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{{Short description|German Nazi politician (1894–1987)}}
{{Dablink|Not to be confused with [[Rudolf Höss]], commandant of Auschwitz concentration camp}}
{{About|the Deputy Führer to Adolf Hitler|the commandant of the Auschwitz concentration camp|Rudolf Höss|the Californian artist|Rudolf Hess (artist)}}
{{Infobox Politician
{{Good article}}
| name = Rudolf Hess
{{Pp-pc1}}
| honorific-suffix =
{{Use British English|date=November 2024}}
| image = Bundesarchiv Bild 146II-849, Rudolf Heß.jpg
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2022}}
| imagesize = 250px
{{Use shortened footnotes|date=May 2021}}
| caption =
{{Infobox officeholder
| office =''Stellvertreter des Führers''<br />[[Deputy Führer]]
| name = Rudolf Hess
| term_start = 21 April 1933
| honorific-prefix = {{lang|de|[[Reichsleiter]]}}
| term_end = 12 May 1941
| image = Bundesarchiv Bild 183-1987-0313-507, Rudolf Hess (cropped)(b).jpg
| lieutenant2 = [[Karl Gerland]]<br>[[Martin Bormann]]
| caption = Hess in 1935
| predecessor = ''Post created''
| office = Deputy Führer of the Nazi Party
| successor = [[Martin Bormann]]<br><small>(As Chief of the [[Parteikanzlei]])</small>
| term_start = 21 April 1933
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1894|4|26|df=yes}}
| term_end = 12 May 1941
| birth_place = [[Alexandria]], [[Khedivate of Egypt]]
| 1blankname = Führer
| death_date = {{death date and age|df=yes|1987|8|17|1894|4|26}}
| 1namedata = [[Adolf Hitler]]
| death_place = [[Spandau]], [[West Berlin]]<br/> [[West Germany]]
| predecessor = Office established
| nationality = German
| successor = [[Martin Bormann]]<br />(Chief of the [[Nazi Party Chancellery|Party Chancellery]])
| party = [[National Socialist German Workers' Party]] (NSDAP)<br> (Since 1920)
| office1 = {{lang|de|[[Reichsminister]]}} without portfolio
| spouse = Ilse Pröhl (22 June 1900 - 7 September 1995) married 20 December 1927
| term_start1 = 1 December 1933
| relations =
| term_end1 = 12 May 1941
| children = [[Wolf Rüdiger Hess]] (18 November 1937 - 14 October 2001)
| chancellor1 = Adolf Hitler
| residence =
| office2 = [[Nazi Party Chancellery|Chief of the Nazi Party Liaison Office]]{{sfn|Orlow|2010|p=261}}{{sfn|Lang|1979|p=69}}
| alma_mater = [[University of Munich]]
| predecessor2 = Office established
| occupation =
| successor2 = Martin Bormann
| profession = ''Reichsminister''
| term_start2 = 20 March 1933{{sfn|Orlow|2010|p=261}}
| signature = Rudolf Hess Signature.svg
| term_end2 = 12 May 1941
| footnotes = German spelling is Heß
| office3 = Private Secretary to the Führer <br>of the Nazi Party{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=19}}
| term_start3 = 1925{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=19}}
| term_end3 = 1935{{sfn|Collier|Pedley|2000|p=68}}
| predecessor3 = Office established
| successor3 = Martin Bormann
| title4 = Additional positions
| suboffice4 = Member of the [[Council of Ministers for the Defense of the Reich]]{{sfn|Broszat|1981|pp=308–309}}
| subterm4 = 1939–1941
| suboffice5 = ''Reichsleiter'' of the <br>[[Nazi Party]]
| subterm5 = June–September 1933
| suboffice6 = Member of the [[Reichstag (Nazi Germany)|Greater German Reichstag]]{{sfn|Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression|1946|p=466}}
| subterm6 = 1933–1941
| suboffice7 = Chairman of the Nazi Party's Central Political Committee{{sfn|Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression|1946|p=466}}
| subterm7 = 1932–1941
| birth_name = Rudolf Walter Richard Hess
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1894|4|26|df=yes}}
| birth_place = [[Alexandria]], [[Khedivate of Egypt]]
| death_date = {{death date and age|df=yes|1987|8|17|1894|4|26}}
| death_place = [[Spandau Prison]], [[West Berlin]], [[West Germany]]
| death_cause = [[Suicide by hanging]]
| resting_place =
| nationality = German
| party = [[Nazi Party]] (1920–1941)
| otherparty = <!--For additional political affiliations-->
| spouse = {{marriage|[[Ilse Hess|Ilse Pröhl]]|20 December 1927}}
| relations =
| children = [[Wolf Rüdiger Hess]]
| parents = <!-- overrides mother and father parameters -->
| relatives =
| residence =
| education =
| alma_mater = [[University of Munich]]
| signature = Rudolf Hess Signature.svg
| signature_alt =
| website = <!--Military service-->
| nickname =
| allegiance = [[German Empire]]
| branch = [[Imperial German Army]]
| serviceyears = 1914–1918
| rank = {{lang|de|Leutnant der Reserve}}
| unit = {{plainlist |
* 7th Bavarian Field Artillery Regiment
* 1st Infantry Regiment
}}
}}
| commands =
'''Rudolf Walter Richard Hess''' (26 April 1894 in [[Alexandria]], [[Khedivate of Egypt]] – 17 August 1987 in [[West Berlin]], [[West Germany]]) was a prominent [[Nazi]] politician who was [[Adolf Hitler]]'s [[Deputy Führer|deputy]] in the [[Nazi Party]] during the 1930s and early 1940s. On the eve of war with the [[Soviet Union]], he flew solo to Scotland in an attempt to negotiate peace with the United Kingdom, but was arrested and became a [[prisoner of war]]. Hess was trialed at [[Nuremberg Trials|Nuremberg]] and sentenced to [[life imprisonment]], which he served at [[Spandau Prison]], [[Berlin]], where he died in 1987. There have been [[conspiracy theory|conspiracy theories]] linked to Hess.<ref name="Martin Allen">''Martin Allen''</ref> After World War II [[Winston Churchill]] wrote of Hess, "He was a medical and not a criminal case, and should be so regarded."<ref name = Churchillp49>{{cite book|title= ''[[The Second World War]]'' Volume III: The Grand Alliance |author= [[Winston Churchill|Churchill, Winston]]|page= 49 |publisher= London: Cassell & Co Ltd |year= 1950}}</ref>
| battles = {{Tree list}}
* [[World War I]]
** [[First Battle of Ypres]]
** [[Battle of Verdun]]
** [[Romania in World War I|Romanian Front]]
{{Tree list/end}}
| mawards = [[Iron Cross]], 2nd Class
| module = '''Criminal conviction'''{{Infobox criminal
|child = yes
|conviction = [[Crimes of aggression|Conspiracy to commit crimes against peace]]<br>[[Crimes of aggression]]
| trial = Nuremberg trials
| conviction_penalty= [[Life imprisonment]]
| conviction_status = [[Deceased]]
}}
}}

'''Rudolf Walter Richard Hess''' ('''Heß''' in German; 26 April 1894&nbsp;– 17 August 1987) was a German politician and a leading member of the [[Nazi Party]] in [[Nazi Germany]]. Appointed Deputy [[Führer]] to [[Adolf Hitler]] in 1933, Hess held that position until 1941, when he flew solo to Scotland in an attempt to negotiate the United Kingdom's exit from the [[Second World War]]. He was taken prisoner and eventually convicted of crimes against peace. He was still serving his life sentence at the time of his suicide in 1987.

Hess enlisted as an infantryman in the [[German Army (German Empire)|Imperial German Army]] at the outbreak of [[World War I]]. He was wounded several times during the war and was awarded the [[Iron Cross]], 2nd Class, in 1915. Shortly before the war ended, Hess enrolled to train as an aviator, but he saw no action in that role. He left the armed forces in December 1918 with the rank of {{lang|de|Leutnant der Reserve}}. In 1919, Hess enrolled in the [[University of Munich]], where he studied [[geopolitics]] under [[Karl Haushofer]], a proponent of the concept of {{lang|de|[[Lebensraum]]}} ('living space'), which became one of the pillars of Nazi ideology. Hess joined the Nazi Party on 1 July 1920 and was at Hitler's side on 8 November 1923 for the [[Beer Hall Putsch]], a failed Nazi attempt to seize control of the government of Bavaria. While serving a prison sentence for this attempted coup, he assisted Hitler with {{lang|de|[[Mein Kampf]]}}, which became a foundation of the political platform of the Nazi Party.

After [[Adolf Hitler's rise to power#Seizure of control (1931–1933)|Hitler became Chancellor]] in January 1933, Hess was appointed Deputy ''Führer'' of the Nazi Party in April. He was elected to the {{lang|de|[[Reichstag (Nazi Germany)|Reichstag]]}} in the March elections, was made a {{lang|de|[[Reichsleiter]]}} of the Nazi Party in June and in December 1933 he became [[Minister without portfolio|Minister without Portfolio]] in Hitler's cabinet.{{sfn|Williams|2015|pp=497–498}} He was also appointed in 1938 to the Cabinet Council and in August 1939 to the Council of Ministers for Defence of the Reich. Hitler decreed on the outbreak of war on 1 September 1939 that [[Hermann Göring]] was his official successor, and named Hess as next in line.{{sfn|Williams|2015|p=497}} In addition to appearing on Hitler's behalf at speaking engagements and rallies, Hess signed into law much of the government's legislation, including the [[Nuremberg Laws]] of 1935, which stripped the Jews of Germany of their rights in the lead-up to [[the Holocaust]].

By the start of the war, Hess was sidelined from most important decisions, and many in Hitler's inner circle thought him to be mad. On 10 May 1941, Hess made a solo flight to [[Scotland]], where he hoped to arrange peace talks with the [[Douglas Douglas-Hamilton, 14th Duke of Hamilton|Duke of Hamilton]], whom he believed to be a prominent opponent of the British government's war policy. The British authorities arrested Hess immediately on his arrival and held him in custody until the end of the war, when he was returned to Germany to stand trial at the 1946 [[Nuremberg trials]] of major war criminals. During much of his trial, Hess claimed to be suffering from amnesia, but he later admitted to the court that this had been a ruse. The court convicted him of crimes against peace and of conspiracy with other German leaders to commit crimes. He served a life sentence in [[Spandau Prison]]; the [[Soviet Union]] blocked repeated attempts by family members and prominent politicians to procure his early release. While still in custody as the only prisoner in Spandau, he hanged himself in 1987 at the age of 93.

After his death, the prison was demolished to prevent it from becoming a [[Neo-Nazism|neo-Nazi]] shrine. His grave, bearing the inscription "Ich hab's gewagt" (''I dared it''), became a site of regular pilgrimage and demonstrations by Neo-Nazis. In 2011, authorities refused to renew the lease on the gravesite, and his remains were exhumed and cremated and the gravestone destroyed.

==Early life and family==
Hess, the eldest of three children, was born on 26 April 1894 in [[El Ibrahimiyya (neighborhood)|al-Ibrahimiyya]], a suburb of [[Alexandria]], [[Khedivate of Egypt|Egypt]] (then under British occupation, though formally a part of the [[Ottoman Empire]]), into a wealthy German family. Originally from [[Bohemia]], the Hess family settled in [[Wunsiedel]], [[Upper Franconia]], in the 1760s. His grandfather, Johann Christian Hess, married Margaretha Bühler, the daughter of a Swiss consul, in 1861 in [[Trieste]]. After the birth of his father, Johann Fritz Hess, the family moved to Alexandria, where Johann Christian Hess founded the import company Hess & Co. which his son, Johann Fritz Hess, took over in 1888. Hess's mother, Klara, was the daughter of Rudolf Münch, a textile industrialist and councillor of commerce from [[Hof, Bavaria|Hof]], Upper Franconia.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|p=2}} His brother, Alfred, was born in 1897 and his sister, Margarete, was born in 1908.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|p=2}}{{sfn|Schmidt|1997|pp=37–38}} The family lived in a villa on the Egyptian coast near Alexandria, and visited Germany often from 1900, staying at their summer home in Reicholdsgrün (now part of [[Kirchenlamitz]]) in the [[Fichtel Mountains]].{{sfn|Hess|1987|pp=26–27}}{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=2–3}}


Hess's youth in Egypt left him with a strong admiration for the British Empire.{{sfn| Rubinstein|2007|p=140}} Hess's youth growing up under the "[[Veiled Protectorate]]" of [[Evelyn Baring, 1st Earl of Cromer|Sir Evelyn Baring]] made him unique among the Nazi leaders in that he grew up under British rule, which he saw in very positive terms.{{sfn| Rubinstein|2007|p=140}}
On 27–28 September 2007, numerous British news services published descriptions of disagreement between his [[Western Allies|Western]] and [[Soviet]] captors over his treatment and how the Soviet captors were steadfast in denying his release.<ref>{{cite news|author= Kennedy, Maev |url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,,2178948,00.html |title=How Nixon showed pity for 'the world's loneliest man' |publisher=''[[The Guardian]]'' |date= 28 September 2007|accessdate=28 April 2010 | location=London}}</ref><ref>[http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article2547568.ece]{{Dead link|date=April 2010}}</ref>
In July 2011, the remains of Rudolf Hess were exhumed from a grave in [[Bavaria]] after it became a focus of a [[pilgrimage]] for [[neo-Nazis]].


Hess attended a German-language Protestant school in Alexandria from 1900 to 1908, when he was sent back to Germany to study at a boarding school in [[Bad Godesberg]]. He demonstrated aptitudes for science and mathematics, but his father wished him to join the family business, Hess & Co., so he sent him in 1911 to study at the ''École supérieure de commerce'' in [[Neuchâtel]], Switzerland. After a year there, Hess took an [[Apprenticeship#Germany|apprenticeship]] at a trading company in [[Hamburg]].{{sfn|Hess|1987|pp=26–27}}{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=2–3}}
==Early life==
Hess was born in Alexandria, [[Egypt]], the eldest of four children, to Fritz H. Hess, a prosperous [[German people|German]] [[Lutheran]] importer/exporter from Bavaria, and Clara (''née'' Münch). The family lived in luxury on the Egyptian coast, near Alexandria, and visited Germany often during the summers, allowing the Hess children to learn the German language and to absorb German culture. The family moved back to Germany in 1908, where Rudolf was subsequently enrolled in boarding school in [[Bad Godesberg]], at the Evangelical School. <!-- This was his first formal education, as he had been home-schooled to that point. <-This conflicts with German article, according to which he attended the German School in Alexandria. Hiding it till a source can be found one way or the other.--> Hess showed aptitude in science and mathematics, and expressed interest in becoming an [[astronomy|astronomer]]. However, his father wished him to eventually continue the family business, Hess & Co., and in 1911 convinced Rudolf to study business for one year in [[Neuchâtel]], [[Switzerland]], at the Ecole Supérieure de Commerce.<ref>''The Hitler/Hess Deception, by Martin Allen, HarperCollins, 2002, ISBN 978-0-00-714119-7, pp. 4-5.</ref>


==World War I==
==World War I==
Within weeks of the outbreak of [[World War I]], Hess enlisted in the 7th Bavarian Field Artillery Regiment, part of the [[1st Royal Bavarian Division]]. His initial posting was against the British on the [[Somme (department)|Somme]];{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=4}} he was present at the [[First Battle of Ypres]]. On 9 November 1914, Hess transferred to the 1st Infantry Regiment, stationed near [[Arras]]. He was awarded the [[Iron Cross]], second class, and promoted to ''[[Gefreiter]]'' (corporal) in April 1915. After additional training at the [[Munster Training Area]], he was promoted to ''[[Vizefeldwebel]]'' (senior non-commissioned officer) and received the Bavarian [[Military Merit Cross (Bavaria)|Military Merit Cross]]. Returning to the front lines in November, he fought in [[Artois]], participating in the battle for the town of [[Neuville-Saint-Vaast]]. After two months out of action with a throat infection, Hess served in the [[Battle of Verdun]] in May, and was hit by [[Fragmentation (weaponry)|shrapnel]] in the left hand and arm on 12 June 1916 during fighting near the village of Thiaumont. After a month off to recover, he was sent back to the Verdun area, where he remained until December.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=4–6}}{{sfn|Hess|1987|p=27}}
Hess joined the [[Hamburg]] trading company Feldt, Stein & Co. as an [[apprentice]] in 1912. At the outbreak of [[World War I]] he enlisted in the 7th Bavarian Field [[Artillery]] Regiment, became an infantryman and was awarded the [[Iron Cross]], second class. He saw heavy action both on the Western Front (at [[Ypres]] and [[Verdun]]) and in the [[Carpathian Mountains]]. After being wounded on several occasions—including a chest wound severe enough to prevent his return to the front as an [[infantry]]man—he transferred to the Imperial Air Corps (after being rejected once). He then took aeronautical training and served as a [[Aviator|pilot]] in an operational squadron, Jasta 35b (Bavarian), with the rank of [[lieutenant]] from 16 October 1918. He won no victories. The war ended on 11 November 1918.<ref>''The Hitler/Hess Deception'', by Martin Allen, HarperCollins, 2002, ISBN 978-0-00-714119-7, pp. 5-6.</ref>


Hess was promoted to platoon leader of the 10th Company of the 18th Bavarian Reserve Infantry Regiment, which was serving in [[Romania during World War I|Romania]]. He was wounded on 23 July and again on 8 August 1917; the first injury was a shell splinter to the left arm, which was dressed in the field, but the second was a bullet wound that entered the upper chest near the armpit and exited near his spinal column, leaving a pea-sized entry wound and a cherry stone-sized exit wound on his back.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=7}}
==Marriage, family, early post-war years==
On 20 December 1927, Hess married 27-year-old Ilse Pröhl (22 June 1900 – 7 September 1995) from [[Hannover]]. They had a son, [[Wolf Rüdiger Hess]] (18 November 1937 – 24 October 2001).


By 20 August, he was well enough to travel, so he was sent to hospital in [[Hungary]] and eventually back to Germany, where he recovered in hospital in [[Meissen]]. In October he received promotion to ''Leutnant der Reserve'' and was recommended for, but did not receive, the Iron Cross, first class. At his father's request, Hess was transferred to a hospital closer to home, arriving at [[Alexandersbad]] on 25 October.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=8–9}}
After the war, the successful Hess family business collapsed. Hess went to [[Munich]], and took a job at a [[textile]] importing firm.<ref>''Martin Allen'', pp. 6-7, 11</ref> He joined the ''[[Freikorps]]''. He also joined the [[Thule Society]], a right-wing [[Völkisch movement|''völkisch'']] [[occult]]-[[mysticism|mystical]] organization.<ref>The occult historian [[Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke]] (2003: 114) now affirms Hess's membership in the Thule Society. It should be noted that Goodrick-Clarke had previously (1985: 149) maintained that Hess was no more than a guest to whom the Thule Society extended hospitality during the [[Bavarian Soviet Republic|Bavarian revolution of 1918]]. Martin Allen (p. 8-9) also wrote that Hess joined the Thule Society, and took part in clashes during this period.</ref> After the end of the war, Bavaria underwent fierce infighting between right-wing groups and left-wing forces, some of which were Soviet-backed.<ref>''Martin Allen'', pp. 7-9</ref>


While still convalescing, Hess had requested that he be allowed to enroll to train as a pilot, so after Christmas leave with his family, he reported to [[Munich]]. He received basic flight training at [[Oberschleissheim]] and [[Lechfeld Air Base]] from March to June 1918, and advanced training at [[Valenciennes]] in France in October. On 14 October, he was assigned to [[Jagdstaffel 35]]b, a Bavarian fighter squadron equipped with [[Fokker D.VII]] biplanes. He saw no action with Jagdstaffel 35b, as the war ended on 11 November 1918, before he had the opportunity.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=9–12}}
==University==
In autumn of 1919, Hess left his job and enrolled in the [[University of Munich]] where he studied [[political science]], [[history]], [[geography]], and [[geopolitics]] under Professor [[Karl Haushofer]], whom he had first met in the summer of 1919 in a social setting. From their first meeting, Hess became a disciple of Karl Haushofer, the two became close friends, and their families would also become close in the ensuing years, as Hess and Karl's son [[Albrecht Haushofer]] also developed a strong friendship.<ref>''Martin Allen'', pp. 8-9</ref>


[[File:KarlHaushofer RudolfHess.jpg|thumb|upright=1.15|Hess (right) with his geopolitics professor, [[Karl Haushofer]], c. 1920]]
==Hitler==


Hess was discharged from the armed forces in December 1918. The family fortunes had taken a serious downturn, as their business interests in Egypt had been expropriated by the British.{{sfn|Hess|1987|pp=27–28}} Hess joined the [[Thule Society]], an [[antisemitic]] right-wing [[Völkisch movement|''Völkisch'']] group, and the ''[[Freikorps]]'' of Colonel Ritter von Epp,{{sfn|Padfield|2001|p=13}} one of many such volunteer paramilitary organisations active in Germany at the time.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=13–14}}
After hearing [[Adolf Hitler]], a powerful orator, speak for the first time in May 1920 at a Munich rally, Hess became completely devoted to him, and spent much of his time and effort for the next several years organizing for Hitler at the local level in Bavaria. Hess joined the fledgling [[Nazi Party]] in 1920 as one of its first members. Hess introduced [[Karl Haushofer]] to Hitler in the spring of 1921, following a rally at a beerhall. This was a critical and vital development in the eventual Nazi rise to power. Haushofer and Hitler connected immediately on a personal level. Haushofer's geopolitical theories found a strong convert in Hitler, who used this material to form the basis of his own plans for the rebuilding of Germany; Hitler soon began using Haushofer's material in his speeches, which drew ever-larger audiences and attention. Haushofer would become a close adviser to Hitler, and assume prominence in Germany with Hitler's rise.<ref>''Martin Allen'', pp. 15-18</ref>


Bavaria witnessed frequent and often bloody conflicts between right-wing groups, the ''Freikorps'', and left-wing forces as they fought for control of the state during this period.{{sfn|Evans|2003|pp=156–159}} Hess was a participant in street battles in early 1919 and led a group that distributed thousands of antisemitic pamphlets in Munich.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=14}}{{sfn|Evans|2003|p=177}} He later said that Egypt made him a nationalist, the war made him a socialist, and Munich made him an antisemite.{{sfn|Gunther|1940|p=73}}
Hess commanded an [[Sturmabteilung|SA]] [[battalion]] during the Hitler-led [[Beer Hall Putsch]] in 1923, which failed. Hess served seven and a half months in [[Landsberg Prison]]; Hitler was sentenced to five years in the same prison, but eventually served just nine months. Acting as Hitler's private secretary in prison, Hess transcribed and partially edited Hitler's book ''[[Mein Kampf]]''. While in prison, Hitler and Hess were frequently visited and tutored by Karl Haushofer.<ref>''Martin Allen'', pp. 20-21</ref> Hess also introduced Hitler at early Nazi Party rallies.


