NAME Adolf Hitler (If his father had not changed the family name in 1877, he would have been known as Adolf Schicklgruber.)
WHAT FAMOUS FOR Adolf Hitler is infamous as the leader of Nazi Germany, serving as Chancellor (1933–1945) and Führer (1934–1945). He was the central figure behind the Second World War in Europe and the Holocaust, the systematic murder of six million Jews and millions of other victims. His regime is widely regarded as one of the most destructive and murderous in human history.
A stone monument erected near his birthplace in 1989 bears the inscription:
“For Peace, Freedom & Democracy – Never Again Fascism – Millions of dead are a warning.”
BIRTH Adolf Hitler was born on April 20, 1889, in Braunau am Inn, a small town in Austria-Hungary (present-day Austria), close to the border with the German Empire.
FAMILY BACKGROUND Hitler was the fourth of six children born to Alois Hitler (1837–1903), a petty clerk in the Austrian Customs Service, and Klara Pölzl, Alois’ niece and third wife. Klara was a simple, uneducated Bavarian woman, and the marriage was reportedly unhappy.
Of Alois and Klara’s six children, only Adolf and his younger sister Paula survived into adulthood. Klara had previously lost three children in infancy and was reportedly fearful of losing Adolf as well, pinning many of her hopes on him. She seriously considered an abortion during her pregnancy with Adolf but was persuaded against it by her doctor.
Alois Hitler also had two children—Alois Jr. and Angela—from his second marriage.
In Mein Kampf, Hitler described his father as an irascible tyrant, though historians note that Alois’ strictness was not unusual for the time. Hitler later summarized the relationship with the phrase:
“My father I respected, my mother I loved.”
Alois Hitler died suddenly on January 3, 1903, when Adolf was 13. Klara Hitler died painfully of breast cancer on December 21, 1907, an event that deeply affected her son.
CHILDHOOD As a child, Hitler survived a near-drowning incident at age four, when he was pulled from a river by a local priest. A Jewish-Austrian doctor treated Hitler’s family without charge due to their financial hardship; years later, Hitler reportedly had this doctor protected and referred to him as a “Noble Jew.”
The same doctor was reportedly concerned about Adolf’s mental state and frequent nightmares and recommended that he be sent to a children’s mental home in Vienna—an idea that was never carried out.
The Hitler family moved frequently during Adolf's early years. In 1893, they relocated to Leonding near Linz, Austria, where Hitler acquired the distinctive lower Bavarian dialect that marked his speech throughout his life. The family returned permanently to Leonding in 1898.
Hitler was deeply affected by the death of his younger brother Edmund from measles in 1900, which transformed him from a confident, outgoing student into a morose, detached boy who constantly fought with his father and teachers. His sister Paula recalled that Adolf was a teenage bully who would often slap her.
At age eight, Hitler took singing lessons and sang in the church choir, briefly considering becoming a priest.
Following his father’s death in 1903 and his mother’s in 1907, he moved to Vienna, where he spent several years in poverty, often living in homeless shelters.
EDUCATION Hitler performed well in elementary school but struggled after entering secondary education. In 1900–1901, his first year at the Realschule in Linz, he failed completely and had to repeat the year. Teachers remarked that he showed “no desire to work.”
Hitler later claimed this was a form of rebellion against his father, who wanted him to become a customs official, while Adolf aspired to be an artist.
Notably, Adolf Hitler and Austrian philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein attended the same Linz Realschule between 1903 and 1904. Though Hitler was six days older, they were two grades apart—Hitler repeating a year and Wittgenstein having been advanced.
After Alois's sudden death in January 1903, Hitler's school performance deteriorated further, though his mother allowed him to leave. He enrolled at the Realschule in Steyr in September 1904, where his behavior and performance improved temporarily.
In 1905, after passing a repeat of the final exam, Hitler left school without ambitions for further education or clear career plans.
In 1907, he moved to Vienna to study fine art, financed by orphan's benefits and his mother's support, but was rejected twice by the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. The director suggested he apply to the School of Architecture, but Hitler lacked the necessary academic credentials.
CAREER RECORD Before his political career, Hitler lived as a struggling artist in Vienna and Munich. He worked as a casual laborer and sold his paintings and postcards to survive. In 1913, he moved to Germany.
1914-1918 During World War I, he served as a dispatch runner in the 16th Bavarian Reserve Infantry Regiment.
1921 Hitler became chairman (Vorsitzender) of the National Socialist German Workers’ Party (NSDAP) on July 29, 1921.
1933 Appointed German Chancellor in a Nazi-Nationalist coalition on January 30, 1933 by President Paul von Hindenburg.
1934 After Hindenburg’s death on August 2, 1934, Hitler merged the offices of President and Chancellor, assuming the title Führer und Reichskanzler.
