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344

Adolf Hitler | Der Führer

Feb 24, 2023
History
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29
minutes

He was the leader of Nazi Germany and was responsible for the most deadly war in human history.

In this episode, we'll explore the murderous life and legacy of Adolf Hitler.

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Transcript

[00:00:00] Hello, hello hello, and welcome to English Learning for Curious Minds, by Leonardo English.

[00:00:12] The show where you can listen to fascinating stories, and learn weird and wonderful things about the world at the same time as improving your English.

[00:00:21] I'm Alastair Budge, and today it is part three of our three-part mini-series on European dictators.

[00:00:29] In part one it was the Grey Blur, Joseph Stalin. In part two, it was Il Duce, Benito Mussolini.

[00:00:37] And in part three, well you could probably guess, it is the most infamous of them all.

[00:00:42] The man most synonymous with fascism, and the fascist with the most warped of all the worldviews.

[00:00:49] A man who almost conquered Europe, and whose genocidal rage left millions dead.

[00:00:55] The Führer - Adolf Hitler, a man whose name alone is enough to send shudders down the spines of hundreds of millions of people around the world.

[00:01:05] Now, obviously it would be incredibly difficult to give a thorough account of Hitler’s entire life, and it certainly wouldn't be possible in this episode.

[00:01:15] So today, I'm not going to be going into detail with a blow-by-blow account of the Second World War, or the horrors of the Holocaust.

[00:01:23] I’ll give a broad overview of Hitler, focusing on his rise and the key events in his life, but also some insight into the lesser known stuff - who Hitler really was as a man, and some of the more unusual things about him.

[00:01:38] OK then, let’s get right into it and talk about Adolf Hitler.

[00:01:44] On the 30th of April, 1945, the Third Reich was in its final hours.

[00:01:50] Gunfire and explosions filled the air.

[00:01:54] Berlin was burning, the streets a battlezone.

[00:01:59] Waves of Soviet Red Army soldiers poured into the city.

[00:02:04] But they weren't hoping just to deliver the decisive blow and finally end the war that had destroyed Europe for five years - they were looking for someone.

[00:02:15] Nazi Germany’s leader, the Führer, Adolf Hitler, hid in a secret underground bunker 16 metres beneath the German chancellery.

[00:02:26] The Führerbunker, as it was known in German.

[00:02:29] Actually, it wasn’t a bunker so much as it was a complex that contained 18 rooms and was fully self-sufficient, with its own water and electrical supply.

[00:02:41] As the Soviets advanced through Berlin street by street, getting closer to the Führerbunker, Hitler continued to give orders and hold meetings with high-ranking Nazis.

[00:02:53] The day before, on April the 29th, he had married his long-time mistress, Eva Braun, and put together his will and political testament outlining who he wanted to take over when he died.

[00:03:07] But when, and how, would that be?

[00:03:10] Was he sure that the Soviets would capture, and likely torture and kill him? 

[00:03:14] Or was it the news of his ally Benito Mussolini’s gruesome death just hours before that convinced him to do something else? 

[00:03:24] After putting his affairs in order, on the afternoon of the 30th, Hitler enjoyed his last lunch, shook hands with his staff, and retired to his private quarters of the complex with Eva Braun.

[00:03:38] Sometime that afternoon, Adolf Hitler, the man who destroyed mainland Europe and organised the slaughter of millions of Jews, sat down on his sofa with his new wife and swallowed a cyanide capsule.

[00:03:52] To make sure, he shot himself in the head.

[00:03:56] The Führer was dead.

[00:03:58] As the Red Army closed in, Hitler and Braun’s bodies were quickly cremated, or burned, in the garden.

[00:04:05] And just eight days later, on the 8th of May, 1945, the Germans surrendered.

[00:04:12] Much like the subjects of part one and two of this mini-series, it didn’t have to be this way.

[00:04:19] Adolf Hitler was born on the 20th of April, 1889, in Braunau am Inn, a small town in modern day Austria, then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

[00:04:31] He was the fourth of six children born to Alois Hitler and Klara Pölzl, though three of his siblings died in infancy.

[00:04:40] Both his parents came from poor peasant backgrounds, but by the time they were married and had started a family, they lived a comfortable middle class existence. His father Alois was a customs official, a civil servant, and his mother, Klara, a housewife and devout Catholic.

[00:05:00] His father was said to be harsh and distant with the children, but his mother was more loving towards them.

[00:05:08] When Hitler was just three years old, the family moved to Passau, in Germany, and it is thought that Hitler picked up his distinctive Bavarian dialect there.

[00:05:19] The family returned to Austria in 1894, and Hitler attended Volksschule, a state-funded primary school.

[00:05:27] Though the young Hitler was clearly able, or intelligent, he showed little interest in education and left school with a poor academic record.

[00:05:38] He had a tense, difficult, relationship with his father, who wanted him to follow in his footsteps and become a civil servant.

[00:05:47] In fact, Alois Hitler was a violent man who beat his children, and Hitler’s mother often intervened to try and protect them.

[00:05:57] In 1900 his younger brother Edmund died from measles, and his brother, the 11-year-old Adolf, became an increasingly quiet, detached boy who got into conflicts with his father and teachers.

[00:06:11] But when his father died suddenly on the 3rd of January in 1903, when Hitler was 13 years old, his mother allowed him to change schools and forget about a career in the civil service.

[00:06:25] The young Hitler was able to study what he really wanted to, art, and he moved to art school and began to think of himself as a bit of an artist.

[00:06:35] In 1907, when he was 18 years old, he moved to Vienna, filled with dreams of winning a place at the Vienna Academy of Art, but he was rejected.

[00:06:47] Traditionally, historical accounts of Hitler’s time in Vienna depict him as a struggling artist with no income that moved from hostel to hostel.

[00:06:57] But the truth wasn’t quite as simple as that.

[00:07:00] After all, his father had been a civil servant, he came from a middle-class family, and so he was by no means poor. 

[00:07:09] It’s thought that he blew through, he got through, quite a large inheritance while he tried to make it as an artist.

[00:07:17] By the end of 1909, however, he was genuinely running out of money.

[00:07:22] He sold postcards and drawings to survive, but even then, one of his aunts introduced him to a wealthy business partner and he was paid to paint watercolour scenes.

[00:07:34] Now, believe it or not, one of Hitler’s watercolours sold for €130,000 at an auction in Nuremberg back in 2014.

[00:07:45] The price tag, it has to be said, comes from the subsequent reputation of the man who held the paintbrush rather than the artistic quality of the canvas.

[00:07:56] And back in Vienna his paintings weren’t worth quite that much, but the watercolours earned Hitler enough money to live, to survive.

[00:08:06] Like many young Austrians at the time, Hitler identified strongly with a sense of German identity and he likely shared the “casual” anti-semitism that was common to middle-class German nationalism.

[00:08:18] However, Hitler probably had business and personal relationships with Jews in Vienna, and his anti-semitism in those early days was likely a reflection of the general anti-semitism common in society at the time - that is to say, still completely unacceptable by any standards, but nothing like the genocidal anti-semitic ideology he developed after the First World War. 

[00:08:45] And in 1913 he moved to Munich, in southern Germany, to avoid military service for the Habsburg Empire.

[00:08:53] This was made possible due to another inheritance from his father’s estate, and in Munich Hitler’s life largely continued as it had in Vienna - drifting around, surviving on paintings and postcards.

[00:09:08] That is, of course, until the following year, 1914, when world events changed not only Hitler’s life but the direction of European history forever.

[00:09:18] When the First World War began, Hitler volunteered for service in the German army and joined the 16th Bavarian Infantry Regiment. 

[00:09:28] He served as a runner on the Western Front - a particularly dangerous job that involved passing messages between different army units on the front line - and he was awarded an Iron Cross.

[00:09:41] At the time of the armistice, when the First World War officially ended, Hitler was in hospital with temporary blindness caused by a British gas attack.

[00:09:52] Keen to stay in the army even after the war had ended, Hitler joined the Intelligence and Propaganda section where he had his first political training, and became an army informer, spying on smaller political parties.

[00:10:08] He made speeches to the troops championing German nationalism and anti-Socialism, and developed his oratory, his public speaking skills.

[00:10:19] In 1919 he also joined the German Workers’ Party, a far-right, anti-semitic, anti-communist organisation.

[00:10:28] When he left the army in 1920, he took over the publicity and propaganda for the German Workers’ Party and he changed the party’s name to the National Socialist German Workers Party - Nazi for short.

