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{{short description|High ranking Nazi official (1904–1942)}}
{{Infobox Chancellor
{{redirect|Heydrich|other people with the surname|Heydrich (surname)}}
| name = Reinhard Heydrich
{{good article}}
| nationality = German
{{EngvarB|date=May 2023}}
| image = SS-R.T.Heydrich.jpg
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2023}}
| caption = Heydrich shortly before his death in 1942.
{{Infobox officeholder
| birth_date = {{birth date|1904|3|7|mf=y}}
| name = Reinhard Heydrich
| birth_place = [[Halle, Saxony-Anhalt|Halle an der Saale]], [[Saxony-Anhalt]], [[Germany]]
| birth_name = Reinhard Tristan Eugen Heydrich
| death_date = {{death date and age|1942|6|4|1904|3|7}}
| image = Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1969-054-16, Reinhard Heydrich (cropped).jpg
| death_place = [[Prague]], [[Protectorate Bohemia and Moravia]] (now [[Czech Republic]])
| image_size =
| party = [[National Socialist German Workers Party]] (NSDAP)
| spouse = Lina von Osten (married [[December 26]], [[1931]])
| caption = Heydrich in 1940
| order = [[Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia|Protector of Bohemia and Moravia]]<br>(acting)
| office = [[Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia|Deputy Protector of Bohemia and Moravia]]
| status = Acting Protector
| term_start = [[September 29]], [[1941]]
| term_end = [[June 4]], [[1942]]
| appointed = [[Adolf Hitler]]
| term_start = 29 September 1941
| predecessor = [[Konstantin von Neurath]] (titular Protector until [[24 August]] [[1943]])
| successor = [[Kurt Daluege]]
| term_end = 4 June 1942
| predecessor = [[Konstantin von Neurath]]<br/>(Protector until 24 August 1943)
| successor = [[Kurt Daluege]]<br/>(Acting Protector)
| order1 = [[President of Interpol]]
| term_start1 = 24 August 1940
| term_end1 = 4 June 1942
| 1blankname1 = {{nowrap|Secretary-General}}
| 1namedata1 = Oskar Dressler
| predecessor1 = [[Otto Steinhäusl]]
| successor1 = [[Arthur Nebe]]
| order2 = Director of the [[Reich Security Main Office]]
| term_start2 = 27 September 1939
| term_end2 = 4 June 1942
| appointed2 = [[Heinrich Himmler]]
| predecessor2 = Office established
| successor2 = Heinrich Himmler (acting)
| order3 = Director of the [[Gestapo]]
| term_start3 = 22 April 1934
| term_end3 = 27 September 1939
| appointed3 = Heinrich Himmler
| predecessor3 = [[Rudolf Diels]]
| successor3 = [[Heinrich Müller (Gestapo)|Heinrich Müller]]
| title4 = Additional positions
| suboffice4 = Commander of the ''[[Einsatzgruppen]]''
| subterm4 = 1939–1942
| suboffice5 = Deputy to the ''[[Reichsführer-SS]]'' {{sfn|McNab|2009|pp=17,23 & 151}}<br>(''de facto'')
| subterm5 = 1936–1942
| suboffice6 = Director of the ''[[Sicherheitspolizei]]''
| subterm6 = 1936–1939
| suboffice7 = Member of the [[Prussian State Council]]
| subterm7 = 1934–1942
| suboffice8 = Director of the ''[[Sicherheitsdienst]]''
| subterm8 = 1931–1942
| birth_date = {{birth date|df=yes|1904|3|7}}
| birth_place = [[Halle (Saale)|Halle an der Saale]], [[Kingdom of Prussia|Prussia]], [[German Empire]]
| death_date = {{death date and age|df=yes|1942|6|4|1904|3|7}}
| death_place = [[Prague|Prague-Libeň]], [[Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia]]<br/>(now [[Prague]], Czech Republic)
| death_cause = [[Assassination of Reinhard Heydrich|Assassination]]
| resting_place = Invalidenfriedhof ([[Invalids' Cemetery]]), Berlin
| party = [[Nazi Party]]
| spouse = {{marriage|[[Lina Heydrich|Lina von Osten]]|1931}}
| children = 4
| parents = {{plainlist |
*[[Richard Bruno Heydrich]] (father)
*Elisabeth Anna Maria Amalia Krantz (mother)
}}
}}
| relatives = [[Heinz Heydrich]] (brother)
| signature = Reinhard Heydrich signatures.svg
<!--Military service-->| nickname = {{plainlist |
*The Hangman{{sfn|Merriam Webster|1996|p=1416}}
*The Butcher of Prague{{sfn|Ramen|2001|p=8}}
*The Blond Beast{{sfn|Ramen|2001|p=8}}
*Himmler's Evil Genius{{sfn|Ramen|2001|p=8}}
*Young Evil God of Death{{sfn|Snyder|1994|p=146}}
*The Man with the Iron Heart{{sfn|Dederichs|2009|p=92}}
}}
| allegiance = {{ubl|[[Weimar Republic]]|[[Nazi Germany]]}}
| branch = {{plainlist |
*''[[Reichsmarine]]''
*''[[Schutzstaffel]]''
*''[[Luftwaffe]]''
}}
| serviceyears = 1922–1942
| rank = {{plainlist |
*''[[Oberleutnant zur See]]'' (''[[Reichsmarine]]'')
* Major of the Reserve (''[[Luftwaffe]]'')
*''[[Obergruppenführer|SS-Obergruppenführer]] und General der Polizei''
}}
| commands = <!---[[Reich Main Security Office]]--->
| battles = [[World War II]]
| mawards = See [[#Service record|service record section]]
| footnotes =
| module =
}}