In 1919, Hess enrolled in the [[University of Munich]], where he studied history and economics. His [[geopolitics]] professor was [[Karl Haushofer]], a former general in the German Army who was a proponent of the concept of ''[[Lebensraum]]'' ("living space"), which Haushofer cited to justify the proposal that Germany should forcefully conquer additional territory in Eastern Europe.{{sfn|Bird|1974|p=7}}{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=14}} Hess later introduced this concept to [[Adolf Hitler]], and it became one of the pillars of [[Nazi Party]] ideology.{{sfn|Evans|2003|p=177}}{{sfn|Evans|2005|p=345}} Hess became friends with Haushofer and his son [[Albrecht Haushofer|Albrecht]], a social theorist and lecturer.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=14}}
Hess retained his interest in flying after the end of his active military career, and competed successfully in several races during the 1920s and 1930s<ref>''Martin Allen'', ''The Hitler/Hess Deception''</ref> latterly in a [[BFW M.35|BFW M35b]] monoplane. He also flew the [[Messerschmitt Bf 108]] and [[Messerschmitt Bf 110]] which he learned to fly under the tutelage of the company chief test pilot [[Wilhelm Stör|Willi Stör]].<ref name=FlightofHess />


[[Ilse Hess|Ilse Pröhl]], a fellow student at the university, met Hess in April 1920 when they by chance rented rooms in the same boarding house. They married on 20 December 1927 and their only child, [[Wolf Rüdiger Hess]], was born ten years later, on 18 November 1937.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=15, 20}}{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|p=63}} His name was, at least in part, to honour Hitler, who often used "Wolf" as a code name.{{sfn|Pick|2012|p=36}} Hess nicknamed the boy "Buz".{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|p=146}}
Writing in ''[[Mein Kampf]]'', Hitler said, 'under the old regime there was [[Philip, Prince of Eulenburg|Prince Eulenburg]], under the new, there is Rudolf Hess'.<ref>[http://www.archive.org/details/meinkampf035176mbp Mein Kamph, Adolf Hitler, pg 366]</ref> [[Anton Drexler]] (known for being Adolf Hitler's mentor during his early days in politics) and his group resented Hess, considering him 'too intellectual'.<ref>[http://www.archive.org/details/meinkampf035176mbp Mein Kamph, Adolf Hitler, pg 524]</ref>


==Relationship with Hitler==
==Deputy Führer==
[[File:Hitler, Maurice, Kriebel, Hess, Weber, prison de Landsberg en 1924.jpg|thumb|Hitler, [[Emil Maurice]], [[Hermann Kriebel]], Hess, and [[Friedrich Weber (veterinarian)|Friedrich Weber]], at [[Landsberg Prison]] (1924)]]
Eventually, Hess became the third-most powerful man in Germany, behind Hitler and [[Hermann Göring]]. Soon after Hitler assumed [[dictator]]ial powers, beginning in early 1933, Hess was named "Deputy to the Fuhrer". Hess had a privileged position as Hitler's deputy in the early years of the Nazi movement and in the early years of the [[Third Reich]]. For instance, he had the power to take "merciless action" against any defendant who he thought got off too lightly—especially in cases of those found guilty of attacking the party, Hitler or the state. Hess also played a prominent part in the creation of the [[Nuremberg Laws]] in 1935. Hitler biographer [[John Toland (author)|John Toland]] described Hess's political insight and abilities as somewhat limited.
[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1969-054-53A, Nürnberg, Reichsparteitag.jpg|thumb|Hess (2nd from left, behind [[Heinrich Himmler]]) was an early supporter of the Nazi Party.]]
After hearing the Nazi Party leader Hitler speak for the first time in 1920 at a Munich rally, Hess became completely devoted to him. They held a shared belief in the [[stab-in-the-back myth]], the notion that Germany's loss in World War I was caused by a conspiracy of Jews and [[Bolshevik]]s rather than a military defeat.{{sfn|Evans|2003|p=177}}{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=15}} Hess joined the Nazi Party on 1 July as member number 16.{{sfn|Hess|1987|p=34}} As the party continued to grow, holding rallies and meetings in ever larger [[beer hall]]s in Munich, he focused his attention on fundraising and organisational activities. On 4 November 1921, he was injured while protecting Hitler when a bomb planted by a Marxist group exploded at the [[Staatliches Hofbräuhaus in München|Hofbräuhaus]] during a party event. Hess joined the ''[[Sturmabteilung]]'' (SA) by 1922 and helped organise and recruit its early membership.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=17}}


Meanwhile, problems continued with the economy; [[Hyperinflation in the Weimar Republic|hyperinflation]] caused many personal fortunes to be rendered worthless. When the German government failed to meet its reparations payments and French troops marched in to occupy the industrial areas along the [[Ruhr]] in January 1923, widespread civil unrest was the result.{{sfn|Evans|2003|pp=186–187}} Hitler decided the time was ripe to attempt to seize control of the government with a ''coup d'état'' modelled on [[Benito Mussolini]]'s 1922 [[March on Rome]].{{sfn|Evans|2003|p=186}} Hess was with Hitler on the night of 8 November 1923 when he and the SA stormed a public meeting organised by Bavaria's de facto ruler, ''Staatskommissar'' (state commissioner) [[Gustav von Kahr]], in the ''[[Bürgerbräukeller]]'', a large beer hall in Munich. Brandishing a pistol, Hitler interrupted Kahr's speech and announced that the national revolution had begun, declaring the formation of a new government with World War I General [[Erich Ludendorff]].{{sfn|Evans|2003|p=193}} The next day, Hitler and several thousand supporters attempted to march to the Ministry of War in the city centre. Gunfire broke out between the Nazis and the police; sixteen marchers and four police officers were killed. Hitler was arrested on 11 November.{{sfn|Evans|2003|pp=193–194}}{{sfn|Shirer|1960|pp=73–74}}
Hess had extensive dealings with senior leaders of major European nations during the 1930s. His education, family man image, high office, and calm, forthright manner all served to make him the more respectful and respectable representative of the often otherwise crude and vulgar Nazis. Compared with other Nazi leaders, Hess had a good reputation among foreign leaders.<ref name="Martin Allen"/>


Hess and some SA men had taken a few of the dignitaries hostage on the night of the 8th, driving them to a house about {{convert|50|km}} from Munich. When Hess left briefly to make a phone call the next day, the hostages convinced the driver to help them escape. Hess, stranded, called Ilse Pröhl, who brought him a bicycle so he could return to Munich. He went to stay with the Haushofers and then fled to Austria, but they convinced him to return. He was arrested and sentenced to 18 months in prison for his role in the attempted coup, which later became known as the [[Beer Hall Putsch]]. Hitler was sentenced to five years imprisonment, and the Nazi Party and SA were both outlawed.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=18–19}}{{sfn|Shirer|1960|pp=70, 73}}
Within Germany, Hess was somewhat marginalized as the 1930s progressed, as [[foreign policy]] took greater prominence. His alienation increased during the early years of the war, as attention and glory were focused on military leaders, along with [[Hermann Göring]], [[Joseph Goebbels]] and [[Heinrich Himmler]]. Those three Nazi leaders in particular had much higher profiles than Hess. Though Hess worshipped Hitler more than the others, he was not nakedly ambitious and did not crave power in the same manner they did. However, as the [[Deputy Fuhrer]], he was definitely not a [[figurehead]]. Hess held as much power as the other Nazi leaders, if not more, under Hitler. He controlled who could get an audience with the Fuhrer, as well as passing and [[veto]]ing proposed bills, and managing party activities.<ref>Schwarzwaller, Wulf. ''Rudolf Hess The Last Nazi" ISBN# 0-915765-52-7</ref> Hitler appointed Hess as "Minister Without Portfolio".<ref name="Martin Allen"/>


[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1972-001-07, München, Zirkus Krone, Rede Hitler.jpg|thumb|Hitler speaks at a party rally in [[Munich]], 1925.]]
On 1 September 1939, the day [[Invasion of Poland|Germany invaded Poland]] and launched World War II, Hitler announced that should anything happen to both him and Göring, Hess would be next in the line of succession.<ref>{{cite news |first= |last= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=GERMANY: Mess's Successor|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,773092,00.html |publisher=[[Time (magazine)]] |date=2 March 1942 |accessdate=27 July 2010}}</ref>


Both men were incarcerated in [[Landsberg Prison]], where Hitler soon began work on his memoir, ''[[Mein Kampf]]'' ("My Struggle"), which he dictated to fellow prisoners Hess and [[Emil Maurice]]. Edited by publisher [[Max Amann]], Hess and others, the work was published in two parts in 1925 and 1926. It was later released in a single volume, which became a best-seller after 1930.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=19}}{{sfn|Evans|2003|p=196}} This book, with its message of violent antisemitism, became the foundation of the political platform of the Nazi Party.{{sfn|Evans|2003|p=197}}
==Flight to Scotland==
[[Image:Rudolf Hess - Bf 110D Werk Nr 3869 - Wreckage - Bonnyton Moor.jpg|thumb|right|The wreckage of Hess's Bf 110]]
Like Goebbels, Hess was privately distressed by the war with the United Kingdom because he, influenced by his academic advisor and in line with earlier statements by Hitler himself, hoped that Britain would accept Germany as an ally. Hess may have hoped to score a diplomatic victory by sealing a peace between the Third Reich and Britain,<ref>{{cite book |last=Shirer |first=William L. |title=The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich}}</ref> using the contact his adviser [[Albrecht Haushofer]] had made in Nazi Germany, just before the war, with [[Douglas Douglas-Hamilton, 14th Duke of Hamilton]].<ref>{{cite book |last=Bird |first=Eugene K. |authorlink=Eugene K. Bird |year=1974 |title=Prisoner #7: Rudolf Hess |page=235 |publisher=The Viking Press}} '''NOTE''': Bird showed the Haushofer Letters in the [[National Archives and Records Administration|National Archives]] in Washington D. C.</ref>


Hitler was released on parole on 20 December 1924 and Hess ten days later.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=19}} The ban on the Nazi Party and SA was lifted in February 1925, and the party grew to 100,000 members in 1928 and 150,000 in 1929.{{sfn|Evans|2003|pp=201, 211}} They received only 2.6 per cent of the vote in the 1928 election, but support increased steadily up until the [[Adolf Hitler's rise to power#Seizure of control (1931–1933)|seizure of power]] in 1933.{{sfn|Evans|2003|pp=209, 282}}
On 10 May 1941, at about 6:00pm, Hess took off from [[Augsburg]] in a [[Messerschmitt Bf 110]] (radio code VJ+OQ) which he had equipped with [[drop tank]]s to increase its range. Goering ordered the [[Adolf Galland|General of the Fighter Arm]] to stop him but squadron leaders were ordered to scramble only one or two fighters, since Hess's particular aircraft could not be distinguished from others<ref name=Galland/> and he was soon out of their range over the North Sea.


Hitler named Hess his private secretary in April 1925 at a salary of 500 [[Reichsmark]]s per month, and named him as personal adjutant on 20 July 1929.{{sfn|Hess|1987|p=34}}{{sfn|Bird|1974|p=8}} Hess accompanied Hitler to speaking engagements around the country and became his friend and confidante.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=19}} Hess was one of the few people who could meet with Hitler at any time without an appointment.{{sfn|Gunther|1940|p=6}} His influence in the Party continued to grow. On 15 December 1932 Hess was named head of the Party Liaison Staff and Chairman of the Party Central Political Commission.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=21}}{{sfn|Williams|2015|p=497}}
===Arrival over Scotland===
Hess flew from Augsburg via [[Darmstadt]] and [[Bonn]] towards the Zuider Zee and then on a track towards the Shetland Islands, until he intercepted a Luftwaffe radio navigation signal transmitted from [[Kalundborg]], Denmark. At that point he turned west towards the mainland of Britain.<ref name=mangor>{{cite book | last = Görtemaker | first = Manfred | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = Britain and Germany in the Twentieth Century | publisher = Berg | series = German Historical Perspectives | volume = 18 | edition = | date = 2006 | location = | page = 76 | language = | url = | doi = | id = | isbn = 9781859738429 | mr = | zbl = | jfm = }}</ref> At about 22:08 Hess's aircraft was first detected by radar from RAF Station [[Ouston, Stamfordham|Ouston]], north of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, at which time he was {{convert|70|mi|km|abbr=on}} off the coast of Scotland, headed in a north-westerly direction towards the island of [[Lindisfarne]]. His flight was designated HOSTILE RAID 42J.<ref name=a2a3>{{cite web | last = | first = | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = AIR 28/624 | work = National Archives | publisher = Air Ministry | date = | url = http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/displaycataloguedetails.asp?CATLN=6&CATID=5030654&SearchInit=4&SearchType=6&CATREF=AIR+28%2F624 | format = | doi = | accessdate = }}</ref>


Retaining his interest in flying after the end of his active military career, Hess obtained his private pilot's licence on 4 April 1929. His instructor was World War I flying ace [[Theodor Croneiss]]. In 1930 Hess became the owner of a [[BFW M.23]]b monoplane sponsored by the party newspaper, the ''[[Völkischer Beobachter]]''. He acquired two more [[Messerschmitt]] aircraft in the early 1930s, logging many flying hours and becoming proficient in the operation of light single-engine aircraft.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=20–21}}
Two Spitfires from Acklington in Northumberland which were already airborne received orders to intercept the unidentified aircraft, while a third was scrambled from Acklington. None of the three managed to sight the Bf 110 which dived to lose altitude after crossing the coast, and was subsequently sighted by a Royal Observer Corps post near Chatton in Northumberland ({{convert|12.5|mi|km|abbr=on}} inland) at 22:25, flying at only {{convert|50|ft|m|abbr=on}}.<ref>Operational Record Book, 72 Squadron, 10 May 1941, Public Record Office AIR 27/624</ref>


==Deputy Führer==
Over Lanarkshire, south of Glasgow, Hess managed to identify what he thought was [[Dungavel House|Dungavel]], the residence of the Duke of Hamilton. However, he had in fact sighted Eaglesham House, near the village of [[Eaglesham]]. To more precisely confirm his position he continued to fly on, over the Ayrshire coast where at 22:35 he avoided contact with a RAF [[Boulton Paul Defiant|Defiant]] nightfighter which had been scrambled from RAF Prestwick to intercept the intruder.<ref>Operational Record Book, RAF Ayr, 10-11 May 1941, PRO AIR 28/40</ref> Shortly afterwards, Hess abandoned the Bf 110 and landed by parachute near the village of Eaglesham, injuring his ankle on landing.
[[File:Kfz-Standarte Rudolf Heß.svg|thumb|left|upright|Vehicle standard for Hess while serving as Deputy Führer]]
On 30 January 1933, Hitler was appointed [[Reich Chancellor]], his first step in gaining dictatorial control of Germany.{{sfn|Evans|2003|p=307}}{{sfn|Shirer|1960|pp=226–227}} Hess was named Deputy Führer (''Stellvertreter des Führers'') of the Nazi Party on 21 April. On 2 June 1933 he was made one of 16 ''[[Reichsleiter]]s'' in the Party hierarchy. On 1 July he was raised to the rank of ''[[Obergruppenführer]]'' in the ''[[Schutzstaffel]]'' (SS). However, by 20 September Hitler decreed that he stop using the titles of ''[[Reichsleiter]]'' and ''Obergruppenführer'', and use only the title of "Deputy Fuhrer". This was an acknowledgement of his ''[[primus inter pares]]'' status in the Party. {{sfn|Lang|1979|p=79}} Hess was appointed to the cabinet as a Reich Minister without Portfolio, on 1 December.{{sfn|Hess|1987|p=39}} With offices in the [[Brown House, Munich|Brown House]] in Munich and another in [[Berlin]], Hess was responsible for several departments, including foreign affairs, finance, health, education and law.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=21–22}} Hess also was named as a member of [[Hans Frank]]'s [[Academy for German Law]].{{sfn|Williams|2015|p=498}} All legislation passed through his office for approval, except that concerning the army, the police and foreign policy, and he wrote and co-signed many of Hitler's decrees.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|pp=47–48}} An organiser of the annual [[Nuremberg Rally|Nuremberg Rallies]], he usually gave the opening speech and introduced Hitler. Hess also spoke over the radio and at rallies around the country, so frequently that the speeches were collected into book form in 1938.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|pp=37, 60, 62}} Hess acted as Hitler's delegate in negotiations with industrialists and members of the wealthier classes.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|p=39}} As Hess had been born abroad, Hitler had him oversee the Nazi Party groups such as the [[NSDAP/AO]] that were in charge of party members living in other countries.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|p=67}} Hitler instructed Hess to review all court decisions that related to persons deemed enemies of the Party. He was authorised to increase the sentences of anyone he felt got off too lightly in these cases, and was also empowered to take "merciless action" if he saw fit to do so. This often entailed sending the person to a concentration camp or simply ordering the person killed.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|p=51}}


In 1933, Hess founded the ''Volksdeutscher Rat'' (Council of Ethnic Germans) to handle the Nazi Party's relations with ethnic German minorities around the world, with a particular focus on Eastern Europe. The purpose of the council was to protect the Nazi Party from criticism that it was attempting to extend the process of ''[[Gleichschaltung]]'' to international ethnic German communities. Despite Hess's claims to the contrary, the council members were primarily loyal to Germany rather than their current nations. The eight council members, only one of which was a member of the Nazi Party, were responsible only to Hess. All had long been known to either Hess or Haushofer, who was also involved with the council. Members publicly claimed to be uninvolved in the council, which Hess used as proof that the Nazi Party was not trying to interfere in the domestic affairs of other nations.{{sfn|Jacobsen|1999|pp=68}} As the council had considerable funds and appeared to be sufficiently independent of the German government to satisfy foreign governments, its activities had some impact on international German communities in the 1930s.{{sfn|Jacobsen|1999|pp=69}} Its most notable impact was in the [[Sudetenland]], where in 1933 it promoted [[Konrad Henlein]] as the politician with the best hope of building a Nazi-friendly party that would win mass support without being banned by the Czechoslovak government.{{sfn|Jacobsen|1999|pp=70}}
===Capture===
Hess landed near Floors Farm, Eaglesham, where he was discovered removing his parachute harness by local ploughman David McLean. Hess identified himself as "Hauptmann Alfred Horn", and said that he had an important message for the Duke of Hamilton. McLean helped Hess to his home nearby then contacted the local Home Guard unit. Hess was then escorted under guard to the local Home Guard headquarters in [[Busby, East Renfrewshire]], and from there to the Battalion HQ in [[Giffnock]], where he arrived shortly after midnight. At Giffnock he was briefly questioned by Major Donald, the Assistant Group Officer of the Glasgow [[Royal Observer Corps]]. Hess gave a short description of his flight and repeated that he had "a secret and vital message" for the Duke of Hamilton and that he must see him immediately. The message was described as being "in the highest interest of the British Air Force", but Hess declined to go into any detail.<ref>Royal Observer Corps Report, "Tracking of flight of Rudolf Hess", 28 May 1941, PRO AIR 16/1266</ref>


The Nazi regime began to persecute Jews soon after the seizure of power. Hess's office was partly responsible for drafting Hitler's [[Nuremberg Laws]] of 1935. These laws had far-reaching implications for the Jews of Germany, banning marriage between non-Jewish and Jewish Germans and depriving non-[[Aryan race|Aryan]]s of their German citizenship. Hess's friend Karl Haushofer and his family were subject to these laws, as Haushofer had married a half-Jewish woman, so Hess issued documents exempting them from this legislation.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=22}}{{sfn|Evans|2005|pp=543–544}}
Hess was handed over to the Army and taken to Maryhill Barracks, Glasgow<ref name="a2a">[http://yourarchives.nationalarchives.gov.uk/index.php?title=AIR_28/40 British National Archives, Air/28/40, May 10, 1941]</ref>, where he again requested that the Duke should speak to him alone. Hamilton was informed of the prisoner and visited him whereupon he revealed his true identity. Shortly afterwards, Hamilton summarised their conversation in a report to Winston Churchill, dictated at RAF Turnhouse. Hamilton stated that, based on Press photographs and a description of Hess given by Albrecht Haushofer, that "this prisoner was indeed Hess himself".<ref>Report of Hamilton for Prime Minister, 11 May 1941, PRO, PREM 3/219/7</ref> Hamilton then flew to RAF Northolt, and on to Kidlington near Oxford, from where he was taken by car to meet Churchill at Ditchley Park.


[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-B01718, Ausstellung "Planung und Aufbau im Osten".jpg|thumb|Hess, [[Heinrich Himmler]], [[Phillip Bouhler]], [[Fritz Todt]], [[Reinhard Heydrich]], and others listening to [[Konrad Meyer]] at a ''[[Generalplan Ost]]'' exhibition, 20 March 1941]]
The flight of Hess, but not his destination or fate, was first announced by Munich Radio in Germany on the evening of Monday, May 12. <ref name=Leasor>{{cite book |last=Leasor |first=James |authorlink=James Leasor |origyear=1962 |year=1962 |title=Rudolf Hess: The Uninvited Envoy |location=London |publisher=Allen & Unwin |page=142}}</ref>Hess's capture was reported at the time in the British and international media and farmhand David McLean claimed to have arrested Hess with his pitchfork.<ref name=Galland>{{cite book |last=Galland |first=Adolf |authorlink=Adolf Galland |origyear=1954 |year=1968 Ninth Printing - paperbound |title=The First and the Last: The Rise and Fall of the German Fighter Forces, 1938-1945 |location=New York |publisher=Ballantine Books |page=56}}</ref><ref name=Overthehill>{{cite news|url= http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,765561,00.html|title= GERMANY: Hess Goes over the Hill|publisher= ''Time'' Magazine US|date= 19 May 1941|accessdate= 24 July 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://century.guardian.co.uk/1940-1949/Story/0,,127470,00.html|title= Hitler's deputy escapes to Britain|publisher= London: ''The Guardian''|date= 13 May 1941|accessdate= 24 July 2011}}</ref>
Hess did not build a power base or develop a coterie of followers.{{sfn|Evans|2003|p=47}}{{sfn|Hess|1987|p=36}} He was motivated by his loyalty to Hitler and a desire to be useful to him; he did not seek power or prestige{{sfn|Hess|1987|p=39}}{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=22}} or take advantage of his position to accumulate personal wealth. He lived in a modest house in Munich.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|p=63}} Hess was devoted to the ''völkisch'' ideology and viewed many issues in terms of an alleged Jewish conspiracy against Germany. For example, he said in a speech that "Today's League of Nations is really only a farce which functions primarily as the basis for the Jews to reach their own aims. You need only to note how many Jews sit in the League."{{sfn|Goda|2007|p=226}} In a speech in 1937, Hess blamed the [[Spanish Civil War]] on "international Jewry", called the Soviet Foreign Commissar [[Maxim Litvinov]] a "dirty Jew", and claimed that without Hitler or Mussolini, "Jewish Asiatic Bolshevism would dominate European culture".{{sfn|Goda|2007|p=226}}


On 30 August 1939, immediately prior to the outbreak of the [[Second World War]], Hess was appointed by Hitler to the six-person [[Council of Ministers for Defense of the Reich]] which was set up to operate as a war cabinet.{{sfn| Broszat| 1981| pp=308–309}} After the [[Invasion of Poland]] and the start of the war on 1 September 1939, Hitler made Hess second in line to succeed him, after [[Hermann Göring]].{{sfn|Shirer|1960|p=599}}{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|p=47}} Around the same time, Hitler appointed Hess's chief of staff, [[Martin Bormann]], as his personal secretary, a post formerly held by Hess.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=28}} On 8 October 1939, Hess co-signed the law that annexed the [[Free City of Danzig]], the [[Polish Corridor]], and the [[Upper Silesia plebiscite|part of Upper Silesia lost in 1921]] to Germany. On the same day, Hess and [[Heinrich Himmler]] ordered that a racial registry be established in these areas and stated that Poles and Jews living in these areas were not to be treated as equals of Germans. A separate legal code for Poles and Jews in the annexed areas was created, imposing draconian punishments. Hess argued that a separate legal code was necessary because "the Pole is less susceptible to the infliction of ordinary punishment".{{sfn|Goda|2007|p=226}} In another decree, Hess ordered that none of the buildings destroyed in Warsaw during the siege were to be rebuilt as a reminder to the Poles of their "war guilt".{{sfn|Goda|2007|p=226}}
The wreckage of the aircraft was salvaged by 63 Maintenance Unit between 11 and 16 May 1941.<ref>[http://yourarchives.nationalarchives.gov.uk/index.php?title=Hess,_Rudolf_%281894-1987%29_German_Politician British National Archives, A2A, AIR 29/1019]</ref> The aeroplane
was found to be armed with machine guns in the nose but there was no ammunition on board.<ref name=FlightofHess>{{cite book|year=1999|author=Ray Conyers Nesbit and Georges van Acker|isbn=978 0750947572|title=The Flight of Rudolph Hess Myths and Reality|publisher=The History Press}}</ref>


Hess's antisemitism markedly increased after the war started, as he was convinced that the war had been caused by Jews. This became a major theme of his wartime speeches. In a speech given on 20 April 1940 to mark Hitler's 51st birthday, Hess accused "Jews and their fellow travellers" of Germany's capitulation in November 1918, which he called the most calamitous event in world history. In the same speech, Hess, referring to the [[Black Horror on the Rhine]] story, stated the defeat of 1918 was followed by an occupation of the Rhineland by "niggers", which he again blamed on the Jews. Hess concluded his speech by saying that with Hitler in charge, there was no possibility of the current war ending similarly. "How the Jewish hounds will howl when Adolf Hitler stands before them," he concluded.{{sfn|Goda|2007|p=226}}
===Motives for trip===
Records released by the UK's National Archives confirm that Hess was on a peace mission. In early 1941 Germany tried to negotiate peace with Britain through diplomatic communications via Sweden.<ref name="a2a2">[http://yourarchives.nationalarchives.gov.uk/index.php?title=FO_371/26542 The National Archives (UK), A2a, FO 371/26542, C1687G,C1954 and C2785G]</ref> The Duke of Hamilton commenced [[libel]] action in 1941/42 and wanted to stand Hess in court as a witness.<ref name="libel">[http://yourarchives.nationalarchives.gov.uk/index.php?title=Hess,_Rudolf_%281894-1987%29_German_Politician HO 144/22492/863753, Duke of Hamilton, Libel]</ref> There is no evidence to implicate the Duke of Hamilton.<ref name=FlightofHess /> National Archives files relating to Hess and concerning the nature and range of German peace feelers in early 1941 (C1687G, C1954, C2785G) were formerly closed until 2017, but were released in 2007.<ref>[http://yourarchives.nationalarchives.gov.uk/index.php?title=Hess,_Rudolf_%281894-1987%29_German_Politician FO 371/26542]</ref>


Hess was obsessed with his health to the point of [[hypochondria]], consulting many doctors and other practitioners for what he described to his captors in Britain as a long list of ailments involving the kidneys, colon, gall bladder, bowels and heart. Hess was a vegetarian, and he did not smoke or drink. He brought his own food to the [[Berghof (residence)|Berghof]], claiming it was [[Biodynamic agriculture|biologically dynamic]], but Hitler did not approve of this practice, so he discontinued taking meals with the Führer.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|pp=63–67}}
In May 1943, the ''[[American Mercury]]'' magazine published a story from an anonymous source that indicated the British Secret Service lured Hess to Scotland to meet with [[Douglas Douglas-Hamilton, 14th Duke of Hamilton]], a member of the [[Anglo-German Fellowship]] and that Hess was on a peace mission; this was denied by Hitler.<ref>"The Inside Story of the Hess Flight" ''The American Mercury'' compendium volume CX-CXI Spring 1974 page 18
p.&nbsp;22</ref>''The Queen's Lost Uncle'', a [[television programme]] broadcast in November 2003 and March 2005 on Britain's [[Channel 4]], indicated involvement by [[Prince George, Duke of Kent]].
It appears that Hess was tricked into thinking he was in communication with [[Douglas Douglas-Hamilton, 14th Duke of Hamilton|the Duke of Hamilton]] who Hess was led to believe was an opponent of Winston Churchill.