1939 Hitler’s invasion of Poland triggered Britain and France to declare war on Germany on September 3, 1939.
APPEARANCE Hitler stood approximately 5'9" (175 cm), which was slightly above average height for German and Austrian men of his generation. He had brown hair, which he parted to one side, and distinctive pale, clear blue eyes that many described as having a hypnotic quality. His eyes were physically prominent—large and slightly bulging—and he deliberately used them for dramatic effect, often fixing visitors with what he imagined to be a penetrating gaze. (1)
He was reportedly short-sighted, though no photographs of him wearing spectacles were published during his lifetime, likely because he believed glasses weakened his authority and visual symbolism.
There are persistent claims that Hitler was left-handed, though most historical evidence suggests he was right-handed; the idea continues partly due to pop-culture references, including a scene in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade in which a fictionalised Hitler signs an autograph with his right hand.
FASHION care. In the 1920s, he often wore traditional Bavarian lederhosen on mountain walks—an outfit he genuinely liked and which later became fashionable among right-wing nationalist circles. After becoming Chancellor in 1933, however, he banned all images of himself in shorts, deciding they made him look provincial and were “beneath one’s dignity.” (1)
By around 1930, his standard public outfit had settled into the familiar brown Nazi Party shirt and jacket, paired with brown trousers and insignia. In 1932, more formal elements such as braided shoulder boards and collar rank insignia were added. After 1934, he adjusted the uniform slightly for occasion, pairing the brown shirt with either black or brown trousers depending on formality. Many of his most famous speeches were delivered in this brown-shirt uniform, deliberately evoking a militarized image.
From 1 September 1939 until the end of the Second World War, Hitler wore almost exclusively a field-grey uniform, reinforcing his self-presentation as a frontline soldier rather than a civilian politician. The jacket was intentionally austere, featuring only silver buttons and lacking braid, epaulettes, or decorative flourishes. He avoided bourgeois formalwear such as morning dress or evening dress altogether, preferring the familiarity and symbolism of uniform.
Publicly, he cultivated a disciplined, authoritarian look—most often seen in tailored military tunics, sometimes complemented by an ankle-length leather coat and highly polished jackboots in cold weather or on formal occasions. Privately or while on holiday, however, he reportedly reverted to lederhosen, a sharp contrast to his rigid public image.
Hitler also suffered from excessive sweating, particularly during long speeches, and frequently changed clothes between appearances. He became fascinated with the logistics of rapid outfit changes, rehearsing them with the help of a valet to minimize time out of public view.
CHARACTER Psychological assessments portray Hitler as a deeply disturbed and highly complex figure. Analysts have noted extreme narcissism, with Hitler viewing himself as a messianic figure chosen to redeem Germany and reshape history. This self-image fed into pronounced paranoid tendencies: he routinely suspected conspiracies against him, trusted only a narrow inner circle, and demanded unwavering personal loyalty.
He also exhibited obsessive and compulsive traits, including rigid daily routines and an unusual concern with order and cleanliness. A striking feature of his personality was a profound absence of empathy. He spoke with chilling detachment about mass death and showed little evidence of moral concern for the suffering his policies caused.
Control was central to his psychology. Hitler demonstrated an obsessive need to dominate decision-making, particularly during the war, where he increasingly micromanaged military operations despite lacking professional training. Over time, this behavior became more erratic, accompanied by emotional volatility, sudden rages, and a growing disconnection from reality in his final years.
Contemporary accounts and later analyses consistently describe him as impulsive, egocentric, aggressive, emotionally cold, and unempathetic. He was known to hold grudges, react badly to criticism, demand constant attention, and show little capacity for gratitude—traits that further reinforced his isolation and authoritarian rule.
SPEAKING VOICE Privately, Hitler spoke in a relatively soft, controlled Austrian-accented German. Publicly, however, he adopted a highly theatrical speaking style, carefully rehearsed and increasingly aggressive in tone. He spent hours at a time in front of a mirror practising his expressions and gestures for his rabble raising oratory. Hitler's speeches were designed to build gradually from calm exposition to emotional frenzy, a technique that became central to Nazi mass rallies.
One contemporary observer described Hitler’s oratory power in near-religious terms, recalling that his speeches exerted a magnetic pull over audiences, creating a sense of collective exaltation akin to religious conversion.
SENSE OF HUMOUR Hitler’s sense of humour was limited and often crude. He enjoyed slapstick, physical comedy, and mocking impressions of his political enemies, particularly in private settings. He was reportedly amused by repetition and caricature rather than wit, and those around him often laughed more out of obligation than genuine amusement.
Historical records suggest he found amusement in intimidating others—one documented instance involves him screaming for a general during negotiations with the Austrian Chancellor, then laughingly claiming he was only "joking". (2)
RELATIONSHIPS Hitler’s personal relationships were marked by manipulation, emotional distance, and control. His longest and most significant relationship was with Eva Braun, his companion for sixteen years, whom he married on April 29, 1945, one day before their joint suicide. Braun met Hitler in 1929, when she was 17 and working as an assistant to his personal photographer. Throughout their relationship, she largely conformed to his rigid ideal of womanhood, enduring behavior described by contemporaries as manipulative, calculating, and emotionally harsh.
