall' that describes the months before the purge in great deatil -- probably too much detail. It needs to be edited for length, but otherwise contains good writing. Also, references to historian Shirer, or any other historian, do not belong in the text. The text should contain individual facts that are properly sourced.--[[User:Mcattell|Mcattell]] 17:47, 8 July 2007 (UTC) |
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==Separate section on Rohm's sexual orientation== |
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This section should be removed, and its information interwoven with the body of the text where appropriate.--[[User:Mcattell|Mcattell]] 17:47, 8 July 2007 (UTC) |
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::Done. It's meaningless unless described in context anyway. [[User:Gwen Gale|Gwen Gale]] 19:59, 22 September 2007 (UTC) |
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==Cleanup== |
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Although I've flowed the text, much remains to be done. |
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* The longish narrative about the SA's socialist and working class origins is very helpful in leading readers to an understanding of how ER (somewhat cluelessly) got himself killed, but needs much more personal detail. For example, towards the end he did half-heartedly undertake a public campaign to counter attacks on his moral leadership: For example, I've seen publicity pictures of him posed in a domestic setting with his mother. |
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* Likewise, more detail about his early life would be more than helpful. |
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* Although I think the text is accurate, sourcing is lacking and needed. The mention of Shirer and Toland in the body of the text is but a stopgap. Please help. |
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[[User:Gwen Gale|Gwen Gale]] 20:13, 22 September 2007 (UTC) |
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==Occupation== |
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Is professionnal pedophile an occupation? <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/78.129.94.248|78.129.94.248]] ([[User talk:78.129.94.248|talk]]) 12:58, 16 June 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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[[Category:Articles which may no longer need images|Ernst Röhm]] |
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:It's an irrelevant question, since whatever species of monster Roehm may have been, a paedophile he certainly wasn't. |
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:[[User:Nuttyskin|Nuttyskin]] ([[User talk:Nuttyskin|talk]]) 14:43, 20 October 2009 (UTC) |
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== German quotes == |
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I have to say that the German quotes about his final minutes are totally wrong. This needs to be cleaned up. I speak German and it is nothing but gibberish. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/85.115.8.18|85.115.8.18]] ([[User talk:85.115.8.18|talk]]) 11:56, 15 September 2009 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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:Removed un-cited alleged quotes and put in cited quote, and addition as to his death.[[User:Kierzek|Kierzek]] ([[User talk:Kierzek|talk]]) 22:28, 15 September 2009 (UTC) |
Latest revision as of 06:29, 20 October 2024
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A BOLD claim needs to be sourced
[edit]An editor has made the claims that if "[Röhm] had agreed to stand the SA down he would have survived", i.e. he would not have been purged in the Night of the Long Knives. The editor also claims that "Hitler needed the support of the industrialists more than he needed the army." I have seen absolutely no support for these claims in any of the literature I have read. Such WP:BOLD claims need to be supported with citations from extremely reliable (i.e. not WP:FRINGE) sources.
First, there is the question of what the editor means by "standing down". The conventional meaning of this is to (temporarily) stop activities. This is what Hitler ordered Röhm to do, stand down the SA, and Röhm complied. He and the SA's leadership were (putatively) at Bad Wiessee to confer with each other and then meet with Hitler, again at Hitler's orders. So the SA had indeed stood down, and Röhm was murdered anyway.
It seems possible that the editor means by "stand down" to dis-establish the SA entirely. If so, this is a counter-factual opinion which is impossible to verify, because it did not happen, and it seems highly unlikely that Röhm would have willingly shut down his very power base. It's more likely that if Hitler had ordered it, Röhm would have returned to South America, or wherever, to be a military consultant again. In any case, the opinion that Röhm would have survived if he had shut down the SA for good is one that can only be expressed in a Wikipedia article if it is expressed by a verified subject expert, who are the only people that are allowed to express opinions; Wikipedia editors cannot do so as the editor has done in this instance.