[00:10:44] A year later, in 1921, he challenged Anton Drexler for the leadership of the Nazi party, and eventually Drexler agreed.

[00:10:53] A couple of years later, on the 8th of November 1923, Hitler and the Nazis attempted to overthrow the Bavarian government in a coup d'état that became known as the Beer Hall Putsch.

[00:11:07] After being inspired by Benito Mussolini’s ‘March on Rome’ the year before, Hitler and 2,000 Nazis marched through Munich to the Beer Hall, determined to take over a meeting chaired by important figures in Bavarian politics and ultimately to overthrow the government.

[00:11:25] However, unlike Mussolini, who was one of his early political heroes and the man many consider to be the father of fascism, Hitler’s coup didn’t work.

[00:11:37] The next day as Nazis marched in the streets, police open fire.

[00:11:42] Hitler managed to escape but was captured and served 9 months in Landsberg prison.

[00:11:49] Now, while in prison, he wrote his famous autobiographical book of political ideology, Mein Kampf - or my struggle, in English. 

[00:11:59] But what many people don’t know is that Hitler didn’t actually write the book himself, or at least he wasn’t sitting down at a desk writing it down on endless sheets of paper.

[00:12:11] Rather, he paced around his cell and dictated it - meaning, he said it out loud - to Rudolf Hess, the man who would later rise the Nazi ranks to become the Deputy Führer. 

[00:12:25] As you probably know, in Mein Kampf Hitler expanded on, or explained, his twisted theories on race and ethnic “purity” - that there was a racial hierarchy and the so-called “Aryan race” was superior.

[00:12:42] In order for the Aryan race to fulfil its destiny, Hitler’s logic went, they would need Lebensraum [or living space].

[00:12:51] Germany must, he wrote, invade the land to the east occupied by the “inferior” Slavic peoples including the Sudetenland [or the Czech Republic as it’s now called], Poland and Russia.

[00:13:04] By the time Hitler was released from prison, the German economy had picked up, or improved a little, after a period of terrible economic growth and hyperinflation, and support for more extreme right-wing groups like the Nazis began to die down.

[00:13:22] As Germans began to trust the Weimar Republic again, Hitler got to work reorganising the Nazi Party.

[00:13:30] In 1925 he established the Hitler Youth to organise youngsters, and created the Schutzstaffel - known as the SS, his own paramilitary organisation.

[00:13:44] Members of the SS wore black uniforms - which was likely inspired by Mussolini’s blackshirts - and they swore a personal oath of loyalty to Hitler.

[00:13:55] Over the next couple of years the Nazi party was banned several times, but continued to ramp up, to increase its anti-semitic and anti-communist rhetoric.

[00:14:07] After the failed Beer Hall Putsch, the Nazi party would, Hitler promised, win power through democratic means, and in the late-1920s the Nazi party began building up its propaganda machine and tried to establish a base in northern Germany.

[00:14:24] Now, it’s around this time that things start to get a little strange in Hitler’s personal life, and there’s even a hint of murder mystery.

[00:14:34] In 1928, Hitler’s half-sister, Angela Raubal, and her daughter Geli, moved into Hitler's home.

[00:14:43] Hitler, who was 19 years older than his half-niece, developed something of an obsessive relationship with Geli.

[00:14:51] He was so obsessive that historians have debated for decades, and it has been strongly implied, or suggested, that their relationship was a romantic one.

[00:15:03] Whatever the truth, historians have described Geli as “the only true deep love affair of his life.”

[00:15:10] And as if that wasn’t strange enough, Hitler’s obsessiveness had tragic, and deadly consequences.

[00:15:18] On the 18th of September, 1931, at the age of 23, Geli was found dead in the apartment she shared with Hitler in Munich.

[00:15:28] By her side was Hitler’s pistol.

[00:15:31] But what had happened?

[00:15:33] Well, the official version of events was that Hitler and Geli had argued over her plans to go to Vienna, and that after Hitler had refused to let her leave, she committed suicide

[00:15:46] But it’s a little more mysterious than that.

[00:15:50] At the time, the Munich press reported that Geli’s nose was shattered, and that she had other injuries to her body.

[00:15:58] Had he killed the young girl?

[00:16:00] Now, we must remember that in 1931 Hitler was on the cusp of political power.

[00:16:07] The 1929 Wall St. Crash had plunged the Weimar economy back into crisis, and the political landscape was ripe, it was ready, for extreme views.

[00:16:19] Hitler wanted to take advantage of this, and a murder scandal would have likely ruined his career and rise to power.

[00:16:28] In fact, we now know that Nazi officials even discussed a replacement for Hitler, should the scandal get out of hand.

[00:16:37] So it’s little surprise, therefore, that the Nazi party pressued the public prosecutor not to investigate, and that Geli’s body was given a very quick post-mortem.

[00:16:49] The incident was quickly ruled suicide, and Geli’s body was taken down the back stairs of the police station and taken to Vienna to be buried before the press even got wind of it, before they heard the news.

[00:17:02] Very mysterious indeed - and one can’t help but wonder how different Hitler’s career and German and European history would have been if there had been a proper investigation into Geli Raubal’s death.

[00:17:15] Now, regardless of what happened, the incident sent Hitler into a depression so bad that one historian believes that “With the exception of his mother’s death… no other event in his personal life had hit him so hard.”

[00:17:30] Clearly, it’s hard to have any compassion for the man, when one knows what he would go on to do, and this event wouldn’t have any effect on his political career, as his Nazi party continued its rise to power.

[00:17:44] Around a year before Geli’s death, in September of 1930, the Nazi party had enjoyed large electoral gains and increased its number of representatives in parliament from 14 to 107, making Hitler the leader of the second biggest political party in Germany.

[00:18:03] In 1932 Hitler came second in the presidential elections, and the Nazis were firmly established in the political mainstream - benefitting from political instability and another spike, or increase, in unemployment.

[00:18:18] In July of that year the Nazis became the largest party in the Reichstag, and after political negotiating and maneuvering throughout the rest of 1932, Hitler emerged as Chancellor in January of 1933.

[00:18:34] The Nazis now had a third of the seats in the Reichstag, and with more elections coming up in Feburary of 1933, the German Reichstag was destroyed by a fire. 

[00:18:46] Now, historians are almost certain that the Nazis organised the blaze, but the fire allowed them to blame the Communists and tighten their grip on power.

[00:18:57] And Hitler wasted no time. 

[00:19:00] The Enabling Act, which was passed in March 1933, effectively made Hitler a dictator, and all other political parties and trade unions were banned. 

[00:19:11] Adolf Hitler, the shy Austrian boy who painted watercolours, had risen to the very top of German politics and stolen power.

[00:19:21] And he had ambitious, deadly plans.

[00:19:25] Now, clearly the 1930s and lead up to the Second World War was a period of intense activity, far too much to do justice to here, so we are going to skip over the key events. 

[00:19:38] Instead, we’ll deal with a couple of interesting points about Hitler the man from this period.

[00:19:44] One is an assassination attempt, and the other a theory about Hitler’s drug use.

[00:19:51] The most important thing to underline about Hitler’s foreign policy during the 1930s was that he was immediately on a war footing - that is to say, he was preparing Germany for war.

[00:20:04] In October of 1933 Hitler withdrew Germany from the League of Nations and cast aside, or ignored, the restrictions placed on the German military by the Treaty of Versailles and he tripled the size of the army.

[00:20:19] In June of 1934, he further tightened his grip on the Nazi party and eliminated his remaining enemies with a move that became known as the Night of the Long Knives.

[00:20:32] In 1935 he began rearming Germany and military conscription was introduced.

[00:20:39] Hitler, it became clear to everyone across Europe, was ready for war.

[00:20:44] Domestically, he was also setting the wheels in motion for his mass-persecution of Jews, homosexuals, Roma, and anyone who didn’t fit into his idea of the perfect “Aryan” society.

[00:20:58] In November of 1938, the infamous Kristallnacht took place across Germany.

[00:21:05] Jewish shops and synagogues were burnt down, and 30,000 Jewish men were rounded up and taken to concentration camps. 

[00:21:15] This was just the start of what would have become known as the the Holocaust, which is clearly far too important a subject to try to do justice to in a short section of this episode.

[00:21:27] Internationally, he was itching for war.

[00:21:30] Despite signing agreements not to, he sent his army abroad. 