Hitler treated Braun with consistent indifference, only beginning to acknowledge her importance after her second suicide attempt. Although he built a residence for her at the Berghof, she remained excluded from public life and could appear in public only with his permission. Materially, he provided generously—supplying her with a villa, a Mercedes, and household staff—but emotionally he remained distant. Braun’s diary entries, released by American intelligence in 1945, depict a relationship defined by neglect and disappointment, including an instance in which Hitler forgot her birthday when she hoped he might give her a dachshund.
His difficulties with intimacy extended beyond Braun. Hitler struggled to form healthy relationships with women generally, whom he idealized as fragile and innocent figures to be sheltered from the world. His personal connections largely served his own psychological needs, with Braun often described by historians as a surrogate maternal figure, filling the emotional void left by his mother’s death.
He also maintained an unusually close relationship with his niece, Geli Raubal, who lived with him in his Munich apartment. In 1931, Raubal died from a gunshot wound using Hitler’s pistol. Although Munich police ruled the death a suicide, the circumstances caused scandal within Nazi circles. While later speculation has suggested alternative explanations, no conclusive evidence has emerged to overturn the original finding.
Beyond romantic attachments, Hitler cultivated intense personal loyalties within cultural and ideological circles. He was closely connected to the Wagner family, particularly Winifred Wagner, to whom he twice proposed marriage after her husband’s death. She declined, citing his lack of social standing at the time. Wagner’s children referred to him affectionately as “Uncle Wolf,” a nickname commonly used within his inner circle.
He admired American industrialist Henry Ford, frequently praising him in speeches, keeping his portrait, and sending him birthday gifts. Ford’s antisemitic writings were particularly influential on Hitler’s worldview.
MONEY AND FAME Despite cultivating an image of asceticism, Hitler became extremely wealthy through book royalties (Mein Kampf), the use of his image on German postage stamps, gifts, and state privileges. He owned a large estate (the Berghof) and a fleet of Mercedes-Benz cars. Hitler paid little or no tax and lived at public expense while presenting himself as a servant of the nation.
Hitler's fame—or infamy—was global, making him the central figure of World War II and the Holocaust. He remains one of history's most studied and reviled individuals.
FOOD AND DRINK During his impoverished years in Vienna before World War I, Adolf Hitler survived largely on bread, milk, and butter. As an occasional indulgence, he would prepare a large plate of rice and milk, heavily covered in sugar and grated chocolate.
Hitler had a marked sweet tooth. Staff and associates recalled that he had a “perpetual, ferocious craving” for cakes, pastries, biscuits and pralines, sometimes consuming up to around two pounds of chocolates or pralines a day and even spooning extra sugar into wine or tea. (3)
His maid and other domestic staff described a nightly “Führer cake” (an apple cake with nuts and raisins) left out for him, plus a strong liking for chocolate biscuits and scones with sweetened tea, which he would often eat late at night or between meetings
From 1942 onward, Hitler followed a vegetarian diet, though accounts of his pre-war dietary habits are inconsistent. He eliminated meat, rich food, and milk from his diet, relying instead on vegetables and whole grains. A typical day's consumption included eggs prepared various ways, spaghetti, baked potatoes with cottage cheese, oatmeal, stewed fruits, and vegetable puddings.
Hitler occasionally relished a slice of ham and relieved the tediousness of his diet with delicacies like caviar. He continued to eat a favorite Austrian dish, Leberknödl (liver dumplings). Eva Braun, however, was fond of turtle soup and would direct that midnight snacks of turtle soup, sandwiches, and sausages be prepared. (4)
Hitler was a strict teetotaler for most of his adult life, a stance he traced to a humiliating episode in his youth when he became severely intoxicated and vomited uncontrollably. Alcohol was avoided almost entirely, though he occasionally drank light champagne on rare ceremonial occasions, such as celebrating military victories.
He did not smoke, leading one of the first major anti-smoking campaigns.
MUSIC AND ARTS Music played a significant role in Hitler’s inner life. Richard Wagner’s operas were a lifelong obsession, and Hitler claimed that during his penniless youth he saw Tristan und Isolde dozens of times. He made annual pilgrimages to the Wagner festival in Bayreuth, elevating the composer's works to the status of hymns in his cult of personality.
He later relaxed by listening to 78 rpm records, with Anton Bruckner’s symphonies ranking just behind Wagner as favorites.
Hitler was a habitual whistler and was known to regularly whistle Disney’s “Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf?”—a choice possibly linked to his fondness for his self-styled “Wolf” nickname.
For several years in Vienna, Hitler lived as a marginal, struggling artist, earning a meagre income by copying postcard images and selling small watercolour scenes to tourists and shopkeepers. It was an obscure and largely unremarkable existence that came before his political radicalisation.