Hess was interested in music, enjoyed reading and loved to spend time hiking and climbing in the mountains with his wife, Ilse. He and his friend Albrecht Haushofer shared an interest in [[astrology]], and Hess also was keen on clairvoyance and the occult.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|p=94}} Hess continued to be interested in aviation. He won an air race in 1934, flying a [[BFW M.35]] in a circuit around [[Zugspitze]] Mountain and returning to the airfield at Munich with a time of 29 minutes. He placed sixth of 29 participants in a similar race held the following year.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=24}} With the outbreak of World War II, Hess asked Hitler to be allowed to join the [[Luftwaffe]] as a pilot, but Hitler forbade it, and ordered him to stop flying for the duration of the war. Hess convinced him to reduce the ban to one year.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=28}}
Hess was quoted by his wife Ilse as saying:{{quote|"My coming to England in this way is, as I realise, so unusual that nobody will easily understand it. I was confronted by a very hard decision. I do not think I could have arrived at my final choice unless I had continually kept before my eyes the vision of an endless line of children's coffins with weeping mothers behind them, both English and German, and another line of coffins of mothers with mourning children."<ref>10 June 1941 (from ''Rudolf Hess: Prisoner of Peace'' by his wife, Ilse Hess).</ref>}}


==Attempted peace mission==
Hitler granted Hess's wife a [[pension]] but stripped Hess of all of his party and state offices, and privately ordered him shot on sight if he ever returned to Germany. [[Martin Bormann]] succeeded Hess as deputy under a newly created title.
{{Nazism sidebar}}
As the war progressed, Hitler's attention became focused on foreign affairs and the conduct of the war.{{sfn|Evans|2008|p=167}} Hess, who was not directly engaged in the war, became increasingly sidelined from the affairs of the nation and from Hitler's attention. He was excluded from most important decisions, and many in Hitler's inner circle thought him to be mad.{{sfn|Wright|2024}} Bormann had successfully supplanted Hess in many of his duties and had taken Hess's position at Hitler's side.{{sfn|Evans|2008|p=167}} Hess was concerned that Germany would face a war on two fronts as plans progressed for [[Operation Barbarossa]], the invasion of the [[Soviet Union]] scheduled to take place in 1941. Hess decided to attempt to bring Britain to the negotiating table by travelling there himself to seek meetings with the British government.{{sfn|Shirer|1960|p=837}}{{sfn|Sereny|1996|p=321}}


On 31 August 1940, Hess met with Karl Haushofer. Haushofer told Hess that he believed that [[King George VI]] was opposed to Churchill and would dismiss him and send him to Canada at the first opportunity. Haushofer spoke of his belief that it was possible to make contact with the king via either General [[Ian Hamilton (British Army officer)|Ian Hamilton]] or [[Douglas Douglas-Hamilton, 14th Duke of Hamilton|the Duke of Hamilton]].{{sfn|Herwig|2016|p=176}} Hess decided they should contact his fellow aviator the Duke of Hamilton, whom he had never met. Hess chose Hamilton in the mistaken belief that he was one of the leaders of a party opposed to war with Germany, and because Hamilton was a friend of Haushofer. On Hess's instructions, Haushofer wrote to Hamilton in September 1940, but the letter was intercepted by [[MI5]] and Hamilton did not see it until March 1941.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=29–30}}{{sfn|Shirer|1960|p=836}}{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|p=82}}
===Soviet suspicion===
Hess's flight raised suspicions with Soviet leader [[Joseph Stalin]] that secret discussions were under way between Britain and Germany to attack the Soviet Union. Later, in a meeting with Stalin, Churchill would address the topic and find Stalin still believed secret agreements were discussed with Hess. "When I make a statement of facts within my knowledge I expect it to be accepted," Churchill responded to Stalin, again denying that the incident resulted in any communications with Nazi Germany.<ref name = Churchillp49/> Files at The National Archives dated 1942 include Moscow Embassy correspondence concerning Hess; some pages are subject to non-disclosure under statute.<ref>[http://yourarchives.nationalarchives.gov.uk/index.php?title=Hess,_Rudolf_%281894-1987%29_German_Politician FO 181/969/12]</ref>


A letter Hess wrote to his wife dated 4 November 1940 shows that in spite of not receiving a reply from Hamilton, he intended to proceed with his plan. He began training on the [[Messerschmitt Bf 110]], a two-seater twin-engine aircraft, in October 1940 under instructor [[Wilhelm Stör]], the chief test pilot at Messerschmitt. He continued to practice, as well as log his many cross-country flights, and found a specific aircraft which handled well—a Bf 110E-1/N—which was from then on held in reserve for his personal use. He asked for a radio compass, modifications to the oxygen delivery system, and large long-range fuel tanks to be installed on this plane, and these requests were granted by March 1941.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=32–37}}
According to data published in a book about [[Wilhelm Canaris]], a number of contacts between Britain and Germany were kept during the war.<ref>Bassett, Richard (2005), ''Hitler’s Spy Chief''. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson.</ref>


==Trial and imprisonment==
===Flight to Scotland===
===Prisoner of war===
Churchill sent Hess initially to the [[Tower of London]], making Hess the last in the long line of prominent people to be held in the 900 year-old fortress.<ref>Olwen Hedley, ''Her Majesty's Tower of London'', pp.19-20, Pitkin Pictorials Ltd., London, 1976</ref> Churchill gave orders that Hess was to be strictly isolated, but treated with dignity.<ref>Hedley, p.19</ref> He remained in the Tower until 20 May 1941. After being held in the [[Maryhill]] army barracks, he was transferred to Mytchett Place near [[Aldershot]]. He was kept under close guard. [[Frank Foley]] and two other [[MI6]] officers were given the job of debriefing Hess — or "Jonathan", as he was now known. Churchill's instructions were that Hess should be strictly isolated, and that every effort should be taken to get any information out of him that might be useful.<ref>{{cite book|title= ''[[The Second World War]]'' Volume III: The Grand Alliance |author= Churchill, Winston|page= 45 |publisher= London: Cassell & Co Ltd |year= 1950}}</ref><ref name="Foley">''Foley'': Michael Smith, Hodder & Stoughton, 1999</ref>


After a final check of the weather reports for Germany and the [[North Sea]], Hess took off at 17:45 on 10 May 1941 from the airfield at [[Augsburg-Haunstetten]] in his specially prepared aircraft.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=44}} It was the last of several attempts to depart on his mission; previous efforts had to be called off due to mechanical problems or poor weather.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|p=92}} Wearing a leather flying suit bearing the rank of captain, he brought along a supply of money and toiletries, a [[Flashlight|torch]], a camera, maps and charts, and a collection of 28 different medicines, as well as [[Glucose|dextrose]] tablets to help ward off fatigue and an assortment of homoeopathic remedies.{{sfn|Evans|2008|p=167}}{{sfn|Bird|1974|p=15}}{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=39}}
During his time as a [[prisoner of war]] Hess was confined at Maindiff Court Military Hospital, Abergavenny, Wales for treatment for [[insanity]]. He was treated well and enjoyed painting.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/ww2peopleswar/stories/40/a5279240.shtml |title=WW2 People's War - Marjorie's War |author= CSV Action Desk Leicester
|publisher=BBC |date=23 August 2005 |accessdate=28 April 2010}}</ref>


Setting a course towards [[Bonn]], Hess used landmarks on the ground to orient himself and make minor course corrections. When he reached the coast near the [[Frisian Islands]], he turned and flew in an easterly direction for twenty minutes to stay out of range of British radar. He then took a heading of 335 degrees for the trip across the North Sea, initially at low altitude but travelling for most of the journey at {{convert|5000|ft|m}}. At 20:58 he changed his heading to 245 degrees, intending to approach the coast of [[North East England]] near the village of [[Bamburgh]], Northumberland. As it was not yet sunset when he first approached the coast, Hess backtracked, zigzagging back and forth for 40 minutes until it grew dark. Around this time, his auxiliary fuel tanks were exhausted so he released them into the sea. Also around this time, at 22:08, the British [[Chain Home]] station at Ottercops Moss near [[Newcastle upon Tyne]] detected his presence and informed the [[Filter Room]] at [[Bentley Priory]]. Soon he was detected by several other stations, and the aircraft was designated as "Raid 42".{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=46–51}}
===Hess's mental state===
At the time of his capture, official London sources had claimed Hess was "sane and healthy" and had not brought any peace message.<ref name=Overthehill/> However, the Nazis claimed he had left behind a letter which "showed clearly traces of mental disorder which led to fears that Party Comrade Hess was a victim of hallucinations."<ref name=Overthehill/> In an official report to [[President Franklin Roosevelt]] "A Former Naval Person" wrote: "Hess seems in good health and not excited, and no ordinary signs of insanity can be detected."<ref>{{cite book|title= ''[[The Second World War]]'' Volume III: The Grand Alliance |author= Churchill, Winston|page=47 |publisher= London: Cassell & Co Ltd |year= 1950}}</ref>


[[File:Rudolf Hess - Bf 110D Werk Nr 3869 - Wreckage - Bonnyton Moor.jpg|thumb|Wreckage of Hess's [[Messerschmitt Bf 110]] at the site of the crash]]
On 15 October 1941, Hess made his first suicide attempt by throwing himself over the rail of the first floor balcony, but he only broke his leg.


Two [[Spitfire]]s of [[No. 72 Squadron RAF]], [[No. 13 Group RAF]] that were already in the air were sent to attempt an interception, but failed to find the intruder. A third Spitfire sent from [[Acklington]] at 22:20 also failed to spot the aircraft; by then it was dark and Hess had dropped to an extremely low altitude, so low that the volunteer on duty at the [[Royal Observer Corps]] (ROC) station at [[Chatton]] was able to correctly identify it as a Bf 110, and reported its altitude as {{convert|50|ft|m}}. Tracked by additional ROC posts, Hess continued his flight into Scotland at high speed and low altitude, but was unable to spot his destination, [[Dungavel House]], so he headed for the west coast to orient himself and then turned back inland. At 22:35 a [[Boulton Paul Defiant]] sent from [[No. 141 Squadron RAF]] based at [[Ayr]] began pursuit. Hess was nearly out of fuel, so he climbed to {{convert|6000|ft|m}} and parachuted out of the plane at 23:06. He injured his foot, either while exiting the aircraft or when he hit the ground. The aircraft crashed at 23:09, about {{convert|12|mi|km}} west of Dungavel House, the Duke of Hamilton's home.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=52–58}} He would have been closer to his destination had he not had trouble exiting the aircraft.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|p=101}} Hess considered this achievement to be the proudest moment of his life.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|p=97}}
Hess was interviewed by [[psychiatry|psychiatrist]] [[John Rawlings Rees]], who had worked at the [[Tavistock Clinic]] prior to becoming a [[Brigadier]] in the [[British Army]]. Rees concluded that he was not insane, but certainly [[mental illness|mentally ill]] and suffering from [[clinical depression|depression]]—probably due to the failure of his mission.<ref name="Foley"/> Hess's diaries from his imprisonment in Britain after 1941 make many references to visits from Rees, whom he did not like and accused of poisoning him and "[[hypnosis|mesmerizing]]" him. Rees took part in the Nuremberg Trials of 1945.


Before his departure from Germany, Hess had given his adjutant, [[Karlheinz Pintsch]], a letter addressed to Hitler that detailed his plans to initiate peace negotiations with the UK.{{sfn|Evans|2008|p=168}} Hess intended to approach the Duke of Hamilton at his home in Scotland, hoping that the duke might then be willing to advocate for and assist him in negotiating peace with Germany on terms that would be acceptable to Hitler.{{sfn|Handwerk|2016}} Pintsch delivered the letter to Hitler at the Berghof around noon on 11 May.{{sfn|Evans|2008|p=168}} After reading the letter, Hitler let loose a cry heard throughout the entire Berghof and sent for a number of his inner circle, concerned that a [[putsch]] might be underway.{{sfn|Childers|2017|p=478}}
Hess was in captivity for almost four years of the war and thus he was absent from most of it, in contrast to the others who stood accused at Nuremberg. British government files released by [[The National Archives (United Kingdom)|The National Archives]] include a note concerning Hess's war crimes trial in which Judge Jackson considered whether Hess should be testified as insane. His case was considered by the Attorney-General.<ref>[http://yourarchives.nationalarchives.gov.uk/index.php?title=Hess,_Rudolf_%281894-1987%29_German_Politician National Archives (UK) FO 371/50976]</ref>


Hitler worried that his allies, Italy and Japan, would perceive Hess's act as an attempt by Hitler to secretly open peace negotiations with the British. Hitler contacted Mussolini specifically to reassure him otherwise.{{sfn|Childers|2017|p=478}} For this reason, Hitler ordered that the German press should characterise Hess as a madman who made the decision to fly to Scotland entirely on his own, without Hitler's knowledge or authority. Subsequent German newspaper reports described Hess as "deluded, deranged," indicating that his mental health had been affected by injuries sustained during World War I. Some members of the government, including Göring and Propaganda Minister [[Joseph Goebbels]], believed this only made matters worse, because if Hess truly were mentally ill, he should not have held an important government position.{{sfn|Shirer|1960|p=838}}
[[Image:Nuremberg-1-.jpg|thumb|Rudolf Hess (first row, second from left) in the defendants' box at the Nuremberg Trials]]
[[File:1946-10-08 21 Nazi Chiefs Guilty.ogv|thumb|200px|17 October 1946 newsreel of [[Nuremberg Trials]] sentencing]]
[[File:Rudolf Hess at Nuremberg prison.jpg|thumb|upright|Hess in his cell at the Nuremberg prison while on trial]]


Hitler stripped Hess of all of his party and state offices, and secretly ordered him shot on sight if he ever returned to Germany. He abolished the post of Deputy Führer, assigning Hess's former duties to Bormann, with the title of Head of the [[Party Chancellery]].{{sfn|Shirer|1960|p=838}}{{sfn|Evans|2008|p=169}} Bormann used the opportunity afforded by Hess's departure to secure significant power for himself.{{sfn|Childers|2017|pp=478–479}} Meanwhile, Hitler initiated ''Aktion Hess'', a flurry of hundreds of arrests of astrologers, faith healers and occultists that took place around 9 June. The campaign was part of a propaganda effort by Goebbels and others to denigrate Hess and to make scapegoats of occult practitioners.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|pp=126–127, 131–132}}
===Nuremberg Trials===
Hess became a defendant at the Nuremberg Trials of the International Military Tribunal, on the insistence of the Soviet Union, despite his being in a state of almost complete forgetfulness. He was eventually flown to Nuremberg in October 1945. Hess regained his memory for a short period and was declared fit to stand trial. Partial memory loss returned and he went back into [[amnesia]]. He spent his time in court reading, occasionally laughing. In the British view, Hess was of unsound mind.<ref name="bbctrials">[http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/worldwars/wwtwo/nuremberg_article_01.shtml Nuremberg: Nazis On Trial, By Professor Richard Overy, 2011-02-17]</ref> Some of his last words before the tribunal were "I regret nothing".


US journalist [[Hubert Renfro Knickerbocker]], who had met both Hitler and Hess, speculated that Hitler had sent Hess to deliver a message informing [[Winston Churchill]] of the forthcoming invasion of the Soviet Union, and offering a negotiated peace or even an anti-Bolshevik partnership.{{sfn|Knickerbocker|1941|p=161}} Soviet leader [[Joseph Stalin]] believed that Hess's flight had been engineered by the British. Stalin persisted in this belief as late as 1944, when he mentioned the matter to Churchill, who insisted that they had no advance knowledge of the flight.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=107–108}} While some sources reported that Hess had been on an official mission, Churchill later stated in his book ''[[The Second World War (book series)|The Grand Alliance]]'' that in his view, the mission had not been authorised. "He came to us of his own free will, and, though without authority, had something of the quality of an envoy", said Churchill, and referred to Hess's plan as one of "lunatic benevolence".{{sfn|Churchill|1950|p=55}}
In 1946, Hess was found guilty on two of four counts: crimes against peace (planning and preparation of aggressive war) and [[conspiracy (crime)|conspiracy]] with other German leaders to commit crimes. He was found not guilty of [[war crime]]s or [[crimes against humanity]]. Hess was given a [[life sentence]].


After the war, [[Albert Speer]] discussed the rationale for the flight with Hess, who told him that "the idea had been inspired in him in a dream by supernatural forces. We will guarantee England her empire; in return she will give us a free hand in Europe."{{sfn|Speer|1971|p=241}} While in Spandau prison, Hess told journalist [[Desmond Zwar]] that Germany could not win a war on two fronts. "I knew that there was only one way out – and that was certainly not to fight against England. Even though I did not get permission from the Führer to fly, I knew that what I had to say would have had his approval. Hitler had great respect for the English people&nbsp;..."{{sfn|Boyes|2010}} Hess wrote that his flight to Scotland was intended to initiate "the fastest way to win the war."{{sfn|Zwar|2010|p=127}}
===Spandau Prison===
Following the release in 1966 of [[Baldur von Schirach]] and [[Albert Speer]], Hess was the sole remaining inmate of [[Spandau Prison]], partly at the insistence of the Soviets. Guards reportedly said he degenerated mentally and lost most of his memory. For the next 8 years, his main companion was warden [[Eugene K. Bird]], with whom he formed a close friendship. Bird wrote a 1974 book titled ''The Loneliest Man in the World: The Inside Story of the 30-Year Imprisonment of Rudolf Hess'' about his relationship with Hess. Frank Keller, a former guard at Spandau, said that "Hess would march by himself in the jail courtyard every day".


===Capture===
In the third volume of his book ''[[The Second World War (book)|The Second World War]]'' Winston Churchill wrote:
Shortly before midnight on 10 May 1941, Hess landed at Floors Farm, by [[Waterfoot, East Renfrewshire|Waterfoot]], south of Glasgow, where he was discovered still struggling with his parachute by local ploughman David McLean. Identifying himself as "''[[Hauptmann]]'' Alfred Horn", Hess said he had an important message for the Duke of Hamilton. McLean helped Hess to his nearby cottage and contacted the local [[Home Guard (United Kingdom)|Home Guard]] unit, who escorted the captive to their headquarters in [[Busby, East Renfrewshire]]. He was next taken to the police station at [[Giffnock]], arriving after midnight. He was searched and his possessions confiscated. Hess repeatedly requested to meet with the Duke of Hamilton during questioning undertaken with the aid of an interpreter by Major Graham Donald, the area commandant of Royal Observer Corps. After the interview, Hess was taken under guard to [[Maryhill Barracks]] in Glasgow, where his injuries were treated. By this time some of his captors suspected Hess's true identity, though he continued to insist his name was Horn.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|pp=101–105}}{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=58–61}}
[[File:Rudolph Hess BF-110.jpg|thumb|left|Part of the [[fuselage]] of Hess's Bf 110. [[Imperial War Museum]] (2008)]]
Hamilton had been on duty as [[wing commander (rank)|wing commander]] at [[Edinburgh Airport|RAF Turnhouse]] near Edinburgh when Hess had arrived, and his station had been one of those that had tracked the progress of the flight. He arrived at Maryhill Barracks the next morning, and after examining Hess's effects, he met alone with the prisoner. Hess immediately admitted his true identity and outlined the reason for his flight. Hamilton told Hess that he hoped to continue the conversation with the aid of an interpreter; Hess could speak English well, but was having trouble understanding Hamilton.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|pp=105–107}}{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=61–63}} He told Hamilton that he was on a "mission of humanity" and that Hitler "wished to stop the fighting" with England.{{sfn|Shirer|1960|p=835}}


After the meeting, Hamilton examined the remains of the Messerschmitt in the company of an intelligence officer, then returned to Turnhouse, where he made arrangements through the [[Foreign Office]] to meet Churchill, who was at [[Ditchley]] for the weekend. They had some preliminary talks that night, and Hamilton accompanied Churchill back to London the next day, where they both met with members of the [[Churchill war ministry|War Cabinet]]. Churchill sent Hamilton with foreign affairs expert [[Ivone Kirkpatrick]], who had met Hess previously, to positively identify the prisoner, who had been moved to [[Buchanan Castle]] overnight.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|pp=105–107}}{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=61–68}} Hess, who had prepared extensive notes to use during this meeting, spoke to them at length about Hitler's expansionary plans and the need for Britain to let the Nazis have free rein in Europe, in exchange for Britain being allowed to keep its overseas possessions. Kirkpatrick held two more meetings with Hess over the course of the next few days, while Hamilton returned to his duties. In addition to being disappointed at the apparent failure of his mission, Hess began claiming that his medical treatment was inadequate and that there was a plot afoot to poison him.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|pp=116–117, 124}}
{{quote|Reflecting upon the whole of the story, I am glad not to be responsible for the way in which Hess has been and is being treated. Whatever may be the moral guilt of a German who stood near to Hitler, Hess had, in my view, atoned for this by his completely devoted and frantic deed of lunatic benevolence. He came to us of his own free will, and, though without authority, had something of the quality of an envoy. He was a medical and not a criminal case, and should be so regarded.<ref name = Churchillp49/>}}


Hess's flight, but not his destination or fate, was first announced by [[Munich Radio]] in Germany on the evening of 12 May. On 13 May, Hitler sent Foreign Minister [[Joachim von Ribbentrop]] to give the news in person to Mussolini, and the British press was permitted to release full information about events that same day. On 14 May, Ilse Hess finally learned that her husband had survived the trip when news of his fate was broadcast on German radio.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|pp=119–120}}
In the early 1970s, the [[U.S. government|U.S.]], [[British government|British]] and [[French government]]s had approached the Soviet government to propose that Hess be released on humanitarian grounds due to his age. The Soviet official response was apparently to reject these attempts and reportedly "refused to consider any reduction in Hess's life sentence."<ref>[http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070928/ap_on_re_eu/britain_rudolf_hess_1]{{Dead link|date=June 2008}}</ref> [[U.S. President]] [[Richard Nixon]] was in favour of releasing Hess and stated that the U.S., Britain and France should continue to entreat the Soviet Union for his release.


