Reinhard Heydrich
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Born in Halle an der Saale, Saxony-Anhalt, to composer Richard Bruno Heydrich, a staunch anti-Semite and racist, Heydrich was known at school for being an excellent pupil, with impressive skills in violin and fencing. As he was far too young during the [[Weltkrieg]] to enlist, the young man flaterred his strong nationalist feelings by joining various paramilitary, anticommunist and antisemetic groups. Then he joined the Kaiserliche Marine in 1921, the Weltkrieg ended before he was affected to a ship: naval cadet Heydrich saw no combat. Based in Kiel as a cadet, he advanced in 1926 to the rank of second lieutenant and was assigned as a signals officer on the battleship Schleswig Holstein. However, in 1930, he had an affair with the daughter of a shipyard director and cheated her by announcing his engagement with another woman; the shipyard director was friend of Admiral [[Erich Raeder]]. A formal complaint was lodged against Heydrich for insulting the honor of a young woman. He was charged with "conduct unbecoming to an officer and a gentleman" and an investigation ensued. Heydrich was called before a court of honor and he protested his innocence and accused the woman of lying. His attitude was so disdainful that the court admonished him for insubordination. Though he was exonerated, the officers demanded that he be cashiered for "conduct unbecoming a naval officer". In April 1931, admiral Erich Raeder sentenced Heydrich to "dismissal for impropriety." Heydrich was devastated, but he remained engaged to Lina von Osten, who is now his wife. He then emigrated to the [[United Baltic Duchy]] as a settler, establishing himself in Reval, where he became close to the local Pan-Germanists. Seducing the local members of the Grossdeutsche Volkspartei, and helped by his relations in Germany itself, he quickly became president of the local party, arosing in Baltic politics (most of the German settlers being convinced nationalists and Pan-Germanists) and even becoming a potential Prime Minister to the Duke [[Adolf Friedrich]]. | Born in Halle an der Saale, Saxony-Anhalt, to composer Richard Bruno Heydrich, a staunch anti-Semite and racist, Heydrich was known at school for being an excellent pupil, with impressive skills in violin and fencing. As he was far too young during the [[Weltkrieg]] to enlist, the young man flaterred his strong nationalist feelings by joining various paramilitary, anticommunist and antisemetic groups. Then he joined the Kaiserliche Marine in 1921, the Weltkrieg ended before he was affected to a ship: naval cadet Heydrich saw no combat. Based in Kiel as a cadet, he advanced in 1926 to the rank of second lieutenant and was assigned as a signals officer on the battleship Schleswig Holstein. However, in 1930, he had an affair with the daughter of a shipyard director and cheated her by announcing his engagement with another woman; the shipyard director was friend of Admiral [[Erich Raeder]]. A formal complaint was lodged against Heydrich for insulting the honor of a young woman. He was charged with "conduct unbecoming to an officer and a gentleman" and an investigation ensued. Heydrich was called before a court of honor and he protested his innocence and accused the woman of lying. His attitude was so disdainful that the court admonished him for insubordination. Though he was exonerated, the officers demanded that he be cashiered for "conduct unbecoming a naval officer". In April 1931, admiral Erich Raeder sentenced Heydrich to "dismissal for impropriety." Heydrich was devastated, but he remained engaged to Lina von Osten, who is now his wife. He then emigrated to the [[United Baltic Duchy]] as a settler, establishing himself in Reval, where he became close to the local Pan-Germanists. Seducing the local members of the Grossdeutsche Volkspartei, and helped by his relations in Germany itself, he quickly became president of the local party, arosing in Baltic politics (most of the German settlers being convinced nationalists and Pan-Germanists) and even becoming a potential Prime Minister to the Duke [[Adolf Friedrich]]. | ||
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+ | In December 1930 Heydrich met Lina Mathilde von Osten (Borned 14 June 1911). She was the daughter of Jürgen von Osten, a minor German aristocrat. They were married on 26 December 1931 in Großenbrode. The couple has two children. According to historian Jaroslav Čvančara, Heydrich had an additional child with a mistress, a leader of League of German Girls. | ||
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+ | Heydrich has two children: Klaus, born in 1933; Heider, born in 1934; | ||
[[Category:People]] [[Category:German-related topics]] [[Category:National-Populism]] | [[Category:People]] [[Category:German-related topics]] [[Category:National-Populism]] |
Current revision as of 17:03, 14 August 2008
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Reinhard Tristan Eugen Heydrich (born on March, 7 1904 in Halle an der Saale, Germany) is a German politician and settler in the United Baltic Duchy. He is the president of the local branch of the Pan-Germanist Grossdeutsche Volkspartei and a major figure in Baltic German politics.
Biography
Born in Halle an der Saale, Saxony-Anhalt, to composer Richard Bruno Heydrich, a staunch anti-Semite and racist, Heydrich was known at school for being an excellent pupil, with impressive skills in violin and fencing. As he was far too young during the Weltkrieg to enlist, the young man flaterred his strong nationalist feelings by joining various paramilitary, anticommunist and antisemetic groups. Then he joined the Kaiserliche Marine in 1921, the Weltkrieg ended before he was affected to a ship: naval cadet Heydrich saw no combat. Based in Kiel as a cadet, he advanced in 1926 to the rank of second lieutenant and was assigned as a signals officer on the battleship Schleswig Holstein. However, in 1930, he had an affair with the daughter of a shipyard director and cheated her by announcing his engagement with another woman; the shipyard director was friend of Admiral Erich Raeder. A formal complaint was lodged against Heydrich for insulting the honor of a young woman. He was charged with "conduct unbecoming to an officer and a gentleman" and an investigation ensued. Heydrich was called before a court of honor and he protested his innocence and accused the woman of lying. His attitude was so disdainful that the court admonished him for insubordination. Though he was exonerated, the officers demanded that he be cashiered for "conduct unbecoming a naval officer". In April 1931, admiral Erich Raeder sentenced Heydrich to "dismissal for impropriety." Heydrich was devastated, but he remained engaged to Lina von Osten, who is now his wife. He then emigrated to the United Baltic Duchy as a settler, establishing himself in Reval, where he became close to the local Pan-Germanists. Seducing the local members of the Grossdeutsche Volkspartei, and helped by his relations in Germany itself, he quickly became president of the local party, arosing in Baltic politics (most of the German settlers being convinced nationalists and Pan-Germanists) and even becoming a potential Prime Minister to the Duke Adolf Friedrich.
Family
In December 1930 Heydrich met Lina Mathilde von Osten (Borned 14 June 1911). She was the daughter of Jürgen von Osten, a minor German aristocrat. They were married on 26 December 1931 in Großenbrode. The couple has two children. According to historian Jaroslav Čvančara, Heydrich had an additional child with a mistress, a leader of League of German Girls.
Heydrich has two children: Klaus, born in 1933; Heider, born in 1934;