He later developed an intense hostility toward modern art, which he viewed as a corrosive force undermining German culture. In 1937, he personally orchestrated the notorious “Degenerate Art” exhibition, assembling works he deemed decadent and un-German, including German Expressionism and pieces by artists such as Picasso. The exhibition was followed by a systematic purge of modern art from German museums.
The irony was stark: Hitler himself was a failed and untrained artist. Rejected twice by the Vienna Academy of Fine Arts, largely for his inability to convincingly depict the human figure, he continued to produce stiff architectural watercolours that avoided people almost entirely. Despite—or because of—this contradiction, interest in his artwork has remained strong. On November 18, 2014, a watercolour of Munich’s Old Town Hall, believed to date from around 1913, sold at a German auction for €130,000.
In one revealing anecdote, a modern art critic once evaluated Hitler’s paintings without knowing who had made them, calling them “quite good” technically, while remarking that the treatment of human figures suggested a striking lack of interest in people—an observation that, in hindsight, feels unsettlingly apt.
Hitler watched a great many films at the Berghof and elsewhere, often several in one evening, and followed both German and some foreign movies closely. A close associate, Ernst Hanfstaengl, later claimed that King Kong (1933) was one of Hitler’s favourite films and that Hitler had it screened multiple times.
After his suicide in April 1945, the two films found in the Führerbunker were both Sherlock Holmes adventures: The Hound of the Baskervilles and The Man Who Was Sherlock Holmes. (5)
Extensive 16mm colour home movies of Hitler, Eva Braun, and the Berghof circle were shot; they survive and have been widely reused in post‑war documentaries, and most of the filming was done by Braun and others in Hitler’s entourage.
LITERATURE Hitler was an avid reader and had an extensive library of over 16,000 volumes. His favorites included the adventure novels of Karl May, military history, and works on architecture and racial theory. He interacted aggressively with books, often scrawling furious exclamation marks in the margins when passages aligned—or conflicted—with his views.
His primary work, Mein Kampf ("My Struggle"), was dictated during his imprisonment in Landsberg Prison following the failed Beer Hall Putsch. The book outlined his political ideology, antisemitism, and plans for German expansion. He also wrote a unpublished follow-up manuscript addressing his thoughts on death and destiny.
NATURE Hitler's favored retreat was at Obersalzberg, on the northern slope of the Hoher Göll in Bavaria. In 1935, he had a house built there, which became a central location for both relaxation and political meetings. When vacationing in the Bavarian Alps with Eva Braun, the pair would take walks, attend tea gatherings, and socialize with senior Nazi officials.
PETS While serving in World War I, Hitler adopted a a stray white Fox Terrier he named “Little Fox,” teaching it tricks to entertain fellow soldiers.
Hitler was particularly fond of German Shepherds, which he saw as embodying Germanic virtues. His most famous pet was Blondi, a German Shepherd given to him as a puppy by Martin Bormann in 1941. Hitler was very fond of Blondi, keeping her by his side and allowing her to sleep in his bedroom in the bunker. He personally trained Blondi to perform tricks, including climbing ladders
Blondi had a litter of five puppies in 1945, one of which was named "Wulf," Hitler's favorite nickname.
In the final days of the Third Reich, Blondi was used to test the effectiveness of cyanide capsules. After witnessing the dog’s death on April 29, 1945, Hitler used the same poison on himself.
Before Blondi, Hitler owned two German Shepherd bitches both named Blonda (mother and daughter). He also owned other dogs including Bella, purchased in 1942.
HOBBIES AND SPORTS Hitler's hobbies were largely sedentary and intellectual rather than athletic. He enjoyed watching films, particularly Hollywood productions including Mickey Mouse cartoons, which were screened regularly at the Berghof.
He spent considerable time reviewing architectural models of planned buildings for Berlin, Linz, and other cities, even late in the war.
Hitler was fascinated by automobiles and in 1934 helped spark “Beetlemania” by commissioning Ferdinand Porsche to design the Volkswagen as an affordable “people’s car.” He owned multiple Mercedes-Benz vehicles, including a custom touring car with a hydraulically raised seat so he could be seen more easily during parades. This vehicle is now housed at the Larz Anderson Auto Museum in Boston. Due to heavy armor plating, his cars averaged only about three miles per gallon.
His personal yacht, the Aviso Grille, was crewed by 230 men. Hitler envisioned using it to sail to London in 1940 to accept Britain’s surrender—a plan that never materialized.
He did not participate in sports, considering it unseemly for a leader to engage in physical activities that other prisoners participated in during his incarceration. His lifestyle became increasingly sedentary, contributing to his decision to adopt vegetarianism to control his weight.
Hitler could not swim, despite frequent stays near lakes and mountain retreats. However, during his long periods at his Obersalzberg retreat he took regular long walks in the surrounding mountains.