Two sections of the fuselage of the aircraft were initially hidden by David McLean and later retrieved. One part was sold to the former assistant secretary of the Battle of Britain Association, who gave it to a war museum in the US; this {{convert|17.5|by|23|in|cm}} part was later sold by [[Bonhams]] at auction.{{sfn|Bonhams|2014}} Part of the fuel tank and a strut were offered for sale via Bonhams in 2014.{{sfn|Bonhams|2015}} Other wreckage was salvaged by 63 Maintenance Unit between 11 and 16 May 1941 and then taken to [[Oxford]] to be stored. The aeroplane had been armed with four machine guns in the nose, but carried no ammunition.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=72–73}} One of the engines is on display at the [[RAF Museum]] while the [[Imperial War Museum]] displays another engine and part of the fuselage.{{sfn|''The Scotsman''|2014}}
In 1977, Britain's chief prosecutor at Nuremberg, Sir [[Hartley Shawcross]], characterised Hess's continued imprisonment as a "scandal".<ref>Interview with Bild am Sonntag, 10 April 1977. Quoted in: Wolf R. Hess, My Father Rudolf Hess, p. 402.</ref> In 1987, the new Soviet leadership agreed that Hess should be set free on humanitarian grounds.


===Restrictions and isolation===
==Trial and imprisonment==
The restrictions of communication in prison for Hess were harsh. Family visits were restricted to a half-hour visit once a month; he considered this degrading and refused such short visits until 1968. In the 1970s he was visited by members of his family once a month, and later in the 1970s on "humanitarian grounds" visitation rights were extended to one hour per month. Hess was never allowed to discuss anything related to the period of World War II or to the Nazi regime. {{Citation needed|date=October 2011}}


===Prisoner of war===
Hess's letters and all communication were subject to censorship. British government files released by The National Archives detail a disagreement between the western powers and the Soviet Union regarding rights, especially censorship. The Soviet governor argued that uncensored letters to Hess's wife could be used to construct a propagandist essay.<ref>[http://yourarchives.nationalarchives.gov.uk/index.php?title=Hess,_Rudolf_%281894-1987%29_German_Politician FCO 90/18]</ref>
From Buchanan Castle, Hess was transferred briefly to the [[Tower of London]] and then to [[Mytchett#Detention of Rudolf Hess|Mytchett Place]] in [[Surrey]], a fortified mansion, designated "Camp Z", where he stayed for the next 13 months.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=71}}{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|p=128}} Churchill issued orders that Hess was to be treated well, though he was not allowed to read newspapers or listen to the radio. Three intelligence officers were stationed onsite and 150 soldiers were placed on guard. By early June, Hess was allowed to write to his family. He also prepared a letter to the Duke of Hamilton, but it was never delivered, and his repeated requests for further meetings were turned down.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=82, 88, 95}} Major [[Frank Foley]], the leading German expert in MI6 and former British Passport Control Officer in Berlin, took charge of a year-long abortive debriefing of Hess, according to Foreign Office files released to the National Archives.{{sfn|Smith|2004}} Henry V. Dicks and [[John Rawlings Rees]], psychiatrists who treated Hess during this period, noted that while he was not insane, he was mentally unstable, with tendencies toward hypochondria and paranoia.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|p=136}} Hess repeated his peace proposal to [[John Simon, 1st Viscount Simon]], then serving as [[Lord Chancellor]], in an interview on 9 June 1942. Lord Simon noted that the prisoner's mental state was not good; Hess claimed he was being poisoned and was being prevented from sleeping.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=89}} He would insist on swapping his dinner with that of one of his guards, and attempted to get them to send samples of the food out for analysis.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|pp=139–140}}


While in Scotland, Hess claimed to have discovered a "secret force" controlling the minds of Churchill and other British leaders, filling them with an irrational hatred of Germany. Hess claimed that the force acted on Hitler's mind as well, causing him to make poor military decisions. He said that the Jews had psychic powers that allowed them to control the minds of others, including Himmler, and that the Holocaust was part of a Jewish plot to defame Germany.{{sfn|Goda|2007|pp=262–263}}
British government files opened on 28 September 2007 by The National Archives from the period 6 May to 6 August 1974 contains a report of an altercation between Hess and a Soviet warder. The western governors raise issues of Soviet policy towards Hess, for example taking away Hess’s glasses before lights out, destroying his notebooks, increasing the strictness of censorship and blocking visits by Hess’s lawyer.<ref>[http://yourarchives.nationalarchives.gov.uk/index.php?title=Hess,_Rudolf_%281894-1987%29_German_Politician FCO 90/20]</ref>


In the early morning hours of 16 June 1942, Hess rushed his guards and attempted suicide by jumping over the railing of the staircase at Mytchett Place. He fell onto the stone floor below, fracturing the [[femur]] of his left leg. The injury required that the leg be kept in [[Traction (orthopedics)|traction]] for 12 weeks, with a further six weeks bed rest before he was permitted to walk with crutches. Captain Munro Johnson of the [[Royal Army Medical Corps]], who assessed Hess, noted that another suicide attempt was likely to occur in the near future. Hess began around this time to complain of amnesia. This symptom and some of his increasingly erratic behaviour may have in part been a ruse, because if he were declared mentally ill, he could be repatriated under the terms of the [[Geneva Conventions]].{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=92–95}}{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|pp=139–140, 149}}
==Death and legacy==
On 17 August 1987, Hess died while under [[Four-Power Authorities|Four-Power]] imprisonment at Spandau Prison in [[West Berlin]], at the age of 93. He was found in a summer house in a garden located in a secure area of the prison with an electrical cord wrapped around his neck. His death was ruled a [[suicide]] by asphyxiation. He was buried at [[Wunsiedel]] in a Hess family grave plot sold to his family by the Vetters of the Sechsämtertropfen bitter liquor company of [[Wunsiedel]]. Spandau Prison was subsequently demolished to prevent it from becoming a shrine.<ref>{{cite news |first= |last= |authorlink= |title= Hess Dies at 93; Hitler's Last Lieutenant |url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B0DEFDE1338F930A1575BC0A961948260 |quote=Walter Richard Rudolf Hess, the last of Hitler's lieutenants, died last week in Nuremberg Prison in West Berlin in characteristically murky circumstances. Allied officials said Hess had committed suicide, as did his long-dead fellow Nazis - Hitler, Goring, Goebbels and Himmler, strangling himself with an electric cord. They said he left a note pointing to suicide, but a lawyer for the partially blind 93-year-old prisoner suggested there might have been foul play. |publisher=New York Times |date=23 August 1987 |accessdate=21 July 2007 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |first= |last= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=Germany The Inmate of Spandau's Last Wish |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,965331,00.html |quote=Nearly every day for four decades, the prisoner took a stroll through a tiny garden inside West Berlin's forbidding Spandau fortress. He was never without a keeper and his gait had slowed to a shuffle over the years, but he rarely missed the opportunity for fresh air. Last Monday a guard left him alone briefly in a small cottage at the garden's edge. A few minutes later the guard returned to find the sole inmate of Spandau slumped over, an electrical cord wound tightly around his neck. Rushed to the nearby British Military Hospital, 93-year-old Hess was pronounced dead at 4:10 p.m. An autopsy showed that he had died of asphyxiation. |publisher=[[Time (magazine)]] |date=31 August 1987 |accessdate=21 August 2007 }}</ref>


Hess was moved to [[Maindiff Court Hospital]] on 26 June 1942, where he remained for the next three years. The facility was chosen for its added security and the need for fewer guards. Hess was allowed walks on the grounds and car trips into the surrounding countryside. He had access to newspapers and other reading materials; he wrote letters and journals. His mental health remained under the care of Dr. Rees. Hess continued to complain on and off of memory loss and made a second suicide attempt on 4 February 1945, when he stabbed himself with a bread knife. The wound was not serious, requiring two stitches. Despondent that Germany was losing the war, he took no food for the next week, only resuming eating when he was threatened with being force-fed.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=95–97}}{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|pp=142–145}}
Hess was the last surviving member of [[Cabinet Hitler|Hitler's cabinet]].


Germany surrendered unconditionally on 8 May 1945. Hess, facing charges as a war criminal, was ordered to appear before the [[International Military Tribunal]] and was transported to [[Nuremberg]] on 10 October 1945.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=97}}
===Neo-nazi pilgrimages and disinternment===
[[Neo-Nazism|Neo-Nazis]] from Germany and Europe held gatherings in Wunsiedel for a memorial march and similar demonstrations that took place every year around the anniversary of Hess's death. These gatherings were banned from 1991 to 2000 and neo-Nazis tried to assemble in other cities and countries (such as the [[Netherlands]] and [[Denmark]]). Demonstrations in Wunsiedel were again legalized in 2001. After stricter German legislation regarding demonstrations by neo-Nazis was enacted in March 2005, the demonstrations were banned again.


===Nuremberg trials===
With the grave's lease due to expire in October 2011, the Hess family applied for a 20-year extension which was denied. "We decided not to extend the lease because of all the unrest and disturbances," said parish council chairman Peter Seisser. After negotiations between the church's chaplin and Hess's granddaughter, the family agreed to remove his remains from the town.<ref name=disintern/> Hess's grave was re-opened on the morning of 20 July 2011 and his remains [[exhumation|exhumed]] then cremated. Soon afterward his ashes were scattered at sea; the gravestone, which bore the epitaph "Ich hab's gewagt" ("I dared"), was destroyed.<ref name=disintern>{{cite news|last=Dowling|first=Siobhan|title=Rudolf Hess's body removed from cemetery to deter Nazi pilgrims|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/jul/21/rudolf-hess-body-removed-nazi|accessdate=August 19, 2011|newspaper=The Guardian|date=July 21, 2011|location=London}}</ref><ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-14232768 | work=BBC News | title=Top Nazi Rudolf Hess exhumed from 'pilgrimage' grave | date=21 July 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.independent.ie/world-news/europe/hitler-aidersquos-body-exhumed-after-town-became-neonazi-mecca-2827895.html |title= Hitler aide's body exhumed after town bcame neo-nazi mecca |author= |date= 21 July 2011 |work= |publisher= ''Irish Independent'' |accessdate=21 July 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |url= http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-14232768 |title= Top Nazi Rudolf Hess exhumed from 'pilgrimage' grave |author= |date= 21 July 2011 |work= |publisher= BBC News |accessdate=20 July 2011}}</ref>
{{Further|Nuremberg trials}}
[[File:Rudolf Hess in Landsberg Prison.jpg|thumb|upright|left|Hess in his cell at Nuremberg, November 1945]]


The [[Allies of World War II]] held a series of military tribunals and trials, beginning with a trial of the major war criminals from November 1945 to October 1946. Hess was tried with this first group of 23 defendants, all of whom were charged with several counts from conspiracy to commit crimes, crimes against peace, [[war crime]]s and [[crimes against humanity]], in violation of international laws governing warfare.{{sfn|Evans|2008|p=741}}
==Speculation==
===Occult===


On his arrival in Nuremberg, Hess was reluctant to give up some of his possessions, including samples of food he said had been poisoned by the British; he proposed to use these for his defence during the trial. The commandant of the facility, Colonel [[Burton C. Andrus]] of the United States Army, advised him that he would be allowed no special treatment; the samples were sealed and confiscated.{{sfn|Bird|1974|p=34}}{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|pp=151–152}} Hess's diaries indicate that he did not acknowledge the validity of the court and felt the outcome was a foregone conclusion. He was thin when he arrived, weighing {{convert|65|kg|sigfig=3}}, and had a poor appetite, but was deemed to be in good health. As one defendant, [[Robert Ley]], had managed to hang himself in his cell on 24 October, the remaining prisoners were monitored around the clock.{{sfn|Sereny|1996|p=573}}{{sfn|Bird|1974|pp=37–38}} Because of his previous suicide attempts, Hess was handcuffed to a guard whenever he was out of his cell.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|p=153}}
Hess ordered a mapping of all the [[ley line]]s in the [[Third Reich]].<ref>Pennick, Nigel ''Hitler’s Secret Sciences:His Quest for the Hidden Knowledge of the Ancients'' New York:1982 C.W. Daniel Co., Ltd.</ref> There is speculation{{fact|date=October 2011}} that Hess was questioned by the British about [[Nazism and occultism|Nazi interest in the occult]].


Almost immediately after his arrival, Hess began exhibiting [[amnesia]], which may have been feigned in the hope of avoiding the death sentence. The chief psychiatrist at Nuremberg, [[Douglas Kelley]] of the US Military, gave the opinion that the defendant suffered from "a true psychoneurosis, primarily of the hysterical type, engrafted on a basic paranoid and schizoid personality, with amnesia, partly genuine and partly feigned", but found him fit to stand trial.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|pp=154–155}}{{sfn|Chesler|2014}} Efforts were made to trigger his memory, including bringing in his former secretaries and showing old newsreels, but he persisted in showing no response to these stimuli.{{sfn|Bird|1974|pp=37–38}}{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|pp=154–155}} When Hess was allowed to make a statement to the tribunal on 30 November, he admitted that he had faked memory loss as a tactic.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|p=159}}{{sfn|Bird|1974|p=43}}
===Conspiracy theories===
There have been conspiracy theories concerning his death, mainly from Wolf Rüdiger Hess.<ref>Wolf Rudiger Hess/ Alfred Seidl: Who Murdered My Father Rudolf Hess? My Father's Mysterious Death in Spandau. Reporter Press, 1989</ref>


The prosecution's case against Hess was presented by [[Mervyn Griffith-Jones]] beginning on 7 February 1946. By quoting from Hess's speeches, he attempted to demonstrate that Hess had been aware of and agreed with Hitler's plans to conduct a war of aggression in violation of international law. He declared that as Hess had signed important governmental decrees, including the decree requiring mandatory military service, the Nuremberg racial laws, and a decree incorporating the conquered Polish territories into the Reich, he must share responsibility for the acts of the regime. He pointed out that the timing of Hess's trip to Scotland, only six weeks before the German [[Operation Barbarossa|invasion of the Soviet Union]], could only be viewed as an attempt by Hess to prevent the British from interfering. Hess resumed showing symptoms of amnesia at the end of February, partway through the prosecution's case.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|pp=162–163}}
Wolfgang Spann,<ref>BBC2 Newsnight, 28 February 1989</ref> who was in charge of the second autopsy, publicly stated that "we can't prove a third hand participated in the death of Rudolf Hess".<ref>Knopp, Guido. ''Hitler's Henchmen''. London, Sutton Publishers, 2000</ref>
[[File:Rudolf hess.jpg|thumb|upright|Hess (left) and [[Joachim von Ribbentrop]] in the defendants' box at the [[Nuremberg Trials]]]]
The case for Hess's defence was presented from 22 to 26 March by his lawyer, Dr Alfred Seidl. He noted that while Hess accepted responsibility for the many decrees he had signed, he said these matters were part of the internal workings of a sovereign state and thus outside the purview of a war crimes trial. He called to the stand [[Ernst Wilhelm Bohle]], the man who had been head of the [[NSDAP/AO]], to testify on Hess's behalf. When Griffith-Jones presented questions about the organisation's spying in several countries, Bohle testified that any warlike activities such as espionage had been done without his permission or knowledge. Seidl called two other witnesses, former mayor of [[Stuttgart]] [[Karl Strölin]] and Hess's brother Alfred, both of whom repudiated the allegations that the NSDAP/AO had been spying and fomenting war. Seidl presented a summation of the defence's case on 25 July, in which he attempted to refute the charge of conspiracy by pointing out that Hitler alone had made all the important decisions. He noted that Hess could not be held responsible for any events that took place after he left Germany in May 1941. Meanwhile, Hess mentally detached himself from what was happening, declining visits from his family and refusing to read the newspapers.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|pp=165–171}} Hess spoke to the tribunal again on 31 August 1946 during the last day of closing statements, where he made a lengthy statement.{{sfn|Bird|1974|p=49}}{{sfn|Pick|2012|p=282}}


The court deliberated for nearly two months before passing judgement on 30 September, with the defendants being individually sentenced on 1 October. Hess was found guilty on two counts: crimes against peace (planning and preparing a war of aggression), and conspiracy with other German leaders to commit crimes. He was found not guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity. He was given a life sentence, one of seven Nazis to receive prison sentences at the trial. These seven were transported by aircraft to the Allied military prison at [[Spandau Prison|Spandau]] in Berlin on 18 July 1947.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|p=173}}{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=98}} The Soviet member of the tribunal, Major-General [[Iona Nikitchenko]], filed a document recording his dissent of Hess's sentence; he felt the death sentence was warranted.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|p=175}}
In 2008 Abdallah Melaouhi, a [[Tunisia]]n who acted as Hess's medical caretaker in Spandau prison from 1984 to 1987, was dismissed from his position in his local German district parliament's advisory board for integration after he wrote a book, ''I Looked into the Murderer's Eyes''. He had claimed in the book that his patient was murdered by [[MI6]] (the British Secret Intelligence Service).<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bild.de/BILD/berlin/aktuell/2008/07/24/bezirk-feuert-krankenpfleger-von/rudolf-hess.html |title=Bezirk feuert Krankenpfleger von Heß |language=German |publisher=[[Bild]] (largest European newspaper)}}</ref>


===Spandau Prison===
According to Hugh Thomas's book ''The Murder of Rudolf Hess'' (1979),<ref name="The Murder of Rudolf Hess">{{cite book|last=Thomas|first=Hugh|title=The Murder of Rudolf Hess|year=1979|publisher=Harper & Row|isbn=0060142510|pages=224}}</ref> the prisoner tried at Nuremberg and incarcerated in Spandau as Rudolf Hess was actually an imposter. Dutch author At Voorhorst contradicts Thomas's allegations with his study in which he compares biometric features of the prisoner in Spandau prison and deputy of Hitler in the Second World War.<ref name="Look-alikes Unmasked">{{cite book|last=Voorhorst|first=At|title=Look-alikes Unmasked|year=2011|location=Zwolle|isbn=9789081554510|pages=192|url=http://www.dubbelgangersontmaskerd.nl/}}</ref>
Spandau was placed under the control of the [[Allied Control Council]], the governing body in charge of the military occupation of Germany, which consisted of representatives from the UK, France, the United States, and the Soviet Union. Each country supplied prison guards for a month at a time on a rotating basis. After the inmates were given medical examinations—Hess refused his body search, and had to be held down{{sfn|Sereny|1996|p=604}}—they were provided with prison garb and assigned the numbers by which they were addressed throughout their stay. Hess was Number 7. The prison had a small library and inmates were allowed to file special requests for additional reading material. Writing materials were limited; each inmate was allowed four pieces of paper per month for letters. They were not allowed to speak to one another without permission and were expected to work in the facility, helping with cleaning and gardening chores.{{sfn|Bird|1974|pp=68–71}} The inmates were taken for outdoor walks around the prison grounds for an hour each day, separated by about {{convert|10|yd|m|sigfig=1}}. Some of the rules became more relaxed as time went on.{{sfn|Sereny|1996|p=604}}


[[File:Kriegsverbrechergefängnis Spandau - Wachablösung.JPG|thumb|Changing of the guard at [[Spandau Prison]], mid-1980s]]
==In popular culture==
===Film and television===
Rudolf Hess has been portrayed by the following actors in film, television and theater productions:<ref name="imdb">{{cite web | url = http://www.imdb.com/character/ch0042374/ | title = Rudolf Hess (Character) | accessdate = 8 May 2008 | author = | last = | first = | authorlink = | coauthors = | date = | year = | month = | work = | publisher = [[IMDb.com]] | pages = | doi = | archiveurl = | archivedate = | quote = }}</ref>
* [[George Lynn (actor)|George Lynn]] in the 1943 United States short documentary film ''Plan for Destruction''
* [[Victor Varconi]] in the 1944 American film ''[[The Hitler Gang]]''
* [[Carroll O'Connor]] in "Engineer of Death: The Eichmann Story", a 1960 episode of the American TV series ''[[Armstrong Circle Theatre]]''
* [[Predrag Lakovic]] in the 1971 [[Yugoslavia]]n television production ''[[Nirnberski epilog]]''
* [[Wolfgang Lukschy]] played "Reinhard Holtz", a former Nazi and the sole prisoner of a Spandau-like prison in the 1975 United States film ''[[Inside Out (1975 film)|Inside Out]]''
* [[Maurice Roëves]] in the 1982 American television production ''[[Inside the Third Reich#Movie|Inside the Third Reich]]''
* [[Laurence Olivier]] in the 1985 American action film ''[[Wild Geese II]]''
* [[Richard Edson]] in the 1997 American drama ''[[Snide and Prejudice]]''
* [[Roc LaFortune]] in the 2000 Canadian/U.S. TV production ''[[Nuremberg (2000 film)|Nuremberg]]''
* [[James Babson]] in the 2003 Canadian/U.S. TV production ''[[Hitler: The Rise of Evil]]''
* [[Conor Timmis]] in the 2004 American documentary ''Hitler's Lost Plan''.
* [[André Hennicke]] in the 2005 German TV miniseries ''[[Speer und Er]]''
* [[Victor Wagner]] in "Caso Mengele", a 2005 episode of the [[Brazil]]lian TV series ''[[Linha Direta]]''
* [[Ben Cross]] in the 2006 British/U.S. television production ''[[Nuremberg: Nazis on Trial]]''
* [[Attila Harsányi]] in the 2008 [[Romania]]n theatre production ''[[The Ten Commandements of Rudolf Hess]]''
* [[Rob Paulsen]] (voice only) in [[Rob Zombie]]'s 2009 animated feature ''[[The Haunted World of El Superbeasto]]''


Visitors were allowed to come for half an hour per month, but Hess forbade his family to visit until December 1969, when he was a patient at the British Military Hospital in [[West Berlin]] for a perforated ulcer. By this time, Wolf Rüdiger Hess was 32 years old and Ilse 69; they had not seen Hess since his departure from Germany in 1941. After this illness, he allowed his family to visit regularly. His daughter-in-law Andrea, who often brought photos and films of his grandchildren, became a particularly welcome visitor.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|pp=186, 195}}{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=100–101}} Hess's health problems, both mental and physical, were ongoing during his captivity. He cried out in the night, claiming he had stomach pains. He continued to suspect that his food was being poisoned and complained of amnesia.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|pp=186–187, 195}}{{sfn|Speer|1976|pp=193, 197, 234, 305}} A psychiatrist who examined him in 1957 deemed he was not ill enough to be transferred to a mental hospital.{{sfn|Speer|1976|p=314}} Hess attempted suicide again in 1977.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=100}}
===Literature===
Rudolf Hess has been portrayed in literary works by the following authors:


Other than his stays in hospital, Hess spent the rest of his life in Spandau Prison.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|pp=195, 200}} His fellow inmates [[Konstantin von Neurath]], [[Walther Funk]], and [[Erich Raeder]] were released because of poor health in the 1950s;{{sfn|Speer|1976|pp=258, 278, 310}} [[Karl Dönitz]], [[Baldur von Schirach]], and [[Albert Speer]] served their time and were released; Dönitz left in 1956, Schirach and Speer in 1966.{{sfn|Speer|1976|pp=300, 446}} The 600-cell prison continued to be maintained for its lone prisoner from 1966 until Hess's death in 1987, at an estimated annual cost of [[Deutsche Mark|DM]] 800,000.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|pp=189, 197}} Conditions were far more pleasant in the 1980s than in the early years; Hess was allowed to move more freely around the cell block, setting his own routine and choosing his own activities, which included television, films, reading, and gardening. A lift was installed so he could easily reach the garden, and he was provided with a medical orderly from 1982 onward.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=100–101}}
* [[James Leasor]] in ''[[Rudolf Hess: The Uninvited Envoy]]'', Allen & Unwin, London, 1962, 2011. ISBN 978-1-908291-16-5
* [[Desmond Zwar]] in ''[[Talking To Rudolf Hess]]'', The History Press UK, 2010. ISBN 9780752455228
* [[Eugene K. Bird]] in ''[[The Loneliest Man In The World: the inside story of the 30-year imprisonment of Rudolf Hess]]'', Secker & Warburg, London, 1974. ISBN 978-0436042904. The book was also published in the United States by Viking, and in 10 other countries.
* [[Upton Sinclair]] in his ''[[Lanny Budd|Lanny Budd Series]]''
* [[Eric Knight]] in 1942 novel ''[[Sam Small Flies Again]]''
* [[James Barwick]] in the 1978 novel ''[[Shadow of the Wolf]]''
* [[Timothy Findley]] in 1981 novel ''[[Famous Last Words (novel)|Famous Last Words]]''
* [[Daniel Carney]] in 1982 novel ''[[The Square Circle]]''
* [[Katherine Kurtz]] in 1992 novel ''[[The Lodge of the Lynx]]''
* [[Peter Lovesey]] in 1992 novel ''[[The Secret of Spandau]]''
* [[Greg Iles]] in 1993 [[thriller novel]] ''[[Spandau Phoenix]]''
* [[Christopher Priest (novelist)|Christopher Priest]] in the 2002 novel ''[[The Separation (2002 novel)|The Separation]]''
* [[David Edgar (playwright)|David Edgar]] in 2000 play ''Albert Speer''
* [[Michael Moorcock]] in 2001 novel ''[[The Dreamthief's Daughter]]''
* [[Peter Ho Davies]] in 2007 novel ''[[The Welsh Girl]]''
* [[Ethan Mordden]] in 2008 novel ''[[The Jewcatcher]]''
* [[Bruce Weiss]] in his novel ''[[The Ghost of Rudolph Hess]]''
* In the 2006 alternate-history novel ''[[Farthing (novel)|Farthing]]'', by [[Jo Walton]], Hess is not portrayed, but his flight is the story's divergence point with real history: his entreaties have been accepted, and have led to a peace between United Kingdom and [[Nazi Germany]], and to the former withdrawing from [[World War II]].
* John Douglas-Gray in his thriller 'The Novak Legacy' ISBN 978-0-7552-1321-4