'''Reinhard Tristan Eugen Heydrich''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|h|aɪ|d|r|ɪ|k}} {{respell|HY|drik}}; {{IPA-de|ˈʁaɪnhaʁt ˈtʁɪstan ˈʔɔʏɡn̩ ˈhaɪdʁɪç|lang|Reinhard Tristan Eugen Heydrich.ogg}}; 7 March 1904&nbsp;– 4 June 1942) was a high-ranking German [[SS]] and police official during the [[Nazi era]] and a principal architect of [[the Holocaust]].

Heydrich was chief of the [[Reich Security Main Office]] (including the [[Gestapo]], [[Kriminalpolizei (Nazi Germany)|Kripo]], and [[Sicherheitsdienst|SD]]). He was also ''Stellvertretender Reichsprotektor'' (Deputy/Acting Reich-Protector) of [[Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia|Bohemia and Moravia]]. He served as president of the International Criminal Police Commission (ICPC, now known as [[Interpol]]) and chaired the January 1942 [[Wannsee Conference]] which formalised plans for the "[[Final Solution]] to the [[Jewish question]]"—the deportation and genocide of all Jews in [[German-occupied Europe]].


Many historians regard Heydrich as one of the darkest figures within the [[Nazi]] regime;{{sfn|Sereny|1996|p=325}}{{sfn|Evans|2005|p=53}}{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=xiii}} [[Adolf Hitler]] described him as "the man with the iron heart".{{sfn|Dederichs|2009|p=92}} He was the founding head of the ''[[Sicherheitsdienst]]'' (Security Service, SD), an intelligence organisation charged with seeking out and neutralising resistance to the [[Nazi Party]] via arrests, deportations, and murders. He helped organise ''[[Kristallnacht]]'', a series of coordinated attacks against Jews throughout Nazi Germany and parts of Austria on 9–10 November 1938. The attacks were carried out by [[Sturmabteilung|SA stormtroopers]] and civilians and presaged the Holocaust. Upon his arrival in [[Prague]], Heydrich sought to eliminate opposition to the Nazi occupation by suppressing [[Culture of the Czech Republic|Czech culture]] and deporting and executing members of the [[Resistance in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia|Czech resistance]]. He was directly responsible for the ''[[Einsatzgruppen]]'', the special task forces that travelled in the wake of the German armies and murdered more than two million people by mass shooting and gassing, including 1.3&nbsp;million Jews.
'''Reinhard Tristan Eugen Heydrich''' ([[7 March]] [[1904]] &ndash; [[4 June]] [[1942]]) was an ''[[Schutzstaffel|SS]]-[[Obergruppenführer]]'', chief of the [[RSHA|Reich Security Main Office]] (including the [[Gestapo]], [[Sicherheitsdienst|SD]] and [[Kripo]] [[Nazi]] [[police]] agencies) and ''Reichsprotektor'' ([[Reich]] [[Protector]]) of [[Bohemia]] and [[Moravia]]. [[Adolf Hitler]] considered him a possible successor. When the Nazis moved the headquarters of [[Interpol]] to Berlin he was chosen as the President of that international law enforcement agency. Heydrich chaired the 1942 [[Wannsee conference]], which finalized plans for the extermination of all European [[Jew]]s in what is now referred to as the [[Holocaust]]. Heydrich was wounded in an assassination attempt in [[Prague]] on [[27 May]] [[1942]] and died over a week later from complications arising from his injuries.


Heydrich was mortally wounded in [[Prague]] on 27 May 1942 as a result of [[Assassination of Reinhard Heydrich|Operation Anthropoid]]. He was ambushed by a team of Czech and Slovak soldiers who had been sent by the [[Czechoslovak government-in-exile]] to kill him; the team was trained by the British [[Special Operations Executive]]. Heydrich died from his injuries on 4 June. Nazi intelligence falsely linked the Czech and Slovak soldiers and resistance [[Partisan (military)|partisans]] to the villages of [[Lidice]] and [[Ležáky]]. [[Lidice massacre|Both villages were razed]]; the men and boys age 14 and above were shot and most of the women and children were deported and murdered in [[Nazi concentration camps]].
<!--spacing, please do not remove-->