[00:21:35] Nazi forces occupied part of modern day Czech Republic called the Sudetenland, in 1938.

[00:21:42] And then in September 1939 Germany invaded Poland, which resulted in a full declaration of war between the UK and France on Germany.

[00:21:53] The Nazis went on to occupy Denmark, Norway, Holland, Belgium, France, Romania and Yugoslavia, and in 1941 they invaded Russia - a mistake that would prove to be the beginning of the end for the Nazis, and Hitler.

[00:22:11] Now, as we heard in part one, on Stalin, after sacrificing as many as a million men at the Battle of Stalingrad, the Soviets pushed the Germans all the way back to Berlin and the Führerbunker in 1945.

[00:22:26] Now, the details of the war and the Holocaust are well-known, but I want to touch on two elements of life within Hitler’s personal circle.

[00:22:36] As Hitler’s genocidal rage wreaked havoc across Europe, killing millions and slaughtering Jews, some in the Nazi party thoughts things - and Hitler specifically - were getting a bit out of control.

[00:22:50] That’s why, in July of 1944, a German Army officer named Claus Von Stauffenberg placed a bomb in a briefcase under a table in Hitler’s headquarters, with the aim of blowing the man to smithereens.

[00:23:06] During a meeting between Hitler and top Nazis, the bomb exploded, killing one person, but Hitler survived.

[00:23:15] As you might expect, Hitler purged the party of anyone even remotely suspected of being involved.

[00:23:22] Though the assassination attempt, which became known as Operation Valkyrie, wasn’t successful, it highlights the fact that there were those in the Nazi party that felt Hitler had lost control.

[00:23:35] Now, why might that be?

[00:23:38] Well, the obvious answer is that he was clearly a brutal genocidal maniac, but in recent years another interesting theory about Hitler has emerged, and it concerns his drug use.

[00:23:50] Was the Führer a drug addict?

[00:23:53] In autumn of 1941 as the war began to turn against the Nazis, Hitler had fallen ill.

[00:24:01] He was so ill, in fact, that he couldn't go to a military briefing - this was something that never happened.

[00:24:09] That day, his doctor gave him an opiate and a hormone injection for the first time.

[00:24:15] Unsurprisingly, Hitler felt much better and he was able to attend the briefing.

[00:24:21] And he was very impressed by this magical recovery drug, which was an opiate called Dolantin. 

[00:24:28] From then on, Hitler asked his doctor for more and more of it, and between 1941 and the winter of 1944 Hitler's drug abuse increased massively, with him reportedly relying on a cocktail of opiates and cocaine.

[00:24:46] His dependence got so bad, in fact, that he developed a severe tremor, or shake.

[00:24:53] You can actually see this if you look at footage of Hitler in the latter stages of the war, where his hands and entire body are shaking so violently that even the Nazi propaganda machine couldn’t hide it.

[00:25:08] Some historians believe that Hitler could have been suffering from Parkinson's disease, but severe tremors are also a symptom of drug withdrawal.

[00:25:18] We already know that some Nazis felt Hitler was out of control, but was this partly down to drug addiction?

[00:25:25] Was he making war decisions while high on cocaine and opiates?

[00:25:30] It’s certainly an interesting theory, and could partly explain Hitler’s manic behaviour and refusal to stop the war until the last moment, preferring to destroy Europe than make peace.

[00:25:43] There are clearly many other reasons for his behaviour and downfall, and one that I should mention is his extreme paranoia and his refusal to trust his generals to make military decisions without consulting him first. 

[00:25:57] When you are fighting literally a world war, you can’t do everything yourself, and this is believed to be a major reason why the German army was eventually defeated.

[00:26:07] So, all of this takes us back to Berlin, in 1945.

[00:26:13] In January the Soviets began their assault on Germany, and by April they reached Berlin.

[00:26:21] As we know from the start of this episode, Hitler stayed in the Führerbunker until the very end.

[00:26:28] After hearing of Mussolini’s gruesome end, with the Soviets just streets away, Hitler committed suicide on the 30th of April, 1945.

[00:26:38] Adolf Hitler, the man whose name has become synonymous with evil, was dead.

[00:26:45] Unlike the subjects of parts one and two of this mini-series, Stalin and Mussolini, the death of Hitler offered more of a clean break with the past, an acknowledgment of the horrors that had been committed under his command, and a shared resolve to never allow them to happen again.

[00:27:06] Clearly, as with any warped belief, there are still those who look back on this man’s life with some form of admiration, but for the vast majority of mankind, the life of Adolf Hitler is looked back on with utter repulsion, hate and disgust. 

[00:27:25] He is a man who organised the industrial slaughter of at least six million Jews, oversaw the deaths of millions of soldiers and civilians across Europe, and left a deep scar on world history.

[00:27:39] It is a truly vile legacy indeed.

[00:27:45] Ok then, that is it for today’s episode on Adolf Hitler, and with that comes the end of our mini-series on European dictators.

[00:27:53] I hope it was an interesting one, and whether you knew a lot about Hitler, Stalin or Mussolini, or this was the first time you’d really dived into their backstories, well I hope you learned something new

[00:28:05] As always, I would love to know what you thought about this episode.

[00:28:09] What particular set of circumstances allowed Hitler to come to power?

[00:28:13] Do you think a Hitler-like figure could ever come to power again? 

[00:28:17] Of the three dictators we’ve discussed in our mini-series, who would you say was the ‘worst’ or most consequential

[00:28:25] I would love to know, so let’s get this discussion started.

[00:28:29] You can head right into our community forum, which is at community.leonardoenglish.com and get chatting away to other curious minds.

[00:28:36] You've been listening to English Learning for Curious Minds, by Leonardo English.

[00:28:41] I'm Alastair Budge, you stay safe, and I'll catch you in the next episode.

[END OF EPISODE]

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[00:00:00] Hello, hello hello, and welcome to English Learning for Curious Minds, by Leonardo English.

[00:00:12] The show where you can listen to fascinating stories, and learn weird and wonderful things about the world at the same time as improving your English.

[00:00:21] I'm Alastair Budge, and today it is part three of our three-part mini-series on European dictators.

[00:00:29] In part one it was the Grey Blur, Joseph Stalin. In part two, it was Il Duce, Benito Mussolini.

[00:00:37] And in part three, well you could probably guess, it is the most infamous of them all.

[00:00:42] The man most synonymous with fascism, and the fascist with the most warped of all the worldviews.

[00:00:49] A man who almost conquered Europe, and whose genocidal rage left millions dead.

[00:00:55] The Führer - Adolf Hitler, a man whose name alone is enough to send shudders down the spines of hundreds of millions of people around the world.

[00:01:05] Now, obviously it would be incredibly difficult to give a thorough account of Hitler’s entire life, and it certainly wouldn't be possible in this episode.

[00:01:15] So today, I'm not going to be going into detail with a blow-by-blow account of the Second World War, or the horrors of the Holocaust.

[00:01:23] I’ll give a broad overview of Hitler, focusing on his rise and the key events in his life, but also some insight into the lesser known stuff - who Hitler really was as a man, and some of the more unusual things about him.

[00:01:38] OK then, let’s get right into it and talk about Adolf Hitler.

[00:01:44] On the 30th of April, 1945, the Third Reich was in its final hours.

[00:01:50] Gunfire and explosions filled the air.

[00:01:54] Berlin was burning, the streets a battlezone.

[00:01:59] Waves of Soviet Red Army soldiers poured into the city.

[00:02:04] But they weren't hoping just to deliver the decisive blow and finally end the war that had destroyed Europe for five years - they were looking for someone.

[00:02:15] Nazi Germany’s leader, the Führer, Adolf Hitler, hid in a secret underground bunker 16 metres beneath the German chancellery.

[00:02:26] The Führerbunker, as it was known in German.

[00:02:29] Actually, it wasn’t a bunker so much as it was a complex that contained 18 rooms and was fully self-sufficient, with its own water and electrical supply.

[00:02:41] As the Soviets advanced through Berlin street by street, getting closer to the Führerbunker, Hitler continued to give orders and hold meetings with high-ranking Nazis.

[00:02:53] The day before, on April the 29th, he had married his long-time mistress, Eva Braun, and put together his will and political testament outlining who he wanted to take over when he died.

[00:03:07] But when, and how, would that be?

[00:03:10] Was he sure that the Soviets would capture, and likely torture and kill him? 

