Klara Hitler
- Birth Date:
- 12.08.1860
- Death date:
- 21.12.1907
- Person's maiden name:
- Pölzl
- Extra names:
- Клара Гитлер
- Cemetery:
- Austria, Cimetière (fr)
Klara Hitler née Pölzl (12 August 1860 – 21 December 1907) was an Austrian woman, the wife of Alois Hitler and the mother of Adolf Hitler.
Born Klara Pölzl in the Austrian village of Spital, Weitra, her mother was Johanna Hiedler. Either Hiedler's father Johann Nepomuk Hiedler or the latter's brother was most likely the biological father of her later husband Alois. Moreover, Klara's grandfather Johann was her future husband's step-uncle.
In 1876, three years after Alois Hitler's first married Anna Glasl-Hörer, her uncle Alois had hired Klara Pölzl, 16-year-old, as a household servant. After the death of his second wife, Franziska Matzelsberger, in 1884, Alois and Klara were married on 7 January 1885 in a brief wedding held early that morning at Hitler's rented rooms on the top floor of the Pommer Inn in Braunau. Alois then went to work for the day at his job as a customs official. Klara carried on calling Alois "uncle" following the marriage. Their first son Gustav was born four months later, on 15 May 1885. Ida followed on 23 September 1886. Both infants died of diphtheria during the winter of 1886-1887. A third child, Otto, was born and died in 1887.
Adolf was born 20 April 1889, followed by Edmund on 24 March 1894 and Paula on 21 January 1896. Edmund died of measles on 28 February 1900, at the age of five. Klara's adult life was spent keeping house and raising children, for which, according to Smith, Alois had little understanding or interest. Historian Alice Miller later wrote, "The family structure could well be characterized as the prototype of a totalitarian regime. Its sole, undisputed, often brutal ruler is the father. The wife and children are totally subservient to his will, his moods, and his whims; they must accept humiliation and injustice unquestioningly and gratefully. Obedience is their primary rule of conduct."
Klara was a devout Roman Catholic and attended church regularly with her children. Of her six children with Alois, only Adolf and Paula survived childhood.
Alois and Klara's children were:
- Gustav Hitler (born 10 May 1885, died of diphtheria on 8 December 1887 in Braunau am Inn)
- Ida Hitler (born 23 September 1886, died of diphtheria 2 January 1888 in Braunau am Inn)
- Otto Hitler (born and died 1887 in Vienna, lived only 3 days)
- Adolf Hitler (born 20 April 1889, committed suicide 30 April 1945), German dictator
- Edmund Hitler (born 24 March 1894, Passau, died of measles, 28 February 1900, Leonding)
- Paula Hitler (born 21 January 1896, died 1 June 1960), the last surviving member of Hitler's immediate family.
When Alois died in 1903 he left her a government pension. She sold the house in Leonding and moved with young Adolf and Paula to an apartment in Linz, where they lived frugally. Three or four years later a tumor was diagnosed in her breast. Following a long series of painful iodoform treatments given by her doctor Eduard Bloch, Klara died at home in Linz from the toxic medical side-effects on 21 December 1907. Adolf and Paula were at her side. Owing to their mother's pension and money from her modest estate, the two siblings were left with some financial support. Klara was buried in Leonding near Linz.
Adolf Hitler had a close relationship with his mother, was crushed by her death and carried the grief for the rest of his life. Speaking of Hitler, Bloch later recalled that after Klara's death he had seen in "one young man never so much pain and suffering broken fulfilled". Decades later in 1940 Hitler showed gratitude to Bloch (who was Jewish) by allowing him to emigrate with his wife from Austria to the United States.
wikipedia
Adolph Hitler’s mother, Klara
Adolf Hitler’s hatred of Jews stemmed from the mistaken belief that his mother was poisoned by a Jewish doctor, according to a new book. Hitler’s mother Klara had breast cancer but died as a result of poisoning from the idoform which was given to her by Dr Eduard Bloch. The use of idoform as a treatment for breast cancer was a standard medical practice when she died in 1907 at the age of 47.
The future dictator was 18 at the time and the author of the book, Joachim Riecker, said “her painful death was a key moment in his [Hitler’s] development”.
“Hitler never forgave the Jewish doctor. In conversations with aides such as Josef Goebbels he referred to the Jews as being like TB and himself as a ‘healer’ who had to stamp it, and consequently them, out,” he said.
The arguments in the book, called November 9: How World War One Led To The Holocaust, contradict other views that Hitler respected and liked Dr Bloch, even helping him to emigrate from Austria to the US in 1940.
Mr Riecker views November 9 as a key date for Hitler. On that day of the year, the Weimar Republic was set up in 1918, Hitler staged an attempted coup in 1923 and the Kristallnacht pogrom against Jews happened in 1938.
Dr Bloch died in June 1945 at the age of 73, outliving Hitler by a month.
Via Telegraph
Source: wikipedia.org
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Relation name | Relation type | Description | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Adolf Hitler | Son | ||
2 | Angela Hitler | Daughter | ||
3 | Paula Hitler | Daughter | ||
4 | Alois Hitler | Husband | ||
5 | Eva Braun | Daughter in-law | ||
6 | Leo Raubal | Grandson | ||
7 | Зинаида Попова | Granddaughter | ||
8 | Geli Raubal | Granddaughter |
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