==Early life==
==Early life==
Heydrich was born in [[Halle, Saxony-Anhalt|Halle an der Saale]] to composer Richard Bruno Heydrich and his wife Elisabeth Anna Maria Amalia Kranz; Heydrich held a life-long passion for the [[violin]]. His two forenames were patriotic musical references: "Reinhard" from ''Amen'', an opera written by his father, in a portion called ''"Reinhard's Crime"''. His first middle name, 'Tristan' stems from [[Richard Wagner|Wagner]]'s ''Tristan und Isolde''. His third name probably derives from military hero [[Prince Eugene of Savoy]], ''Eugen'' in German (the German cruiser ''[[Prinz Eugen]]'' was also named for Eugene of Savoy, as was the 7th Division of the [[Waffen-SS]]).He was born into a financially secure Catholic family. Music was a part of Heydrich's everyday life. his father, Bruno, was an opera singer as well as the founder of the Halle Conservatory of Music.
Reinhard Tristan Eugen Heydrich{{sfn|Dederichs|2009|p=11}} was born in 1904 in [[Halle, Saxony-Anhalt|Halle an der Saale]] to composer and opera singer [[Richard Bruno Heydrich]] and his wife, Elisabeth Anna Maria Amalia Heydrich (née Krantz). His father came from a Protestant family, but converted to Elisabeth's [[Roman Catholic]] faith upon marriage.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=21}} Reinhard was an altar boy, attending evening prayers and Mass every week with his mother as part of the Catholic minority in Halle.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=22}} Two of his forenames were musical references: "Reinhard" referred to the hero from his father's opera ''Amen'', and "Tristan" stems from [[Richard Wagner]]'s ''[[Tristan und Isolde]]''. Heydrich's third name, "Eugen", was his late maternal grandfather's forename ([[Eugen Krantz]] had been the director of the [[Dresden Royal Conservatory]]).{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|pp=14–18}}


Heydrich's family held social standing and substantial financial means. Music was a part of Heydrich's everyday life; his father founded the Halle Conservatory of Music, Theatre, and Teaching and his mother taught piano there.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|pp=14, 20}} As the oldest son, Reinhard was expected to inherit his father's music conservatory and was trained in music by his father. He learned the piano and violin by the time he was six years old.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=21}} Heydrich developed a passion for the violin and carried that interest into adulthood; he impressed listeners with his musical talent.{{sfn|Dederichs|2009|p=28}}
Young Heydrich developed an ardor for the violin, which he carried into his adult life, and he impressed listeners with his passionate musical talent. His father was a virulent anti-Semite and he instilled his three children with racist ideas. The Heydrich household was very strict and the children were frequently disciplined with lashings. As a youth, Heydrich engaged his younger brother, Heinz, in mock fencing duels, thus developing strong fencing skills. Young Heydrich was very intelligent and he excelled in his schoolwork at the Reform-Realgymnasium. He was also a talented athlete and he became an expert swimmer and fencer. However, he was a shy, insecure boy and he had few friends because most of his classmates did not accept him. The other children found three major shortcomings in Heydrich and he was frequently teased and beaten up by the other boys. Firstly, Heydrich had an unusually high-pitched voice and he was constantly taunted. Secondly, he was teased because of his family's strong Catholic leanings in his largely Protestant community. The third reason was one that he carried with him throughout his life and it strongly influenced his future Nazi career - the rumor of a Jewish ancestor.


His father was a [[Pan-Germanism|German nationalist]] with loyalties to the [[Wilhelm II, German Emperor|Kaiser]], who instilled patriotic ideas in his three children but was not affiliated with any political party until after [[World War I]].{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=28}} The household was strict. Heydrich, initially a frail and sickly youth, was encouraged by his parents to exercise to build up his strength.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=22}} He engaged his younger brother, [[Heinz Heydrich|Heinz]], in mock [[fencing]] duels. He excelled in his schoolwork at the secular "Reformgymnasium", especially in the sciences.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|pp=24, 33}} A talented athlete, he became an expert swimmer and fencer. He was shy, insecure, and was frequently bullied for his high-pitched voice and rumoured Jewish ancestry.{{sfn|Dederichs|2009|pp=23, 28}} These rumours increased after his maternal uncle Hans Krantz married a Hungarian Jew named Iza Jarmy.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=26}} However, the family maintained cordial relations with the Jewish community; many Jewish students attended the Halle Conservatory, and its cellar was rented out to a Jewish salesman. Heydrich was friends with Abraham Lichtenstein, son of the [[cantor]].{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=27}}
Although the rumor was completely false, it was never laid to rest. It arose from the fact that his paternal grandmother remarried after the death of Heydrich's biological grandfather. Heydrich's widowed grandmother married a man by the name of Suess, and subsequently the Heydrich family name was sometimes hyphenated as ' Heydrich-Suess'. Although Mr. Suess was not Jewish, the name was widely considered to be a Jewish name. Mr. Suess was not even biologically related to Reinhard Heydrich, nevertheless, the rumor of his "tainted" bloodline continued to spread.


