Hitler personal life children. Biological children of Adolf Hitler

Adolf Hitler is a famous dictator, demagogue, founder of the Nazi Party and the perpetrator of the outbreak of World War II. Hundreds of thousands of people died at his hands, so it is not surprising that now many consider him almost the embodiment of evil. And the fact that he left no offspring behind him only pleases the souls of people. But this is only official information. It is hard to believe that in his entire life Adolf did not “make happy” a single young lady, especially considering his rich and promiscuous sex life. Indeed, there is evidence that he did have children.

Hitler's daughters and Brown

As you know, the most important woman in the life of the Nazi leader was Eva Braun. He lived with her for about 14 years and even eventually married. A couple of days after the wedding, the bride and groom committed suicide. They had no children at that time. At least that's what official sources say.

If we believe the theory of the British researchers D. Williams and S. Dunstan, then in 1945, instead of Hitler and his wife, their doubles died. In fact, the couple “deserted” back in 1943: first they went to fascist Spain to General Franco, and from there to Argentina. Frau and Herr Hitler settled in the bay of Caleta de los Loros and lived there for another 2 decades. During this time, they had 2 daughters.

All these judgments are based on the testimony of eyewitnesses of the events: the pilot who helped the Fuhrer escape, as well as his servants and bodyguards. In addition, a man from Argentina claims to have seen and communicated with the former Nazi leader after 1950. But many scientists strongly disagree with the conclusions of Williams and Dunstan due to a lack of facts.

If the story that Adolf Hitler lived to old age in Argentina is fiction, then could he have had children? Apparently, yes. There are many testimonies about the Fuhrer's illegitimate offspring. Here are just the most popular ones.

Of all the people who talked about their relationship with Hitler (and there were many impostors), Jean-Marie Lauret has the most evidence of his origin.

His mother, Charlotte Lobjoie, had a brief relationship with Adolf in 1917, when he was serving in France as a simple soldier.

Here is what Charlotte had to say:

“I was 16 years old. Collecting hay with other girls, we saw a German soldier on the other side of the street. The man was making sketches in his notebook, and we wondered what he was drawing. Out of the whole company, I was chosen to approach him.”

The soldier liked the pretty young lady, and an affair began between them, which lasted less than a year. Charlotte had a son 9 months later. Adolf, apparently, refused to acknowledge paternity, but sent the girl money, expressing tacit consent. She, apparently, was not ready to raise a baby, so she gave him to her grandmother to raise.

Oddly enough, during the Nazi occupation, the already adult Jean-Marie joined the French Resistance and fought against the Nazis.

Later, Charlotte recognized the same soldier in the newly made ruler of Germany, but she told her son about who his father was only before her death. Jean-Marie was greatly saddened by this fact, he fell into depression, and in order to distract himself, he constantly worked without rest and entertainment. For 20 years he was silent about his origin, but then he opened up: wanting to confirm, or rather, refute his origin, in 1980 Jean-Marie conducted an investigation with the involvement of historians and graphologists who compared the handwriting of the man and the former head of the NSWP.

In search of truth

All experts came to the conclusion: there is a high probability that the Fuhrer is the father of Jean-Marie. They have similar facial features and similar handwriting. Genetic examination showed a 25% similarity, but there was not enough data for an accurate analysis.

There was also evidence that Hitler really had a connection with Lobjoie. This was confirmed by familiar women, as well as a picture of Charlotte, which was painted by the future leader of the Nazis. Later, documents were found confirming that Adolf's officers delivered an envelope with a "payoff" to a pregnant Charlotte.

These arguments seemed unconvincing to Laura, he did not want to admit that the notorious despot was his relative. The man continued his investigations, however, he died at the age of 67, never knowing the truth.

In 1981, Lore wrote the autobiographical book Your Father's Name is Hitler, in which he describes his investigations and also relates his mother's story about her affair with the despot.

Although many historians agree that Jean Marie is the offspring of a famous dictator, the question remains open. The problem is that Lobjoie was not a chaste girl and, apparently, entered into intimate relationships with other soldiers even when she met Adolf.

If paternity had been proven, Laura's children would have been entitled to royalties from their grandfather's autobiographical book, My Struggle. But they refused to do a DNA test. Still, being the descendants of the most hated man in history is not something you want to brag about.