Hitler and the regime poured enormous resources into turning the 1936 Olympics, held in Berlin, (and Riefenstahl’s Olympia) into a propaganda stage for Nazi Germany and its supposed Aryan physical “superiority.” Jesse Owens’s four gold medals and overall Black American success undercut Nazi racial mythology and created a propaganda embarrassment, even though Germany still topped the medal table and Nazi film/editing tried to downplay Owens.
SCIENCE AND MATHS Hitler distrusted modern scientific thought when it conflicted with his racial worldview, rejecting disciplines such as genetics and anthropology when they contradicted Nazi racial doctrine.
Under his rule, science was subordinated to ideology: research was encouraged only insofar as it served military expansion, racial policy, or propaganda. The regime promoted pseudo-scientific racial theories while suppressing or expelling Jewish and politically unreliable scientists—ironically accelerating scientific advancement elsewhere, notably in Britain and the United States.
Hitler personally deferred technical matters to specialists when it suited him, but routinely overruled military engineers and scientists with intuition and ideology, particularly during World War II, often with disastrous consequences.
The Nazi ideology promoted "Aryan mathematics" emphasizing geometry and probability theory while denouncing abstract axiomatics as "Franco-Jewish". The University of Göttingen, which had been the world's leading mathematics department, was destroyed as Jewish mathematicians were persecuted, exiled, or murdered. Hitler's policies caused a massive brain drain, with luminaries like Albert Einstein, John von Neumann, and Kurt Gödel fleeing Germany. The focus of the mathematical world shifted to the United States and Canada as a result.
PHILOSOPHY & THEOLOGY Hitler was raised Catholic but steadily abandoned Christianity, replacing it with a belief system rooted in nationalism, racial struggle, and a mythologized vision of German destiny. He came to believe that Christianity was a religion fit only for the lowest of the low and detested its ethics. By 1919, he had rejected Christian ethics altogether, framing Germany’s future instead as a process of “regeneration” through National Socialism.
Hitler’s worldview combined crude Social Darwinism with Germanic mythology and racial pseudoscience. He viewed life as a perpetual struggle between races for survival and dominance, with the so-called “Aryan” race cast as history’s rightful rulers. Having discarded his Catholic upbringing, he possessed no coherent theological framework. Instead, the Nazi movement cultivated a quasi-religious cult of personality around him, with party rituals and symbolism effectively substituting for traditional religious practice.
The music and ideas of Richard Wagner played a significant role in shaping Hitler’s ideological imagination, providing a mythic and operatic framework for his conception of German destiny. Hitler came to see himself as an instrument of history—a messianic figure chosen to rescue Germany from decline.
Persistent claims—originating with contemporaries and later writers—suggest that Hitler was fascinated by occultism, including Germanic mysticism and Tibetan symbolism. While he tolerated such interests within early Nazi circles, most historians agree that he was fundamentally pragmatic rather than spiritually committed, discarding mystical ideas once they conflicted with political authority.
Hitler also venerated Frederick the Great, keeping a well-known portrait—often identified as the Anton Graff painting—in his offices and even in the Führerbunker during his final days. He reportedly regarded it as a source of personal strength and inspiration. Nazi propaganda consistently cast Frederick as a spiritual precursor to Hitler, using his image and legacy to legitimize both the regime and Hitler’s authoritarian leadership style.
RISE TO POWER On September 12, 1919, Adolf Hitler joined a political outfit so small and obscure it barely qualified as a club. It was called the German Workers’ Party, and Hitler was its seventh member, which tells you roughly how exclusive it wasn’t. Within weeks he was talking more than everyone else combined, and before long he was effectively running the place. By this point, whatever Catholic instincts he once possessed had been quietly mislaid, replaced by a fervent belief in Germany’s mystical “regeneration” through politics, willpower, and a great deal of shouting.
By 1921, Hitler had installed himself as leader of the newly renamed National Socialist German Workers’ Party and reorganized it with all the charm and subtlety of a barracks inspection. Uniforms, ranks, discipline—everything short of a marching band, though that would come later. Around this time he also developed a fascination with symbols, myth, and what admirers later described as destiny. The party adopted the swastika, a symbol with ancient origins that Hitler enthusiastically repurposed into something unmistakably modern and terrifying.
In November 1923, convinced that history was ready for him (it was not), Hitler attempted to seize power in Munich in the episode known as the Beer Hall Putsch. The uprising collapsed with remarkable speed. Hitler fled and hid in the attic bedroom of a supporter in the Bavarian countryside, where—depending on which account you read—he either contemplated suicide or behaved like a man who had suddenly realized he’d made a terrible administrative error. When police arrived, an officer reportedly disarmed him before matters could get any worse.
On April 1, 1924, Hitler was sentenced to five years in prison for his role in the putsch, though this proved to be an exceptionally optimistic estimate. He served just nine months, mostly in relative comfort, during which time he dictated the first volume of Mein Kampf, a book that combined autobiography, political rant, and a warning label history would ignore at its peril.