In 1918, World War I ended with Germany's defeat. In late February 1919, civil unrest—including strikes and clashes between communist and anti-communist groups—took place in Heydrich's home town of Halle. Under Defense Minister [[Gustav Noske]]'s directives, a right-wing paramilitary unit was formed and ordered to "recapture" Halle. {{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|pp=28–29}} Heydrich, then 15 years old, joined Maercker's Volunteer Rifles (a paramilitary [[Freikorps]] unit). This was largely symbolic, as Heydrich was too young for military service. There is no evidence that he participated in the fighting, and when the skirmishes ended, he was part of the force assigned to protect private property.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|pp=29–30}} Heydrich began to form positive opinions about the [[Völkisch movement|''Völkisch'' movement]] and [[anti-communism]], as well as a distaste for the [[Treaty of Versailles]] and the positioning of the German-Polish border.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|pp=31–32}} Heydrich stated he joined the ''[[Deutschvölkischer Schutz- und Trutzbund]]'' (National German Protection and Shelter League), an [[antisemitic]] organisation.{{sfn|Waite|1969|pp=206–07}} However, there is very little documentation of this, beyond a single postcard he received.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|pp=30–31}}
Although shy, Heydrich excelled physically and grew handsome and fit, excelling in [[fencing (sport)|fencing]] and swimming. When the first World War broke out in 1914, ten-year-old Heydrich was too young to enlist for military service. He joined the quasi-military [[Freikorps | Maracker Freikorps]], a right-wing group that strongly opposed the Communists. He also joined the Deutscher Schutz und Truzbund, a strongly anti-Semitic organization. For the first time in his life, Heydrich felt at home in an organization that touted his blonde-haired, blue-eyed features and made him feel important and superior. In 1918, the first World War came to an end with Germany's defeat. Due to the conditions of Germany's surrender, inflation spread across Germany and many families lost their life savings. The wealth of Heydrich's affluent family was suddenly gone.


As a result of the conditions of the Treaty of Versailles as well as Germany's large war debt, [[Hyperinflation in the Weimar Republic|hyperinflation]] spread across Germany and many lost their life savings. Halle was not spared. By 1921, few townspeople there could afford a musical education at Bruno Heydrich's conservatory. This led to a financial crisis for the Heydrich family.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|pp=32–33}}
In 1922, he took advantage of the free education and guaranteed pension offered by the navy. He became a naval cadet at Germany's chief naval base at Kiel. Heydrich, however, found himself in the same situation that he had been in back in grade school. Due to the fact that his voice was still thin, he received taunts of "billy goat" from the other cadets, and rumors of his supposed Jewish ancestry resurfaced. He was mocked for his love of classical music and was frequently called "Moses Handel". Heydrich had an intense desire to succeed and in 1926, he advanced to the rank of second lieutenant and was assigned as a signals officer on the battleship [[German battleship Schleswig-Holstein|Schleswig Holstein]]. The constant teasing drove him to become angry and intensely arrogant. Finding himself with considerable authority over the subordinate officers that teased him, he revenged himself by ordering them around and treating them like lowly subjects. His subordinates came to fiercely resent him, but he did not let that distract him from his dream of becoming an admiral.


==Naval career==
Heydrich found one major distraction to his naval career - his womanizing. He had matured into a handsome young man and many women found him desirable. He became a notorious seducer and spent all of his free time chasing women. He had countless affairs, but one encounter would prove disastrous for him.
[[File:Reinhard Heydrich (1922).jpg|thumb|left|Heydrich as a [[Reichsmarine]] cadet in 1922]]


In 1922, Heydrich joined the German Navy (''[[Reichsmarine]]''), taking advantage of the security, structure, and pension it offered. He became a naval cadet at [[Kiel]], Germany's primary naval base. Many of Heydrich's fellow cadets falsely regarded him as Jewish. To counteract these rumours, Heydrich told people he had joined several [[Antisemitism|antisemitic]] and nationalist organisations, such as the ''[[Deutschvölkischer Schutz- und Trutzbund|Deutschvölkischer Schutz und Trutzbund]]''. On 1 April 1924 he was promoted to senior midshipman (''Oberfähnrich zur See'') and sent to officer training at the [[Naval Academy Mürwik]]. In 1926 he advanced to the rank of ensign (''[[Leutnant zur See]]'') and was assigned as a signals officer on the battleship [[SMS Schleswig-Holstein|SMS ''Schleswig-Holstein'']], the flagship of Germany's North Sea Fleet. With the promotion came greater recognition. He received good evaluations from his superiors and had few problems with other crewmen. He was promoted on 1 July 1928 to the rank of first lieutenant.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|pp=34–38}}
According to one version of the story, in 1930, he met the daughter of a shipyard director and spent the night with her. To Heydrich, this was just another sexual conquest. Later one night he attended a rowing club ball and instantly fell in love with a young woman by the name of Lina von Osten. The two became romantically involved and soon announced their engagement. The daughter of the shipyard director became infuriated that Heydrich was going to marry another woman. She protested to Heydrich, but he coldly told her to leave him alone. Distraught, the young woman lamented to her father, who was a major naval contractor, and friend of [[Erich Raeder]], the commander-in-chief of the German Navy. A formal complaint was lodged against Heydrich for insulting the honor of a young woman. He was charged with "conduct unbecoming to an officer and a gentleman" and an investigation ensued. Heydrich was called before a court of honor and he protested his innocence and accused the woman of lying. His attitude was so disdainful that the court admonished him for insubordination. Though he was exonerated, the officers demanded that he be cashiered for "conduct unbecoming a naval officer". In April 1931, admiral Erich Raeder sentenced Heydrich to "dismissal for impropriety." He was dismissed in 1931 {{harv|Bullock|1962}}. Heydrich was devastated, but he remained engaged to Lina von Osten. He now found himself no prospects for a career and he did not know where to turn.