At the moment, Jean-Marie is not a recognized descendant, which means that the Fuhrer's family tree stops at him.

Werner Hermann Schmedt

Another more or less reliable version says: the leader of the NSRP has a son from Geli Raubal, and his name is Werner Hermann Schmedt. He was born in 1929 and lived with his mother until 1931, when she took her own life. From that moment on, the boy was under the care of his father. His existence was carefully concealed, and at the end of the war Herman was sent on a trip to Europe to save him from the hands of the Red Army.

After some time he moved to the USA. Schmedt now lives in Indianapolis. He himself turned to journalists with a confession, as he was tired of living a lie for 60 years. Researchers doubted for a long time whether he was an impostor or not, but Mr. Werner presented photographs with his father and mother. There is also a birth certificate, but only “G. and R."

As you know, Hitler preferred to remain a bachelor. The politician believed that he would be more popular unmarried. Maybe for the same reason he did not want to officially recognize any child. This made him vulnerable.

Zinaida Popova

There is another version that the Fuhrer has a daughter from the Soviet intelligence officer Maria Popova. In 1931, she went on a business trip to Berlin, where the National Socialists had just come to power. Officially, she worked at the Trade Representation of the USSR, but in fact, she was a scout.

Maria was acquainted with the head of the NSRP and, they say, they met secretly. After the woman became pregnant, she was recalled to Moscow. There she gave birth to a girl named Zinaida. Stalin helped Popova settle down and protected her from reprisals.

Zinaida Popova, who believed that the Fuhrer was her parent, died in 2015 in Moscow. Of course, it is not a fact that Maria did not become pregnant from other leaders of the Nazi Party, as they say that she had affairs not only with Adolf.

Other illegitimate children

In addition, there were other reports of illegitimate children of the founder of the Third Reich. For example, the media wrote that allegedly Magda Goebbels admitted that she gave birth to Helmut Christian from Hitler, and not from her husband Joseph Goebbels.

There were also reports that, shortly before his death, Adolf admitted that he had a daughter from Olympic champion Tilly Fleischer. When the leader of the Nazis found out about her situation, he quickly married her off, so that the child was supposedly born in marriage. The daughter, named Gisella, was seen by her father only once. Gisella herself is sure that her descendant is Hitler, and even wrote a book about it, but her mother denied everything (of course).

In addition to active propaganda among adult Germans, the Nazi Party did not disregard the young population. Although Hitler had no children of his own, he aspired to be a father to the children of all Germany. The politician often met with little Germans to chat. He tried to instill in them devotion to his country and grow them into real Aryans.

Project Thor

This is probably the most terrible theory, the confirmation of which may indicate that the children of Adolf Hitler live almost all over the world!

Before his death, the former Nazi Obersturmführer Erich Runge spoke about many secret projects of the Third Reich, including the so-called Thor project, whose goal was to produce ideal Aryans. For this, about 100 German women aged 18-27 were chosen on a “racial basis”. They were artificially fertilized with material taken from Hitler.

Of course, the subjects weren't told the secret of who would be the "dad". The newborns were under observation in the secret laboratory Lebensborn N 1146. On May 6, 1945, the Lebensborn employees were ordered to evacuate. All documents were destroyed, the building was blown up, and the babies were distributed to peasants from German villages: people were told that these were orphans from a large maternity hospital that had come under bombardment.

Accordingly, the descendants of the Fuhrer, who can now live in any corner of the world, do not know about their origin. There is even an opinion that some of them are now members of the government. So, recently someone pointed out the similarities between Hitler and Angela Merkel, and they really are! Is this information correct? It is unlikely that we will be able to get to the bottom of the truth.

Did Adolf Hitler have children?

Both of Adolf Hitler's parents came from the rural area of ​​Waldviertel in Austria, near the Czech border. Hitler's father, Alois, was born on June 7, 1837, to an unmarried 42-year-old Maria Anna Schicklgruber. Alois' father (Adolf Hitler's grandfather) is unknown. It was rumored that he was the son of a wealthy Jew, Frankenberger, for whom Maria Anna worked as a servant-cook. When Alois was almost five years old, a certain Johann Georg Hiedler married Maria Schicklgruber. The surname Hiedler (in ancient metrics was also written as Hüttler) sounded unusual for an Austrian and resembled a Slavic one. Five years later, Maria, Adolf Hitler's grandmother, died. Stepfather Johann Georg abandoned his stepson, and Alois was raised by his stepfather's brother, Johann Nepomuk Hidler, who had no sons. At the age of 13, Alois ran away from home and first got a job as an apprentice shoemaker in Vienna, and after 5 years - in the border guard. He quickly moved up in the ranks and soon became a senior customs inspector in the town of Braunau.

