- Otto Weidinger
-
Otto Weidinger Born 27 May 1914
WürzburgDied 11 January 1990 (aged 75)
AalenAllegiance Nazi Germany Service/branch Waffen-SS Years of service 1934-1945 Rank Obersturmbannführer Unit SS-PzAufklAbt 2 "Das Reich"
SS-PzGrenRgt 4 "Der Führer"Battles/wars World War II Awards Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords Otto Weidinger (27 May 1914 – 11 January 1990) was a member of the German Waffen-SS and a commander of SS-PzGrenRgt 4 "Der Führer" (2nd SS Division Das Reich) during World War II and was involved in the massacre of Oradour-sur-Glane in France in June 1944. He held the rank of SS-Obersturmbannführer (Lieutenant Colonel). He was also a recipient of the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern (Knight's Cross).
Contents
SS career
Otto Weidinger enlisted in the SS-Verfügungstruppe SS-VT (precursor to the Waffen-SS) in April 1934. His first duty assignment was as a concentration camp guard at SS-Wachsturmbann (camp guard detachment) Dachau. He volunteered for officer training and entered the SS-Junkerschule in Braunschweig in May 1935. After graduating from Junkerschule, he completed platoon leader training back in Dachau and was commissioned as an SS-Untersturmführer (Second Lieutenant) in April 1936.[1]
Weidinger's first command was the 3. Kompanie of the SS-Standarte "Deutschland" (2nd SS Division Das Reich) in Ellwangen. Shortly after he underwent training as a combat engineer with the SS-Pioniere Battalion, as well as attending the Kampfschule (combat school) in Munich.
Promoted to SS-Obersturmführer (Platoon Commander) in 1938, Weidinger first saw combat in the 1939 Nazi invasion of Poland, earning an Iron Cross 2nd Class. After subjugating Poland, his unit then participated in the Battle of the Netherlands, where Weidinger continued to distinguish himself, earning a Iron Cross 1st Class and a promotion to Division Adjutant.
At the end of 1940, Weidinger was promoted to SS-Captain and his unit was sent to subdue insurgents in Lithuania. Weidinger commanded a heavy (anti-tank) company of the motorcycle rifle battalion of the SS-Reconnaissance-Detachment until the onset of Operation Barbarossa. He was subsequently promoted to SS-Hauptsturmführer and transferred to the Divisional Staff of the SS-Division "Das Reich". Following a tour of duty in Russia, Weidinger returned to the Braunschweig Junkerschule as a tactics instructor for officer candidates until 1943.
In June 1943, Weidinger was again ordered to the Russian front and assumed command of the First Battalion of the SS Regiment "Germany", with the rank of SS major. This battalion saw significant combat action at the Battle of Kursk. In the battle, Weidinger received a serious head wound. In November 1943 he was awarded the German Cross in Gold award. By the end of 1943 he commanded at the 2nd SS Panzer Division "Das Reich", an armored infantry regiment.
In the spring of 1944, his SS Panzer Division received orders to move to France. On 21 April 1944, Weidinger was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross. Shortly thereafter, was promoted to the SS-Obersturmbannfuhrer (Lieutenant Colonel) and the assumption of command of the 4th SS Panzer-Grenadier Regiment "Der Führer", which had the responsibility for defending the Normandy coastline. Command of "Der Führer" passed from SS-Standartenführer (Colonel) Sylvester Stadler to Weidinger on 14 June. Until then Weidinger had been with the regiment for familiarisation purposes.[2]
After two months of heavy fighting following the Normandy D-Day invasion, Weidinger's unit, along with 50,000 other German troops, were surrounded by British and Polish forces led by General Bernard Montgomery in what would be known as the battle of Falaise pocket. Faced with the prospect of surrender or annihilation, Weidinger had his unit constantly probe the enemy line for weaknesses. They discovered a very small gap in the Polish lines, which Weidinger then exploited by using the massed firepower of his remaining tanks to enlarge. Ten thousand German troops were able to escape the collapsing pocket. For his heroic actions in the face of near-certain defeat, Weidinger was awarded Oak Leaves to his Knight's Cross in December 1944.
Post war
When World War II ended, Weidinger was imprisoned by the American military in the former Nazi concentration camp at Dachau, along with thousands of other SS men who were automatically considered to be war criminals by virtue of having served in the Waffen-SS, which was designated as a criminal organization by the Allies. In August 1947, he was transferred to French custody, where he remained a prisoner until June 1951.