Heydrich became notorious for his countless affairs. In December 1930 he attended a rowing-club ball and met [[Lina Heydrich|Lina von Osten]]. They became romantically involved and soon announced their engagement. Lina was already a Nazi Party follower and antisemite; she had attended her first rally in 1929.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|pp=39–41}} Early in 1931 Heydrich was charged with "conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman" for a [[breach of promise]], having been engaged to marry another woman he had known for six months before the Lina von Osten engagement.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|pp=43–44}} Admiral [[Erich Raeder]] dismissed Heydrich from the navy in April. He received severance pay of 200 ''[[Reichsmarks]]'' ({{Inflation|DE|200|1931|fmt=eq|cursign=€}}) a month for the next two years.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|pp=44–45}} Heydrich married Lina in December 1931.{{sfn|Calic|1985|p=51}}
Heydrich's own version was that he had intercourse with, then refused to marry, a woman. The woman revealed her difficulties to her father, who took the matter to Raeder. Admiral Raeder summoned Heydrich to his office where he and the aggrieved father demanded that Heydrich marry the girl, only to be told that he already was engaged to Lina von Osten, and considered himself bound by his "honour as a naval officer" to not dissolve the engagement. At this, the appalled Raeder is supposed to have summarily cashiered Heydrich. The tale is apparently false. Intensive post-war efforts by journalists failed to identify the woman, though Heydrich's version would have her as socially prominent. Raeder himself scoffed at that tale, while refusing to disclose his reasons for sacking Heydrich.


==Career in the SS==
This leaves the question as to why Heydrich would have concocted a tale which clearly discredited him, and why would Lina Heydrich and others also maintain that Heydrich was contemptuous of the Nazis before his dismissal from the navy, which others of his acquaintance at the time categorically deny. One theory was submitted by [[Edouard Calic]], namely that Heydrich was discharged once it emerged that he had been spying on the navy in the service of the Nazis. While Heydrich's political convictions and fascination with espionage would make this feasible and would explain why SS chief [[Heinrich Himmler]] appointed him to head the [[Sicherheitsdienst|SD]] immediately following his discharge, direct evidence is lacking.
On 30 May 1931, Heydrich's discharge from the navy became legally binding,{{sfn|Padfield|1990|p=110}} and either the following day{{sfn|Padfield|1990|p=110}} or on 1 June he joined the Nazi Party in [[Hamburg]].{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=48}}{{sfn|Dederichs|2009|p=45}} Six weeks later, on 14 July, he joined the SS.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=53}} His party number was 544,916 and his SS number was 10,120.{{sfn|Dederichs|2009|p=12}} Those who joined the party after Hitler's [[Machtergreifung|seizure of power]] in January 1933 faced suspicions from the ''[[Alter Kämpfer|Alte Kämpfer]]'' (Old Fighters; the earliest party members) that they had joined for reasons of career advancement rather than a true commitment to [[Nazism|Nazi ideology]]. Heydrich's date of enlistment in 1931 was early enough to quell suspicion that he had joined only to further his career, but was not early enough for him to be considered an Old Fighter.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=48}}


In 1931, [[Heinrich Himmler]] began setting up a [[counterintelligence]] division of the SS. Acting on the advice of his associate [[Karl von Eberstein]], who was Lina's friend and Heydrich's godbrother, Himmler agreed to interview Heydrich, but cancelled their appointment at the last minute.{{sfn|Williams|2001|pp=29–30}}{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=47}} Lina ignored this message, packed Heydrich's suitcase, and sent him to [[Munich]]. Eberstein met Heydrich at the railway station and took him to see Himmler.{{sfn|Williams|2001|pp=29–30}} Himmler asked Heydrich to convey his ideas for developing an SS intelligence service. Himmler was so impressed that he hired Heydrich immediately.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|pp=51–52}}{{sfn|Longerich|2012|p=125}}
==Nazi Party and the SS==
[[Image:Vlcsnap-5522132.png|thumb|right|200px|Reinhard Heydrich (middle) together with [[Heinrich Himmler]], [[Karl Wolff]] and an unidentified assistant at the [[Berghof (Hitler)|Obersalzberg]], May 1939]]In 1931, Himmler began to set up a counter-intelligence division of the SS. Acting on a friend's advice, he interviewed Heydrich. One version states that he arranged for an interview with Heydrich and was instantly impressed when Heydrich walked through the door. Himmler is said to have marveled at the tall, thin, blond, blue-eyed man that stood before him. However, as soon as Heydrich opened his mouth, he revealed an imperfection - an unusually high-pitched voice. Himmler, nevertheless remained intimidated by Heydrich. He gave him a test which allowed him 20 minutes to outline his plans for a counterintelligence service. Having no experience in the field, Heydrich put together anything that he could recall from spy novels that he read and an intelligence course that he took in the navy. Upon reading Heydrich's proposal, Himmler hired him on the spot. His pay was 180 reichsmarks per month [$ 40.00]. In doing so Himmler also effectively recruited Heydrich into the Nazi Party. He would later receive a [[Totenkopfring]] from Himmler, for his service.