[00:03:14] Or was it the news of his ally Benito Mussolini’s gruesome death just hours before that convinced him to do something else? 

[00:03:24] After putting his affairs in order, on the afternoon of the 30th, Hitler enjoyed his last lunch, shook hands with his staff, and retired to his private quarters of the complex with Eva Braun.

[00:03:38] Sometime that afternoon, Adolf Hitler, the man who destroyed mainland Europe and organised the slaughter of millions of Jews, sat down on his sofa with his new wife and swallowed a cyanide capsule.

[00:03:52] To make sure, he shot himself in the head.

[00:03:56] The Führer was dead.

[00:03:58] As the Red Army closed in, Hitler and Braun’s bodies were quickly cremated, or burned, in the garden.

[00:04:05] And just eight days later, on the 8th of May, 1945, the Germans surrendered.

[00:04:12] Much like the subjects of part one and two of this mini-series, it didn’t have to be this way.

[00:04:19] Adolf Hitler was born on the 20th of April, 1889, in Braunau am Inn, a small town in modern day Austria, then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

[00:04:31] He was the fourth of six children born to Alois Hitler and Klara Pölzl, though three of his siblings died in infancy.

[00:04:40] Both his parents came from poor peasant backgrounds, but by the time they were married and had started a family, they lived a comfortable middle class existence. His father Alois was a customs official, a civil servant, and his mother, Klara, a housewife and devout Catholic.

[00:05:00] His father was said to be harsh and distant with the children, but his mother was more loving towards them.

[00:05:08] When Hitler was just three years old, the family moved to Passau, in Germany, and it is thought that Hitler picked up his distinctive Bavarian dialect there.

[00:05:19] The family returned to Austria in 1894, and Hitler attended Volksschule, a state-funded primary school.

[00:05:27] Though the young Hitler was clearly able, or intelligent, he showed little interest in education and left school with a poor academic record.

[00:05:38] He had a tense, difficult, relationship with his father, who wanted him to follow in his footsteps and become a civil servant.

[00:05:47] In fact, Alois Hitler was a violent man who beat his children, and Hitler’s mother often intervened to try and protect them.

[00:05:57] In 1900 his younger brother Edmund died from measles, and his brother, the 11-year-old Adolf, became an increasingly quiet, detached boy who got into conflicts with his father and teachers.

[00:06:11] But when his father died suddenly on the 3rd of January in 1903, when Hitler was 13 years old, his mother allowed him to change schools and forget about a career in the civil service.

[00:06:25] The young Hitler was able to study what he really wanted to, art, and he moved to art school and began to think of himself as a bit of an artist.

[00:06:35] In 1907, when he was 18 years old, he moved to Vienna, filled with dreams of winning a place at the Vienna Academy of Art, but he was rejected.

[00:06:47] Traditionally, historical accounts of Hitler’s time in Vienna depict him as a struggling artist with no income that moved from hostel to hostel.

[00:06:57] But the truth wasn’t quite as simple as that.

[00:07:00] After all, his father had been a civil servant, he came from a middle-class family, and so he was by no means poor. 

[00:07:09] It’s thought that he blew through, he got through, quite a large inheritance while he tried to make it as an artist.

[00:07:17] By the end of 1909, however, he was genuinely running out of money.

[00:07:22] He sold postcards and drawings to survive, but even then, one of his aunts introduced him to a wealthy business partner and he was paid to paint watercolour scenes.

[00:07:34] Now, believe it or not, one of Hitler’s watercolours sold for €130,000 at an auction in Nuremberg back in 2014.

[00:07:45] The price tag, it has to be said, comes from the subsequent reputation of the man who held the paintbrush rather than the artistic quality of the canvas.

[00:07:56] And back in Vienna his paintings weren’t worth quite that much, but the watercolours earned Hitler enough money to live, to survive.

[00:08:06] Like many young Austrians at the time, Hitler identified strongly with a sense of German identity and he likely shared the “casual” anti-semitism that was common to middle-class German nationalism.

[00:08:18] However, Hitler probably had business and personal relationships with Jews in Vienna, and his anti-semitism in those early days was likely a reflection of the general anti-semitism common in society at the time - that is to say, still completely unacceptable by any standards, but nothing like the genocidal anti-semitic ideology he developed after the First World War. 

[00:08:45] And in 1913 he moved to Munich, in southern Germany, to avoid military service for the Habsburg Empire.

[00:08:53] This was made possible due to another inheritance from his father’s estate, and in Munich Hitler’s life largely continued as it had in Vienna - drifting around, surviving on paintings and postcards.

[00:09:08] That is, of course, until the following year, 1914, when world events changed not only Hitler’s life but the direction of European history forever.

[00:09:18] When the First World War began, Hitler volunteered for service in the German army and joined the 16th Bavarian Infantry Regiment. 

[00:09:28] He served as a runner on the Western Front - a particularly dangerous job that involved passing messages between different army units on the front line - and he was awarded an Iron Cross.

[00:09:41] At the time of the armistice, when the First World War officially ended, Hitler was in hospital with temporary blindness caused by a British gas attack.

[00:09:52] Keen to stay in the army even after the war had ended, Hitler joined the Intelligence and Propaganda section where he had his first political training, and became an army informer, spying on smaller political parties.

[00:10:08] He made speeches to the troops championing German nationalism and anti-Socialism, and developed his oratory, his public speaking skills.

[00:10:19] In 1919 he also joined the German Workers’ Party, a far-right, anti-semitic, anti-communist organisation.

[00:10:28] When he left the army in 1920, he took over the publicity and propaganda for the German Workers’ Party and he changed the party’s name to the National Socialist German Workers Party - Nazi for short.

[00:10:44] A year later, in 1921, he challenged Anton Drexler for the leadership of the Nazi party, and eventually Drexler agreed.

[00:10:53] A couple of years later, on the 8th of November 1923, Hitler and the Nazis attempted to overthrow the Bavarian government in a coup d'état that became known as the Beer Hall Putsch.

[00:11:07] After being inspired by Benito Mussolini’s ‘March on Rome’ the year before, Hitler and 2,000 Nazis marched through Munich to the Beer Hall, determined to take over a meeting chaired by important figures in Bavarian politics and ultimately to overthrow the government.

[00:11:25] However, unlike Mussolini, who was one of his early political heroes and the man many consider to be the father of fascism, Hitler’s coup didn’t work.

[00:11:37] The next day as Nazis marched in the streets, police open fire.

[00:11:42] Hitler managed to escape but was captured and served 9 months in Landsberg prison.

[00:11:49] Now, while in prison, he wrote his famous autobiographical book of political ideology, Mein Kampf - or my struggle, in English. 

[00:11:59] But what many people don’t know is that Hitler didn’t actually write the book himself, or at least he wasn’t sitting down at a desk writing it down on endless sheets of paper.

[00:12:11] Rather, he paced around his cell and dictated it - meaning, he said it out loud - to Rudolf Hess, the man who would later rise the Nazi ranks to become the Deputy Führer. 

[00:12:25] As you probably know, in Mein Kampf Hitler expanded on, or explained, his twisted theories on race and ethnic “purity” - that there was a racial hierarchy and the so-called “Aryan race” was superior.

[00:12:42] In order for the Aryan race to fulfil its destiny, Hitler’s logic went, they would need Lebensraum [or living space].

[00:12:51] Germany must, he wrote, invade the land to the east occupied by the “inferior” Slavic peoples including the Sudetenland [or the Czech Republic as it’s now called], Poland and Russia.

[00:13:04] By the time Hitler was released from prison, the German economy had picked up, or improved a little, after a period of terrible economic growth and hyperinflation, and support for more extreme right-wing groups like the Nazis began to die down.

[00:13:22] As Germans began to trust the Weimar Republic again, Hitler got to work reorganising the Nazi Party.

[00:13:30] In 1925 he established the Hitler Youth to organise youngsters, and created the Schutzstaffel - known as the SS, his own paramilitary organisation.

[00:13:44] Members of the SS wore black uniforms - which was likely inspired by Mussolini’s blackshirts - and they swore a personal oath of loyalty to Hitler.

[00:13:55] Over the next couple of years the Nazi party was banned several times, but continued to ramp up, to increase its anti-semitic and anti-communist rhetoric.

[00:14:07] After the failed Beer Hall Putsch, the Nazi party would, Hitler promised, win power through democratic means, and in the late-1920s the Nazi party began building up its propaganda machine and tried to establish a base in northern Germany.