Hess's lawyer Alfred Seidl launched numerous appeals for his release, beginning as early as 1947. These were denied, mainly because the Soviets repeatedly vetoed the proposal. Spandau was located in West Berlin, and its existence gave the Soviets a foothold in that sector of the city. Additionally, Soviet officials believed Hess must have known in 1941 that an attack on their country was imminent.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|pp=189–192}} In 1967, Wolf Rüdiger Hess began a campaign to win his father's release, garnering support from politicians such as [[Geoffrey Lawrence, 1st Baron Oaksey|Geoffrey Lawrence]]{{efn|Lawrence had been the president of the judicial group at the International Military Tribunal in Nuremberg.{{Sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|p=195}}}} in the UK and [[Willy Brandt]] in West Germany, but to no avail, in spite of the prisoner's advanced age and deteriorating health.{{sfn|Manvell|Fraenkel|1971|pp=192–195}}{{sfn|Hess|1987|pp=325–327}} In 1967, Wolf Hess founded a society that by September had collected 700 signatures on a petition calling for Hess's release. By 1974, 350,000 people had signed the petition.{{sfn|Goda|2007|pp=237, 243}} The American historian [[Norman Goda]] wrote that those who campaigned to free Hess routinely exaggerated the harshness of his imprisonment.{{sfn|Goda|2007|p=222}} Goda states that Wolf Hess's efforts to free his father ultimately backfired as he conflated the question of whether his father deserved release on humanitarian grounds with the question of whether his father was guilty.{{sfn|Goda|2007|pp=248–249}} Wolf argued that his father was unjustly imprisoned to hide the UK's "war guilt", arguing that millions of lives could have been saved if only Churchill had accepted Hess's peace offer in May 1941.{{sfn|Goda|2007|p=249}} In 1973, the Israeli foreign minister [[Abba Eban]] charged that Hess was not being treated as badly as his champions claimed and that he should serve his full sentence.{{sfn|Goda|2007|p=222}}
===Music===

*In [[Joy Division]]'s song "Warsaw", lyrics include reference to Hess's prison number, 31G-350125
[[File:FreiheitFürRudolfHessWolltIhrAuchDenTotalenKrieg1981Berlin.jpg|thumb|Graffiti on billboard outside [[Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church]] in [[West Berlin]] in 1981. The comments read "Freedom for Rudolf Hess" and "[[Do you want Total War?|Do you also want total war]]?"]]
*British [[punk rock]] band [[Angelic Upstarts]] released the song "Lonely Man of Spandau", which called for Hess's release
In September 1979, medical tests showed that Hess was suffering from potentially fatal prostate cancer.{{sfn|Goda|2007|p=250}} In a letter dated 8 September 1979, Hess announced that he would refuse treatment unless released, saying he deserved freedom as an "unjustly convicted man" and that if he were to die, his death would be on the consciences of the leaders of the UK, France, the Soviet Union, and the United States.{{sfn|Goda|2007|p=250}} [[Cyrus Vance]] wrote: "Far from representing the beginning of irrationality, Hess's well considered attempt is to use his medical condition to 'force' his release".{{sfn|Goda|2007|p=250}} The British Foreign Secretary, [[Peter Carington, 6th Baron Carrington|Lord Carrington]], appealed for Hess's release, but Soviet Foreign Minister [[Andrei Gromyko]] refused on the grounds that Hess had never "shown even a shadow of repentance" and was still claiming innocence.{{sfn|Goda|2007|p=252}} Gromyko also said that many people would take Hess's release as confirmation of a wrongful conviction. Hess's appeal to neo-Nazi groups in West Germany further increased the Soviet unwillingness to consider his release.{{sfn|Goda|2007|pp=253–254}}
*[[Chumbawamba]]'s song "The Day the Nazi Died" reflects on Hess' role as a symbol for neo-Nazis.

*[[Skrewdriver]] wrote two songs about Hess's incarceration, "Prisoner of Peace" and "46 Years".
Hess continued to be an unapologetic Nazi and antisemite; this was usually ignored by those championing his release, who portrayed him as a harmless old man.{{sfn|Goda|2007|pp=260–261}} Hess further hindered efforts to get himself released by promising to make no statements to the media if he were released, while repeatedly writing drafts of statements that he planned to make. On 25 June 1986, a Soviet guard caught Charles Gabel, the chaplain at Spandau, attempting to smuggle out a statement by Hess, causing Gabel to be fired. Hess had originally written the document as his opening address at the Nuremberg trial in 1946, which he had been unable to deliver in full after the judges cut him short. Hess tried to mail a copy of the statement to Sir [[Oswald Mosley]] in October 1946, but the letter was intercepted by his US guards.{{sfn|Goda|2007|p=263}} Hess's statement (both the 1946 version and the 1986 version) claimed that Germany's attack on the Soviet Union was preemptive; he claimed there had been overwhelming evidence that [[Soviet offensive plans controversy|the Soviet Union had planned to attack Germany]]. He said in the statement that he had decided to make his flight to Scotland without informing Hitler, with the aim of informing the UK of the Soviet danger to "European civilization" and the entire world. He believed his warning would cause the UK to end its war with Germany and join in the fight against the Soviet Union.{{sfn|Goda|2007|pp=261–262}}
*[[Landser_(band)|Landser]] released the song, "[[Landser_(band)#Music|Rudolf Hess]]" as part of their 1997 album, "[[Landser_(band)#Discography|Rock gegen oben]]."

==Death and aftermath==
Hess was found dead on 17 August 1987, aged 93, in a summer house that had been set up in the prison garden as a reading room; he had hanged<!-- "hanged" is correct in this context. Please do not edit it to "hung"--> himself using an extension cable strung over a window latch. A short note to his family was found in his pocket, thanking them for all that they had done. The [[Four-Power Authorities]] released a statement on 17 September ruling the death a suicide. He was initially buried at a secret location to avoid media attention or demonstrations by Nazi sympathisers, but his body was re-interred in a family plot at [[Wunsiedel]] on 17 March 1988; his wife was buried beside him in 1995.{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|pp=101–103}}

Hess's lawyer Alfred Seidl felt that he was too old and frail to have managed to kill himself. Wolf Rüdiger Hess repeatedly claimed that his father had been murdered by the British [[Secret Intelligence Service]] to prevent him from revealing information about British misconduct during the war. According to an investigation by the British government in 1989, the available evidence did not back up the claim that Hess was murdered, and Solicitor General [[Nicholas Lyell, Baron Lyell of Markyate|Sir Nicholas Lyell]] saw no grounds for further investigation.{{sfn|Milmo|2013}} The autopsy results supported the conclusion that Hess had killed himself.{{sfn|Greenwald|Freeman|1987}}{{sfn|Nesbit|van Acker|2011|p=132}}{{sfn|''Bild''|2009}} A report declassified and published in 2012 led to questions again being asked as to whether Hess had been murdered. Historian [[Peter Padfield]] wrote that the suicide note found on the body appeared to have been written when Hess was hospitalised in 1969.{{sfn|Rojas|Wardrop|2012}}

Hess's grave in Wunsiedel became a destination for [[Neo-Nazism|neo-Nazi]] pilgrimage and for demonstrations each August on the anniversary of his death. To prevent further pilgrimages, the parish council did not extend the grave's lease when it expired in 2011.{{sfn|Dowling|2011}} With the eventual consent of his family, Hess's grave was re-opened on 20 July 2011. The remains were cremated and the ashes scattered at sea by family members. The gravestone, which bore the epitaph ''"Ich hab's gewagt"'' ("I have dared"), was destroyed.{{sfn|BBC News|2011}} Spandau Prison was demolished in 1987 to prevent it from becoming a neo-Nazi shrine.{{sfn|Greenwald|Freeman|1987}}

A myth that the Spandau prisoner was not actually Hess was disproved in 2019.{{sfn|McCall et al.|2019}} A study of DNA testing undertaken by Sherman McCall, formerly of the [[Walter Reed Army Medical Center]], and Jan Cemper-Kiesslich of the [[University of Salzburg]] demonstrated a 99.99 per cent match between the prisoner's [[Y chromosome]] DNA markers and those of a living male Hess relative.{{sfn|Knapton|2019}}

==See also==
* [[List of Nazi Party leaders and officials]]
* [[Register of SS-Leaders in general's rank#List SS-Obergruppenführer|List SS-Obergruppenführer]]
* [[Neue Deutsche Heilkunde]]


==References==
==References==
===Informational notes===
{{notelist}}

===Citations===
{{Reflist|30em}}
{{Reflist|30em}}


===Bibliography===
===Bibliography===
{{refbegin|30em}}
* {{cite news | title = Bezirk feuert Krankenpfleger von Heß |trans-title=District nurse fired over Hess | newspaper = [[Bild]] | publisher = Axel Springer AG | date = 24 July 2008 | language = de | url = http://www.bild.de/BILD/berlin/aktuell/2008/07/24/bezirk-feuert-krankenpfleger-von/rudolf-hess.html | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090123071358/http://bild.de/BILD/berlin/aktuell/2008/07/24/bezirk-feuert-krankenpfleger-von/rudolf-hess.html | archive-date = 23 January 2009 | access-date = 27 February 2013 | ref = {{sfnRef|''Bild''|2009}} }}
* {{cite book | last = Bird | first = Eugene | author-link = Eugene K. Bird | title = The Loneliest Man in the World | year = 1974 | publisher = Martin Secker & Warburg | location = London | oclc = 1094312}}
* {{cite news | last = Boyes | first = Roger | title = How I got Hess talking: Australian journalist Desmond Zwar explains | author-link = Roger Boyes | date = 7 June 2010 | website = The Australian | publisher = News Corp Australia | url = https://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/how-i-got-hess-talking-australian-journalist-desmond-zwar-explains/news-story/ea05621ae5d63486745370c4880b9258 | access-date = 26 November 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211021063816/https://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/how-i-got-hess-talking-australian-journalist-desmond-zwar-explains/news-story/ea05621ae5d63486745370c4880b9258 |archive-date=21 October 2021 |url-status=live |url-access=subscription}}
* {{cite book | last= Broszat| first= Martin | title= The Hitler State: The Foundation and Development of the Internal Structure of the Third Reich | place= New York | publisher= Longman Inc.| year= 1981|isbn= 0-582-49200-9}}
* {{cite web| last = Chesler | first = Caren | url = https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/rudolf-hess-tale-poison-paranoia-and-tragedy-180952783/#HmDHAfuU0IjBwh5e.99 | title = Rudolf Hess' Tale of Poison, Paranoia and Tragedy |date = 1 October 2014 | website = Smithsonian Magazine | publisher = [[Smithsonian Institution]] | access-date = 4 September 2018}}
* {{cite book | last=Childers | first=Thomas | year=2017 | title=The Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany | place=New York | publisher=Simon & Schuster | isbn= 978-1-45165-113-3 }}
* {{cite book | last = Churchill | first = Winston | author-link = Winston Churchill | title = [[The Second World War (book series)|The Grand Alliance: The Second World War]] | year = 1950 | publisher = Houghton Mifflin | location = Boston; Cambridge}}
* {{cite book |last1=Collier |first1=Martin |last2=Pedley |first2=Philip |author-link= |date=2000 |title=Germany 1919–1945 |url= |location= |publisher=Heinemann Educational Publishers |page= |isbn=0-435-32721-6}}
* {{cite web |title = Deputy Fuhrer Rudolf Walter Richard Hess: Sections of his Crashed Plane, Recovered From Floors Farm, Eagleston, Scotland, 11 May 1941 | date = 21 October 2015 | website = Bonhams | url = https://www.bonhams.com/auctions/22965/lot/237/ | access-date = 4 September 2019 | ref = {{sfnRef|Bonhams|2015}} }}
* {{cite news | last = Dowling | first = Siobhan | title = Rudolf Hess's body removed from cemetery to deter Nazi pilgrims | work = [[The Guardian]] | url = https://www.theguardian.com/world/2011/jul/21/rudolf-hess-body-removed-nazi | access-date = 26 February 2013 | date = 21 July 2011}}
* {{cite book | last = Evans | first = Richard J. | author-link = Richard J. Evans | title = [[The Coming of the Third Reich]] | year = 2003 | publisher = Penguin Group | isbn = 978-0-14-303469-8}}
* {{cite book | last = Evans | first = Richard J. | title = The Third Reich in Power | year = 2005 | publisher = Penguin Group | location = New York | isbn = 978-0-14-303790-3}}
* {{cite book | last = Evans | first = Richard J. | title = The Third Reich at War | year = 2008 | publisher = Penguin Group | location = New York | isbn = 978-0-14-311671-4}}
* {{cite book | last = Goda | first = Norman | author-link = Norman J. W. Goda |title = Tales from Spandau: Nazi Criminals and the Cold War | year = 2007 | publisher = Cambridge University Press | location = Cambridge | isbn = 978-0-521-86720-7}}
* {{cite book | last = Gunther | first = John | author-link = John Gunther | title = Inside Europe | year = 1940 | publisher = Harper & Brothers | location = New York | oclc = 836676034}}
* {{cite web | last = Handwerk | first = Brian | title = Will We Ever Know Why Nazi Leader Rudolf Hess Flew to Scotland in the Middle of World War II? | date = 10 May 2016 | website = Smithsonian Magazine | publisher = Smithsonian Institution | url = https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/will-we-ever-know-why-nazi-leader-rudolf-hess-flew-scotland-middle-world-war-ii-180959040/ | access-date = 28 August 2017}}
* {{cite book | last = Hess | first = Wolf Rüdiger | author-link = Wolf Rüdiger Hess | title = My Father Rudolf Hess | year = 1987 | orig-year = 1984 | publisher = W.H. Allen | location = London | isbn = 0-352-32214-4}}
*{{cite book | last=Herwig | first=Holger | title=The Demon of Geopolitics: How Karl Haushofer "Educated" Hitler and Hess | publisher=Rowman & Littlefield|location=Latham | year = 2016 | isbn = 978-1-4422-6114-3}}
* {{cite news | last1 = Greenwald | first1 = John | last2 = Freeman | first2 = Clive | title = Germany: The Inmate of Spandau's Last Wish | magazine = [[Time (magazine)|Time]] | date = 31 August 1987 | url = http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,965331,00.html | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20081206131406/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,965331-1,00.html | archive-date = 6 December 2008 | url-status = dead | access-date = 27 February 2013}}
*{{cite book | last = Jacobsen | first = Hans-Adolf | title = The Third Reich: The Essential Readings | chapter = The Structure of Nazi Foreign Policy, 1933–1945 | year = 1999 | editor1-last = Leitz | editor1-first = Christian | publisher = Blackwell | location = London | isbn = 0-631-20700-7}}
*{{cite news | last1 = Knapton | first1 = Sarah | title = Conspiracy theory that Rudolf Hess was switched for doppelganger in Spandau prison, debunked by DNA | url = https://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/2019/01/22/conspiracy-theory-rudolf-hess-switched-doppelganger-spandau/ | access-date = 28 January 2019 | work = The Telegraph | date = 22 January 2019 }}
* {{cite book | last = Knickerbocker | first = H. R. | author-link = Hubert Renfro Knickerbocker | title = Is Tomorrow Hitler's? 200 Questions on the Battle of Mankind | year=1941 | publisher = Reynal & Hitchcock | location = New York}}
* {{cite book | last = Lang | first = Jochen von | title = The Secretary. Martin Bormann: The Man Who Manipulated Hitler | year = 1979 | publisher = Random House | location = New York | isbn = 978-0-394-50321-9 }}
* {{cite book | last1 = Manvell | first1 = Roger | author-link1 = Roger Manvell | last2 = Fraenkel | first2 = Heinrich | author-link2 = Heinrich Fraenkel | title = Hess: A Biography | year = 1971 | publisher = Granada | location = London | isbn = 0-261-63246-9}}
* {{Cite journal |last1=McCall |first1=Sherman |last2=Kreindl |first2=Gabriele |last3=Kastinger |first3=Tamara |last4=Müller |first4=Eva |last5=Zahrer |first5=Waltraud |last6=Grießner |first6=Ines |last7=Dunkelmann |first7=Bettina |last8=Tutsch-Bauer |first8=Edith |last9=Neuhuber |first9=Franz |last10=Pittman |first10=Phillip R. |last11=Wahl |first11=Rick |last12=Lowry |first12=Mark |last13=Cemper-Kiesslich |first13=Jan |date=May 2019 |title=Rudolf Hess – The Doppelgänger conspiracy theory disproved |url=https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30685710/ |journal=Forensic Science International. Genetics |volume=40 |pages=18–22 |doi=10.1016/j.fsigen.2019.01.004 |issn=1878-0326 |pmid=30685710|s2cid=59306479 | ref={{sfnRef|McCall et al.|2019}} }}
* {{cite web | last = Milmo | first = Cahal | title = Adolf Hitler's Nazi deputy Rudolf Hess 'murdered by British agents' to stop him spilling wartime secrets | date = 10 September 2013 | work = The Independent | url = https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/adolf-hitlers-nazi-deputy-rudolf-hess-murdered-by-british-agents-to-stop-him-spilling-wartime-secrets-8802603.html | access-date = 10 September 2013}}
* {{cite web | title = Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression, Volume 2, Chapter XV, Part 3: The Reich Cabinet | publisher = Office of United States Chief of Counsel For Prosecution of Axis Criminality | date = 1946 | url = https://www.loc.gov/rr/frd/Military_Law/pdf/NT_Nazi_Vol-II.pdf | access-date = 20 August 2017 | ref = {{sfnRef|Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression|1946}} }}
* {{cite book | last1 = Nesbit | first1 = Roy Conyers | last2 = van Acker | first2 = Georges | title = The Flight of Rudolf Hess: Myths and Reality | year = 2011 | orig-year = 1999 | publisher = History Press | location = Stroud | isbn = 978-0-7509-4757-2}}
* {{cite book |last=Orlow |first=Dietrich |author-link= |date=2010 |title=The Nazi Party 1919-1945: A Complete History |url= |location= |publisher=Enigma Books |page= |isbn=978-1-929631-57-5}}
* {{cite book | last = Padfield | first = Peter | author-link = Peter Padfield | title = Hess: The Fuhrer's Disciple | year = 2001 | publisher = Cassell & Co | location = London | isbn = 0-304-35843-6}}
* {{cite book | last = Pick | first = Daniel | author-link = Daniel Pick | title = The Pursuit of the Nazi Mind: Hitler, Hess, and the Analysts | year = 2012 | publisher = Oxford University Press | location = Oxford; New York | isbn = 978-0-19-954168-3}}
* {{cite journal | last1 = Rojas | first1 = John-Paul Ford | last2 = Wardrop | first2 = Murray | title = Report into Rudolf Hess death fails to answer unexplained questions about Nazi prisoner's 'suicide' | date = 17 March 2012 | journal = The Telegraph | url = https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/defence/9149066/Report-into-Rudolf-Hess-death-fails-to-answer-unexplained-questions-about-Nazi-prisoners-suicide.html | access-date = 21 June 2013}}
*{{cite book |last=Rubinstein|first=William|title=Unsolved Historical Mysteries: Answers to Outstanding Historical Puzzles|publisher=Edward Everett Root|location=Brighton|year=2007|isbn=978-1-911454-45-8}}
* {{cite web | title = Rudolf Walter Richard Hess: a fuselage section from the Messerschmitt that Hess piloted to Scotland, 10 May 1941 | date = 5 June 2014 | website = Bonhams | url = https://www.bonhams.com/auctions/21651/lot/51/ | access-date = 4 September 2019 | ref = {{sfnRef|Bonhams|2014}} }}
* {{cite book | last = Sereny | first = Gitta | author-link = Gitta Sereny | orig-year = 1995 | year = 1996 | title = Albert Speer: His Battle With Truth | publisher = Vintage | location = New York | isbn = 978-0-679-76812-8}}
* {{cite book | last = Shirer | first = William L. | author-link = William L. Shirer | title = [[The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich]] | publisher = Simon & Schuster | location = New York | year = 1960 | isbn = 978-0-671-62420-0}}
* {{Cite book|last=Schmidt|first=Rainer F.|title=Rudolf Heß: Botengang eines Toren?: Der Flug nach Großbritannien vom 10. Mai 1941.|date=1997|publisher=Econ|isbn=978-3-430-18016-0|language=de}}
* {{cite news | date = 31 May 2014 | title = Scottish field wreckage of Hess plane to be sold | newspaper = [[The Scotsman]] | location = Edinburgh | url = https://www.scotsman.com/lifestyle/scottish-field-wreckage-of-hess-plane-to-be-sold-1-3427935 | access-date = 4 September 2019 | ref = {{sfnRef|''The Scotsman''|2014}} }}
* {{cite web | last = Smith | first = Michael | title = Mrs Foley's diary solves the mystery of Hess | date = 27 December 2004 | newspaper = The Telegraph | publisher = Telegraph Media Group Limited | url = https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/germany/1479844/Mrs-Foleys-diary-solves-the-mystery-of-Hess.html}}
* {{cite book | last = Speer | first = Albert | author-link = Albert Speer | orig-year = 1969 | year = 1971 | title = [[Inside the Third Reich]] | publisher = Avon | location = New York | isbn = 978-0-380-00071-5}}
* {{cite book | last = Speer | first = Albert| title = Spandau: The Secret Diaries | publisher = Macmillan | location = New York | year = 1976 | isbn = 0-02-612810-1}}
* {{cite news | title = Top Nazi Rudolf Hess exhumed from 'pilgrimage' grave | date = 21 July 2011 | url = https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-14232768 | work = BBC News | access-date = 4 September 2019 | ref = {{sfnRef|BBC News|2011}} }}
* {{cite book | last = Williams | first = Max | title = SS Elite: The Senior Leaders of Hitler's Praetorian Guard, Vol. 1 (A-J) | date = 2015 | publisher = Fonthill Media LLC | isbn = 978-1-78155-433-3 }}
* {{cite web |last1=Wright |first1=Ashley |title=Hitler’s Inner Circle: The 7 Most Powerful Figures in the Third Reich |url=https://www.thecollector.com/hitler-circle-powerful-figures-third-reich/ |website=TheCollector |access-date=21 June 2024 |language=en |date=5 June 2024}}
* {{cite book | last = Zwar | first = Desmond | author-link = Desmond Zwar | title = Talking to Rudolf Hess | date = 16 June 2010 | publisher = History Press | location = Stroud | isbn = 978-0-7524-5522-8}}
{{refend}}