Although the starting monthly salary of 180 ''Reichsmarks'' ({{Inflation|DE|180|1931|fmt=eq|cursign=€}}) was low, Heydrich decided to take the job because Lina's family supported the Nazi movement, and the quasi-military and revolutionary nature of the post appealed to him.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=52}} At first he had to share an office and typewriter with a colleague, but by 1932 Heydrich was earning 290 ''Reichsmarks'' a month ({{Inflation|DE|290|1932|fmt=eq|cursign=€}}), a salary he described as "comfortable".{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|pp=55, 58}} As his power and influence grew throughout the 1930s, his wealth grew commensurately; in 1935 he received a base salary of 8,400 ''Reichsmarks'' ({{Inflation|DE|8400|1935|fmt=eq|cursign=€}}) and an allowance of 12,000 ''Reichsmarks'' ({{Inflation|DE|12000|1935|fmt=eq|cursign=€}}) and by 1938 his income increased to 17,371 ''Reichsmarks'' ({{Inflation|DE|17371|1938|fmt=eq|cursign=€}}), annually.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|pp=110, 111}} Heydrich later received a [[Totenkopfring]] from Himmler for his SS service.<ref name="National Archives"/>
To begin work, Heydrich set up office at the Brown House, the Nazi party headquarters in Munich. His office contained a kitchen table, a chair, and a typewriter. Despite his meager pay and humble office, Heydrich was a driven man. He set about to create a counterintelligence service to be reckoned with. His new position brought out the terrifying aspects of his personality; he was cold, calculating, and brilliant. His restless mind never ceased to invent methods to trap, humiliate, and destroy his enemies.


On 1 August 1931, Heydrich began his job as chief of the new 'Ic Service' (intelligence service).{{sfn|Longerich|2012|p=125}} He set up office at the [[Brown House, Munich, Germany|Brown House]], the Nazi Party headquarters in [[Munich]]. By October he had created a network of spies and informers for intelligence-gathering purposes and to obtain information to be used as [[blackmail]] to further political aims.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|pp=56–57}} Information on thousands of people was recorded on index cards and stored at the Brown House.{{sfn|Calic|1985|p=72}} To mark the occasion of Heydrich's December wedding, Himmler promoted him to the rank of SS-''[[Sturmbannführer]]'' (major).{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=58}}
At this time, he was relatively insignificant within the Nazi intelligence apparatus. Heydrich created his own web of spies and informers and sent them out to dig up any information that could be used for blackmail, the more scandalous the better. He did not only go after opponents of the Nazis, he also sought sordid information on high-ranking Nazis. He and his staff spent their time building up a card-file system that contained dossiers which listed everyone's dirty little secrets. His office was filled with boxes which contained index cards marking the different categories of offenders: Communists, Catholics, aristocrats, Jews, Freemasons, and Nazis with shameful pasts. A special "poison file" was reserved for offenders that fit into two or more categories.


In 1932, rumours were spread by Heydrich's enemies of his alleged Jewish ancestry.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=61}} [[Wilhelm Canaris]] said he had obtained copies of documents proving Heydrich's Jewish ancestry.{{sfn|Craig|2005|p=184}} Nazi [[Gauleiter]] [[Rudolf Jordan (politician)|Rudolf Jordan]] claimed Heydrich was not a pure [[Aryan race|Aryan]].{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=61}} Within the Nazi organisation such innuendo could be damning, even for the head of the Reich's counterintelligence service. [[Gregor Strasser]] passed the allegations on to the Nazi Party's racial expert, [[Achim Gercke]], who investigated Heydrich's genealogy.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=61}} Gercke reported that Heydrich was "...&nbsp;of German origin and free from any coloured and Jewish blood".{{sfn|Williams|2001|p=38}} He insisted that the rumours were baseless. Even so, Heydrich privately engaged SD member Ernst Hoffmann to further investigate and dispel the rumours.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=61}}
Heydrich's fiancée Lina von Osten faithfully remained by his side and in December of 1931, the two were married. That same year, Heydrich was promoted to SS major. As early as 1931, Heydrich was becoming one of the most dangerous men in the Nazi party. With his list of index cards, the fate of Nazi opponents rested with him. Also, his growing list of dirty files became invaluable to him as he had control over powerful Nazis by threatening to expose their secrets. In 1932, however, Heydrich was given a taste of his own medicine by Adolf Hitler.