After 6 and 1/2 years in prison, he was finally put on trial as a war criminal, along with 50 other SS soldiers. All were charged with a war crime for being volunteers in the Waffen-SS. He was acquitted by a military court in Bordeaux on 19 June 1951 and released on 23 June 1951. At the trial of the perpetrators of the massacre at Oradour-sur-Glane in Bordeaux in January 1953, Weidinger was a witness for the defense.
Upon his release from prison, Weidinger trained as a pharmacist, working in a pharmacy until his retirement in 1982.
From 1967 to 1982, Weidinger wrote the history of Regiment "Der Führer" (he was its last commander) titled "Comrades to the End," as well as a 6 volume history of "Das Reich" consisting of five text volumes and a photo compilation published by Munin Verlag in Germany. Most of the "Das Reich" volumes have been translated into English as well as the regimental history.
In 1984, Weidinger self-published a controversial revisionist account of the Tulle massacre, Tulle and Oradour. A German-French tragedy. This booklet was published after his death by extreme right-wing publisher Nation und Europa and was immediately banned in France.
He died 11 January 1990, aged 75.
Awards
- Infantry Assault Badge in Silver
- Wound Badge in Silver
- German Cross in Gold (26 November 1943)
- Iron Cross (1939) 2nd and 1st Class
- Close Combat Clasp in Bronze
- Tank Destruction Badge
- Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords
- Knight's Cross on 21 April 1944 as Sturmbannführer and commander of the SS-Panzer-Aufklärungs-Abteilung 2 "Das Reich"
- 688th Oak Leaves on 26 December 1944 and as Obersturmbannführer and commander of the SS-Panzergrenadier-Regiment 4 "Der Führer"
- 150th Swords on 6 May 1945 as Obersturmbannführer and commander of the SS-Panzergrenadier-Regiment 4 "Der Führer"[Notes 1]
Notes
- ^ No evidence of the award can be found in the German National Archives. The award was unlawfully presented by SS-Oberstgruppenführer Sepp Dietrich. The date is taken from the announcement made by the 6. SS-Panzerarmee. The sequential number "150" was assigned by the Association of Knight's Cross Recipients (AKCR). Weidinger was member of the AKCR.[3]
References
- Citations
- ^ http://www.oradour.info/appendix/weidgr10.htm
- ^ http://www.oradour.info/appendix/dasorder.htm Order of Battle for Das Reich as of June 1944
- ^ Scherzer 2007, p. 184.
- Bibliography
- Berger, Florian (1999). Mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern. Die höchstdekorierten Soldaten des Zweiten Weltkrieges. Selbstverlag Florian Berger. ISBN 3-9501307-0-5.
- Fellgiebel, Walther-Peer (2000). Die Träger des Ritterkreuzes des Eisernen Kreuzes 1939-1945. Friedburg, Germany: Podzun-Pallas. ISBN 3-7909-0284-5.
- Patzwall, Klaus D. and Scherzer, Veit (2001). Das Deutsche Kreuz 1941 - 1945 Geschichte und Inhaber Band II. Norderstedt, Germany: Verlag Klaus D. Patzwall. ISBN 3-931533-45-X.
- Scherzer, Veit (2007). Die Ritterkreuzträger 1939–1945 Die Inhaber des Ritterkreuzes des Eisernen Kreuzes 1939 von Heer, Luftwaffe, Kriegsmarine, Waffen-SS, Volkssturm sowie mit Deutschland verbündeter Streitkräfte nach den Unterlagen des Bundesarchives (in German). Jena, Germany: Scherzers Miltaer-Verlag. ISBN 978-3-938845-17-2.
- Williamson, Gordon (2006). Knight's Cross, Oak-Leaves and Swords Recipients 1941-45. Osprey Publishing Ltd. ISBN 1-84176-643-7.
- Yerger, Mark C., "German Cross in Gold Holders of the SS and Police," volumes 1 and 2, R. James Bender Publishing corrects considerable fact errors of this article
- Yerger, Mark C., "Otto Weidinger, Knight's Cross with Oakleaves and Swords, Commander SS-Panzer-Grenadier-Regiment 4 "Der Führer," Schiffer Publishing, is a detailed biographical study of this officer. Its text corrects the considerable personal and military career fact errors in this article.