[00:14:24] Now, it’s around this time that things start to get a little strange in Hitler’s personal life, and there’s even a hint of murder mystery.

[00:14:34] In 1928, Hitler’s half-sister, Angela Raubal, and her daughter Geli, moved into Hitler's home.

[00:14:43] Hitler, who was 19 years older than his half-niece, developed something of an obsessive relationship with Geli.

[00:14:51] He was so obsessive that historians have debated for decades, and it has been strongly implied, or suggested, that their relationship was a romantic one.

[00:15:03] Whatever the truth, historians have described Geli as “the only true deep love affair of his life.”

[00:15:10] And as if that wasn’t strange enough, Hitler’s obsessiveness had tragic, and deadly consequences.

[00:15:18] On the 18th of September, 1931, at the age of 23, Geli was found dead in the apartment she shared with Hitler in Munich.

[00:15:28] By her side was Hitler’s pistol.

[00:15:31] But what had happened?

[00:15:33] Well, the official version of events was that Hitler and Geli had argued over her plans to go to Vienna, and that after Hitler had refused to let her leave, she committed suicide

[00:15:46] But it’s a little more mysterious than that.

[00:15:50] At the time, the Munich press reported that Geli’s nose was shattered, and that she had other injuries to her body.

[00:15:58] Had he killed the young girl?

[00:16:00] Now, we must remember that in 1931 Hitler was on the cusp of political power.

[00:16:07] The 1929 Wall St. Crash had plunged the Weimar economy back into crisis, and the political landscape was ripe, it was ready, for extreme views.

[00:16:19] Hitler wanted to take advantage of this, and a murder scandal would have likely ruined his career and rise to power.

[00:16:28] In fact, we now know that Nazi officials even discussed a replacement for Hitler, should the scandal get out of hand.

[00:16:37] So it’s little surprise, therefore, that the Nazi party pressued the public prosecutor not to investigate, and that Geli’s body was given a very quick post-mortem.

[00:16:49] The incident was quickly ruled suicide, and Geli’s body was taken down the back stairs of the police station and taken to Vienna to be buried before the press even got wind of it, before they heard the news.

[00:17:02] Very mysterious indeed - and one can’t help but wonder how different Hitler’s career and German and European history would have been if there had been a proper investigation into Geli Raubal’s death.

[00:17:15] Now, regardless of what happened, the incident sent Hitler into a depression so bad that one historian believes that “With the exception of his mother’s death… no other event in his personal life had hit him so hard.”

[00:17:30] Clearly, it’s hard to have any compassion for the man, when one knows what he would go on to do, and this event wouldn’t have any effect on his political career, as his Nazi party continued its rise to power.

[00:17:44] Around a year before Geli’s death, in September of 1930, the Nazi party had enjoyed large electoral gains and increased its number of representatives in parliament from 14 to 107, making Hitler the leader of the second biggest political party in Germany.

[00:18:03] In 1932 Hitler came second in the presidential elections, and the Nazis were firmly established in the political mainstream - benefitting from political instability and another spike, or increase, in unemployment.

[00:18:18] In July of that year the Nazis became the largest party in the Reichstag, and after political negotiating and maneuvering throughout the rest of 1932, Hitler emerged as Chancellor in January of 1933.

[00:18:34] The Nazis now had a third of the seats in the Reichstag, and with more elections coming up in Feburary of 1933, the German Reichstag was destroyed by a fire. 

[00:18:46] Now, historians are almost certain that the Nazis organised the blaze, but the fire allowed them to blame the Communists and tighten their grip on power.

[00:18:57] And Hitler wasted no time. 

[00:19:00] The Enabling Act, which was passed in March 1933, effectively made Hitler a dictator, and all other political parties and trade unions were banned. 

[00:19:11] Adolf Hitler, the shy Austrian boy who painted watercolours, had risen to the very top of German politics and stolen power.

[00:19:21] And he had ambitious, deadly plans.

[00:19:25] Now, clearly the 1930s and lead up to the Second World War was a period of intense activity, far too much to do justice to here, so we are going to skip over the key events. 

[00:19:38] Instead, we’ll deal with a couple of interesting points about Hitler the man from this period.

[00:19:44] One is an assassination attempt, and the other a theory about Hitler’s drug use.

[00:19:51] The most important thing to underline about Hitler’s foreign policy during the 1930s was that he was immediately on a war footing - that is to say, he was preparing Germany for war.

[00:20:04] In October of 1933 Hitler withdrew Germany from the League of Nations and cast aside, or ignored, the restrictions placed on the German military by the Treaty of Versailles and he tripled the size of the army.

[00:20:19] In June of 1934, he further tightened his grip on the Nazi party and eliminated his remaining enemies with a move that became known as the Night of the Long Knives.

[00:20:32] In 1935 he began rearming Germany and military conscription was introduced.

[00:20:39] Hitler, it became clear to everyone across Europe, was ready for war.

[00:20:44] Domestically, he was also setting the wheels in motion for his mass-persecution of Jews, homosexuals, Roma, and anyone who didn’t fit into his idea of the perfect “Aryan” society.

[00:20:58] In November of 1938, the infamous Kristallnacht took place across Germany.

[00:21:05] Jewish shops and synagogues were burnt down, and 30,000 Jewish men were rounded up and taken to concentration camps. 

[00:21:15] This was just the start of what would have become known as the the Holocaust, which is clearly far too important a subject to try to do justice to in a short section of this episode.

[00:21:27] Internationally, he was itching for war.

[00:21:30] Despite signing agreements not to, he sent his army abroad. 

[00:21:35] Nazi forces occupied part of modern day Czech Republic called the Sudetenland, in 1938.

[00:21:42] And then in September 1939 Germany invaded Poland, which resulted in a full declaration of war between the UK and France on Germany.

[00:21:53] The Nazis went on to occupy Denmark, Norway, Holland, Belgium, France, Romania and Yugoslavia, and in 1941 they invaded Russia - a mistake that would prove to be the beginning of the end for the Nazis, and Hitler.

[00:22:11] Now, as we heard in part one, on Stalin, after sacrificing as many as a million men at the Battle of Stalingrad, the Soviets pushed the Germans all the way back to Berlin and the Führerbunker in 1945.

[00:22:26] Now, the details of the war and the Holocaust are well-known, but I want to touch on two elements of life within Hitler’s personal circle.

[00:22:36] As Hitler’s genocidal rage wreaked havoc across Europe, killing millions and slaughtering Jews, some in the Nazi party thoughts things - and Hitler specifically - were getting a bit out of control.

[00:22:50] That’s why, in July of 1944, a German Army officer named Claus Von Stauffenberg placed a bomb in a briefcase under a table in Hitler’s headquarters, with the aim of blowing the man to smithereens.

[00:23:06] During a meeting between Hitler and top Nazis, the bomb exploded, killing one person, but Hitler survived.

[00:23:15] As you might expect, Hitler purged the party of anyone even remotely suspected of being involved.

[00:23:22] Though the assassination attempt, which became known as Operation Valkyrie, wasn’t successful, it highlights the fact that there were those in the Nazi party that felt Hitler had lost control.

[00:23:35] Now, why might that be?

[00:23:38] Well, the obvious answer is that he was clearly a brutal genocidal maniac, but in recent years another interesting theory about Hitler has emerged, and it concerns his drug use.

[00:23:50] Was the Führer a drug addict?

[00:23:53] In autumn of 1941 as the war began to turn against the Nazis, Hitler had fallen ill.

[00:24:01] He was so ill, in fact, that he couldn't go to a military briefing - this was something that never happened.

[00:24:09] That day, his doctor gave him an opiate and a hormone injection for the first time.

[00:24:15] Unsurprisingly, Hitler felt much better and he was able to attend the briefing.

[00:24:21] And he was very impressed by this magical recovery drug, which was an opiate called Dolantin. 

[00:24:28] From then on, Hitler asked his doctor for more and more of it, and between 1941 and the winter of 1944 Hitler's drug abuse increased massively, with him reportedly relying on a cocktail of opiates and cocaine.

[00:24:46] His dependence got so bad, in fact, that he developed a severe tremor, or shake.

[00:24:53] You can actually see this if you look at footage of Hitler in the latter stages of the war, where his hands and entire body are shaking so violently that even the Nazi propaganda machine couldn’t hide it.

[00:25:08] Some historians believe that Hitler could have been suffering from Parkinson's disease, but severe tremors are also a symptom of drug withdrawal.