===Gestapo and SD===
A number of Heydrich's enemies had discovered the old rumors of his supposed Jewish ancestry and began to spread them around. With the Nazi party's growing power, such rumors could be deadly, even for the head of the Reich's counterintelligence service. The Nazis conducted an investigation into Heydrich's genealogy and he was found to be free of "colored or Jewish blood". Despite the fact that Heydrich was cleared by the investigation, Heinrich Himmler was distressed by the mere suggestion of a Jew heading his counterintelligence service and he even played with the idea of dismissing Heydrich. Himmler took the matter to Hitler. Normally, Hitler felt threatened by tough, conniving, and brilliant men such as Heydrich, and his natural instinct was to crush them before they became too powerful. This time, however, Hitler did not allow Himmler to dismiss Heydrich. Hitler was secure in the fact that he held all of the cards, and the rumors could be used to keep Heydrich in his place. In the Nazi party, the truth did not matter, the power of "truth" rested only with Hitler; a rumor was false only if Hitler wished it to be false. If Hitler, therefore, said that Heydrich was a Jew, it would become the truth within the Nazi party. Hitler considered Heydrich to be very useful to the Nazi party and he wanted Heydrich to continue his sly and effective counterintelligence work. Regardless of how dangerous Heydrich was, Hitler could "expose" him as a Jew at any given moment and Heydrich would be destroyed by the very instrument of terror that he created. Heydrich was fully aware of his tenuous position and he blindly obeyed Hitler with slavish loyalty throughout his life.
[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-R97512, Berlin, Geheimes Staatspolizeihauptamt.jpg|thumb|upright=1.3|[[Gestapo]] headquarters on [[Prinz-Albrecht-Strasse]] in Berlin, 1933]]
In mid-1932, Himmler appointed Heydrich chief of the renamed security service—the ''[[Sicherheitsdienst]]'' (SD).{{sfn|Longerich|2012|p=125}} Heydrich's counterintelligence service grew into an effective machine of terror and intimidation. With Hitler striving for absolute power in Germany, Himmler and Heydrich wished to control the political police forces of all 17 German states. They began with [[Bavaria]]. In 1933, Heydrich gathered some of his men from the SD and together they stormed police headquarters in Munich and took over the organisation using intimidation tactics. Himmler became the Munich police chief and Heydrich became the commander of Department IV, the [[Bavarian Political Police|political police]].{{sfn|Longerich|2012|p=149}}


In 1933, Hitler became [[Chancellor of Germany (German Reich)|Chancellor of Germany]], and through a series of decrees{{sfn|Shirer|1960|pp=196–200}} became Germany's ''[[Führer|Führer und Reichskanzler]]'' (leader and chancellor).{{sfn|Shirer|1960|pp=226–27}} The first [[Nazi concentration camps|concentration camp]]s, which were originally intended to house political opponents, were established in early 1933. By year's end there were over fifty camps.{{sfn|Shirer|1960|p=271}}
==Gestapo & SD ==
In July of 1932, Heydrich's counterintelligence service grew into an effective machine of terror and intimidation and it was officially named [[Sicherheitsdienst|Sicherheitsdienst [SD] - Security Service]], an intelligence organization wholly committed to the defence of Nazism. He built it by recruiting agents from unusual sources, some of whom were not really committed Nazis, just people Heydrich found talented or useful, from whom reports could be compiled on various aspects of life in Nazi Germany. The organisation benefitted from close cooperation with the Gestapo, which Heydrich also gained control of in 1936, as part of a combined security police force. With his first task being the suppression of all possible dissent prior and during the Olympic Games of 1936, a task he executed with a cold and systematic brutality that gained him the German Olympia Honor Badge (First Class) (Deutsches Olympiaehrenzeichen). Later, the SD and the Gestapo were united under the [[RSHA|Reichssicherheitshauptamt (RSHA)]] under Heydrich. Heydrich was further promoted to SS colonel.


[[Hermann Göring]] founded the [[Gestapo]] in 1933 as a [[Prussia]]n police force. When Göring transferred full authority over the Gestapo to Himmler in April 1934, it immediately became an instrument of terror under the SS's purview.{{sfn|Shirer|1960|pp=270–71}} Himmler named Heydrich to head the Gestapo on 22 April 1934.{{sfn|Williams|2001|p=61}} Also in April, Göring made Heydrich an advisor to the Prussian government with an appointment to the [[Prussian State Council (Nazi Germany)|Prussian State Council]].{{sfn|Miller|Schulz|2015|p=121}} On 9 June 1934, [[Rudolf Hess]] declared the SD the official Nazi intelligence service.{{sfn|Longerich|2012|p=165}}
With Hitler clambering for real political power in Germany, Himmler and Heydrich wished to control all of the political police forces of all of the 17 states of Germany, and they began with the state of Bavaria. In 1933, Heydrich gathered some of his men from the SD and together they stormed police headquarters in Munich and took over the police using intimidation tactics. Himmler became commander of the Bavarian political police with Heydrich as his deputy. From there, the duo moved on to the rest of the police forces of the 16 remaining German states. With 15 states under control, they locked horns with [[Goering|Hermann Goering]] in Prussia.