External links
- Otto Weidinger in the German National Library catalogue (German)
- "Lexikon der Wehrmacht". Otto Weidinger. http://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/Personenregister/W/WeidingerO.htm. Retrieved 6 March 2008.
Recipients of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves Recipients of 1940 Eduard Dietl (Swords) · Werner Mölders (Swords & Diamonds) · Adolf Galland (Swords & Diamonds) · Helmut Wick · Günther Prien · Otto Kretschmer (Swords) · Joachim Schepke
Recipients of 1941 Martin Harlinghausen · Walter Oesau (Swords) · Erwin Rommel (Swords & Diamonds) · Hermann-Friedrich Joppien · Joachim Müncheberg (Swords) · Heinrich Liebe · Engelbert Endrass · Herbert Schultze · Herbert Ihlefeld (Swords) · Wilhelm Balthasar · Siegfried Schnell · Rudolf Schmidt · Werner Baumbach (Swords) · Oskar Dinort · Walter Storp · Viktor Schütze · Heinz Guderian · Hermann Hoth (Swords) · Wolfram Freiherr von Richthofen · Günther Lützow (Swords) · Josef Priller (Swords) · Günther Freiherr von Maltzahn · Horst Niemack (Swords) · Heinrich Bär (Swords) · Hans Hahn · Hans Philipp (Swords) · Ludwig Crüwell · Karl-Gottfried Nordmann · Heinrich Hoffmann · Kurt-Jürgen Freiherr von Lützow · Gordon Gollob (Swords & Diamonds) · Erbo Graf von Kageneck · Ernst-Felix Krüder · Josef Dietrich (Swords & Diamonds) · Heinrich Eberbach · Franz Scheidies · Ernst-Georg Buchterkirch · Bernhard Rogge · Dietrich Peltz (Swords) · Adelbert Schulz (Swords & Diamonds) · Josef-Franz Eckinger · Günther Hoffmann-Schönborn · Karl Eibl (Swords) · Heinrich Lehmann-Willenbrock · Otto Weiß · Georg Freiherr von Boeselager (Swords) · Walther von Seydlitz-Kurzbach · Josef Harpe (Swords) · Reinhard Suhren (Swords) · Hubertus Hitschhold
Recipients of 1942 Oskar von Boddien · Hans Jordan (Swords) · Karl-Wilhelm Specht · Hans Freiherr von Wolff · Hans-Valentin Hube (Swords & Diamonds) · Karl-Heinz Noak · Joachim Helbig (Swords) · Otto Hitzfeld (Swords) · Wilhelm Wegener (Swords) · Hans Traut · Werner von Gilsa · Hermann Breith (Swords) · Rolf Kaldrack · Heinrich Borgmann · Paul Ludwig Ewald von Kleist (Swords) · Georg-Hans Reinhardt (Swords) · Walter Model (Swords & Diamonds) · Willibald Freiherr von Langermann und Erlencamp · Walter Wessel · Walter Hagen · Albert Kesselring (Swords & Diamonds) · Gerhard Köppen · Kurt Ubben · Max-Hellmuth Ostermann (Swords) · Franz Eckerle · Wolf-Dietrich Huy · Hans Strelow · Wilhelm Spies · Friedrich-Wilhelm Müller (Swords) · Erich Topp (Swords) · Theodor Eicke · Reinhard Hardegen · Wolfgang Späte · Alfred Wünnenberg · Theodor Scherer · Hermann Graf (Swords & Diamonds) · Adolf Dickfeld · Eberhard von Mackensen · Leopold Steinbatz (Swords) · Hans-Joachim Marseille (Swords & Diamonds) · Helmut Lent (Swords & Diamonds) · Robert-Georg Freiherr von Malapert · Ludwig Wolff · Friedrich Geißhardt · Heinrich Setz · Walter von Brockdorff-Ahlefeldt · Rolf Mützelburg · Adalbert Schnee · Erwin Clausen · Viktor Bauer · Franz-Josef Beerenbrock · Anton Hackl (Swords) · Traugott Herr (Swords) · Werner Kempf · Gerhard Kollewe · Walter Gorn (Swords) · Kurt Brändle · Johannes Steinhoff (Swords) · Walter