As for the industrialists vs. the military: the Army had long objected to the SA, and was concerned about their being a quasi-military force which could be used against them. Hitler very much needed to co-opt the Army, and the fact that he had gained the Chancellorship and virtually unfettered civil power meant that he no longer needed the SA to perform the anti-Communist rabble-rousing role they had played, which helped to create the circumstances under which he was made Chancellor. Now, he no longer needed the SA, he needed the Army, and Röhm's continuing push for a "Second Revolution" had become a thorn in his side, similar to the Strassers. Hitler had power, he no longer saw the need for revolution, which would simply upset everything he had achieved. These factors all came together in his decision to purge Röhm, the SA leadership Strasser and others who had long been on his list. The Army was who he was trying to appease, not industrialists.
Hitler, of course, needed the backing of the industrialists, but he already had that to some extent, and it is far from clear to me (and the editor does not present any evidence to support the idea) that getting rid of the SA was something that the industrialists wanted. The Sa was potentially direct competition for the Army, they presented no specific danger to the industrialists, except for being agents of general civil unrest. I have read nothing to indicate that the industrialists were urging Hitler to suppress the SA, were as the literature about the Army's qualms about the Nazi paramilitary is abundant.
In short "Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof." The editor is questions needs to stop attempting to edit-war their desired changes into the article and discuss them here, providing proof in the way of citations from very reliable sources. Beyond My Ken (talk) 19:33, 15 May 2021 (UTC)
- I agree with your revert and analysis, BMK. The fact is, the inclusion of the first part of the edit, is mere speculation and conjecture. The second edit is not the main reason, as you stated; certainly the industrialists and conservative politicians for that matter wanted the SA brought to heel given the civil unrest caused and also the spouted Socialism aspects, but it was the army who were the competition for being the arms bearing military force for the country; they had the most to lose. Frankly, there’s no evidence that Ernst would have survived and there’s no evidence he would’ve ever “stood down”, either. The edits also involved WP:OR. Kierzek (talk) 23:19, 15 May 2021 (UTC)
Westerhaley: first, what you’ve written does not support what you want to add. Secondly, that is not a good strong RS source. Kierzek (talk) 23:35, 18 May 2021 (UTC)
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"First openly gay politician"
[edit]From the article:
Röhm acknowledged that the letters were genuine, and as a result of the scandal, he became the first openly gay politician in history.
But the reference for this doesn't state the latter half of the claim, only the former. The claim that Röhm was the first openly gay politician in history seems quite bold -- there's quite a bit of history, after all, and politics has been a part for all of it, and historically attitudes on homosexuality have varied. I'm no expert on queer history, nor can I name an earlier "out" politician, but a better source for this would be nice. 82.95.254.249 (talk) 18:04, 14 February 2022 (UTC)
- Not from an WP:RS source and so it has been removed. Kierzek (talk) 20:29, 14 February 2022 (UTC)
- It's worth noting then that the exact same information (with the same source) is prominently present on the article Röhm scandal, which is now no longer linked to at all from this article (also, while the source has been removed from the bibliography,
{{sfn|Marhoefer 2018}}
is still present). Not an optimal situation. Also, rereading the page, while the "in history" bit is not literally there, it does state Röhm was "the first openly gay politician", which is presumably meant to cover all of history. This doesn't reduce the boldness of the claim, but then Laurie Marhoefer actually is a historian, and I'm not. She's written actual books, which might be better sources than a blog article. 82.95.254.249 (talk) 21:29, 14 February 2022 (UTC)
- It's worth noting then that the exact same information (with the same source) is prominently present on the article Röhm scandal, which is now no longer linked to at all from this article (also, while the source has been removed from the bibliography,
Rohm's country of origin
[edit]Hello, I'm not really familiar with the tools of changing pages like this, but under early life it states he was born in the Kingdom of Bavaria, which ceased existing in 1871. This is listed correctly as German Empire not kingdom of Bavaria in the card, but not in the body of the early life section. It'd be really nice if someone with skills could fix this Zsessions1 (talk) 21:21, 14 March 2023 (UTC)
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