== Further reading ==
{{refbegin|colwidth=30em}}
{{refbegin|colwidth=30em}}
* Allen, Martin. ''The Hitler / Hess Deception''. (HarperCollins, 2003, [[ISBN]] 978-0-00-714119-7)
* {{cite book | last = Allen | first = Martin | author-link =Martin Allen (publicist)| title = The Hitler/Hess Deception : British Intelligence's Best-Kept Secret of the Second World War | year = 2004 | publisher = Harper Collins | location = London | isbn = 978-0-00-714119-7}}
* Allen, Peter. ''The Crown and the Swastika: Hitler, Hess, and the Duke of Windsor''.
* {{cite book | last = Allen | first = Peter | title = The Crown and the Swastika: Hitler, Hess, and the Duke of Windsor | year = 1983 | publisher = R. Hale | location = London | isbn = 978-0-7090-1294-8}}
* {{cite book | last = Costello | first = John | author-link = John Costello (historian) | title = Ten Days that Saved the West | year = 1991 | publisher = Bantam | location = London | isbn = 978-0-593-01919-1 | url-access = registration | url = https://archive.org/details/tendaysthatsaved0000cost }}
* Brenton, Howard. ''H.I.D.: Hess Is Dead''.
* {{cite book | last = Douglas-Hamilton | first = James | author-link = James Douglas-Hamilton, Baron Selkirk of Douglas | title = Motive for a Mission: The Story Behind Rudolf Hess's Flight to Britain | year = 1979 | publisher = Mainstream | location = Edinburgh | isbn = 978-0-906391-05-1}}
* Churchill, Winston S. ''The Second World War; Volume 3: The Grand Alliance'' (Cassell & Co., 1950)
* {{cite journal | last = Haiger | first = Ernst | title = Fiction, Facts, and Forgeries: The 'Revelations' of Peter and Martin Allen about the History of the Second World War | journal = [[Journal of Intelligence History]] | year = 2006 | volume = 6 | issue = 1 | pages = 105–117| doi = 10.1080/16161262.2006.10555127 | s2cid = 161410964 }}
* [[Cornell University]] Law Library - "''[[Analysis of the Personality of Adolph Hitler]]''" [[Cornell University]] lawschool. Readers can download a [[PDF]] version of the whole document
* {{cite book | last1 = Hess | first1 = Rudolf | last2 = Hess | first2 = Ilse | title = Prisoner of Peace | year = 1954 | publisher = Britons | location = London | oclc = 1302579}}
* [[John Costelloe (actor)|Costello, John]]. ''Ten Days to Destiny: The Secret Story of the Hess Peace Initiative and British Efforts to Strike a Deal With Hitler''. Also published as ''Ten Days That Saved the West''.
* {{cite book | last = Hutton | first = Joseph Bernard | title = Hess: The Man and His Mission | year = 1971 | publisher = Macmillan | location = New York | oclc = 126879}}
* Douglas-Hamilton, James. ''Motive for a Mission: The Story Behind Rudolf Hess's Flight to Britain''.
* {{cite book | last = Le Tissier | first = Tony | title = Farewell to Spandau | year = 1994 | publisher = Ashford, Buchan & Enright | location = Leatherhead | isbn = 978-1-85253-314-4 | url-access = registration | url = https://archive.org/details/farewelltospanda0000leti }}
* Goodrick-Clarke, Nicholas. ''The Occult Roots of Nazism: The Ariosophists of Austria and Germany 1890-1935''. (Wellingborough, England: Aquarian Press, 1985, ISBN 0-85030-402-4)
* {{cite book | last = Leasor | first = James | author-link = James Leasor | title = Rudolf Hess: The Uninvited Envoy | publisher = Allen & Unwin | year = 1962 | location = London | oclc=1373664}}
* Goodrick-Clarke, Nicholas. ''[[Black Sun (Goodrick-Clarke book)|Black Sun]]: Aryan Cults, Esoteric Nazism and the Politics of Identity''. (New York University Press, 2002, ISBN 0-8147-3124-4. Paperback 2003, ISBN 0-8147-3155-4)
* {{cite book | last = Padfield | first = Peter | title = Hess: Flight for the Führer | year = 1991 | publisher = Weidenfeld & Nicolson | location = London | isbn = 978-0-297-81181-7}}
* [[Ernst Haiger]] ''Fiction, Facts, and Forgeries: The 'Revelations' of Peter and Martin Allen about the History of the Second World War''. The Journal of Intelligence History, Vol 6 no. 1 (Summer 2006 [published in 2007]), pp.&nbsp;105–117.
* {{cite book | last1 = Rees | first1 = John R | author-link1 = John R. Rees | last2 = Dicks | first2 = Henry Victor | author-link2 = Henry Victor Dicks | title = The Case of Rudolf Hess: A Problem in Diagnosis and Forensic Psychiatry | year = 1948 | publisher = Norton | location = New York | oclc = 1038757}}
* Harris, John. ''Hess:The British Conspiracy''
* {{cite book | last = Thomas | first = W. Hugh | title = The Murder of Rudolf Hess | year = 1979 | publisher = Harper & Row | location = New York | isbn = 978-0-06-014251-3 | url = https://archive.org/details/murderofrudolfhe00thom }}
* Hess, Ilse. ''Prisoner of Peace''.
* {{cite book | last = Schwarzwäller | first = Wulf | title = Rudolf Hess: the Last Nazi | year = 1988 | publisher = National Press | location = Bethesda, Md | isbn = 978-0-915765-52-2 | url = https://archive.org/details/rudolphhesslastn00schw }}
* Hess, Rudolf. ''Selected speeches''.
* Hess, Wolf Ruidger. ''My Father Rudolf Hess''.
* Hutton, Joseph Bernard. ''Hess: The Man and His Mission''.
* [[David John Cawdell Irving|Irving, David John Cawdell]]. ''Hess: The Missing Years 1941–1945''.
* Le Tissier, Tony. ''Farewell to Spandau''.
* [[Guido Knopp|Knopp, Guido]] for ZDF ''Hitlers Helfer - Hess, der Stellvertreter''. (German TV, 1998, ISBN 0-7509-3781-5)
* Kilzer, Louis C. ''Churchill's Deception: The Dark Secret That Destroyed Nazi Germany''.
* Leasor, James [http://www.jamesleasor.com/rudolf-hess-the-uninvited-envoy/#=true The Uninvited Envoy]. UK, 1962, 2011. ISBN 978-1-908291-16-5
* [[Lothar Machtan|Machtan, Lothar]]. ''[[The Hidden Hitler]]''. (2001) ISBN 0-465-04308-9
* [[Roger Manvell|Manvell, Roger]]. ''Hess: A Biography''.
* [[David M. Moriarty|Moriarty, David M.]] ''Rudolf Hess, Deputy Führer: A Psychological Study''.
* Nesbit, Roy Conyers, and Georges Van Acker. ''The Flight of Rudolf Hess: Myths and Reality''.
* Padfield, Peter. ''Hess: Flight for the Führer''.
* [[Peter Padfield|Padfield, Peter]]. ''Hess: The Führer's Disciple''.
* Picknett, Lynn, Clive Prince, and Stephen Prior. ''Double Standards The Rudolf Hess Cover-Up''. ISBN 0-7515-3220-7
* Pile, G. ''Rudolf Hess: Prisoner of Peace''.
* Rees, John R., and Henry Victor Dicks. ''The Case of Rudolf Hess; A Problem in diagnosis and forensic psychiatry''.
* [[Philip Rees|Rees, Philip]], editor. ''[[Biographical Dictionary of the Extreme Right Since 1890]]''. (1991, ISBN 0-13-089301-3)
* Royce, William Hobart ''The Behest of Hess'''.
* [[Alfred Smith (historian)|Smith, Alfred]]. ''Rudolf Hess and Germany's Reluctant War, 1939-41''.
* Tuccille, Jerome, and Philip S. Jacobs. ''The Mission''. (Dutton Adult, 1991 novel, ISBN 1-55611-199-1)
* Thomas, Hugh. ''The Murder of Rudolf Hess'' (republished as ''Hess: A Tale of Two Murders'').
* [[Wulf Schwarzwäller|Schwarzwäller, Wulf]]. ''Rudolf Hess, the Last Nazi''. (A Zenith edition)
{{refend}}
{{refend}}


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{{commons|Rudolf Hess}}
{{commons|Rudolf Hess}}
{{wikiquote}}
{{wikiquote}}
* [http://www.archive.org/search.php?query=Rudolf%20Hess Free online books about Rudolf Hess]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20210512014904/http://www.thule-italia.net/dossier/hess2.htm Rudolf Hess autopsy results] (Italian and English)
* {{cite journal | url = https://www.scotsman.com/whats-on/arts-and-entertainment/reported-statement-by-hess-2508875 | journal = [[The Scotsman]]| publisher = [[Johnston Press]] | title = Reported statement by Hess | date = 14 February 2005 }}
* [http://www.ihr.org/jhr/v13/v13n1p24_Hess.html The Life and Death of My Father, Rudolf Hess by Wolf Rüdiger Hess]
* [http://arcre.com/archives/74-hess 'The Facts about Rudolf Hess'], a transcript of a British Foreign Office report on Rudolf Hess's capture and subsequent interrogations. National Archives file # FO 371/34484.
* {{Britannica|264125}}
* {{cite journal | last = Fox | first = Jo | year = 2011 | title = Propaganda and the Flight of Rudolf Hess, 1941–45 | journal = [[The Journal of Modern History]] | volume = 83 | issue = 1 | pages = 78–110 | jstor = 658050 | doi = 10.1086/658050 | s2cid = 154294679 | url = http://dro.dur.ac.uk/9794/1/9794.pdf }} (subscription required)
* [http://heritage.scotsman.com/heritage/Reported-statement-by-Hess.2598608.jp Article about British release of information about Hess's crash-landing outside Glasgow]
* {{PM20|FID=pe/007739}}
* [http://www.defendingsteiner.com/pers/Hess.php Rudolf Hess's relationship to Rudolf Steiner's Anthroposophy]

* [http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documentsonline/details-result.asp?Edoc_Id=7737066&queryType=1&resultcount=168 Correspondence on Rudolph Hess's incarceration held by the National Archives of the UK]
{{Nazi Party}}
*[http://www.reuters.com/article/oddlyEnoughNews/idUSPAT25009520080522? Mail firm issues stamps of Hitler deputy] [[Reuters]] 22 May 2008
{{Nazism}}
*[http://www.itnsource.com/shotlist//BHC_RTV/1941/05/19/BGU408100027/ Footage of Rudolf Hess plane after crash in Scotland in 1941]
*[http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-14232768 Top Nazi Rudolf Hess exhumed from 'pilgrimage' grave] [[BBC News online]] 2011-07-21
{{Hitler's Cabinet}}
{{Hitler's Cabinet}}
{{Main Nuremberg defendants}}
{{Main Nuremberg defendants}}
{{Portal bar|Biography|Germany|Politics|Egypt}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2011}}
{{Authority control}}


<!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]] -->
{{Persondata
|NAME = Hess, Rudolf
|ALTERNATIVE NAMES =Hess, Rudolf Walter Richard
|SHORT DESCRIPTION = German Nazi leader
|DATE OF BIRTH = 26 April 1894
|PLACE OF BIRTH = [[Alexandria]], [[Khedivate of Egypt]], [[Ottoman Empire]]
|DATE OF DEATH = 17 August 1987
|PLACE OF DEATH = [[Spandau]], [[West Berlin]], [[West Germany]]
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hess, Rudolf}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hess, Rudolf}}
[[Category:Rudolf Hess| ]]
[[Category:1894 births]]
[[Category:1894 births]]
[[Category:1987 deaths]]
[[Category:1987 deaths]]
[[Category:1987 suicides]]
[[Category:20th-century Freikorps personnel]]
[[Category:20th-century Freikorps personnel]]
[[Category:Burials in Berlin]]
[[Category:Burials at sea]]
[[Category:German anti-communists]]
[[Category:German Army personnel of World War I]]
[[Category:German military personnel of World War I]]
[[Category:German people convicted of the international crime of aggression]]
[[Category:Luftstreitkräfte personnel]]
[[Category:German people of World War II]]
[[Category:German people of World War II]]
[[Category:German military personnel who committed suicide]]
[[Category:German people convicted of the international crime of aggression]]
[[Category:German people who died in prison custody]]
[[Category:German people who died in prison custody]]
[[Category:German prisoners of war]]
[[Category:German prisoners of war in World War II held by the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:Military of Bavaria]]
[[Category:German prisoners sentenced to life imprisonment]]
[[Category:Nazis from outside Germany]]
[[Category:German people of Swiss descent]]
[[Category:Nazi Germany ministers]]
[[Category:German people imprisoned abroad]]
[[Category:Nazis who committed suicide in prison custody]]
[[Category:People with hypochondriasis]]
[[Category:Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich alumni]]
[[Category:Luftstreitkräfte personnel]]
[[Category:Members of the Academy for German Law]]
[[Category:Members of the Reichstag 1933–1936]]
[[Category:Members of the Reichstag 1933]]
[[Category:Military personnel of Bavaria]]
[[Category:Government ministers of Nazi Germany]]
[[Category:Nazi Party officials]]
[[Category:Nazi Party politicians]]
[[Category:Suicides by hanging in Germany]]
[[Category:Nazis who died by suicide in prison custody]]
[[Category:Nazis who died by suicide in Germany]]
[[Category:Nazis who participated in the Beer Hall Putsch]]
[[Category:Nazis who participated in the Beer Hall Putsch]]
[[Category:Occultism in Nazism]]
[[Category:People convicted by the International Military Tribunal in Nuremberg]]
[[Category:People convicted by the International Military Tribunal in Nuremberg]]
[[Category:People from Alexandria]]
[[Category:Politicians from Alexandria]]
[[Category:Prisoners in the Tower of London]]
[[Category:Prisoners in the Tower of London]]
[[Category:Prisoners sentenced to life imprisonment by international courts and tribunals]]
[[Category:Prisoners sentenced to life imprisonment by international courts and tribunals]]
[[Category:Recipients of the Iron Cross]]
[[Category:Recipients of the Iron Cross (1914), 2nd class]]
[[Category:SS generals]]
[[Category:Recipients of the Military Merit Cross (Bavaria)]]
[[Category:Reichsleiters]]
[[Category:SS-Obergruppenführer]]
[[Category:Sturmabteilung officers]]
[[Category:Thule Society members]]
[[Category:Thule Society members]]
[[Category:Adolf Hitler]]
[[Category:Suicides in West Germany]]
[[Category:Nazi leaders]]
[[Category:Members of the Reichstag 1936–1938]]
[[Category:Members of the Reichstag 1938–1945]]
{{Link GA|sv}}

[[ar:رودلف هس]]
[[an:Rudolf Hess]]
[[ast:Rudolf Hess]]
[[az:Rudolf Hess]]
[[bs:Rudolf Hess]]
[[bg:Рудолф Хес]]
[[ca:Rudolf Hess]]
[[cv:Гесс Рудольф]]
[[cs:Rudolf Hess]]
[[cy:Rudolf Hess]]
[[da:Rudolf Hess]]
[[de:Rudolf Heß]]
[[et:Rudolf Heß]]
[[el:Ρούντολφ Ες (πολιτικός)]]
[[es:Rudolf Hess]]
[[eo:Rudolf Hess]]
[[eu:Rudolph Hess]]
[[fa:رودلف هس]]
[[fr:Rudolf Hess]]
[[fy:Rudolf Hess]]
[[gl:Rudolf Hess]]
[[ko:루돌프 발터 리하르트 헤스]]
[[hr:Rudolf Heß]]
[[id:Rudolf Hess]]
[[is:Rudolf Hess]]
[[it:Rudolf Hess]]
[[he:רודולף הס]]
[[ka:რუდოლფ ჰესი]]
[[la:Rudolphus Hess]]
[[lv:Rūdolfs Hess]]
[[lt:Rudolf Hess]]
[[hu:Rudolf Heß]]
[[mk:Рудолф Хес]]
[[nl:Rudolf Hess]]
[[ja:ルドルフ・ヘス]]
[[no:Rudolf Hess]]
[[nn:Rudolf Hess]]
[[pl:Rudolf Hess]]
[[pt:Rudolf Hess]]
[[ro:Rudolf Hess]]
[[ru:Гесс, Рудольф]]
[[sq:Rudolf Heß]]
[[simple:Rudolf Hess]]
[[sr:Рудолф Хес]]
[[fi:Rudolf Hess]]
[[sv:Rudolf Hess]]
[[tr:Rudolf Hess]]
[[uk:Рудольф Гесс]]
[[ur:رودلف ھس]]
[[vo:Rudolf Hesse]]
[[yi:רודאלף העס]]
[[zh:鲁道夫·赫斯]]

Latest revision as of 20:40, 30 November 2024

Rudolf Hess
Hess in 1935
Deputy Führer of the Nazi Party
In office
21 April 1933 – 12 May 1941
FührerAdolf Hitler
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byMartin Bormann
(Chief of the Party Chancellery)
Reichsminister without portfolio
In office
1 December 1933 – 12 May 1941
ChancellorAdolf Hitler
Chief of the Nazi Party Liaison Office[1][2]
In office
20 March 1933[1] – 12 May 1941
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byMartin Bormann
Private Secretary to the Führer
of the Nazi Party[3]
In office
1925[3]–1935[4]
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byMartin Bormann
Additional positions
1939–1941Member of the Council of Ministers for the Defense of the Reich[5]
June–September 1933Reichsleiter of the
Nazi Party
1933–1941Member of the Greater German Reichstag[6]
1932–1941Chairman of the Nazi Party's Central Political Committee[6]
Personal details
Born
Rudolf Walter Richard Hess

(1894-04-26)26 April 1894
Alexandria, Khedivate of Egypt
Died17 August 1987(1987-08-17) (aged 93)
Spandau Prison, West Berlin, West Germany
Cause of deathSuicide by hanging
NationalityGerman
Political partyNazi Party (1920–1941)
Spouse
(m. 1927)
ChildrenWolf Rüdiger Hess
Alma materUniversity of Munich
Signature
Military service
AllegianceGerman Empire
Branch/serviceImperial German Army
Years of service1914–1918
RankLeutnant der Reserve
Unit
  • 7th Bavarian Field Artillery Regiment
  • 1st Infantry Regiment
Battles/wars
AwardsIron Cross, 2nd Class
Criminal conviction
Criminal statusDeceased
Conviction(s)Conspiracy to commit crimes against peace
Crimes of aggression
TrialNuremberg trials
Criminal penaltyLife imprisonment

Rudolf Walter Richard Hess (Heß in German; 26 April 1894 – 17 August 1987) was a German politician and a leading member of the Nazi Party in Nazi Germany. Appointed Deputy Führer to Adolf Hitler in 1933, Hess held that position until 1941, when he flew solo to Scotland in an attempt to negotiate the United Kingdom's exit from the Second World War. He was taken prisoner and eventually convicted of crimes against peace. He was still serving his life sentence at the time of his suicide in 1987.

Hess enlisted as an infantryman in the Imperial German Army at the outbreak of World War I. He was wounded several times during the war and was awarded the Iron Cross, 2nd Class, in 1915. Shortly before the war ended, Hess enrolled to train as an aviator, but he saw no action in that role. He left the armed forces in December 1918 with the rank of Leutnant der Reserve. In 1919, Hess enrolled in the University of Munich, where he studied geopolitics under Karl Haushofer, a proponent of the concept of Lebensraum ('living space'), which became one of the pillars of Nazi ideology. Hess joined the Nazi Party on 1 July 1920 and was at Hitler's side on 8 November 1923 for the Beer Hall Putsch, a failed Nazi attempt to seize control of the government of Bavaria. While serving a prison sentence for this attempted coup, he assisted Hitler with Mein Kampf, which became a foundation of the political platform of the Nazi Party.

After Hitler became Chancellor in January 1933, Hess was appointed Deputy Führer of the Nazi Party in April. He was elected to the Reichstag in the March elections, was made a Reichsleiter of the Nazi Party in June and in December 1933 he became Minister without Portfolio in Hitler's cabinet.[7] He was also appointed in 1938 to the Cabinet Council and in August 1939 to the Council of Ministers for Defence of the Reich. Hitler decreed on the outbreak of war on 1 September 1939 that Hermann Göring was his official successor, and named Hess as next in line.[8] In addition to appearing on Hitler's behalf at speaking engagements and rallies, Hess signed into law much of the government's legislation, including the Nuremberg Laws of 1935, which stripped the Jews of Germany of their rights in the lead-up to the Holocaust.

By the start of the war, Hess was sidelined from most important decisions, and many in Hitler's inner circle thought him to be mad. On 10 May 1941, Hess made a solo flight to Scotland, where he hoped to arrange peace talks with the Duke of Hamilton, whom he believed to be a prominent opponent of the British government's war policy. The British authorities arrested Hess immediately on his arrival and held him in custody until the end of the war, when he was returned to Germany to stand trial at the 1946 Nuremberg trials of major war criminals. During much of his trial, Hess claimed to be suffering from amnesia, but he later admitted to the court that this had been a ruse. The court convicted him of crimes against peace and of conspiracy with other German leaders to commit crimes. He served a life sentence in Spandau Prison; the Soviet Union blocked repeated attempts by family members and prominent politicians to procure his early release. While still in custody as the only prisoner in Spandau, he hanged himself in 1987 at the age of 93.

After his death, the prison was demolished to prevent it from becoming a neo-Nazi shrine. His grave, bearing the inscription "Ich hab's gewagt" (I dared it), became a site of regular pilgrimage and demonstrations by Neo-Nazis. In 2011, authorities refused to renew the lease on the gravesite, and his remains were exhumed and cremated and the gravestone destroyed.

Early life and family

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Hess, the eldest of three children, was born on 26 April 1894 in al-Ibrahimiyya, a suburb of Alexandria, Egypt (then under British occupation, though formally a part of the Ottoman Empire), into a wealthy German family. Originally from Bohemia, the Hess family settled in Wunsiedel, Upper Franconia, in the 1760s. His grandfather, Johann Christian Hess, married Margaretha Bühler, the daughter of a Swiss consul, in 1861 in Trieste. After the birth of his father, Johann Fritz Hess, the family moved to Alexandria, where Johann Christian Hess founded the import company Hess & Co. which his son, Johann Fritz Hess, took over in 1888. Hess's mother, Klara, was the daughter of Rudolf Münch, a textile industrialist and councillor of commerce from Hof, Upper Franconia.[9] His brother, Alfred, was born in 1897 and his sister, Margarete, was born in 1908.[9][10] The family lived in a villa on the Egyptian coast near Alexandria, and visited Germany often from 1900, staying at their summer home in Reicholdsgrün (now part of Kirchenlamitz) in the Fichtel Mountains.[11][12]

Hess's youth in Egypt left him with a strong admiration for the British Empire.[13] Hess's youth growing up under the "Veiled Protectorate" of Sir Evelyn Baring made him unique among the Nazi leaders in that he grew up under British rule, which he saw in very positive terms.[13]

Hess attended a German-language Protestant school in Alexandria from 1900 to 1908, when he was sent back to Germany to study at a boarding school in Bad Godesberg. He demonstrated aptitudes for science and mathematics, but his father wished him to join the family business, Hess & Co., so he sent him in 1911 to study at the École supérieure de commerce in Neuchâtel, Switzerland. After a year there, Hess took an apprenticeship at a trading company in Hamburg.[11][12]

World War I

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Within weeks of the outbreak of World War I, Hess enlisted in the 7th Bavarian Field Artillery Regiment, part of the 1st Royal Bavarian Division. His initial posting was against the British on the Somme;[14] he was present at the First Battle of Ypres. On 9 November 1914, Hess transferred to the 1st Infantry Regiment, stationed near Arras. He was awarded the Iron Cross, second class, and promoted to Gefreiter (corporal) in April 1915. After additional training at the Munster Training Area, he was promoted to Vizefeldwebel (senior non-commissioned officer) and received the Bavarian Military Merit Cross. Returning to the front lines in November, he fought in Artois, participating in the battle for the town of Neuville-Saint-Vaast. After two months out of action with a throat infection, Hess served in the Battle of Verdun in May, and was hit by shrapnel in the left hand and arm on 12 June 1916 during fighting near the village of Thiaumont. After a month off to recover, he was sent back to the Verdun area, where he remained until December.[15][16]

Hess was promoted to platoon leader of the 10th Company of the 18th Bavarian Reserve Infantry Regiment, which was serving in Romania. He was wounded on 23 July and again on 8 August 1917; the first injury was a shell splinter to the left arm, which was dressed in the field, but the second was a bullet wound that entered the upper chest near the armpit and exited near his spinal column, leaving a pea-sized entry wound and a cherry stone-sized exit wound on his back.[17]

By 20 August, he was well enough to travel, so he was sent to hospital in Hungary and eventually back to Germany, where he recovered in hospital in Meissen. In October he received promotion to Leutnant der Reserve and was recommended for, but did not receive, the Iron Cross, first class. At his father's request, Hess was transferred to a hospital closer to home, arriving at Alexandersbad on 25 October.[18]

While still convalescing, Hess had requested that he be allowed to enroll to train as a pilot, so after Christmas leave with his family, he reported to Munich. He received basic flight training at Oberschleissheim and Lechfeld Air Base from March to June 1918, and advanced training at Valenciennes in France in October. On 14 October, he was assigned to Jagdstaffel 35b, a Bavarian fighter squadron equipped with Fokker D.VII biplanes. He saw no action with Jagdstaffel 35b, as the war ended on 11 November 1918, before he had the opportunity.[19]

Hess (right) with his geopolitics professor, Karl Haushofer, c. 1920

Hess was discharged from the armed forces in December 1918. The family fortunes had taken a serious downturn, as their business interests in Egypt had been expropriated by the British.[20] Hess joined the Thule Society, an antisemitic right-wing Völkisch group, and the Freikorps of Colonel Ritter von Epp,[21] one of many such volunteer paramilitary organisations active in Germany at the time.[22]

Bavaria witnessed frequent and often bloody conflicts between right-wing groups, the Freikorps, and left-wing forces as they fought for control of the state during this period.[23] Hess was a participant in street battles in early 1919 and led a group that distributed thousands of antisemitic pamphlets in Munich.[24][25] He later said that Egypt made him a nationalist, the war made him a socialist, and Munich made him an antisemite.[26]

In 1919, Hess enrolled in the University of Munich, where he studied history and economics. His geopolitics professor was Karl Haushofer, a former general in the German Army who was a proponent of the concept of Lebensraum ("living space"), which Haushofer cited to justify the proposal that Germany should forcefully conquer additional territory in Eastern Europe.[27][24] Hess later introduced this concept to Adolf Hitler, and it became one of the pillars of Nazi Party ideology.[25][28] Hess became friends with Haushofer and his son Albrecht, a social theorist and lecturer.[24]

Ilse Pröhl, a fellow student at the university, met Hess in April 1920 when they by chance rented rooms in the same boarding house. They married on 20 December 1927 and their only child, Wolf Rüdiger Hess, was born ten years later, on 18 November 1937.[29][30] His name was, at least in part, to honour Hitler, who often used "Wolf" as a code name.[31] Hess nicknamed the boy "Buz".[32]

Relationship with Hitler

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Hitler, Emil Maurice, Hermann Kriebel, Hess, and Friedrich Weber, at Landsberg Prison (1924)
Hess (2nd from left, behind Heinrich Himmler) was an early supporter of the Nazi Party.