Sigel · Johann Zemsky · Alfred Druschel (Swords) · Ernst Bormann · Gerhard Hein · Werner Ziegler (Swords) · Wolf-Dietrich Wilcke (Swords) · Klaus Scholtz · Heinz Schmidt · Heinrich Bleichrodt · Friedrich-Karl Müller · Wilhelm Crinius · Wolfgang Tonne · Bruno Ritter von Hauenschild · Hans Beißwenger · Ernst-Wilhelm Reinert (Swords) · Karl Torley · Johannes Kümmel · Günther Rall (Swords) · Ludwig Kirschner · Konrad Hupfer · Max Stotz · Heinrich Schweickhardt · Wolfgang Schenck · Hermann Seitz · Josef Zwernemann · Wolfgang Lüth (Swords & Diamonds) · Werner Töniges · Hyazinth Graf Strachwitz von Gross-Zauche und Camminetz (Swords & Diamonds) · Hermann-Bernhard Ramcke (Swords & Diamonds) · Josef Wurmheller (Swords) · Karl-Friedrich Merten · Friedrich Lang (Swords) · Alwin Boerst (Swords) · Ekkehard Kylling-Schmidt · Ernst Nobis · Wolfgang Fischer · Karl Allmendinger · Heinrich Paepcke · Hermann Balck (Swords & Diamonds) · Walter Heitz · Hermann Fegelein (Swords) · Helmuth von Ruckteschell · Felix Steiner (Swords) · Hubert Lanz · Helmuth Schlömer · Maximilian Reichsfreiherr von Edelsheim (Swords) · Hartwig von Ludwiger · Harald von Hirschfeld · Josef Bremm (Swords) · Helmut Thumm · Helmuth von Pannwitz · Martin Fiebig
Recipients of 1943 Reiner Stahel (Swords) · Fritz Feßmann (Swords) · Friedrich Guggenberger · Heinz Frank · Ernst Kupfer (Swords) · Bruno Dilley · Gerhard Barkhorn (Swords) · Wend von Wietersheim (Swords) · Johann Mohr · Friedrich Paulus · Karl Willig · Günter Goebel · Günther von Kluge (Swords) · Waldemar von Gazen (Swords) · Hans Kreysing (Swords) · Reinhard Günzel · Hugo Primozic · Willy Riedel · Georg Michael · Gustav Pressler · Carl Rodenburg · Reinhold Knacke · Erwin Fischer · Hermann Hogeback (Swords) · Helmut Bruck · Alfons König (Swords) · Kurt Meyer (Swords) · Paul Gildner · Werner Streib (Swords) · Ludwig Becker · Werner Baumgarten-Crusius · Fritz Witt · Hans Mikosch · Walter Scheunemann · Gustav Schmidt · Eberhard Zahn · Johann Mickl · Wilhelm von Malachowski · Bruno Kohnz · Georg Lassen · Erich von Lewinski (Swords) · Georg Rietscher · Karl Langesee · Josef Kult · Walter Hörnlein · Theodor Nordmann (Swords) · Georg-Wilhelm Postel (Swords) · Robert Ritter von Greim (Swords) · Hans-Karl von Scheele · Heinrich Schüler · Helmut Hudel · Hinrich Schuldt (Swords) · Otto Kumm (Swords) · Rudolf Schlee · Karl Dönitz · Albrecht Brandi (Swords & Diamonds) · Gerhard von Kamptz · Siegfried Wuppermann · Erich Klawe · Peter Frantz · Hans-Ulrich Rudel (Golden Oak Leaves, Swords & Diamonds) · Paul-Werner Hozzel · Georg Dörffel · Egon Mayer (Swords) · August Dieckmann (Swords) · Otto von Bülow · Willibald Borowietz · Hans-Günther Stotten · Paul Laux · Gustav Höhne · Karl-Adolf Hollidt · Gerhard von Schwerin (Swords) · Wilhelm Niggemeyer · Franz Griesbach (Swords) · Erich Bärenfänger (Swords) · Richard Grünert · Ernst Kruse · Georg Bochmann (Swords) · Karl Löwrick · Martin Grase · Friedrich Kemnade · Robert Gysae · Hans von Obstfelder (Swords) · Karl Göbel · Friedrich Höhne · Günter Klappich · Gustav Rödel · Carl Emmermann · Werner Henke · Fritz Bayerlein (Swords) · Walther von Hünersdorff · Bernhard Sauvant · Paul Hausser (Swords) · Franz Bäke (Swords) · Egmont Prinz zur Lippe-Weißenfeld · Manfred Meurer · Heinrich Ehrler · Theodor Weissenberger · Joachim Kirschner · Werner Schröer (Swords) · Hajo Herrmann (Swords) · Bruno Kahl · Lothar Rendulic (Swords) · Dietrich von Müller (Swords) · Georg von Küchler · Ernst Busch · Georg Lindemann · Paul Conrath · Otto Baum (Swords) · Hans Freiherr von Funck · Alexander Conrady · Erhard Raus · Dietrich von Saucken (Swords & Diamonds) · Hans Gollnick · Alfred Eidel · Paul Schultz · Hans-Detloff von Cossel · Walter Krüger (Swords) · Rolf Rocholl · Hartmann Grasser · Wolf-Udo Ettel · Heinrich Prinz zu Sayn-Wittgenstein (Swords) · Hans Zorn · Horst Großmann · Walter Nowotny (Swords & Diamonds) · Joachim Lemelsen · Erich Jaschke · Heinz Harmel (Swords) · Hermann Prieß (Swords) · Friedrich Hoßbach · Siegfried Thomaschki · Walter Lange · Günther Pape · Theodor Tolsdorff (Swords & Diamonds) · Sylvester Stadler (Swords) · Ulrich Kleemann · Kurt Student · Alfred-Hermann Reinhardt (Swords) · Hans Fritsche · Bodo Spranz · Josef Schreiber · Hubert-Erwin Meierdress · Hans-Gotthard Pestke · Julius Ringel · Rudolf Freiherr von Roman · Ernst Voß · Herbert Otto Gille (Swords & Diamonds) · Albert Graf von der Goltz · Ernst Ziemer · Eugen König · Hermann Recknagel (Swords) · Siegfried Grabert · Heinrich Kiesling · Otto von Knobelsdorff (Swords) · Maximilian de Angelis · Erich Brandenberger · Otto-Ernst Remer · Georg Christiansen · Hans Dorr (Swords) · Josef Heindl · Willy Johannmeyer · Karl-Friedrich Brill · Johannes Block · Hasso von Manteuffel (Swords & Diamonds) · Gotthard Heinrici (Swords) · Hans Schmidt · Karl Mauss (Swords & Diamonds) · Hans-Henning Freiherr von Beust · Dietrich Hrabak · Wilhelm Lemke · Otto Schünemann · Walter Hartmann (Swords) · Ernst-August Fricke · Ernst Wellmann · Alfred Druffner · Anton Grasser · Kurt Walter · Adolf Weitkunat · Walter Elflein · Willy Langkeit · Andreas Thorey · Sigfrid Henrici · Heinrich Voigtsberger · Karl Baacke · Christian Tychsen · Alfred Müller · Hans-Joachim Kahler · Ernst Kühl · Kurt von der Chevallerie · Wilhelm Schmalz · Albert Frey · Heinrich Ochs
Recipients of 1944 Bernd Klug · Klaus Feldt · Walter Krauß · Horst Hannig · Hans-Arnold Stahlschmidt · Helmut Kalbitz · Josef-Georg Mulzer · Maximilian Fretter-Pico · Hans Schlemmer · Heinrich Boigk · August Schmidt · Friedrich Wiese · Walter Krüger · Karl Koetz · Hugo Kraas · Eduard Hauser · Joachim Peiper (Swords) · Walter Fries (Swords) · Walther Sievers · Michael Wittmann (Swords) · Bernhard Flachs · Richard Heidrich (Swords) · Walther Nehring (Swords) · Botho Kollberg · Erich Löwe · Günther Hilt · Fritz Breithaupt · Robert Martinek · Josef Schneider · Walter Möse · Friedrich Kirchner (Swords) · Hans Källner (Swords) · Theodor Wisch (Swords) · Heinrich-Walter Bronsart von Schellendorff · Karl Lorenz · Meinrad von Lauchert · Josef Karl · Ferdinand Schörner (Swords & Diamonds) · Wilhelm Stemmermann · Theo-Helmut Lieb · Robert Kaestner · Ernst-Günther Baade (Swords) · Rudolf Kolbeck · Maximilian Wengler (Swords) · Walter Mix · Otto Benzin · Werner Forst · Helmuth