Alois Hitler, father of Adolf Hitler

In the spring of 1876, Nepomuk, who wanted to have a son, even if it was not his own, adopted Alois, giving him his last name. It is not known for what reason she was slightly changed during adoption - from Hiedler to Hitler. Six months later, Nepomuk died, and Alois inherited his farm worth 5,000 florins. Lover of love affairs, the father of Adolf Hitler then already had an illegitimate daughter. Alois first married a woman who was 14 years older than him, but she divorced him when he entered into a love affair with the cook Fanny Matzelsberger. In addition, Alois was attracted by the granddaughter of his adoptive father Nepomuk, sixteen-year-old Clara Pelzl, who was formally his cousin's niece. In 1882, Fanny gave birth to a son from Alois, named after his father, and then a daughter, Angela. Alois was married to Fanny, but she died in 1884.

Even before that, Alois entered into a love affair with the calm, gentle Clara Pelzl. In January 1885, he married her, having received special permission from Rome for this, since the new wife was formally his close relative. In the coming years, Clara gave birth to two boys and one girl, but they all died. On April 20, 1889, Clara's fourth child, Adolf, was born.

Clara Pelzl-Hitler - mother of Adolf Hitler

Three years later, Alois was promoted, and Adolf Hitler's parents moved from Austria to the German city of Passau, where the young Fuhrer forever mastered the Bavarian dialect. When Adolf was almost five years old, his parents had another child - the son of Edmund. In the spring of 1895, the Hitler family moved to Havefeld, a village fifty kilometers southwest of Linz. The Hitlers lived in a peasant house with a field of almost two hectares and were considered wealthy people. Soon, Hitler's parents sent him to an elementary school, whose teachers later recalled him as "a student with a lively mind, obedient, but playful." Even at this age, Adolf showed his oratory skills and soon became a ringleader among his peers. At the beginning of 1896, a daughter, Paula, was also born in the Hitler family.

House in Braunau, where Hitler's family lived and he was born

Alois Hitler retired from customs, leaving behind the memory of a diligent employee, but a rather arrogant man who loved to be photographed in official uniform. Because of his inclinations as a family tyrant, he came into sharp conflict with his eldest son and namesake. At the age of 14, Alois Jr. followed his father's example and ran away from home. The Hitler family moved again - to the town of Lambach, where they settled in a good apartment on the second floor of a spacious house. In 1898, young Adolf graduated from school with twelve "units" - the highest mark in German schools. In 1899, Hitler's father bought a cozy house in Leonding, a village on the outskirts of Linz.

Adolf Hitler in 1889-1890

After the flight of Alois Jr., his father began to drill Adolf. He also thought about running away from the family. Already at the age of eleven, Adolphe strove for leadership. In a photograph from that year, he sits among his classmates, towering over his comrades, with his chin up and his arms folded across his chest. Adolf showed a talent for drawing. The young Fuhrer was very fond of war games and Indians, he read books about the Franco-Prussian war.

Adolf Hitler with classmates (1900)

In 1900, Adolf Hitler's brother, Edmund, died of measles. Adolf dreamed of becoming an artist, but in 1900 his parents sent him to the Linz real school. The big city made a strong impression on the boy. He did not study particularly well, especially in natural science subjects. Among classmates, Adolf Hitler became the leader. “Two extremes of character merged in him, the combination of which is extremely rare for people - he was a calm fanatic,” one of his fellow students later recalled.

On January 3, 1903, the head of the Hitler family, Alois, died of a stroke in a pub. His widow began to receive a good pension. Family tyranny is now a thing of the past. Adolf studied worse and dreamed of becoming a great artist. His older half-sister Angela married Leo Raubal, a tax inspector from Linz. “He lacked self-discipline, he was wayward, arrogant and quick-tempered ... He reacted very painfully to advice and comments, while at the same time demanding from his classmates unquestioning obedience to him as a leader,” one of his Linz students recalled about the then Adolf Hitler teachers. The Hitler boy was very fond of history, especially stories about the ancient Germans. The last, fifth grade, Adolf was already finishing at a real school in Steyr, forty kilometers from Linz. He passed his final exams in mathematics and German only on the second attempt (1905). Now he could continue his studies at a higher real school or technical institute, but, having an aversion to the technical sciences, he convinced his mother of the uselessness of this. At the same time, Adolf referred to a pulmonary disease, which then appeared in him.