In the early 1920s, Hitler’s real talent—public speaking—began to pay dividends. Wealthy industrialists, alarmed by Germany’s defeat and humiliation after Versailles, found his rage reassuring and his certainty irresistible. His speeches followed a familiar pattern: they began quietly, almost conversationally, then built relentlessly until Hitler was shouting himself hoarse, each sentence punctuated by cheers, applause, and collective emotional collapse.
He also mastered theatrical touches. Hitler liked to enter halls from the rear, walking slowly through the crowd so audiences could see him emerge from among them—a man of the people, apparently, who just happened to end up on stage commanding absolute attention. It was politics staged as spectacle, and it worked far better than anyone expected.
NAZI GERMANY By April 1932, the Nazis had gone from political curiosity to electoral juggernaut, winning 162 seats in the 422-member Reichstag—the largest single party showing since Germany’s postwar revolution. This did not mean a majority, but it did mean that Adolf Hitler was suddenly very difficult to ignore, rather like a man who has just stood up in a quiet railway carriage and begun shouting about destiny.
On January 30, 1933, Hitler was sworn in as Chancellor of Germany, a position that had once been a rather dull administrative job and was about to become something else entirely. Almost immediately, Hitler set about collecting power the way some people collect teaspoons—acquiring duplicates, inventing new varieties, and refusing ever to give one back. He pitted ministries against each other, created overlapping offices, and ensured that no one was ever quite sure who was in charge—except him.
The crucial moment came on March 24, 1933, with the passage of the Enabling Act, a law so accommodating it effectively abolished democracy while insisting it was doing everyone a favor. The Act allowed Hitler to make laws without parliamentary approval, even laws that ignored the constitution altogether. From this point on, Germany was a dictatorship with paperwork.
Between 1933 and 1939, Hitler presided over what appeared to be a dramatic economic recovery. Unemployment fell, autobahns were built, and Germany looked busy and purposeful again—though much of this recovery rested on rearmament, borrowed money, and the unspoken assumption that someone else would eventually pick up the bill.
Hitler rarely retreated once power was secured, but there was one notable exception. When Christians protested against the regime’s secret program of killing the mentally ill and elderly, public outrage forced a partial halt. The relationship between Nazism and Christianity was always uneasy. The Catholic Church had initially supported the Nazis for their nationalism and anti-communism, and in 1933 Hitler signed a concordat with the Pope, promising religious freedom—a promise he promptly ignored. Protestant pastors who put faith before Führer fared badly: by 1935, around 700 had been arrested for resisting Nazi racial ideology.
On March 29, 1936, Hitler staged a referendum to approve Germany’s illegal reoccupation of the Rhineland. The result was a reassuring 99 percent in favor, with 44.5 million votes out of 45.5 million registered voters—a level of enthusiasm that tends to occur only in dictatorships and certain office morale surveys.
In October 1936, Hitler signed an alliance with Benito Mussolini, whom he admired greatly. Mussolini returned the compliment sparingly, remarking that Germans were descended from people who were still illiterate when Rome had Caesar, Augustus, and Virgil—a point that did little to dent Hitler’s enthusiasm.
In 1938, Hitler annexed Austria and seized the Sudetenland after the Munich Agreement, persuading British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain that this would be his final territorial demand. Hitler later remarked that Chamberlain seemed like such a “nice old gentleman” that he felt moved to give him an autograph. Chamberlain went home believing he had secured “peace for our time.” Hitler went home planning the next move.
That same year, Hitler was named Time magazine’s “Man of the Year.” The title was not meant as praise—though it is often misunderstood that way—but rather recognition of the individual who had most shaped events. Few choices have ever fit the definition more ominously.
WORLD WAR II After annexing what remained of Czechoslovakia and sealing a brisk, deeply cynical non-aggression pact with Joseph Stalin, Adolf Hitler did what he had been hinting at for years and invaded Poland in September 1939—thereby starting the Second World War, an event that surprised almost no one except, briefly, those who had convinced themselves it wouldn’t really happen.
By the summer of 1940, with much of Europe subdued, Hitler turned his attention to Britain, which inconveniently refused to collapse. His plan was simple in the way only disastrous plans ever are: destroy the Royal Air Force from the air, then follow up with an amphibious invasion known as Operation Sea Lion. To this end, the Luftwaffe hurled itself at British skies and was firmly rebuffed in what became known as the Battle of Britain—a defeat made all the more galling by the fact that Hitler had already decided he rather liked England and even proposed turning Oxford into his English headquarters, presumably assuming the war would be over by tea.
Sea Lion was first postponed indefinitely on September 17, 1940, then quietly abandoned on October 10, as Hitler turned his attention eastward. Britain would have to wait. The Soviet Union, meanwhile, was about to get his full attention.
On December 8, 1941, Hitler burst out of his bunker into the freezing night to inform his generals that Japan had attacked the United States at Pearl Harbor, thereby drawing America into the war. This was not the sort of development one normally announces with enthusiasm, but Hitler regarded it as confirmation that destiny—always a favorite accomplice—was still on his side.