Weidling (Swords) · Friedrich Mieth · Hermann Hohn (Swords) · Erich Walther (Swords) · Ludwig Heilmann (Swords) · Kurt Bühligen (Swords) · Horst Ademeit · Walter Krupinski · August Geiger · Hans-Dieter Frank · Johannes Wiese · Reinhard Seiler · Erich Hartmann (Swords & Diamonds) · Hermann-Heinrich Behrend (Swords) · Gustav Stühmer · Fritz von Scholz Fritz von Scholz Edler von Rarancze (Swords) · Willi Thulke · Josef Rettemeier · Smilo Freiherr von Lüttwitz (Swords) · Josef Bregenzer · Friedrich Schulz (Swords) · Werner Mummert (Swords) · Hans-Joachim Jabs · Bernhard Jope · Wilhelm Schmitter · Maximilian Otte · Hansgeorg Bätcher · Georg Koßmala · Georg Grüner · Eduard Tratt · Fritz Petersen · Fridolin von Senger und Etterlin · Ludwig Müller · Heinz Wittchow von Brese-Winiary · Herbert Schwender · Hans Kroh (Swords) · Günther Radusch · Johannes Frießner · Alfred Grislawski · Erich Rudorffer (Swords) · Emil Lang · Otto Kittel (Swords) · Rudolf Schoenert · Wilhelm Herget · Anton Hafner · Johannes Mayer (Swords) · Heinrich Hogrebe · Rudolf Geisler · Heinrich von Vietinghoff · Egon von Neindorff · Wilhelm Drewes · Karl-Lothar Schulz (Swords) · Günther Schack · Otto Pollmann · Hans-Karl Stepp · Martin Möbus · Albin Wolf · Heinz Vinke · Karl Decker (Swords) · Erich Lorenz · Wilhelm Eggemann · Theodor von Lücken · Otto Deßloch · Leopold Münster · Max Sachsenheimer (Swords) · Martin Hrustak · Johann Schwerdfeger · Emil Vogel · Rudolf Freiherr von Waldenfels · Fritz Müller · Kilian Weimer · Walter Schmidt · Karl Ullrich · Karl Henze · Willy Marienfeld · Ferdinand Wegerer · Wolf Hagemann · Hans Strippel · Friedrich Hochbaum · Ernst-Eberhard Hell · Alfons Hitter · Wolfgang Pickert · Gottfried Weber · Horst Niederländer · Georg Bonk · Hubert Pilarski · Ernst-Wilhelm Hoffmann · Konrad Zeller · Joachim Domaschk · Emil Kaminsky · Edwin Stolz · Rudolf Petersen · Götz Freiherr von Mirbach · Diddo Diddens · Ernst Sieler · Erich Marcks · Albert Brux · Horst Kaubisch · Hendrik Stahl · Heinz-Wolfgang Schnaufer (Swords & Diamonds) · Adolf Glunz · Eduard Skrzipek · Reinhard Egger · Josef-August Fitz · Herbert Huppertz · Clemens-Heinrich Graf von Kageneck · Werner Kolb · Martin Unrein · Erich Abraham · Fritz-Hubert Gräser (Swords) · Friedrich Dollmann · Gerd von Rundstedt (Swords) · Hermann Wulf · Erich Buschenhagen · Heinz-Otto Fabian · Karl Palmgreen · Heinrich Hoffmann · Heinz-Georg Lemm (Swords) · Wilhelm Batz (Swords) · Willy Kientsch · Heinz Strüning · Karl-Heinz Weber · Otto Weßling · Rudolf Frank · Herbert Lamprecht · Wilhelm von Salisch · Gerhard Kruse · Otto Carius · Hermann von Oppeln-Bronikowski (Swords) · Rudolf Demme · Paul Schulze · Kurt von Tippelskirch · Hubert Mickley · Willy Wesche · Carl Hilpert · Heinrich Nickel · Curt Schille · Martin Strahammer · Karl Kloskowski · Gerhard Simons · Max Wünsche · Dietrich Kraiß · Rudolf Bacherer · Andreas von Aulock · Hermann Siggel · Gerhard Pick · Heinz Macher · Hinrich Warrelmann · Rudolf Wulf · Werner Schulze · Walter Melzer · Bruno Hinz · Hellmuth Mäder (Swords) · Rudolf Holste · Kurt Pflugbeil · Wilhelm Bittrich (Swords) · Eugen Meindl (Swords) · Hermann