He continued to live in Linz, read a lot, painted, went to museums and the opera house. In the autumn of 1905, Hitler became friends with August Kubitschek, who was studying to be a musician. They got very close. Kubizek bowed before his comrade, who often orated in his presence. Hitler told Kubizek about his sublimely romantic love for a certain Stefanie Jansten, a beauty of the "Nordic type", to whom he did not dare to confess his feelings. On this occasion, Hitler was even going to jump from a bridge into the Danube. He spoke to Kubizek about his plans to rebuild the whole of Vienna (planning, among other things, to erect a 100-meter steel tower there). In the spring of 1906, Adolf spent a month in Vienna, and the trip there strengthened his intention to devote his life to painting and architecture.

Hitler's mother was diagnosed with breast cancer. In January 1907 she had one of her breasts removed. In September 1907, Hitler, having received his share of the inheritance, about 700 crowns, with the consent of his mother, who constantly spoiled him, went to Vienna to enter the Academy of Arts. But he failed the exam. In October 1907, the Jewish doctor Bloch, who was treating Clara Hitler, informed Adolf that she was in a very bad condition. Adolf returned home from Vienna and selflessly looked after his mother, sparing no money for her treatment. On December 21, Clara died, and her son mourned her fervently. “In all my practice,” Dr. Bloch later recalled, “I have never seen a more inconsolable person than Adolf Hitler.”

In the relatives of Adolf Hitler, the so-called intzucht was very common. This term refers to incestuous intra-tribal marriages between cousins ​​and sisters, nieces and uncles, etc. The leader of the Third Reich knew this very well and was afraid to become a father.

His fears were fully justified: when crossing closely related lines, there is a high chance of the appearance of sick offspring. At the same time, some sources claim that Hitler still had children. In fact, the leader of the Nazis was an ordinary bourgeois with respect for family values ​​​​and love for children inherent in this class.

British explorers version

A few years ago, the British magazine The Globe published a sensational article. The article considered different versions of where, when and in relations with which women Adolf Hitler could have children. There is no 100% reliable documentary evidence of this, but there are many indirect facts indicating the possibility of the birth of heirs from the instigator of World War II.

Psychologists and researchers of all stripes attributed to Hitler all sorts of deviations from the norm in sexual life. In reality, the Fuhrer had as many mistresses and common-law wives as any average man in his position could have.

Unrecognized sons of the leader

In his early youth, Adolf had an affair with a German woman, Hilda Lokamp. She gave birth to the future Fuhrer's son. It is not possible to trace the fate of the boy. Hitler had a love affair with his mother for a short time and what became of her after that is not known.

The second case when he could have children is connected with the First World War. At that time, Corporal A. Hitler ended up in France, where he had more than one love affair. In 1981, Jean-Marie Lauret, a Frenchman, claimed to be the illegitimate son of the leader of Nazi Germany. He even published a book with the eloquent title "Your father's name was Hitler."

Project Thor

Already at the helm of the Third Reich, the Fuhrer launched the secret project Thor. According to the plan, it was planned to give birth and raise many of his brilliant followers and "true Aryans" from Hitler's seed. Young, healthy Germans and Norwegians 18-27 years old were selected for fertilization. 22 babies were born.

These children were first kept in a secret laboratory, number 1146, which was registered with the Lebensborn organization. In 1945, this Aryan breeding farm was evacuated. Hitler's children were given to peasants from neighboring villages. Many of them could survive and give birth to the Fuhrer's grandchildren.

son across the ocean

He also had a legitimate son, who was even brought up by his father for some time. Now Werner Schmedt - and this is him - lives in the USA. Hitler's official heir had photographs with his father and mother, as well as a birth certificate with a secret note in the "parents" column: G. (father) and R. (mother).