In 1942, a Finnish sound engineer secretly recorded 11 minutes of conversation between Hitler and Finnish leader Gustaf Mannerheim. The tape is historically invaluable because it captures Hitler speaking in his normal, conversational voice—no shouting, no theatrical pauses, no audience—just a tired man explaining tanks, oil shortages, and the depressing realities of war.
By July 20, 1944, reality finally intruded in a more explosive way. Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg planted a bomb at Hitler’s Wolf’s Lair headquarters in East Prussia. The blast failed to kill him, singeing his trousers and leaving him with a perforated eardrum—injuries that would have been amusing had the consequences not been so appalling. Hitler responded with savage reprisals, ordering the execution of more than 4,900 people, often after grotesque show trials or none at all.
Ironically, the British had also toyed with killing Hitler. Operation Foxley, devised by the Special Operations Executive in 1944, proposed assassinating him during one of his walks at the Berghof. The plan was ultimately abandoned—not out of mercy, but because British planners concluded that Hitler alive was more useful to the Allied cause. His catastrophic decision-making, they reasoned, was doing more damage to Germany than any assassin ever could.
Four days after Hitler committed suicide in his Berlin bunker, Field Marshal Sir Bernard Law Montgomery accepted the total and unconditional surrender of the German forces.
By the end, the scale of destruction attached to Hitler’s name was almost beyond comprehension. More than 11 million people were murdered as a direct result of Nazi policy—most of them Jews, but also communists, Roma and Sinti, homosexuals, the disabled, political opponents, and anyone else deemed inconvenient, inferior, or simply in the way. It was the grim final accounting of a worldview that treated human life as expendable and history as something to be bullied into submission.
POLITICS Hitler's political career began with his joining the German Workers' Party in 1919. He quickly rose to leadership through his oratorical skills and ruthless tactics. His political philosophy, as outlined in Mein Kampf, centered on antisemitism, anti-communism, Lebensraum (living space) for Germans, and the creation of a totalitarian state. He used democratic means to gain power—becoming Chancellor in January 1933—then dismantled democracy through the Enabling Act of March 24, 1933.
His foreign policy—reoccupation of the Rhineland, annexation of Austria, seizure of Sudetenland—was built on calculated risk and appeasement by other powers.
SCANDAL Hitler’s rule was inseparable from scandal on a moral and human scale. He presided over a totalitarian system responsible for mass repression, censorship, and the destruction of political opposition.
While he temporarily moderated the euthanasia program targeting the disabled after public Christian protests, this retreat was tactical rather than ethical. Clergy who opposed antisemitic policy were arrested, with hundreds of pastors imprisoned by 1935.
Hitler cultivated referendums and plebiscites—such as the 1936 Rhineland vote—that produced implausibly high approval figures under conditions of intimidation and propaganda.
Ultimately, the defining scandal of his life and rule was the Holocaust and associated mass killings: over 11 million people were murdered, including six million Jews, alongside Roma and Sinti, homosexuals, political dissidents, and others deemed “undesirable.”
MILITARY RECORD In May 1913, Hitler used his inheritance to move to Munich to avoid Austrian conscription. Arrested by Austrian authorities, he was declared unfit for service after a physical exam and allowed to return to Germany.
When World War I broke out in 1914, he volunteered enthusiastically for the Bavarian Army. Serving as a messenger with the 16th Bavarian Reserve Infantry Regiment, he saw active combat in France and Belgium, a role that exposed him repeatedly to enemy fire. He also produced cartoons and instructional drawings for army publications. Photo below shows Hitler (far right, seated) with comrades from the Bavarian Reserve Infantry Regiment 16.
At his first major engagement, the Ypres offensive of 1914, he reportedly shouted “Deutschland, Deutschland über Alles” while advancing.
Hitler was wounded in the left thigh during the Battle of the Somme in October 1916 and returned to the front in March 1917. He was twice decorated for bravery, receiving the Iron Cross Second Class in 1915 and the Iron Cross First Class in August 1918—an unusual honor for a corporal.
On October 15, 1918, he was temporarily blinded by a mustard gas attack and hospitalized in Pasewalk, where he received news of Germany’s defeat.
A widely repeated but unverified story claims that British soldier Henry Tandey spared Hitler’s life in September 1918; Hitler later allegedly kept Tandey’s image and referenced it in conversation with Neville Chamberlain.
As Germany’s leader in World War II, Hitler assumed direct command over military strategy. His insistence on ideological goals over operational reality contributed to catastrophic defeats. His authority was seriously challenged only after the failed July 20, 1944 assassination attempt, after which he ordered brutal reprisals resulting in thousands of executions.
Historians broadly agree that Hitler’s strategic incompetence ultimately hastened Germany’s defeat.
An often-noted historical coincidence is that Hitler was born 129 years after Napoleon, came to power 129 years after Napoleon, invaded Russia 129 years after Napoleon, and was defeated 129 years after Napoleon.