[00:25:18] We already know that some Nazis felt Hitler was out of control, but was this partly down to drug addiction?

[00:25:25] Was he making war decisions while high on cocaine and opiates?

[00:25:30] It’s certainly an interesting theory, and could partly explain Hitler’s manic behaviour and refusal to stop the war until the last moment, preferring to destroy Europe than make peace.

[00:25:43] There are clearly many other reasons for his behaviour and downfall, and one that I should mention is his extreme paranoia and his refusal to trust his generals to make military decisions without consulting him first. 

[00:25:57] When you are fighting literally a world war, you can’t do everything yourself, and this is believed to be a major reason why the German army was eventually defeated.

[00:26:07] So, all of this takes us back to Berlin, in 1945.

[00:26:13] In January the Soviets began their assault on Germany, and by April they reached Berlin.

[00:26:21] As we know from the start of this episode, Hitler stayed in the Führerbunker until the very end.

[00:26:28] After hearing of Mussolini’s gruesome end, with the Soviets just streets away, Hitler committed suicide on the 30th of April, 1945.

[00:26:38] Adolf Hitler, the man whose name has become synonymous with evil, was dead.

[00:26:45] Unlike the subjects of parts one and two of this mini-series, Stalin and Mussolini, the death of Hitler offered more of a clean break with the past, an acknowledgment of the horrors that had been committed under his command, and a shared resolve to never allow them to happen again.

[00:27:06] Clearly, as with any warped belief, there are still those who look back on this man’s life with some form of admiration, but for the vast majority of mankind, the life of Adolf Hitler is looked back on with utter repulsion, hate and disgust. 

[00:27:25] He is a man who organised the industrial slaughter of at least six million Jews, oversaw the deaths of millions of soldiers and civilians across Europe, and left a deep scar on world history.

[00:27:39] It is a truly vile legacy indeed.

[00:27:45] Ok then, that is it for today’s episode on Adolf Hitler, and with that comes the end of our mini-series on European dictators.

[00:27:53] I hope it was an interesting one, and whether you knew a lot about Hitler, Stalin or Mussolini, or this was the first time you’d really dived into their backstories, well I hope you learned something new

[00:28:05] As always, I would love to know what you thought about this episode.

[00:28:09] What particular set of circumstances allowed Hitler to come to power?

[00:28:13] Do you think a Hitler-like figure could ever come to power again? 

[00:28:17] Of the three dictators we’ve discussed in our mini-series, who would you say was the ‘worst’ or most consequential

[00:28:25] I would love to know, so let’s get this discussion started.

[00:28:29] You can head right into our community forum, which is at community.leonardoenglish.com and get chatting away to other curious minds.

[00:28:36] You've been listening to English Learning for Curious Minds, by Leonardo English.

[00:28:41] I'm Alastair Budge, you stay safe, and I'll catch you in the next episode.

[END OF EPISODE]

[00:00:00] Hello, hello hello, and welcome to English Learning for Curious Minds, by Leonardo English.

[00:00:12] The show where you can listen to fascinating stories, and learn weird and wonderful things about the world at the same time as improving your English.

[00:00:21] I'm Alastair Budge, and today it is part three of our three-part mini-series on European dictators.

[00:00:29] In part one it was the Grey Blur, Joseph Stalin. In part two, it was Il Duce, Benito Mussolini.

[00:00:37] And in part three, well you could probably guess, it is the most infamous of them all.

[00:00:42] The man most synonymous with fascism, and the fascist with the most warped of all the worldviews.

[00:00:49] A man who almost conquered Europe, and whose genocidal rage left millions dead.

[00:00:55] The Führer - Adolf Hitler, a man whose name alone is enough to send shudders down the spines of hundreds of millions of people around the world.

[00:01:05] Now, obviously it would be incredibly difficult to give a thorough account of Hitler’s entire life, and it certainly wouldn't be possible in this episode.

[00:01:15] So today, I'm not going to be going into detail with a blow-by-blow account of the Second World War, or the horrors of the Holocaust.

[00:01:23] I’ll give a broad overview of Hitler, focusing on his rise and the key events in his life, but also some insight into the lesser known stuff - who Hitler really was as a man, and some of the more unusual things about him.

[00:01:38] OK then, let’s get right into it and talk about Adolf Hitler.

[00:01:44] On the 30th of April, 1945, the Third Reich was in its final hours.

[00:01:50] Gunfire and explosions filled the air.

[00:01:54] Berlin was burning, the streets a battlezone.

[00:01:59] Waves of Soviet Red Army soldiers poured into the city.

[00:02:04] But they weren't hoping just to deliver the decisive blow and finally end the war that had destroyed Europe for five years - they were looking for someone.

[00:02:15] Nazi Germany’s leader, the Führer, Adolf Hitler, hid in a secret underground bunker 16 metres beneath the German chancellery.

[00:02:26] The Führerbunker, as it was known in German.

[00:02:29] Actually, it wasn’t a bunker so much as it was a complex that contained 18 rooms and was fully self-sufficient, with its own water and electrical supply.

[00:02:41] As the Soviets advanced through Berlin street by street, getting closer to the Führerbunker, Hitler continued to give orders and hold meetings with high-ranking Nazis.

[00:02:53] The day before, on April the 29th, he had married his long-time mistress, Eva Braun, and put together his will and political testament outlining who he wanted to take over when he died.

[00:03:07] But when, and how, would that be?

[00:03:10] Was he sure that the Soviets would capture, and likely torture and kill him? 

[00:03:14] Or was it the news of his ally Benito Mussolini’s gruesome death just hours before that convinced him to do something else? 

[00:03:24] After putting his affairs in order, on the afternoon of the 30th, Hitler enjoyed his last lunch, shook hands with his staff, and retired to his private quarters of the complex with Eva Braun.

[00:03:38] Sometime that afternoon, Adolf Hitler, the man who destroyed mainland Europe and organised the slaughter of millions of Jews, sat down on his sofa with his new wife and swallowed a cyanide capsule.

[00:03:52] To make sure, he shot himself in the head.

[00:03:56] The Führer was dead.

[00:03:58] As the Red Army closed in, Hitler and Braun’s bodies were quickly cremated, or burned, in the garden.

[00:04:05] And just eight days later, on the 8th of May, 1945, the Germans surrendered.

[00:04:12] Much like the subjects of part one and two of this mini-series, it didn’t have to be this way.

[00:04:19] Adolf Hitler was born on the 20th of April, 1889, in Braunau am Inn, a small town in modern day Austria, then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

[00:04:31] He was the fourth of six children born to Alois Hitler and Klara Pölzl, though three of his siblings died in infancy.

[00:04:40] Both his parents came from poor peasant backgrounds, but by the time they were married and had started a family, they lived a comfortable middle class existence. His father Alois was a customs official, a civil servant, and his mother, Klara, a housewife and devout Catholic.

[00:05:00] His father was said to be harsh and distant with the children, but his mother was more loving towards them.

[00:05:08] When Hitler was just three years old, the family moved to Passau, in Germany, and it is thought that Hitler picked up his distinctive Bavarian dialect there.

[00:05:19] The family returned to Austria in 1894, and Hitler attended Volksschule, a state-funded primary school.

[00:05:27] Though the young Hitler was clearly able, or intelligent, he showed little interest in education and left school with a poor academic record.

[00:05:38] He had a tense, difficult, relationship with his father, who wanted him to follow in his footsteps and become a civil servant.

[00:05:47] In fact, Alois Hitler was a violent man who beat his children, and Hitler’s mother often intervened to try and protect them.

[00:05:57] In 1900 his younger brother Edmund died from measles, and his brother, the 11-year-old Adolf, became an increasingly quiet, detached boy who got into conflicts with his father and teachers.

[00:06:11] But when his father died suddenly on the 3rd of January in 1903, when Hitler was 13 years old, his mother allowed him to change schools and forget about a career in the civil service.

[00:06:25] The young Hitler was able to study what he really wanted to, art, and he moved to art school and began to think of himself as a bit of an artist.

[00:06:35] In 1907, when he was 18 years old, he moved to Vienna, filled with dreams of winning a place at the Vienna Academy of Art, but he was rejected.

[00:06:47] Traditionally, historical accounts of Hitler’s time in Vienna depict him as a struggling artist with no income that moved from hostel to hostel.

[00:06:57] But the truth wasn’t quite as simple as that.