Schmedt even retained memories of his father, his love of sweets, fear of spiders and other character traits. The mother could be Hitler's niece Geli Raubal. The Fuhrer, like many of his ancestors, could not resist the temptation to enter into an incestuous union.

The leader of the Nazis had a strong passion for Geli. The young woman either committed suicide or was killed by Hitler in a fit of jealousy. 5-year-old Werner has since been raised by German nannies. The last time the boy saw his father was before the start of the war, in 1940.

In 1951 he emigrated and finally settled in the United States. Previously, Werner Schmedt hid his family relationship with the Fuhrer. Now he is ready to provide his genetic material to prove it.

Hitler's children July 18th, 2012

Hello dear!
I apologize that I don’t write as often as I would like - it’s just such a stage now in my life - I don’t have enough time and energy to implement my plan and translate it on paper (or rather in electronic form). I hope this is a temporary stage, otherwise it will be somehow “sour” :-) But oh well, this is the lyrics. Wait and see:-)
I was interested in one, at first glance, a rather simple question: how many children did Adolf Hitler have?
The answer seems to be obvious: not a single one, because the German chancellor and the greatest war criminal got married shortly before his suicide, and did not burden himself with marital relations before - he believed that he did not " may belong to one woman, for it must belong to all Germany". However, not everything is so clear.

Corporal Adolf Hitler


It is widely believed that Hitler was inferior in the sexual sphere, and congenital (and acquired) diseases and pathologies did not allow him to have offspring. However, getting acquainted with various works on the life and work of Hitler, including the memoirs of doctors who worked with the Fuhrer, I did not find any evidence of this fact. There were some problems with digestion, multiplied by mental excitability and wild suspiciousness, there were problems with drugs, which Hitler was hooked on by Dr. Morell. And in everything else, including in the sexual sphere, Hitler was all right. He could have children. But did you want to?


Daughter of Hitler's half-sister Geli Raubal

I got the impression that, despite his bloody and disgusting nature, deep down he remained a typical bourgeois, inclined to follow traditional German values, where family and children are in one of the first places. From an official point of view, he did not have a family, but since the mid-20s he had 2 constant mistresses. First, this is his niece Geli Raubal, who either shot herself or was killed in 1931. From this incestuous relationship (which, by the way, has not yet been definitely confirmed), there were definitely no children. Things are much more complicated with the second cohabitant, and later Hitler's wife, Eva Braun. But more on that later.

Eva Brown

In the mid-20s, Adolf Hitler was already well over 30, and it is unlikely that he retained his integrity until the wedding night. One of the main biographers of the Fuhrer, Werner Maser, proceeded from similar considerations. He claims that the son of Hitler was the French railway worker Jean-Marie Lauret-Frison. He was born in 1918 from a connection between Corporal Hitler and a certain Charlotte Edoxy Alida Lobzhua. However, despite the examinations, the likelihood of Hitler's paternity is not obvious due to the lack of genetic material from both the mother and the father. Be that as it may, until recently, Jean-Marie was considered the most likely child of Hitler.


Jean Marie Lauret Frison

However, quite recently, the work of British historians Simon Dunstan and Gerard Williams “The Gray Wolf. Flight of Adolf Hitler. In this well-written and well-illustrated book, the authors present their point of view on why, why and how the German chancellor ... was able to escape from besieged Berlin at the very end of April 1945. The version is not new, but scientists have done a really good job, and the book is at least curious. So, if the price does not scare you away, then I highly recommend reading

Ush and Hitler

Among the many different hypotheses, the British put forward the version of "Hitler's life after death", where Eva Braun plays an important role. By the way, according to the authors, Hitler really married her, but already at the end of 1945, and not in April, as modern historiographers believe.
The book claims that the Hitler couple had 2 girls. The first was born in 1938, her name was Ursula (Ush). A cute child is often found in photographs from the archive of Eva Braun and, according to her (E. Braun), is the daughter of her childhood friend Herta Schneider. But this is not true. Schneider had one daughter, her name was Gita, and she doesn't look like Ursula at all. It is alarming that Eva Brown's biographer Angela Lambert defiantly avoids any mention of this child. It seems to me that this girl is the most possible child of Hitler and Eva Braun, here I agree with British historians.

