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Udo von Woyrsch

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Udo von Woyrsch
File:Udo von Woyrsch.jpg
Born24 July 1895
Died14 January 1983(1983-01-14) (aged 87)
Criminal statusDeceased
MotiveNazism
Conviction(s)Accessory to manslaughter (6 counts)
Membership in a criminal organization
Criminal penalty10 years imprisonment (1948)
10 years imprisonment (1957)

Udo Gustav Wilhelm Egon von Woyrsch (24 July 1895[1] – 14 January 1983) was a high-ranking SS official in Nazi Germany who participated in implementation of the regime's racial policies during World War II.

First World War

From early 1914 to 9 February 1919, Woyrsch served with the Germany Army as junior officer during World War I.[1] From 10 February 1919 to 23 August 1920, he was associated with an organization called the Grenzschutz ("Border Defense").[1] He was awarded the Iron Cross (First Class).[1]

Nazi career

According to the historian Richard Grunberger, Woyrsch had been a member in the Freikorps during the 1920s.[2] Early on, Woyrsch joined the NSDAP (Membership number 162,349) and the SS (Member Number 3,689). Himmler charged him with organising the SS in the Nazi Gau of Silesia; as such Woyrsch became the first commander of the SS-Oberabschnitt Südost.

In 1933, Woyrsch was elected to the Reichstag.[1] He was the SS and Police Leader in Elbe, and in 1934 Woyrsch participated in the Night of the Long Knives, ordering the execution of his SS rival Emil Sembach.[3] On 30 June 1934, "he took command in Silesia, and on the orders of Göring arrested a number of SA leaders, disarmed all SA headquarters' guards and occupied the Breslau police headquarters. Woyrsch's men executed some of the SA officers as a result of an on-going private feud."[4]

Woyrsch had a close friendship with Heinrich Himmler and Reinhard Heydrich, and was on Himmler's personal staff.[1] On 1 January 1935 he was promoted to SS Obergruppenführer (then the second-highest rank in the SS).[1]

Einsatzgruppe

In September 1939 Woyrsch commanded Einsatzgruppe VII. Woyrsch was responsible for some of the deadliest massacres of Jews in Poland in 1939, where in East Upper Silesia he led the group that murdered 500 Jews in Kattowitz, Będzin, and Sosnowiec.[5] The brutality of this Einsatzgruppe in Kattowitz was such that some Wehrmacht officers interceded with the Gestapo to have it withdrawn.[6] However many junior military commanders actively supported Woyrsch's campaign.[5]

Between 20 April 1940 and February 1944, Woyrsch was the Higher SS and Police Leader in military district IV and district leader in Dresden. Woyrsch was removed from office in 1944 for incompetence.[7] According to Richard Grunberger, Woyrsch was part of Himmler's entourage trailing about northern Germany in 1945.[8]

Trials and convictions

Woyrsch was interned by the British from 1945 to 1948.[9] In 1948, a denazification court sentenced him to 10 years in prison for his membership in the SS, citing his knowledge of the organization's atrocities.[7] However, Woyrsch was released early in 1952.[7] In 1957, he was sentenced to a further 10 years in prison after being convicted as an accessory to six counts of manslaughter for his role in executions during the Night of the Long Knives, including that of Emil Sembach. Woyrsch was released once more in 1960, and died in 1987.[7]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g (in German) Reichstag official records digital database
  2. ^ Grunberger, Richard, Hitler's SS (1970), p. 42.
  3. ^ Evans, Richard J. (2006-01-01). The Third Reich in Power. Penguin. ISBN 9780143037903.
  4. ^ Ailsby, Christopher, SS: Role of Infamy (1997), p. 183.
  5. ^ a b Gerwarth, Robert (2011-01-01). Hitler's Hangman: The Life of Heydrich. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300177466.
  6. ^ Browning, Origins of the Final Solution, pp. 16-19, 21, and 29.
  7. ^ a b c d Matthäus, Jürgen; Böhler, Jochen; Mallmann, Klaus-Michael (2014-04-18). War, Pacification, and Execution, 1939: The Einsatzgruppen in Poland. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9781442231429.
  8. ^ Grunberger, Richard, Hitler's SS (1970), p. 102.
  9. ^ Hermann Weiß (Hrsg.): Biographisches Lexikon zum Dritten Reich, Frankfurt am Main 1998, S. 495 f.

References