Flörke · Martin Bieber · Hermann Klein · Jakob Gansmeier · Walter Misera · Friedrich-Wilhelm Bock · Heinrich Freiherr von Lüttwitz (Swords) · Heinz Greiner · Christian Sonntag · Hellmuth Pfeifer · Rudolf Flinzer · Walter Neitzel · Richard Seuss · Otto Lasch · Alois Weber · Gerhard Lindemann · Johannes Bölter · Gustav Reimar · Otto Kähler · Erich Pietzonka · Walter Gericke · Heinrich Trettner · Hans Thurner · Paul Zorner · Hans von der Mosel · Rudolf Haen · Helmut Scholz · Otto Schury · Werner Marcks · Ehrenfried-Oskar Boege · Hellmuth Becker · Johannes Mühlenkamp · Friedrich-August Schack · Ernst König · Ernst-Georg Philipp · Wolfgang Kretzschmar (Swords) · Otto Meyer · Hermann Scharnagel · Konrad Sauer · Jörg Burg · Gerhard Behnke · Gerhard Kunert · Wilhelm Kohler · Heinz Reinefarth · Erich Straube · Georg Graf von Rittberg · Mortimer von Kessel · Willi Koch · Friedrich Strohm · Theodor Krancke · Georg Jakob · Walter Schuck · Friedrich August Freiherr von der Heydte · Herbert Bauer · Franz Kieslich · Diether Lukesch · Wilhelm Bleckwenn · Arthur Jüttner (Swords) · Johann-Georg Richert · Werner Gust · Othmar Kreuzinger · Franz Weller · Karl Thieme (Swords) · Hans-Christian Stock · Gustav Schubert · Johann Schalanda · Helmut Leicht · Günther Tonne · Benno Reuter · Paul Ecker · Paul Freiherr von Hauser · Fritz-Rudolf Schultz · Heinrich Busse · Eduard Brunner · Max Simon · Johannes Blaskowitz (Swords) · Klaus Hilgemann · Gerhard Friedrich · Maximilian Felzmann · Johann-Heinrich Eckhardt · Werner Hartmann · Walter Weiß · Gustav-Adolf von Zangen · Gerd Ruge · Wilhelm Weidenbrück · Helmut Dörner (Swords) · Albrecht Krügel · Emil Badorrek · Klaus Mietusch · Heinz Meyer · Wilhelm Antrup · Heinrich Höfer · Gerhart Schirmer · Hans Seidemann · Hans Hoßfeld · Werner Dörnbrack · Hubert Pölz · Rudolf Witzig · Georg-Peter Eder · Rudolf Rennecke · Otto Dommeratzky · Karl Kennel · Gerhard Michalski · Gerhard Bremer · Klaus von Bismarck · Artur Phleps · Otto Wöhler · Helmuth Reymann · Curt Ehle · Kurt Maier · Georg Sattler · Walther Hahm · Christian Braun · Fritz Arndt · Gerhard Engel · Jürgen Wagner · Friedrich Jakob · Harry Hoppe · Eduard Crasemann · Andreas Kuffner · Fritz Biermeier · Paul Klatt · Günther-Eberhardt Wisliceny (Swords) · Otto Weidinger (Swords) ·
Recipients of 1945 Heinrich Baron von Behr · Kurt-Hermann Freiherr von Mühlen · Walter Lucht · Sigmund-Ulrich Freiherr von Gravenreuth · Kurt Gröschke · Kurt Herzog · Alois Eisele · Volprecht Riedesel Freiherr zu Eisenbach · Joachim Brendel · Wilhelm Hasse · Hans-Detlef Gollert-Hansen · Claus Breger · Bruno Streckenbach · Max Reinwald · Richard Henze · Walther Risse · Alexander Löhr · Gerhard Schmidhuber · Wilhelm Schöning · Herbert Kündiger · Albert Henze · Erich Reuter · Kurt Dahlmann · Kurt Plenzat · Herbert Rollwage · Max Schäfer · Karl Pröll · Hellmuth Böhlke · Walter Süß · Wilhelm Spindler · Karl Arndt · Kurt Wahl · Joachim Rumohr · August Zehender · Karl Pfeffer-Wildenbruch · Walther Dahl · Karl Roßmann · Ernst Jansa · Jürgen Harder · Otto Vincon · Joachim Sander · Georg Graf von Plettenberg · Maximilian von Weichs · Wilhelm Osterhold · Georg Jauer · Karl-Heinz Oesterwitz · Herbert Wittmann · Herbert Schramm · Anton-Otto Frank · Anton Müller · Eduard Zorn · Willi Schülke · Günther Blumentritt · Josef Heichele · Georg Gebhardt · Ernst Knebel · Fritz Klasing · Edmund Blaurock · Ludwig Schulz · Rolf Hermichen · Hans Krebs · Heinz-Martin Ewert · Fritz-Georg von Rappard · Josef Jakwert · Horst Warschnauer · Hans-Babo von Rohr · Ernst-August Krag · Heinrich Schmelzer · Traugott Kempas · Arthur Kullmer · Michael Pössinger · Ottmar Pollmann · Bern von Baer · Hans Reichardt · Werner Ebeling · Hermann Niehoff (Swords) · Heinrich Götz · Rudolf von Bünau · Bruno Karczewski · Erich Schneider · Kurt Welter · Helmut Renschler · Wolfgang Rust · Friedrich Sixt · Kurt Witschel · Clemens Betzel · Franz Rogalski · Johannes Grimminger · Ernst Kutschkau · Egon Aghta · Wilhelm Schröder · Karl-Heinz Becker · Heinz Rökker · Robert Weiß · Werner Pötschke · Alfred Matern · Fritz Vogt · Karl-Heinz Jaeger · Max Wandrey · Hans Engelien · Heinrich Ruhl · Bruno Frankewitz · Paul Scheuerpflug · Martin Becker · Gerhard Werner · Ernst-Georg Kedzia · Kuno von Meyer · Walter Prüß · Günther Konopacki · Hans-Georg Herzog · Rudolf Trittel · Karl Wanka · Harald Freiherr von Elverfeldt · Friedrich Jeckeln · Fritz Fullriede · Johannes Spielmann · Heinrich Keese · Lothar Berger · Helmuth Hufenbach · Erich Schroedter · Horst von Usedom · Günther Josten · Alexander Gläser · Wilhelm Stähler · Gerhard Stüdemann · Walter Girg · Horst von Mellenthin · Martin Steglich · Rudolf Neubert · Friedrich Richter · Ernst Kuppinger · Otto Paetsch · Hans von Tettau · Gerhard Thyben · Theodor Burchardi · August Thiele · Bruno Richter · Otto Skorzeny · Ernst-Anton von Krosigk · Helmut Borchardt · Carl Becker · Kurt Röpke · Friedrich Rögelein · Alfred Simm · Gerhard Raht · Hans-Arno Ostermeier · Max Hansen · Herbert Lütje · Helmut Lipfert · Josef Kraft · Martin Drewes · Hermann Greiner · Paul Semrau · Adolf Raegener · Hans-Peter Knaust · Franz Hack · Paul-Albert Kausch · Josef Brandner · Eberhard Rodt · Joachim Ziegler · Hans-Joachim Kappis · Karl Schrepfer · Josef Prentl · Rolf Thomsen · Hans-Günther Lange · Heinz-Oskar Laebe · Heinrich Hax · Hanns Laengenfelder · Richard Daniel · Wolfgang von Obstfelder · Wolfgang von Bostell · Gerhard Mokros · Werner Ostendorff · Rudolf Lehmann · Karl Kreutz · Heinz Werner · Alfred Jodl · Adalbert von Blanc · Hermann Plocher · Franz Graßmel · Friedrich Lier · Oskar-Hubert Dennhardt · Matthias Kleinheisterkamp · Hanns-Heinrich Lohmann · Alfred Montag · Hans Meier · Alfons Rebane · Walter Schlags-Koch · Erich Schmidt · Joachim von Siegroth · Paul Stahl · Georg Störck · Franz Sensfuß · Joseph von Radowitz
Foreign recipients
(as individuals in the military of allies of the Third Reich)in chronological order
see also: List of Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross recipientsCategories:- 1914 births
- 1990 deaths
- People from Würzburg
- German military personnel of World War II
- Recipients of the Close Combat Clasp
- Recipients of the German Cross
- Recipients of the Knight's Cross
- SS officers
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