After hearing the Nazi Party leader Hitler speak for the first time in 1920 at a Munich rally, Hess became completely devoted to him. They held a shared belief in the stab-in-the-back myth, the notion that Germany's loss in World War I was caused by a conspiracy of Jews and Bolsheviks rather than a military defeat.[25][33] Hess joined the Nazi Party on 1 July as member number 16.[34] As the party continued to grow, holding rallies and meetings in ever larger beer halls in Munich, he focused his attention on fundraising and organisational activities. On 4 November 1921, he was injured while protecting Hitler when a bomb planted by a Marxist group exploded at the Hofbräuhaus during a party event. Hess joined the Sturmabteilung (SA) by 1922 and helped organise and recruit its early membership.[35]

Meanwhile, problems continued with the economy; hyperinflation caused many personal fortunes to be rendered worthless. When the German government failed to meet its reparations payments and French troops marched in to occupy the industrial areas along the Ruhr in January 1923, widespread civil unrest was the result.[36] Hitler decided the time was ripe to attempt to seize control of the government with a coup d'état modelled on Benito Mussolini's 1922 March on Rome.[37] Hess was with Hitler on the night of 8 November 1923 when he and the SA stormed a public meeting organised by Bavaria's de facto ruler, Staatskommissar (state commissioner) Gustav von Kahr, in the Bürgerbräukeller, a large beer hall in Munich. Brandishing a pistol, Hitler interrupted Kahr's speech and announced that the national revolution had begun, declaring the formation of a new government with World War I General Erich Ludendorff.[38] The next day, Hitler and several thousand supporters attempted to march to the Ministry of War in the city centre. Gunfire broke out between the Nazis and the police; sixteen marchers and four police officers were killed. Hitler was arrested on 11 November.[39][40]

Hess and some SA men had taken a few of the dignitaries hostage on the night of the 8th, driving them to a house about 50 kilometres (31 mi) from Munich. When Hess left briefly to make a phone call the next day, the hostages convinced the driver to help them escape. Hess, stranded, called Ilse Pröhl, who brought him a bicycle so he could return to Munich. He went to stay with the Haushofers and then fled to Austria, but they convinced him to return. He was arrested and sentenced to 18 months in prison for his role in the attempted coup, which later became known as the Beer Hall Putsch. Hitler was sentenced to five years imprisonment, and the Nazi Party and SA were both outlawed.[41][42]

Hitler speaks at a party rally in Munich, 1925.

Both men were incarcerated in Landsberg Prison, where Hitler soon began work on his memoir, Mein Kampf ("My Struggle"), which he dictated to fellow prisoners Hess and Emil Maurice. Edited by publisher Max Amann, Hess and others, the work was published in two parts in 1925 and 1926. It was later released in a single volume, which became a best-seller after 1930.[3][43] This book, with its message of violent antisemitism, became the foundation of the political platform of the Nazi Party.[44]

Hitler was released on parole on 20 December 1924 and Hess ten days later.[3] The ban on the Nazi Party and SA was lifted in February 1925, and the party grew to 100,000 members in 1928 and 150,000 in 1929.[45] They received only 2.6 per cent of the vote in the 1928 election, but support increased steadily up until the seizure of power in 1933.[46]

Hitler named Hess his private secretary in April 1925 at a salary of 500 Reichsmarks per month, and named him as personal adjutant on 20 July 1929.[34][47] Hess accompanied Hitler to speaking engagements around the country and became his friend and confidante.[3] Hess was one of the few people who could meet with Hitler at any time without an appointment.[48] His influence in the Party continued to grow. On 15 December 1932 Hess was named head of the Party Liaison Staff and Chairman of the Party Central Political Commission.[49][8]

Retaining his interest in flying after the end of his active military career, Hess obtained his private pilot's licence on 4 April 1929. His instructor was World War I flying ace Theodor Croneiss. In 1930 Hess became the owner of a BFW M.23b monoplane sponsored by the party newspaper, the Völkischer Beobachter. He acquired two more Messerschmitt aircraft in the early 1930s, logging many flying hours and becoming proficient in the operation of light single-engine aircraft.[50]

Deputy Führer

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Vehicle standard for Hess while serving as Deputy Führer

On 30 January 1933, Hitler was appointed Reich Chancellor, his first step in gaining dictatorial control of Germany.[51][52] Hess was named Deputy Führer (Stellvertreter des Führers) of the Nazi Party on 21 April. On 2 June 1933 he was made one of 16 Reichsleiters in the Party hierarchy. On 1 July he was raised to the rank of Obergruppenführer in the Schutzstaffel (SS). However, by 20 September Hitler decreed that he stop using the titles of Reichsleiter and Obergruppenführer, and use only the title of "Deputy Fuhrer". This was an acknowledgement of his primus inter pares status in the Party. [53] Hess was appointed to the cabinet as a Reich Minister without Portfolio, on 1 December.[54] With offices in the Brown House in Munich and another in Berlin, Hess was responsible for several departments, including foreign affairs, finance, health, education and law.[55] Hess also was named as a member of Hans Frank's Academy for German Law.[56] All legislation passed through his office for approval, except that concerning the army, the police and foreign policy, and he wrote and co-signed many of Hitler's decrees.[57] An organiser of the annual Nuremberg Rallies, he usually gave the opening speech and introduced Hitler. Hess also spoke over the radio and at rallies around the country, so frequently that the speeches were collected into book form in 1938.[58] Hess acted as Hitler's delegate in negotiations with industrialists and members of the wealthier classes.[59] As Hess had been born abroad, Hitler had him oversee the Nazi Party groups such as the NSDAP/AO that were in charge of party members living in other countries.[60] Hitler instructed Hess to review all court decisions that related to persons deemed enemies of the Party. He was authorised to increase the sentences of anyone he felt got off too lightly in these cases, and was also empowered to take "merciless action" if he saw fit to do so. This often entailed sending the person to a concentration camp or simply ordering the person killed.[61]

In 1933, Hess founded the Volksdeutscher Rat (Council of Ethnic Germans) to handle the Nazi Party's relations with ethnic German minorities around the world, with a particular focus on Eastern Europe. The purpose of the council was to protect the Nazi Party from criticism that it was attempting to extend the process of Gleichschaltung to international ethnic German communities. Despite Hess's claims to the contrary, the council members were primarily loyal to Germany rather than their current nations. The eight council members, only one of which was a member of the Nazi Party, were responsible only to Hess. All had long been known to either Hess or Haushofer, who was also involved with the council. Members publicly claimed to be uninvolved in the council, which Hess used as proof that the Nazi Party was not trying to interfere in the domestic affairs of other nations.[62] As the council had considerable funds and appeared to be sufficiently independent of the German government to satisfy foreign governments, its activities had some impact on international German communities in the 1930s.[63] Its most notable impact was in the Sudetenland, where in 1933 it promoted Konrad Henlein as the politician with the best hope of building a Nazi-friendly party that would win mass support without being banned by the Czechoslovak government.[64]

The Nazi regime began to persecute Jews soon after the seizure of power. Hess's office was partly responsible for drafting Hitler's Nuremberg Laws of 1935. These laws had far-reaching implications for the Jews of Germany, banning marriage between non-Jewish and Jewish Germans and depriving non-Aryans of their German citizenship. Hess's friend Karl Haushofer and his family were subject to these laws, as Haushofer had married a half-Jewish woman, so Hess issued documents exempting them from this legislation.[65][66]

Hess, Heinrich Himmler, Phillip Bouhler, Fritz Todt, Reinhard Heydrich, and others listening to Konrad Meyer at a Generalplan Ost exhibition, 20 March 1941

Hess did not build a power base or develop a coterie of followers.[67][68] He was motivated by his loyalty to Hitler and a desire to be useful to him; he did not seek power or prestige[54][65] or take advantage of his position to accumulate personal wealth. He lived in a modest house in Munich.[30] Hess was devoted to the völkisch ideology and viewed many issues in terms of an alleged Jewish conspiracy against Germany. For example, he said in a speech that "Today's League of Nations is really only a farce which functions primarily as the basis for the Jews to reach their own aims. You need only to note how many Jews sit in the League."[69] In a speech in 1937, Hess blamed the Spanish Civil War on "international Jewry", called the Soviet Foreign Commissar Maxim Litvinov a "dirty Jew", and claimed that without Hitler or Mussolini, "Jewish Asiatic Bolshevism would dominate European culture".[69]

On 30 August 1939, immediately prior to the outbreak of the Second World War, Hess was appointed by Hitler to the six-person Council of Ministers for Defense of the Reich which was set up to operate as a war cabinet.[5] After the Invasion of Poland and the start of the war on 1 September 1939, Hitler made Hess second in line to succeed him, after Hermann Göring.[70][71] Around the same time, Hitler appointed Hess's chief of staff, Martin Bormann, as his personal secretary, a post formerly held by Hess.[72] On 8 October 1939, Hess co-signed the law that annexed the Free City of Danzig, the Polish Corridor, and the part of Upper Silesia lost in 1921 to Germany. On the same day, Hess and Heinrich Himmler ordered that a racial registry be established in these areas and stated that Poles and Jews living in these areas were not to be treated as equals of Germans. A separate legal code for Poles and Jews in the annexed areas was created, imposing draconian punishments. Hess argued that a separate legal code was necessary because "the Pole is less susceptible to the infliction of ordinary punishment".[69] In another decree, Hess ordered that none of the buildings destroyed in Warsaw during the siege were to be rebuilt as a reminder to the Poles of their "war guilt".[69]

Hess's antisemitism markedly increased after the war started, as he was convinced that the war had been caused by Jews. This became a major theme of his wartime speeches. In a speech given on 20 April 1940 to mark Hitler's 51st birthday, Hess accused "Jews and their fellow travellers" of Germany's capitulation in November 1918, which he called the most calamitous event in world history. In the same speech, Hess, referring to the Black Horror on the Rhine story, stated the defeat of 1918 was followed by an occupation of the Rhineland by "niggers", which he again blamed on the Jews. Hess concluded his speech by saying that with Hitler in charge, there was no possibility of the current war ending similarly. "How the Jewish hounds will howl when Adolf Hitler stands before them," he concluded.[69]

Hess was obsessed with his health to the point of hypochondria, consulting many doctors and other practitioners for what he described to his captors in Britain as a long list of ailments involving the kidneys, colon, gall bladder, bowels and heart. Hess was a vegetarian, and he did not smoke or drink. He brought his own food to the Berghof, claiming it was biologically dynamic, but Hitler did not approve of this practice, so he discontinued taking meals with the Führer.[73]

Hess was interested in music, enjoyed reading and loved to spend time hiking and climbing in the mountains with his wife, Ilse. He and his friend Albrecht Haushofer shared an interest in astrology, and Hess also was keen on clairvoyance and the occult.[74] Hess continued to be interested in aviation. He won an air race in 1934, flying a BFW M.35 in a circuit around Zugspitze Mountain and returning to the airfield at Munich with a time of 29 minutes. He placed sixth of 29 participants in a similar race held the following year.[75] With the outbreak of World War II, Hess asked Hitler to be allowed to join the Luftwaffe as a pilot, but Hitler forbade it, and ordered him to stop flying for the duration of the war. Hess convinced him to reduce the ban to one year.[72]

Attempted peace mission

[edit]

As the war progressed, Hitler's attention became focused on foreign affairs and the conduct of the war.[76] Hess, who was not directly engaged in the war, became increasingly sidelined from the affairs of the nation and from Hitler's attention. He was excluded from most important decisions, and many in Hitler's inner circle thought him to be mad.[77] Bormann had successfully supplanted Hess in many of his duties and had taken Hess's position at Hitler's side.[76] Hess was concerned that Germany would face a war on two fronts as plans progressed for Operation Barbarossa, the invasion of the Soviet Union scheduled to take place in 1941. Hess decided to attempt to bring Britain to the negotiating table by travelling there himself to seek meetings with the British government.[78][79]

On 31 August 1940, Hess met with Karl Haushofer. Haushofer told Hess that he believed that King George VI was opposed to Churchill and would dismiss him and send him to Canada at the first opportunity. Haushofer spoke of his belief that it was possible to make contact with the king via either General Ian Hamilton or the Duke of Hamilton.[80] Hess decided they should contact his fellow aviator the Duke of Hamilton, whom he had never met. Hess chose Hamilton in the mistaken belief that he was one of the leaders of a party opposed to war with Germany, and because Hamilton was a friend of Haushofer. On Hess's instructions, Haushofer wrote to Hamilton in September 1940, but the letter was intercepted by MI5 and Hamilton did not see it until March 1941.[81][82][83]

A letter Hess wrote to his wife dated 4 November 1940 shows that in spite of not receiving a reply from Hamilton, he intended to proceed with his plan. He began training on the Messerschmitt Bf 110, a two-seater twin-engine aircraft, in October 1940 under instructor Wilhelm Stör, the chief test pilot at Messerschmitt. He continued to practice, as well as log his many cross-country flights, and found a specific aircraft which handled well—a Bf 110E-1/N—which was from then on held in reserve for his personal use. He asked for a radio compass, modifications to the oxygen delivery system, and large long-range fuel tanks to be installed on this plane, and these requests were granted by March 1941.[84]

Flight to Scotland

[edit]

After a final check of the weather reports for Germany and the North Sea, Hess took off at 17:45 on 10 May 1941 from the airfield at Augsburg-Haunstetten in his specially prepared aircraft.[85] It was the last of several attempts to depart on his mission; previous efforts had to be called off due to mechanical problems or poor weather.[86] Wearing a leather flying suit bearing the rank of captain, he brought along a supply of money and toiletries, a torch, a camera, maps and charts, and a collection of 28 different medicines, as well as dextrose tablets to help ward off fatigue and an assortment of homoeopathic remedies.[76][87][88]

Setting a course towards Bonn, Hess used landmarks on the ground to orient himself and make minor course corrections. When he reached the coast near the Frisian Islands, he turned and flew in an easterly direction for twenty minutes to stay out of range of British radar. He then took a heading of 335 degrees for the trip across the North Sea, initially at low altitude but travelling for most of the journey at 5,000 feet (1,500 m). At 20:58 he changed his heading to 245 degrees, intending to approach the coast of North East England near the village of Bamburgh, Northumberland. As it was not yet sunset when he first approached the coast, Hess backtracked, zigzagging back and forth for 40 minutes until it grew dark. Around this time, his auxiliary fuel tanks were exhausted so he released them into the sea. Also around this time, at 22:08, the British Chain Home station at Ottercops Moss near Newcastle upon Tyne detected his presence and informed the Filter Room at Bentley Priory. Soon he was detected by several other stations, and the aircraft was designated as "Raid 42".[89]

Wreckage of Hess's Messerschmitt Bf 110 at the site of the crash

Two Spitfires of No. 72 Squadron RAF, No. 13 Group RAF that were already in the air were sent to attempt an interception, but failed to find the intruder. A third Spitfire sent from Acklington at 22:20 also failed to spot the aircraft; by then it was dark and Hess had dropped to an extremely low altitude, so low that the volunteer on duty at the Royal Observer Corps (ROC) station at Chatton was able to correctly identify it as a Bf 110, and reported its altitude as 50 feet (15 m). Tracked by additional ROC posts, Hess continued his flight into Scotland at high speed and low altitude, but was unable to spot his destination, Dungavel House, so he headed for the west coast to orient himself and then turned back inland. At 22:35 a Boulton Paul Defiant sent from No. 141 Squadron RAF based at Ayr began pursuit. Hess was nearly out of fuel, so he climbed to 6,000 feet (1,800 m) and parachuted out of the plane at 23:06. He injured his foot, either while exiting the aircraft or when he hit the ground. The aircraft crashed at 23:09, about 12 miles (19 km) west of Dungavel House, the Duke of Hamilton's home.[90] He would have been closer to his destination had he not had trouble exiting the aircraft.[91] Hess considered this achievement to be the proudest moment of his life.[92]

Before his departure from Germany, Hess had given his adjutant, Karlheinz Pintsch, a letter addressed to Hitler that detailed his plans to initiate peace negotiations with the UK.[93] Hess intended to approach the Duke of Hamilton at his home in Scotland, hoping that the duke might then be willing to advocate for and assist him in negotiating peace with Germany on terms that would be acceptable to Hitler.[94] Pintsch delivered the letter to Hitler at the Berghof around noon on 11 May.[93] After reading the letter, Hitler let loose a cry heard throughout the entire Berghof and sent for a number of his inner circle, concerned that a putsch might be underway.[95]

Hitler worried that his allies, Italy and Japan, would perceive Hess's act as an attempt by Hitler to secretly open peace negotiations with the British. Hitler contacted Mussolini specifically to reassure him otherwise.[95] For this reason, Hitler ordered that the German press should characterise Hess as a madman who made the decision to fly to Scotland entirely on his own, without Hitler's knowledge or authority. Subsequent German newspaper reports described Hess as "deluded, deranged," indicating that his mental health had been affected by injuries sustained during World War I. Some members of the government, including Göring and Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels, believed this only made matters worse, because if Hess truly were mentally ill, he should not have held an important government position.[96]

Hitler stripped Hess of all of his party and state offices, and secretly ordered him shot on sight if he ever returned to Germany. He abolished the post of Deputy Führer, assigning Hess's former duties to Bormann, with the title of Head of the Party Chancellery.[96][97] Bormann used the opportunity afforded by Hess's departure to secure significant power for himself.[98] Meanwhile, Hitler initiated Aktion Hess, a flurry of hundreds of arrests of astrologers, faith healers and occultists that took place around 9 June. The campaign was part of a propaganda effort by Goebbels and others to denigrate Hess and to make scapegoats of occult practitioners.[99]

US journalist Hubert Renfro Knickerbocker, who had met both Hitler and Hess, speculated that Hitler had sent Hess to deliver a message informing Winston Churchill of the forthcoming invasion of the Soviet Union, and offering a negotiated peace or even an anti-Bolshevik partnership.[100] Soviet leader Joseph Stalin believed that Hess's flight had been engineered by the British. Stalin persisted in this belief as late as 1944, when he mentioned the matter to Churchill, who insisted that they had no advance knowledge of the flight.[101] While some sources reported that Hess had been on an official mission, Churchill later stated in his book The Grand Alliance that in his view, the mission had not been authorised. "He came to us of his own free will, and, though without authority, had something of the quality of an envoy", said Churchill, and referred to Hess's plan as one of "lunatic benevolence".[102]

After the war, Albert Speer discussed the rationale for the flight with Hess, who told him that "the idea had been inspired in him in a dream by supernatural forces. We will guarantee England her empire; in return she will give us a free hand in Europe."[103] While in Spandau prison, Hess told journalist Desmond Zwar that Germany could not win a war on two fronts. "I knew that there was only one way out – and that was certainly not to fight against England. Even though I did not get permission from the Führer to fly, I knew that what I had to say would have had his approval. Hitler had great respect for the English people ..."[104] Hess wrote that his flight to Scotland was intended to initiate "the fastest way to win the war."[105]

Capture

[edit]

Shortly before midnight on 10 May 1941, Hess landed at Floors Farm, by Waterfoot, south of Glasgow, where he was discovered still struggling with his parachute by local ploughman David McLean. Identifying himself as "Hauptmann Alfred Horn", Hess said he had an important message for the Duke of Hamilton. McLean helped Hess to his nearby cottage and contacted the local Home Guard unit, who escorted the captive to their headquarters in Busby, East Renfrewshire. He was next taken to the police station at Giffnock, arriving after midnight. He was searched and his possessions confiscated. Hess repeatedly requested to meet with the Duke of Hamilton during questioning undertaken with the aid of an interpreter by Major Graham Donald, the area commandant of Royal Observer Corps. After the interview, Hess was taken under guard to Maryhill Barracks in Glasgow, where his injuries were treated. By this time some of his captors suspected Hess's true identity, though he continued to insist his name was Horn.[106][107]

Part of the fuselage of Hess's Bf 110. Imperial War Museum (2008)

Hamilton had been on duty as wing commander at RAF Turnhouse near Edinburgh when Hess had arrived, and his station had been one of those that had tracked the progress of the flight. He arrived at Maryhill Barracks the next morning, and after examining Hess's effects, he met alone with the prisoner. Hess immediately admitted his true identity and outlined the reason for his flight. Hamilton told Hess that he hoped to continue the conversation with the aid of an interpreter; Hess could speak English well, but was having trouble understanding Hamilton.[108][109] He told Hamilton that he was on a "mission of humanity" and that Hitler "wished to stop the fighting" with England.[110]

After the meeting, Hamilton examined the remains of the Messerschmitt in the company of an intelligence officer, then returned to Turnhouse, where he made arrangements through the Foreign Office to meet Churchill, who was at Ditchley for the weekend. They had some preliminary talks that night, and Hamilton accompanied Churchill back to London the next day, where they both met with members of the War Cabinet. Churchill sent Hamilton with foreign affairs expert Ivone Kirkpatrick, who had met Hess previously, to positively identify the prisoner, who had been moved to Buchanan Castle overnight.[108][111] Hess, who had prepared extensive notes to use during this meeting, spoke to them at length about Hitler's expansionary plans and the need for Britain to let the Nazis have free rein in Europe, in exchange for Britain being allowed to keep its overseas possessions. Kirkpatrick held two more meetings with Hess over the course of the next few days, while Hamilton returned to his duties. In addition to being disappointed at the apparent failure of his mission, Hess began claiming that his medical treatment was inadequate and that there was a plot afoot to poison him.[112]

