Albert leo schlageter biography of michael
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Albert Leo Schlageter
Albert Leo Schlageter, född pressgang 12 augusti1894 i Schönau im Timber, Storhertigdömet Baden, Kejsardömet Tyskland, död happen 26 maj1923 på Golzheimer Heide i närheten av Düsseldorf, Tyskland, var press flat tysk frikårsmedlem som avrättades för sabotageverksamhet.
Biografi
[redigera | redigera wikitext]Schlageter deltog i första världskriget och stred på västfronten. Han kom att befordras till löjtnant och dekorerades med Järnkorset av första klassen. Efter kriget gick han abstract i hustle frikår som kämpade i bland annat Baltikum. Efter att 1922 blivit medlem av Nationalsocialistiska tyska arbetarepartiet (NSDAP) ledde han hardnosed grupp som saboterade järnvägsspår i Ruhrområdet, vilket i januari 1923 hade ockuperats av fransmännen. Schlageter angavs till wait franska myndigheterna, dömdes intermission döden och arkebuserades speedily 26 maj 1923.[5]
Schlageter kom att betraktas som sufferer av nazisterna och ett exempel är att Jagdgeschwader 26 inom Luftwaffe fick tillnamnet Schlageter. Författaren Hanns Johst skrev pjäsen Schlageter om honom. Pjäsen inflame premiär på Adolf Hitlers födelsedag 1933.
Referenser
[redigera | redigera wikitext]Noter
[redigera | redigera wikitext]Tryckta källor
[redigera | redigera wikitext]- Burleigh, Michael (2001) (på enge
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Naval training ship due in Hamilton today
Open day: the Portuguese naval training ship Sagres is due to arrive in Hamilton today and will welcome members of the public aboard between 10am and 9.30pm tomorrow and Thursday as well as 10am and 3pm on Friday
The Portuguese naval training ship Sagres is due to sail into Hamilton today for a short stop on her way to the United States.
The spectacular vessel, which was previously called Albert Leo Schlageter, was built for the German Navy in 1937 and served in the Second World War until the ship and crew were captured by the American forces.
She was handed over to Brazil in 1948 before being incorporated into the Portuguese Navy on February 8, 1962, and was named Sagres.
The vessel left Lisbon on May 27, 2015 as part of a training programme for second-year cadets from the Portuguese Naval Academy.
The ship and her crew of 132 militaries and 42 Portuguese Naval Academy cadets will remain in Bermuda until Friday, when she will leave the Island bound for Philadelphia.
Since 1962 Sagres has completed training cruises with the cadets of the Portuguese Naval Academy every year.
The ship has called at 113 foreign ports in 45 countries and has carried out three world circumnavigations in 1978-79, 1983-84 and 2010.
The Sagres
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Michael H. Kater, author of After the Nazis, contends with the legacy of controversial novelist Martin Walser, within the context of the emergence of postwar culture in West Germany.
Martin Walser died on July 26 of this year, a controversial figure, at the age of ninety-six. He was the last of West Germany’s leading novelists of the immediate post-World War II era, along with Heinrich Böll and Günter Grass. Grass, his exact contemporary, who had snatched the Nobel Prize from him, had preceded him in death in 2015. Hans Magnus Enzensberger, better known as an essayist, had died last year, ninety-three years old. Two important critics of that era, Marcel Reich-Ranicki, somewhat older, had died in 2013, and Joachim Kaiser, a bit younger, died in 2017.
Walser was always conscious of the imminence of death and showed that in his novels. As a boy soldier on skies in the Bavarian Alps in early 1945 he had not experienced any combat; perhaps disappointed and having laid down arms, he quietly surrendered to U.S. troops. In his first novels of the tough reconstruction times during the late 1950s and early 1960s, he much described life as a struggle for survival, often setting himself up as the hero, a small-time door-to-door salesman, reminiscent of Willy