Hermann Ehrhardt
Hermann Ehrhardt (29 November 1881 – 27 September 1971) was a German Freikorps commander during the period of turmoil in Weimar Republic Germany from 1918 to 1920, he commanded the famous II.Marine Brigade, better known as the Ehrhardt Brigade or Marinebrigade Ehrhardt.
Born in Diersburg, now part of Hohberg, Baden-Württemberg, he served in the German Imperial Navy as a Korvettenkapitän.
Following the defeat of the German Empire, Ehrhardt formed the II.Marine Brigade. A strong opponent of the Treaty of Versailles, he held strong monarchist views. The II.Marine Brigade was a force of around 6,000 men. They fought in north-west Germany, central Germany, Upper Silesia,[1] and Bavaria and participated in the unsuccessful Kapp-Lüttwitz Putsch of 1920. After the failed Putsch Ehrhardt fled Germany, returning at a later time. In Bavaria, which was ruled by Gustav von Kahr at that time,[2] he formed the Organisation Consul,[3] and later the Viking Bund, a secret military society.[4]
Three years later during the Beer Hall Putsch, Ehrhardt and his deputy commander Eberhard Kautter refused to help Adolf Hitler's Nazi Party. Ehrhardt later contested for leadership with Hitler, but was unsuccessful, with most of Ehrhardt's men joining the Nazi Party.
Ehrhardt was one of those listed to be killed during the Night of the Long Knives but he managed to escape[5] to Austria. He was later invited back to Nazi Germany.[6] He died in 1971 in Krems an der Donau.
Notes
Bibliography
- Robert G L Waite, Vanguard of Nazism, 1969, W. W. Norton & Company
- David Clay Large, Where Ghosts Walked: Munich's Road to the Third Reich, W. W. Norton & Company, 1997, ISBN 0-393-03836-X, 9780393038361
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