[00:07:00] After all, his father had been a civil servant, he came from a middle-class family, and so he was by no means poor. 

[00:07:09] It’s thought that he blew through, he got through, quite a large inheritance while he tried to make it as an artist.

[00:07:17] By the end of 1909, however, he was genuinely running out of money.

[00:07:22] He sold postcards and drawings to survive, but even then, one of his aunts introduced him to a wealthy business partner and he was paid to paint watercolour scenes.

[00:07:34] Now, believe it or not, one of Hitler’s watercolours sold for €130,000 at an auction in Nuremberg back in 2014.

[00:07:45] The price tag, it has to be said, comes from the subsequent reputation of the man who held the paintbrush rather than the artistic quality of the canvas.

[00:07:56] And back in Vienna his paintings weren’t worth quite that much, but the watercolours earned Hitler enough money to live, to survive.

[00:08:06] Like many young Austrians at the time, Hitler identified strongly with a sense of German identity and he likely shared the “casual” anti-semitism that was common to middle-class German nationalism.

[00:08:18] However, Hitler probably had business and personal relationships with Jews in Vienna, and his anti-semitism in those early days was likely a reflection of the general anti-semitism common in society at the time - that is to say, still completely unacceptable by any standards, but nothing like the genocidal anti-semitic ideology he developed after the First World War. 

[00:08:45] And in 1913 he moved to Munich, in southern Germany, to avoid military service for the Habsburg Empire.

[00:08:53] This was made possible due to another inheritance from his father’s estate, and in Munich Hitler’s life largely continued as it had in Vienna - drifting around, surviving on paintings and postcards.

[00:09:08] That is, of course, until the following year, 1914, when world events changed not only Hitler’s life but the direction of European history forever.

[00:09:18] When the First World War began, Hitler volunteered for service in the German army and joined the 16th Bavarian Infantry Regiment. 

[00:09:28] He served as a runner on the Western Front - a particularly dangerous job that involved passing messages between different army units on the front line - and he was awarded an Iron Cross.

[00:09:41] At the time of the armistice, when the First World War officially ended, Hitler was in hospital with temporary blindness caused by a British gas attack.

[00:09:52] Keen to stay in the army even after the war had ended, Hitler joined the Intelligence and Propaganda section where he had his first political training, and became an army informer, spying on smaller political parties.

[00:10:08] He made speeches to the troops championing German nationalism and anti-Socialism, and developed his oratory, his public speaking skills.

[00:10:19] In 1919 he also joined the German Workers’ Party, a far-right, anti-semitic, anti-communist organisation.

[00:10:28] When he left the army in 1920, he took over the publicity and propaganda for the German Workers’ Party and he changed the party’s name to the National Socialist German Workers Party - Nazi for short.

[00:10:44] A year later, in 1921, he challenged Anton Drexler for the leadership of the Nazi party, and eventually Drexler agreed.

[00:10:53] A couple of years later, on the 8th of November 1923, Hitler and the Nazis attempted to overthrow the Bavarian government in a coup d'état that became known as the Beer Hall Putsch.

[00:11:07] After being inspired by Benito Mussolini’s ‘March on Rome’ the year before, Hitler and 2,000 Nazis marched through Munich to the Beer Hall, determined to take over a meeting chaired by important figures in Bavarian politics and ultimately to overthrow the government.

[00:11:25] However, unlike Mussolini, who was one of his early political heroes and the man many consider to be the father of fascism, Hitler’s coup didn’t work.

[00:11:37] The next day as Nazis marched in the streets, police open fire.

[00:11:42] Hitler managed to escape but was captured and served 9 months in Landsberg prison.

[00:11:49] Now, while in prison, he wrote his famous autobiographical book of political ideology, Mein Kampf - or my struggle, in English. 

[00:11:59] But what many people don’t know is that Hitler didn’t actually write the book himself, or at least he wasn’t sitting down at a desk writing it down on endless sheets of paper.

[00:12:11] Rather, he paced around his cell and dictated it - meaning, he said it out loud - to Rudolf Hess, the man who would later rise the Nazi ranks to become the Deputy Führer. 

[00:12:25] As you probably know, in Mein Kampf Hitler expanded on, or explained, his twisted theories on race and ethnic “purity” - that there was a racial hierarchy and the so-called “Aryan race” was superior.

[00:12:42] In order for the Aryan race to fulfil its destiny, Hitler’s logic went, they would need Lebensraum [or living space].

[00:12:51] Germany must, he wrote, invade the land to the east occupied by the “inferior” Slavic peoples including the Sudetenland [or the Czech Republic as it’s now called], Poland and Russia.

[00:13:04] By the time Hitler was released from prison, the German economy had picked up, or improved a little, after a period of terrible economic growth and hyperinflation, and support for more extreme right-wing groups like the Nazis began to die down.

[00:13:22] As Germans began to trust the Weimar Republic again, Hitler got to work reorganising the Nazi Party.

[00:13:30] In 1925 he established the Hitler Youth to organise youngsters, and created the Schutzstaffel - known as the SS, his own paramilitary organisation.

[00:13:44] Members of the SS wore black uniforms - which was likely inspired by Mussolini’s blackshirts - and they swore a personal oath of loyalty to Hitler.

[00:13:55] Over the next couple of years the Nazi party was banned several times, but continued to ramp up, to increase its anti-semitic and anti-communist rhetoric.

[00:14:07] After the failed Beer Hall Putsch, the Nazi party would, Hitler promised, win power through democratic means, and in the late-1920s the Nazi party began building up its propaganda machine and tried to establish a base in northern Germany.

[00:14:24] Now, it’s around this time that things start to get a little strange in Hitler’s personal life, and there’s even a hint of murder mystery.

[00:14:34] In 1928, Hitler’s half-sister, Angela Raubal, and her daughter Geli, moved into Hitler's home.

[00:14:43] Hitler, who was 19 years older than his half-niece, developed something of an obsessive relationship with Geli.

[00:14:51] He was so obsessive that historians have debated for decades, and it has been strongly implied, or suggested, that their relationship was a romantic one.

[00:15:03] Whatever the truth, historians have described Geli as “the only true deep love affair of his life.”

[00:15:10] And as if that wasn’t strange enough, Hitler’s obsessiveness had tragic, and deadly consequences.

[00:15:18] On the 18th of September, 1931, at the age of 23, Geli was found dead in the apartment she shared with Hitler in Munich.

[00:15:28] By her side was Hitler’s pistol.

[00:15:31] But what had happened?

[00:15:33] Well, the official version of events was that Hitler and Geli had argued over her plans to go to Vienna, and that after Hitler had refused to let her leave, she committed suicide

[00:15:46] But it’s a little more mysterious than that.

[00:15:50] At the time, the Munich press reported that Geli’s nose was shattered, and that she had other injuries to her body.

[00:15:58] Had he killed the young girl?

[00:16:00] Now, we must remember that in 1931 Hitler was on the cusp of political power.

[00:16:07] The 1929 Wall St. Crash had plunged the Weimar economy back into crisis, and the political landscape was ripe, it was ready, for extreme views.

[00:16:19] Hitler wanted to take advantage of this, and a murder scandal would have likely ruined his career and rise to power.

[00:16:28] In fact, we now know that Nazi officials even discussed a replacement for Hitler, should the scandal get out of hand.

[00:16:37] So it’s little surprise, therefore, that the Nazi party pressued the public prosecutor not to investigate, and that Geli’s body was given a very quick post-mortem.

[00:16:49] The incident was quickly ruled suicide, and Geli’s body was taken down the back stairs of the police station and taken to Vienna to be buried before the press even got wind of it, before they heard the news.

[00:17:02] Very mysterious indeed - and one can’t help but wonder how different Hitler’s career and German and European history would have been if there had been a proper investigation into Geli Raubal’s death.

[00:17:15] Now, regardless of what happened, the incident sent Hitler into a depression so bad that one historian believes that “With the exception of his mother’s death… no other event in his personal life had hit him so hard.”

[00:17:30] Clearly, it’s hard to have any compassion for the man, when one knows what he would go on to do, and this event wouldn’t have any effect on his political career, as his Nazi party continued its rise to power.

[00:17:44] Around a year before Geli’s death, in September of 1930, the Nazi party had enjoyed large electoral gains and increased its number of representatives in parliament from 14 to 107, making Hitler the leader of the second biggest political party in Germany.

