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Martin Bormann war auf dem Höhepunkt seiner Karriere als Reichsleiter und ›Sekretär‹ von Hitler eine der mächtigsten Figuren des ›Dritten Reiches‹. Seine Herkunft, seinen Aufstieg, die Verbrechen, die er als Schreibtischtäter beging, und seine Intrigen schildert diese Bormann-Biographie. Der bekannte Hamburger Journalist und Zeitgeschichtler, Jochen von Lang, hat alle erreichbaren Dokumente und Details in jahrelangen Recherchen gesammelt und zu einer anschaulichen Darstellung zusammengefügt.
(Quelle: S. Fischer Verlag)
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Subjects
Biography, National socialism, Nazis, Bormann, martin, 1900-1945Places
GermanyTimes
1933-1945Showing 2 featured editions. View all 12 editions?
Edition | Availability |
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1
Der Sekretär: Martin Bormann – der Mann, der Hitler beherrschte
1980-04, Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag
Paperback
in German
- Vom Autor durchgesehene und aktualisierte Ausgabe
3596234301 9783596234301
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2
The Secretary: The Man Who Manipulated Hitler
1979, Random House
in English
- 1st American ed.
039450321X 9780394503219
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Jochen von Lang, a reporter and editor of the German magazine Die Stern, has produced a straightforwardly factual account of the career of Martin Bormann, the faceless bureaucrat whose inexorable rise in Nazi party ranks seemed to place him for a moment at the pinnacle of Nazi power. Despite the book's overblown title, von Lang depicts Bormann for the most part as a pedestrian, yet ruthlessly ambitious man, in the end as much manipulated as he was manipulator; Indeed, there is something pathetic about Bormann's end: having at last inherited Hitler's party rank, he found he did not have the F(infinity)hrer's power; at last the heir to the Third Reich, he found that empire reduced to a pile of rubble. Bormann's instinct for power was a fawning one, and whatever terror he visited upon his subordinates, his own authority resided completely in Hitler; and Lang's account underlines Alan Bullock's conclusion that ""once separated from Hitler, Bormann was a political cypher."" But precisely because of his cypher's anonymity, Bormann quickly came to be thought of both as the eminence grise of the Third Reich and as the one top Nazi who had escaped from Germany and survived incognito to hatch plots for world conquest. In this respect, von Lang's account offers something new, for the author claims the lion's share of the responsibility for locating Bormann's remains, thus proving that Hitler's secretary died by suicide in the hellish days of May 1945 (a clear rebuttal to Farrago's 1974 Aftermath: Martin Bormann and the Fourth Reich). The Frankfurt State Prosecutor's report, which identifies the skeleton uncovered in 1972 as Bormann's, is included here as a valuable appendix. One major drawback, however, is the book's complete lack of footnotes.
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July 10, 2024 | Edited by Gustav-Landauer-Bibliothek Witten | toc |
June 27, 2024 | Edited by Gustav-Landauer-Bibliothek Witten | BookBrainz |
June 27, 2024 | Edited by indy133 | additions and corrections |
October 29, 2022 | Edited by Gustav-Landauer-Bibliothek Witten | edition |
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