Berlin Olympic champion Tilly Fleischer

True, they went even further and suggested that the second child was born either at the end of 1945, or at the beginning of 1946. The name is not given anywhere. In addition, Dunstan and Williams believe that Brown had a stillborn baby in 1943.
But that's not all. Further fantasizing resembles the theater of the absurd.
Allegedly, shortly before his death in 1962, Hitler told one of the few people left with him, the former mechanic of the German rider "Admiral von Spee" Heinrich Bethe, that he had another daughter from a short relationship with the 1936 Olympic champion Tilly Fleischer. The Fuhrer saw his daughter, who was named Gisella, only once. This lady, by the way, wrote a book about being Hitler's daughter, but Tilly Fleischer herself categorically denies everything.

Helmut Goebbels

And that is not all. The most paradoxical "fatherhood" of Hitler follows from the confession of Magda Goebbels: her son Helmut Christian, born in 1935, was precisely from Hitler, and not from her husband Joseph (!).
So how many children did Hitler have - one, four or five? We will never know the exact data. There is only an opportunity to analyze, look for facts and assume.
What do you think?

World War II, the worst in human history, is over. The persons who unleashed it were convicted at the Nuremberg trials. Almost all the leaders of the Third Reich were either childless, or their families died with them, like the Goebbels family. And the successors of the cause of those who retained in themselves the genes of people who flooded the whole of Europe with blood, did not remain. But it turns out it's not.

Hitler, who committed suicide along with his wife Eva Braun, left no heirs. But despite this, the world press has been debating for more than half a century: “Does Adolf Hitler have descendants?”

In December 1935, on the orders of Himmler, a network of special maternity centers was established in Germany. They were supposed to be born "blonde beasts" - children who were born from the military personnel of the SS troops and carefully selected racially German women. It was to them, according to the plan of the Reichsfuehrer SS, that the future should have belonged. All children born in maternity centers were officially considered "adopted by Hitler".

The deputy Fuhrer for the party, "Nazi No. 2", Rudolf Hess decided to go further than his main competitor, who fought for proximity to Hitler, and in 1940, at a secret meeting in the Reich Chancellery, he made a statement that surprised everyone: "Hitler must have his own children. Only those in whose veins flows the Fuehrer's sacred blood are entitled to inherit his supreme power in Germany."

Hitler had an aversion to physical sex and was initially lukewarm about the idea. But he envied Stalin, who had sons who could replace their father at the helm of government, so, in the end, he agreed. Thus, the highly classified Thor project was "born".

It was planned to impregnate with Hitler's sperm about a hundred specially selected "Aryan" women aged 18 to 27 years. The future mothers of the Fuhrer's children did not know about the great mission that was in store for them. They believed that they would bear the descendants of the SS soldiers - "ideal Aryans".

When a baby was born, it was transported to a secret compound in the Bavarian Alps, near the Austrian border. Journalists learned about the nursery for Hitler's children that existed in the Alps from the former SS Obersturmführer Erich Runge, who made a sensational statement that dozens of sons and daughters of the Fuhrer live and work in many countries. And none of them even knows about their origin.

The press was skeptical about the words of the Obersturmführer. But they “changed their minds when, according to doctors, completely healthy, according to doctors, Runge suddenly died of a heart attack.

Time passed, and even more extensive information about the Fuhrer's children was published by Dr. Alessandro Giovenese, who lives in Brazil. From 1943 to 1945 he was an SS medical officer and was directly involved in a highly classified project. From conversations among the laboratory staff, Alessandro Giovenese knew that before the end of the war there were about twenty children in the complex, whose biological father was Adolf Hitler.

On May 6, 1945, an evacuation order was received. All documents were destroyed, and the children were distributed to the families of compassionate peasants, who were told that they were orphaned babies from a maternity hospital destroyed by Allied aircraft.

The babies were born as a result of the fertilization of women of the "Aryan race" with Hitler's "biological material". True, one exception was made. Among the mothers of Hitler's children were two Norwegians. The Fuhrer of the Third Reich wanted his blood to be "mixed with the blood of the Vikings."

So, the children and grandchildren of Hitler walk around Europe. “But they do not pose any threat to humanity,” Giovenese is sure, “If they have not yet shown bloodthirstiness and a thirst for ambition, then it will not manifest itself in the future. Blood and genes play big! role in determining who a person will become, but the standard of living and upbringing play an even greater role ... A second Hitler will never appear in Europe.

Egor USACHEV

Similar posts