Hess's flight, but not his destination or fate, was first announced by Munich Radio in Germany on the evening of 12 May. On 13 May, Hitler sent Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop to give the news in person to Mussolini, and the British press was permitted to release full information about events that same day. On 14 May, Ilse Hess finally learned that her husband had survived the trip when news of his fate was broadcast on German radio.[113]

Two sections of the fuselage of the aircraft were initially hidden by David McLean and later retrieved. One part was sold to the former assistant secretary of the Battle of Britain Association, who gave it to a war museum in the US; this 17.5 by 23 inches (44 by 58 cm) part was later sold by Bonhams at auction.[114] Part of the fuel tank and a strut were offered for sale via Bonhams in 2014.[115] Other wreckage was salvaged by 63 Maintenance Unit between 11 and 16 May 1941 and then taken to Oxford to be stored. The aeroplane had been armed with four machine guns in the nose, but carried no ammunition.[116] One of the engines is on display at the RAF Museum while the Imperial War Museum displays another engine and part of the fuselage.[117]

Trial and imprisonment

[edit]

Prisoner of war

[edit]

From Buchanan Castle, Hess was transferred briefly to the Tower of London and then to Mytchett Place in Surrey, a fortified mansion, designated "Camp Z", where he stayed for the next 13 months.[118][119] Churchill issued orders that Hess was to be treated well, though he was not allowed to read newspapers or listen to the radio. Three intelligence officers were stationed onsite and 150 soldiers were placed on guard. By early June, Hess was allowed to write to his family. He also prepared a letter to the Duke of Hamilton, but it was never delivered, and his repeated requests for further meetings were turned down.[120] Major Frank Foley, the leading German expert in MI6 and former British Passport Control Officer in Berlin, took charge of a year-long abortive debriefing of Hess, according to Foreign Office files released to the National Archives.[121] Henry V. Dicks and John Rawlings Rees, psychiatrists who treated Hess during this period, noted that while he was not insane, he was mentally unstable, with tendencies toward hypochondria and paranoia.[122] Hess repeated his peace proposal to John Simon, 1st Viscount Simon, then serving as Lord Chancellor, in an interview on 9 June 1942. Lord Simon noted that the prisoner's mental state was not good; Hess claimed he was being poisoned and was being prevented from sleeping.[123] He would insist on swapping his dinner with that of one of his guards, and attempted to get them to send samples of the food out for analysis.[124]

While in Scotland, Hess claimed to have discovered a "secret force" controlling the minds of Churchill and other British leaders, filling them with an irrational hatred of Germany. Hess claimed that the force acted on Hitler's mind as well, causing him to make poor military decisions. He said that the Jews had psychic powers that allowed them to control the minds of others, including Himmler, and that the Holocaust was part of a Jewish plot to defame Germany.[125]

In the early morning hours of 16 June 1942, Hess rushed his guards and attempted suicide by jumping over the railing of the staircase at Mytchett Place. He fell onto the stone floor below, fracturing the femur of his left leg. The injury required that the leg be kept in traction for 12 weeks, with a further six weeks bed rest before he was permitted to walk with crutches. Captain Munro Johnson of the Royal Army Medical Corps, who assessed Hess, noted that another suicide attempt was likely to occur in the near future. Hess began around this time to complain of amnesia. This symptom and some of his increasingly erratic behaviour may have in part been a ruse, because if he were declared mentally ill, he could be repatriated under the terms of the Geneva Conventions.[126][127]

Hess was moved to Maindiff Court Hospital on 26 June 1942, where he remained for the next three years. The facility was chosen for its added security and the need for fewer guards. Hess was allowed walks on the grounds and car trips into the surrounding countryside. He had access to newspapers and other reading materials; he wrote letters and journals. His mental health remained under the care of Dr. Rees. Hess continued to complain on and off of memory loss and made a second suicide attempt on 4 February 1945, when he stabbed himself with a bread knife. The wound was not serious, requiring two stitches. Despondent that Germany was losing the war, he took no food for the next week, only resuming eating when he was threatened with being force-fed.[128][129]

Germany surrendered unconditionally on 8 May 1945. Hess, facing charges as a war criminal, was ordered to appear before the International Military Tribunal and was transported to Nuremberg on 10 October 1945.[130]

Nuremberg trials

[edit]
Hess in his cell at Nuremberg, November 1945

The Allies of World War II held a series of military tribunals and trials, beginning with a trial of the major war criminals from November 1945 to October 1946. Hess was tried with this first group of 23 defendants, all of whom were charged with several counts from conspiracy to commit crimes, crimes against peace, war crimes and crimes against humanity, in violation of international laws governing warfare.[131]

On his arrival in Nuremberg, Hess was reluctant to give up some of his possessions, including samples of food he said had been poisoned by the British; he proposed to use these for his defence during the trial. The commandant of the facility, Colonel Burton C. Andrus of the United States Army, advised him that he would be allowed no special treatment; the samples were sealed and confiscated.[132][133] Hess's diaries indicate that he did not acknowledge the validity of the court and felt the outcome was a foregone conclusion. He was thin when he arrived, weighing 65 kilograms (143 lb), and had a poor appetite, but was deemed to be in good health. As one defendant, Robert Ley, had managed to hang himself in his cell on 24 October, the remaining prisoners were monitored around the clock.[134][135] Because of his previous suicide attempts, Hess was handcuffed to a guard whenever he was out of his cell.[136]

Almost immediately after his arrival, Hess began exhibiting amnesia, which may have been feigned in the hope of avoiding the death sentence. The chief psychiatrist at Nuremberg, Douglas Kelley of the US Military, gave the opinion that the defendant suffered from "a true psychoneurosis, primarily of the hysterical type, engrafted on a basic paranoid and schizoid personality, with amnesia, partly genuine and partly feigned", but found him fit to stand trial.[137][138] Efforts were made to trigger his memory, including bringing in his former secretaries and showing old newsreels, but he persisted in showing no response to these stimuli.[135][137] When Hess was allowed to make a statement to the tribunal on 30 November, he admitted that he had faked memory loss as a tactic.[139][140]

The prosecution's case against Hess was presented by Mervyn Griffith-Jones beginning on 7 February 1946. By quoting from Hess's speeches, he attempted to demonstrate that Hess had been aware of and agreed with Hitler's plans to conduct a war of aggression in violation of international law. He declared that as Hess had signed important governmental decrees, including the decree requiring mandatory military service, the Nuremberg racial laws, and a decree incorporating the conquered Polish territories into the Reich, he must share responsibility for the acts of the regime. He pointed out that the timing of Hess's trip to Scotland, only six weeks before the German invasion of the Soviet Union, could only be viewed as an attempt by Hess to prevent the British from interfering. Hess resumed showing symptoms of amnesia at the end of February, partway through the prosecution's case.[141]

Hess (left) and Joachim von Ribbentrop in the defendants' box at the Nuremberg Trials

The case for Hess's defence was presented from 22 to 26 March by his lawyer, Dr Alfred Seidl. He noted that while Hess accepted responsibility for the many decrees he had signed, he said these matters were part of the internal workings of a sovereign state and thus outside the purview of a war crimes trial. He called to the stand Ernst Wilhelm Bohle, the man who had been head of the NSDAP/AO, to testify on Hess's behalf. When Griffith-Jones presented questions about the organisation's spying in several countries, Bohle testified that any warlike activities such as espionage had been done without his permission or knowledge. Seidl called two other witnesses, former mayor of Stuttgart Karl Strölin and Hess's brother Alfred, both of whom repudiated the allegations that the NSDAP/AO had been spying and fomenting war. Seidl presented a summation of the defence's case on 25 July, in which he attempted to refute the charge of conspiracy by pointing out that Hitler alone had made all the important decisions. He noted that Hess could not be held responsible for any events that took place after he left Germany in May 1941. Meanwhile, Hess mentally detached himself from what was happening, declining visits from his family and refusing to read the newspapers.[142] Hess spoke to the tribunal again on 31 August 1946 during the last day of closing statements, where he made a lengthy statement.[143][144]

The court deliberated for nearly two months before passing judgement on 30 September, with the defendants being individually sentenced on 1 October. Hess was found guilty on two counts: crimes against peace (planning and preparing a war of aggression), and conspiracy with other German leaders to commit crimes. He was found not guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity. He was given a life sentence, one of seven Nazis to receive prison sentences at the trial. These seven were transported by aircraft to the Allied military prison at Spandau in Berlin on 18 July 1947.[145][146] The Soviet member of the tribunal, Major-General Iona Nikitchenko, filed a document recording his dissent of Hess's sentence; he felt the death sentence was warranted.[147]

Spandau Prison

[edit]

Spandau was placed under the control of the Allied Control Council, the governing body in charge of the military occupation of Germany, which consisted of representatives from the UK, France, the United States, and the Soviet Union. Each country supplied prison guards for a month at a time on a rotating basis. After the inmates were given medical examinations—Hess refused his body search, and had to be held down[148]—they were provided with prison garb and assigned the numbers by which they were addressed throughout their stay. Hess was Number 7. The prison had a small library and inmates were allowed to file special requests for additional reading material. Writing materials were limited; each inmate was allowed four pieces of paper per month for letters. They were not allowed to speak to one another without permission and were expected to work in the facility, helping with cleaning and gardening chores.[149] The inmates were taken for outdoor walks around the prison grounds for an hour each day, separated by about 10 yards (9 m). Some of the rules became more relaxed as time went on.[148]

Changing of the guard at Spandau Prison, mid-1980s

Visitors were allowed to come for half an hour per month, but Hess forbade his family to visit until December 1969, when he was a patient at the British Military Hospital in West Berlin for a perforated ulcer. By this time, Wolf Rüdiger Hess was 32 years old and Ilse 69; they had not seen Hess since his departure from Germany in 1941. After this illness, he allowed his family to visit regularly. His daughter-in-law Andrea, who often brought photos and films of his grandchildren, became a particularly welcome visitor.[150][151] Hess's health problems, both mental and physical, were ongoing during his captivity. He cried out in the night, claiming he had stomach pains. He continued to suspect that his food was being poisoned and complained of amnesia.[152][153] A psychiatrist who examined him in 1957 deemed he was not ill enough to be transferred to a mental hospital.[154] Hess attempted suicide again in 1977.[155]

Other than his stays in hospital, Hess spent the rest of his life in Spandau Prison.[156] His fellow inmates Konstantin von Neurath, Walther Funk, and Erich Raeder were released because of poor health in the 1950s;[157] Karl Dönitz, Baldur von Schirach, and Albert Speer served their time and were released; Dönitz left in 1956, Schirach and Speer in 1966.[158] The 600-cell prison continued to be maintained for its lone prisoner from 1966 until Hess's death in 1987, at an estimated annual cost of DM 800,000.[159] Conditions were far more pleasant in the 1980s than in the early years; Hess was allowed to move more freely around the cell block, setting his own routine and choosing his own activities, which included television, films, reading, and gardening. A lift was installed so he could easily reach the garden, and he was provided with a medical orderly from 1982 onward.[151]

Hess's lawyer Alfred Seidl launched numerous appeals for his release, beginning as early as 1947. These were denied, mainly because the Soviets repeatedly vetoed the proposal. Spandau was located in West Berlin, and its existence gave the Soviets a foothold in that sector of the city. Additionally, Soviet officials believed Hess must have known in 1941 that an attack on their country was imminent.[160] In 1967, Wolf Rüdiger Hess began a campaign to win his father's release, garnering support from politicians such as Geoffrey Lawrence[a] in the UK and Willy Brandt in West Germany, but to no avail, in spite of the prisoner's advanced age and deteriorating health.[162][163] In 1967, Wolf Hess founded a society that by September had collected 700 signatures on a petition calling for Hess's release. By 1974, 350,000 people had signed the petition.[164] The American historian Norman Goda wrote that those who campaigned to free Hess routinely exaggerated the harshness of his imprisonment.[165] Goda states that Wolf Hess's efforts to free his father ultimately backfired as he conflated the question of whether his father deserved release on humanitarian grounds with the question of whether his father was guilty.[166] Wolf argued that his father was unjustly imprisoned to hide the UK's "war guilt", arguing that millions of lives could have been saved if only Churchill had accepted Hess's peace offer in May 1941.[167] In 1973, the Israeli foreign minister Abba Eban charged that Hess was not being treated as badly as his champions claimed and that he should serve his full sentence.[165]

Graffiti on billboard outside Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church in West Berlin in 1981. The comments read "Freedom for Rudolf Hess" and "Do you also want total war?"

In September 1979, medical tests showed that Hess was suffering from potentially fatal prostate cancer.[168] In a letter dated 8 September 1979, Hess announced that he would refuse treatment unless released, saying he deserved freedom as an "unjustly convicted man" and that if he were to die, his death would be on the consciences of the leaders of the UK, France, the Soviet Union, and the United States.[168] Cyrus Vance wrote: "Far from representing the beginning of irrationality, Hess's well considered attempt is to use his medical condition to 'force' his release".[168] The British Foreign Secretary, Lord Carrington, appealed for Hess's release, but Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko refused on the grounds that Hess had never "shown even a shadow of repentance" and was still claiming innocence.[169] Gromyko also said that many people would take Hess's release as confirmation of a wrongful conviction. Hess's appeal to neo-Nazi groups in West Germany further increased the Soviet unwillingness to consider his release.[170]

Hess continued to be an unapologetic Nazi and antisemite; this was usually ignored by those championing his release, who portrayed him as a harmless old man.[171] Hess further hindered efforts to get himself released by promising to make no statements to the media if he were released, while repeatedly writing drafts of statements that he planned to make. On 25 June 1986, a Soviet guard caught Charles Gabel, the chaplain at Spandau, attempting to smuggle out a statement by Hess, causing Gabel to be fired. Hess had originally written the document as his opening address at the Nuremberg trial in 1946, which he had been unable to deliver in full after the judges cut him short. Hess tried to mail a copy of the statement to Sir Oswald Mosley in October 1946, but the letter was intercepted by his US guards.[172] Hess's statement (both the 1946 version and the 1986 version) claimed that Germany's attack on the Soviet Union was preemptive; he claimed there had been overwhelming evidence that the Soviet Union had planned to attack Germany. He said in the statement that he had decided to make his flight to Scotland without informing Hitler, with the aim of informing the UK of the Soviet danger to "European civilization" and the entire world. He believed his warning would cause the UK to end its war with Germany and join in the fight against the Soviet Union.[173]

Death and aftermath

[edit]

Hess was found dead on 17 August 1987, aged 93, in a summer house that had been set up in the prison garden as a reading room; he had hanged himself using an extension cable strung over a window latch. A short note to his family was found in his pocket, thanking them for all that they had done. The Four-Power Authorities released a statement on 17 September ruling the death a suicide. He was initially buried at a secret location to avoid media attention or demonstrations by Nazi sympathisers, but his body was re-interred in a family plot at Wunsiedel on 17 March 1988; his wife was buried beside him in 1995.[174]

Hess's lawyer Alfred Seidl felt that he was too old and frail to have managed to kill himself. Wolf Rüdiger Hess repeatedly claimed that his father had been murdered by the British Secret Intelligence Service to prevent him from revealing information about British misconduct during the war. According to an investigation by the British government in 1989, the available evidence did not back up the claim that Hess was murdered, and Solicitor General Sir Nicholas Lyell saw no grounds for further investigation.[175] The autopsy results supported the conclusion that Hess had killed himself.[176][177][178] A report declassified and published in 2012 led to questions again being asked as to whether Hess had been murdered. Historian Peter Padfield wrote that the suicide note found on the body appeared to have been written when Hess was hospitalised in 1969.[179]

Hess's grave in Wunsiedel became a destination for neo-Nazi pilgrimage and for demonstrations each August on the anniversary of his death. To prevent further pilgrimages, the parish council did not extend the grave's lease when it expired in 2011.[180] With the eventual consent of his family, Hess's grave was re-opened on 20 July 2011. The remains were cremated and the ashes scattered at sea by family members. The gravestone, which bore the epitaph "Ich hab's gewagt" ("I have dared"), was destroyed.[181] Spandau Prison was demolished in 1987 to prevent it from becoming a neo-Nazi shrine.[176]

A myth that the Spandau prisoner was not actually Hess was disproved in 2019.[182] A study of DNA testing undertaken by Sherman McCall, formerly of the Walter Reed Army Medical Center, and Jan Cemper-Kiesslich of the University of Salzburg demonstrated a 99.99 per cent match between the prisoner's Y chromosome DNA markers and those of a living male Hess relative.[183]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Informational notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Lawrence had been the president of the judicial group at the International Military Tribunal in Nuremberg.[161]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Orlow 2010, p. 261.
  2. ^ Lang 1979, p. 69.
  3. ^ a b c d e Nesbit & van Acker 2011, p. 19.
  4. ^ Collier & Pedley 2000, p. 68.
  5. ^ a b Broszat 1981, pp. 308–309.
  6. ^ a b Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression 1946, p. 466.
  7. ^ Williams 2015, pp. 497–498.
  8. ^ a b Williams 2015, p. 497.
  9. ^ a b Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, p. 2.
  10. ^ Schmidt 1997, pp. 37–38.
  11. ^ a b Hess 1987, pp. 26–27.
  12. ^ a b Nesbit & van Acker 2011, pp. 2–3.
  13. ^ a b Rubinstein 2007, p. 140.
  14. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, p. 4.
  15. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, pp. 4–6.
  16. ^ Hess 1987, p. 27.
  17. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, p. 7.
  18. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, pp. 8–9.
  19. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, pp. 9–12.
  20. ^ Hess 1987, pp. 27–28.
  21. ^ Padfield 2001, p. 13.
  22. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, pp. 13–14.
  23. ^ Evans 2003, pp. 156–159.
  24. ^ a b c Nesbit & van Acker 2011, p. 14.
  25. ^ a b c Evans 2003, p. 177.
  26. ^ Gunther 1940, p. 73.
  27. ^ Bird 1974, p. 7.
  28. ^ Evans 2005, p. 345.
  29. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, pp. 15, 20.
  30. ^ a b Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, p. 63.
  31. ^ Pick 2012, p. 36.
  32. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, p. 146.
  33. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, p. 15.
  34. ^ a b Hess 1987, p. 34.
  35. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, p. 17.
  36. ^ Evans 2003, pp. 186–187.
  37. ^ Evans 2003, p. 186.
  38. ^ Evans 2003, p. 193.
  39. ^ Evans 2003, pp. 193–194.
  40. ^ Shirer 1960, pp. 73–74.
  41. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, pp. 18–19.
  42. ^ Shirer 1960, pp. 70, 73.
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  44. ^ Evans 2003, p. 197.
  45. ^ Evans 2003, pp. 201, 211.
  46. ^ Evans 2003, pp. 209, 282.
  47. ^ Bird 1974, p. 8.
  48. ^ Gunther 1940, p. 6.
  49. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, p. 21.
  50. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, pp. 20–21.
  51. ^ Evans 2003, p. 307.
  52. ^ Shirer 1960, pp. 226–227.
  53. ^ Lang 1979, p. 79.
  54. ^ a b Hess 1987, p. 39.
  55. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, pp. 21–22.
  56. ^ Williams 2015, p. 498.
  57. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, pp. 47–48.
  58. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, pp. 37, 60, 62.
  59. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, p. 39.
  60. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, p. 67.
  61. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, p. 51.
  62. ^ Jacobsen 1999, pp. 68.
  63. ^ Jacobsen 1999, pp. 69.
  64. ^ Jacobsen 1999, pp. 70.
  65. ^ a b Nesbit & van Acker 2011, p. 22.
  66. ^ Evans 2005, pp. 543–544.
  67. ^ Evans 2003, p. 47.
  68. ^ Hess 1987, p. 36.
  69. ^ a b c d e Goda 2007, p. 226.
  70. ^ Shirer 1960, p. 599.
  71. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, p. 47.
  72. ^ a b Nesbit & van Acker 2011, p. 28.
  73. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, pp. 63–67.
  74. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, p. 94.
  75. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, p. 24.
  76. ^ a b c Evans 2008, p. 167.
  77. ^ Wright 2024.
  78. ^ Shirer 1960, p. 837.
  79. ^ Sereny 1996, p. 321.
  80. ^ Herwig 2016, p. 176.
  81. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, pp. 29–30.
  82. ^ Shirer 1960, p. 836.
  83. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, p. 82.
  84. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, pp. 32–37.
  85. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, p. 44.
  86. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, p. 92.
  87. ^ Bird 1974, p. 15.
  88. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, p. 39.
  89. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, pp. 46–51.
  90. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, pp. 52–58.
  91. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, p. 101.
  92. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, p. 97.
  93. ^ a b Evans 2008, p. 168.
  94. ^ Handwerk 2016.
  95. ^ a b Childers 2017, p. 478.
  96. ^ a b Shirer 1960, p. 838.
  97. ^ Evans 2008, p. 169.
  98. ^ Childers 2017, pp. 478–479.
  99. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, pp. 126–127, 131–132.
  100. ^ Knickerbocker 1941, p. 161.
  101. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, pp. 107–108.
  102. ^ Churchill 1950, p. 55.
  103. ^ Speer 1971, p. 241.
  104. ^ Boyes 2010.
  105. ^ Zwar 2010, p. 127.
  106. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, pp. 101–105.
  107. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, pp. 58–61.
  108. ^ a b Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, pp. 105–107.
  109. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, pp. 61–63.
  110. ^ Shirer 1960, p. 835.
  111. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, pp. 61–68.
  112. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, pp. 116–117, 124.
  113. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, pp. 119–120.
  114. ^ Bonhams 2014.
  115. ^ Bonhams 2015.
  116. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, pp. 72–73.
  117. ^ The Scotsman 2014.
  118. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, p. 71.
  119. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, p. 128.
  120. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, pp. 82, 88, 95.
  121. ^ Smith 2004.
  122. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, p. 136.
  123. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, p. 89.
  124. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, pp. 139–140.
  125. ^ Goda 2007, pp. 262–263.
  126. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, pp. 92–95.
  127. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, pp. 139–140, 149.
  128. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, pp. 95–97.
  129. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, pp. 142–145.
  130. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, p. 97.
  131. ^ Evans 2008, p. 741.
  132. ^ Bird 1974, p. 34.
  133. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, pp. 151–152.
  134. ^ Sereny 1996, p. 573.
  135. ^ a b Bird 1974, pp. 37–38.
  136. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, p. 153.
  137. ^ a b Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, pp. 154–155.
  138. ^ Chesler 2014.
  139. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, p. 159.
  140. ^ Bird 1974, p. 43.
  141. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, pp. 162–163.
  142. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, pp. 165–171.
  143. ^ Bird 1974, p. 49.
  144. ^ Pick 2012, p. 282.
  145. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, p. 173.
  146. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, p. 98.
  147. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, p. 175.
  148. ^ a b Sereny 1996, p. 604.
  149. ^ Bird 1974, pp. 68–71.
  150. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, pp. 186, 195.
  151. ^ a b Nesbit & van Acker 2011, pp. 100–101.
  152. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, pp. 186–187, 195.
  153. ^ Speer 1976, pp. 193, 197, 234, 305.
  154. ^ Speer 1976, p. 314.
  155. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, p. 100.
  156. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, pp. 195, 200.
  157. ^ Speer 1976, pp. 258, 278, 310.
  158. ^ Speer 1976, pp. 300, 446.
  159. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, pp. 189, 197.
  160. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, pp. 189–192.
  161. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, p. 195.
  162. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 1971, pp. 192–195.
  163. ^ Hess 1987, pp. 325–327.
  164. ^ Goda 2007, pp. 237, 243.
  165. ^ a b Goda 2007, p. 222.
  166. ^ Goda 2007, pp. 248–249.
  167. ^ Goda 2007, p. 249.
  168. ^ a b c Goda 2007, p. 250.
  169. ^ Goda 2007, p. 252.
  170. ^ Goda 2007, pp. 253–254.
  171. ^ Goda 2007, pp. 260–261.
  172. ^ Goda 2007, p. 263.
  173. ^ Goda 2007, pp. 261–262.
  174. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, pp. 101–103.
  175. ^ Milmo 2013.
  176. ^ a b Greenwald & Freeman 1987.
  177. ^ Nesbit & van Acker 2011, p. 132.
  178. ^ Bild 2009.
  179. ^ Rojas & Wardrop 2012.
  180. ^ Dowling 2011.
  181. ^ BBC News 2011.
  182. ^ McCall et al. 2019.
  183. ^ Knapton 2019.

Bibliography

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Further reading

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