Josef Pfitzner
Josef Pfitzner (24 March 1901 – 6 September 1945) was a politician of Nazi Germany and a writer.
Life
Josef Pfitzner was born in Petrovice (Bruntál District), Austrian Silesia. He was a German historian and politician and was Professor of medieval and Eastern European history at the German University of Prague. Early on, he was attracted to Nazism and belonged to the branch of Austrian National Socialism. He held the rank of Standartenführer in the SA. In 1939, he became the German deputy mayor of Prague and held this office until May 1945. Pfitzner was executed in Prague after World War II within three hours of being convicted for speaking in favour of the Nazis, taking part in Nazi organisations, and defrauding Prague city in financial deals with the Germans. He was hanged in public before up to 50,000 spectators. [citation needed]
Work
Pfitzner took a special interest in the Sudeten German past and published Volkstumsschutz und Nationale Bewegung. Josef Pfitzner wrote that the National Socialism of Germany was "the synthesis of the two great dynamic powers of the century, of the socialist and national idea".[1] This specific brand of German socialism was perfected in the German borderlands of Austria and especially in the Sudetenland before it came to Germany. His views on the essentially German character of Bohemia and Moravia influenced Reinhard Heydrich during his time as Reich Protector; see R. Gerwarth, Hitler's Hangman: the life of Heydrich (2011), p. 266 with n. 220.
Writings of Pfitzner
- Das Sudentendeutschtum, (Cologne:Scharffstein, 1938).
- Volkstummsschutz und Nationale Bewegung (Ethnic Preservation and National Movement: 1938).
- Das tausendjährige Prag (1940)
Footnotes
- ↑ Leftism Revisited, Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn, Regernery Gateway, Washington, D.C., 1990. 149.
External links
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