HEALTH AND PHYSICAL FITNESS Throughout his adult life Hitler suffered from chronic gastrointestinal problems—stomach cramps, flatulence, and diarrhoea—that worsened with age and stress, and these complaints were one major reason he adopted a meat‑free diet in the early 1930s.
From the mid‑1930s his personal physician Theodor Morell subjected him to an escalating regime of injections and pills including gland extracts, hormones, barbiturates, stimulants, and opiate derivatives; by the early 1940s estimates suggest Hitler was taking dozens of preparations, including methamphetamine‑based “Pervitin,” morphine‑type analgesics, and even small doses of strychnine in digestive medicines.
A physician, Dr. Erwin Giesing, treated Hitler in 1944 with cocaine solutions applied to his nose and throat after the 20 July bomb explosion damaged his ears and caused severe headaches.
He neither smoked nor drank alcohol to any significant degree and promoted public campaigns against smoking and drunkenness, but his physical fitness declined markedly in the later war years: by 1944–45 witnesses noted a stooped posture, tremors in his left hand, shuffling gait, and other symptoms often interpreted as evidence of Parkinson’s disease or a related neurological disorder. (6)
HOMES Hitler’s most famous residence was the Berghof, his expanded mountain house on the Obersalzberg above Berchtesgaden in the Bavarian Alps, rebuilt in the mid‑1930s as a large chalet‑style complex where he spent more time than anywhere else apart from the Wolfsschanze during the war. The Berghof became an important symbolic center of Nazi power.
He maintained an official flat in Munich in the 1920s–early 1930s, later moving into the Reich Chancellery complex in Berlin once in power, and his network of Führerhauptquartiere (“Führer Headquarters”)—including the Wolf’s Lair in East Prussia and other bunkered command posts—functioned as semi‑mobile “homes” during military campaigns.
TRAVEL As German leader, Hitler traveled extensively throughout Germany and occupied Europe, primarily by train and aircraft. He visited front-line military headquarters during the early years of World War II, though his direct involvement in battlefield strategy later declined as the war turned against Germany.
Unlike many heads of state he undertook almost no conventional peacetime foreign state visits: the regime’s diplomacy was largely conducted by subordinates, while Hitler preferred to receive foreign leaders on German soil—at the Berghof, in Berlin, or at other German locations—reinforcing the image that others must come to him.
After 1943, his movements became increasingly restricted due to security concerns and declining health.
DEATH On April 30, 1945, as Soviet forces closed in on central Berlin following intense street-to-street fighting, Hitler committed suicide in a sitting room of his underground bunker beneath the Reich Chancellery. He shot himself moments after his wife, Eva Braun, bit into a cyanide capsule.
Following his instructions, aides carried their bodies into the Chancellery garden, doused them with petrol, and burned them in a shell crater under continuing Soviet bombardment; Soviet forces later recovered and repeatedly reburied the remains, which were ultimately reported as destroyed by the KGB in 1970.
German radio (Reichssender Hamburg) broadcast the news of Hitler’s death on the evening of May 1, 1945. The announcement stated that Hitler had “fallen this afternoon in his command post in the Reich Chancellery, fighting to the last breath against Bolshevism and for Germany,” and then introduced Grand Admiral Karl Dönitz as his appointed successor. The wording deliberately framed his suicide as a heroic battlefield death and concealed the true circumstances from the German public.
The remains of the Führerbunker lie beneath a nondescript parking lot and residential courtyard off Gertrud‑Kolmar‑Straße, in Berlin’s government district, just south of the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe.
APPEARANCES IN MEDIA During his lifetime Hitler was the central figure of a vast propaganda apparatus: his image and speeches dominated newsreels, radio, posters, and print, and he was the focal point of films such as Leni Riefenstahl’s Triumph des Willens (1935), which mythologised him and the Nazi Party rallies at Nuremberg.
After 1945 he became one of the most depicted historical figures in cinema, television, literature, documentaries, and video games, ranging from documentary reconstructions (The World at War, innumerable Holocaust and WWII series) to fictionalised portrayals in works like Downfall (Der Untergang), The Great Dictator, and countless satirical or alternate‑history narratives.
Scholars have noted that his mediated image shifted over time—from postwar demonisation and newsreel villainy, through more psychologically focused dramas, to modern satirical and critical treatments—which continue to shape popular understanding of Nazism and the Holocaust.
ACHIEVEMENTS Historically, Hitler achieved the consolidation of absolute power in Germany and initially oversaw large-scale public works projects and rearmament programs. However, these actions were inseparable from violent repression, aggressive war, and crimes against humanity.
Any discussion of his “achievements” is inseparable from the catastrophic moral, human, and geopolitical consequences of his rule.
Main Source: Encyclopaedia of Trivia Other Sources: (1) Rare Historical Photos (2) Reddit (3) The Atlantic (4) Thomas Fuchs (2000). A Concise Biography of Adolf Hitler. (5) DVD Beaver (6) Britannica
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