[00:18:03] In 1932 Hitler came second in the presidential elections, and the Nazis were firmly established in the political mainstream - benefitting from political instability and another spike, or increase, in unemployment.

[00:18:18] In July of that year the Nazis became the largest party in the Reichstag, and after political negotiating and maneuvering throughout the rest of 1932, Hitler emerged as Chancellor in January of 1933.

[00:18:34] The Nazis now had a third of the seats in the Reichstag, and with more elections coming up in Feburary of 1933, the German Reichstag was destroyed by a fire. 

[00:18:46] Now, historians are almost certain that the Nazis organised the blaze, but the fire allowed them to blame the Communists and tighten their grip on power.

[00:18:57] And Hitler wasted no time. 

[00:19:00] The Enabling Act, which was passed in March 1933, effectively made Hitler a dictator, and all other political parties and trade unions were banned. 

[00:19:11] Adolf Hitler, the shy Austrian boy who painted watercolours, had risen to the very top of German politics and stolen power.

[00:19:21] And he had ambitious, deadly plans.

[00:19:25] Now, clearly the 1930s and lead up to the Second World War was a period of intense activity, far too much to do justice to here, so we are going to skip over the key events. 

[00:19:38] Instead, we’ll deal with a couple of interesting points about Hitler the man from this period.

[00:19:44] One is an assassination attempt, and the other a theory about Hitler’s drug use.

[00:19:51] The most important thing to underline about Hitler’s foreign policy during the 1930s was that he was immediately on a war footing - that is to say, he was preparing Germany for war.

[00:20:04] In October of 1933 Hitler withdrew Germany from the League of Nations and cast aside, or ignored, the restrictions placed on the German military by the Treaty of Versailles and he tripled the size of the army.

[00:20:19] In June of 1934, he further tightened his grip on the Nazi party and eliminated his remaining enemies with a move that became known as the Night of the Long Knives.

[00:20:32] In 1935 he began rearming Germany and military conscription was introduced.

[00:20:39] Hitler, it became clear to everyone across Europe, was ready for war.

[00:20:44] Domestically, he was also setting the wheels in motion for his mass-persecution of Jews, homosexuals, Roma, and anyone who didn’t fit into his idea of the perfect “Aryan” society.

[00:20:58] In November of 1938, the infamous Kristallnacht took place across Germany.

[00:21:05] Jewish shops and synagogues were burnt down, and 30,000 Jewish men were rounded up and taken to concentration camps. 

[00:21:15] This was just the start of what would have become known as the the Holocaust, which is clearly far too important a subject to try to do justice to in a short section of this episode.

[00:21:27] Internationally, he was itching for war.

[00:21:30] Despite signing agreements not to, he sent his army abroad. 

[00:21:35] Nazi forces occupied part of modern day Czech Republic called the Sudetenland, in 1938.

[00:21:42] And then in September 1939 Germany invaded Poland, which resulted in a full declaration of war between the UK and France on Germany.

[00:21:53] The Nazis went on to occupy Denmark, Norway, Holland, Belgium, France, Romania and Yugoslavia, and in 1941 they invaded Russia - a mistake that would prove to be the beginning of the end for the Nazis, and Hitler.

[00:22:11] Now, as we heard in part one, on Stalin, after sacrificing as many as a million men at the Battle of Stalingrad, the Soviets pushed the Germans all the way back to Berlin and the Führerbunker in 1945.

[00:22:26] Now, the details of the war and the Holocaust are well-known, but I want to touch on two elements of life within Hitler’s personal circle.

[00:22:36] As Hitler’s genocidal rage wreaked havoc across Europe, killing millions and slaughtering Jews, some in the Nazi party thoughts things - and Hitler specifically - were getting a bit out of control.

[00:22:50] That’s why, in July of 1944, a German Army officer named Claus Von Stauffenberg placed a bomb in a briefcase under a table in Hitler’s headquarters, with the aim of blowing the man to smithereens.

[00:23:06] During a meeting between Hitler and top Nazis, the bomb exploded, killing one person, but Hitler survived.

[00:23:15] As you might expect, Hitler purged the party of anyone even remotely suspected of being involved.

[00:23:22] Though the assassination attempt, which became known as Operation Valkyrie, wasn’t successful, it highlights the fact that there were those in the Nazi party that felt Hitler had lost control.

[00:23:35] Now, why might that be?

[00:23:38] Well, the obvious answer is that he was clearly a brutal genocidal maniac, but in recent years another interesting theory about Hitler has emerged, and it concerns his drug use.

[00:23:50] Was the Führer a drug addict?

[00:23:53] In autumn of 1941 as the war began to turn against the Nazis, Hitler had fallen ill.

[00:24:01] He was so ill, in fact, that he couldn't go to a military briefing - this was something that never happened.

[00:24:09] That day, his doctor gave him an opiate and a hormone injection for the first time.

[00:24:15] Unsurprisingly, Hitler felt much better and he was able to attend the briefing.

[00:24:21] And he was very impressed by this magical recovery drug, which was an opiate called Dolantin. 

[00:24:28] From then on, Hitler asked his doctor for more and more of it, and between 1941 and the winter of 1944 Hitler's drug abuse increased massively, with him reportedly relying on a cocktail of opiates and cocaine.

[00:24:46] His dependence got so bad, in fact, that he developed a severe tremor, or shake.

[00:24:53] You can actually see this if you look at footage of Hitler in the latter stages of the war, where his hands and entire body are shaking so violently that even the Nazi propaganda machine couldn’t hide it.

[00:25:08] Some historians believe that Hitler could have been suffering from Parkinson's disease, but severe tremors are also a symptom of drug withdrawal.

[00:25:18] We already know that some Nazis felt Hitler was out of control, but was this partly down to drug addiction?

[00:25:25] Was he making war decisions while high on cocaine and opiates?

[00:25:30] It’s certainly an interesting theory, and could partly explain Hitler’s manic behaviour and refusal to stop the war until the last moment, preferring to destroy Europe than make peace.

[00:25:43] There are clearly many other reasons for his behaviour and downfall, and one that I should mention is his extreme paranoia and his refusal to trust his generals to make military decisions without consulting him first. 

[00:25:57] When you are fighting literally a world war, you can’t do everything yourself, and this is believed to be a major reason why the German army was eventually defeated.

[00:26:07] So, all of this takes us back to Berlin, in 1945.

[00:26:13] In January the Soviets began their assault on Germany, and by April they reached Berlin.

[00:26:21] As we know from the start of this episode, Hitler stayed in the Führerbunker until the very end.

[00:26:28] After hearing of Mussolini’s gruesome end, with the Soviets just streets away, Hitler committed suicide on the 30th of April, 1945.

[00:26:38] Adolf Hitler, the man whose name has become synonymous with evil, was dead.

[00:26:45] Unlike the subjects of parts one and two of this mini-series, Stalin and Mussolini, the death of Hitler offered more of a clean break with the past, an acknowledgment of the horrors that had been committed under his command, and a shared resolve to never allow them to happen again.

[00:27:06] Clearly, as with any warped belief, there are still those who look back on this man’s life with some form of admiration, but for the vast majority of mankind, the life of Adolf Hitler is looked back on with utter repulsion, hate and disgust. 

[00:27:25] He is a man who organised the industrial slaughter of at least six million Jews, oversaw the deaths of millions of soldiers and civilians across Europe, and left a deep scar on world history.

[00:27:39] It is a truly vile legacy indeed.

[00:27:45] Ok then, that is it for today’s episode on Adolf Hitler, and with that comes the end of our mini-series on European dictators.

[00:27:53] I hope it was an interesting one, and whether you knew a lot about Hitler, Stalin or Mussolini, or this was the first time you’d really dived into their backstories, well I hope you learned something new

[00:28:05] As always, I would love to know what you thought about this episode.

[00:28:09] What particular set of circumstances allowed Hitler to come to power?

[00:28:13] Do you think a Hitler-like figure could ever come to power again? 

[00:28:17] Of the three dictators we’ve discussed in our mini-series, who would you say was the ‘worst’ or most consequential

[00:28:25] I would love to know, so let’s get this discussion started.

[00:28:29] You can head right into our community forum, which is at community.leonardoenglish.com and get chatting away to other curious minds.

[00:28:36] You've been listening to English Learning for Curious Minds, by Leonardo English.

[00:28:41] I'm Alastair Budge, you stay safe, and I'll catch you in the next episode.

[END OF EPISODE]