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Gottfried Graf von Bismarck-Schönhausen (9
March 1901 – 14 September 1949) was a German politician and German Resistance figure.
Born in Berlin, he was a
grandson of the Chancellor Otto von Bismarck. He was a member of
the Nazi Party and in
1933 he was elected to the Reichstag as a Nazi member. In
1935 he became chairman of the regional council
(Regierungspräsident) for Stettin, and later also for Potsdam. He was a friend of the
SS leader Heinrich
Himmler and by 1944 he held the rank of Brigadeführer
(Brigade Leader/Major General) in the SS.
From 1942, however, Bismarck had been opposed to the
continuation of World
War II, and had made contact with other members of the German
aristocracy who were working against the Nazi regime, such as the
Berlin police chief Wolf-Heinrich Graf von
Helldorf, Colonel Claus Graf von
Stauffenberg, and General Friedrich Olbricht with the aim of
starting negotiations with the western Allies. He was aware of the
preparations for the July 20 plot to assassinate Adolf Hitler, but was
not directly involved in it.
After the failure of the plot, Bismarck's connections to the
plotters were discovered.[1] He was
expelled from the SS and from the Reichstag. Because of his famous
name and many powerful connections, however, he escaped the fate of
most of the active plotters. He was not arrested until August and
he was not tortured. In October he was acquitted of the charges
against him by the People’s Court, but was nevertheless sent to Sachsenhausen
concentration camp, where he was relatively well treated. He
was liberated by Soviet forces in April 1945. In September 1949 he
was killed in a car accident in Verden near Bremen.
His great-nephew would be named in honor of
him.
See also
References
- ^
Tatjana Metternich. Purgatory of
Fools. Quadrangle (1976). p. 196f. ISBN
0-8129-0691-8.