===Crushing the SA===
Goering controlled the Prussian political police and he neither liked nor trusted the Himmler-Heydrich twosome. Goering's intentions were that his police force would stand apart from any other police organization and they would obey no laws, they would be a law unto themselves. He named his organization [[Gestapo| Geheime Staatspolizei (Secret State Police)]]. For the purpose of a franking stamp, a postal clerk abbreviated the name to Gestapo. Goering wanted to transfer them out of police headquarters and give them their own command center. He chose an address that would soon strike deadly terror in the hearts of millions of people throughout the German Reich - 8 Prinz Albrechtstrasse.
[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 152-50-10, Reinhard Heydrich.jpg|thumb|left|SS-''Brigadeführer'' Heydrich, head of the Bavarian police and [[Sicherheitsdienst|SD]], in Munich, 1934]]
Beginning in April 1934, and at Hitler's request, Heydrich and Himmler began building a dossier on ''[[Sturmabteilung]]'' (SA) leader [[Ernst Röhm]] in an effort to remove him as a rival for party leadership. At this point, the SS was still part of the SA, the early Nazi paramilitary organisation which now numbered over 3 million men.{{sfn|Kershaw|2008|pp=306–07}} At Hitler's direction, Heydrich, Himmler, Göring, and [[Viktor Lutze]] drew up lists of those who should be killed, starting with seven top SA officials and including many more. On 30 June 1934 the SS and Gestapo acted in coordinated mass arrests that continued for two days. Röhm was shot without trial, along with the leadership of the SA.{{sfn|Kershaw|2008|pp=309–12}} The purge became known as the [[Night of the Long Knives]]. Up to 200 people were killed in the action. Lutze was appointed SA's new head and it was converted into a sports and training organisation.{{sfn|Kershaw|2008|p=313}}


With the SA out of the way, Heydrich began building the Gestapo into an instrument of fear. He improved his index-card system, creating categories of offenders with colour-coded cards.{{sfn|Flaherty|2004|pp=56, 68}} The Gestapo had the authority to arrest citizens on the suspicion that they might commit a crime, and the definition of a crime was at their discretion. The Gestapo Law, passed in 1936, gave police the right to act extra-legally. This led to the sweeping use of ''[[Protective custody#Other usages|Schutzhaft]]''—"protective custody", a [[euphemism]] for the power to imprison people without judicial proceedings.{{sfn|McNab|2009|p=156}} The courts were not allowed to investigate or interfere. The Gestapo was considered to be acting legally as long as it was carrying out the leadership's will. People were arrested arbitrarily, sent to concentration camps, or killed.{{sfn|Shirer|1960|p=271}}
In 1933, Hitler became chancellor of Germany, but he still did not have the dictatorial powers that he desired. In order to give himself more power, he pressured President [[Paul von Hindenburg]] to sign a series of decrees which would hamper opposition parties such as the Communists and Socialists. With these decrees, the police had the authority to search and confiscate property and arrest and detain people without allowing a hearing or trial. Reinhard Heydrich consulted his list of index cards and supplied the SS and the brown-shirted SA with lists containing the names of offenders that needed to be arrested. Since Heydrich's index cards numbered in the thousands, the prisons were soon overflowing and the first concentration camps were established in order to deal with the overflow of prisoners.


Himmler began developing the notion of a [[religious aspects of Nazism#Himmler and the SS|Germanic religion]] and wanted SS members to leave the church. In early 1936, Heydrich left the [[Catholic Church]] in favour of the ''[[Gottgläubig]]'' movement.{{sfn|Steigmann-Gall|2003|p=219}} His wife, Lina, had already done so the year before. Heydrich not only felt he could no longer be a member, but came to consider the church's political power and influence a danger to the state.{{sfn|Williams|2001|p=66}}
==Crushing the SA ==
In early 1934, Hitler was chancellor of Germany, but he was dreaming of absolute power. He was facing problems because [[Ernst Roehm]] and the [[Ernst Roehm#SA|SA stormtroopers]] were instigating trouble with the German army. To Hitler, this was most unwelcome because he needed the support of the German army to achieve his dictatorial ambitions and it did not make a pretty picture for his stormtroopers to induce adversity with the army. The powerful men of the army told Hitler in no uncertain terms that if he did not obliterate Roehm and the SA, he will be overthrown by the army. Unwilling to let his dreams of power die, Hitler decided to placate the army by dissolving the SA. This presented a problem for Hitler because Roehm was one of his closest friends and indulging the army meant killing his friend.


===Consolidating the police forces===
Goering viewed the SA as dangerous rivals to his Gestapo. Under the leadership of Ernst Roehm, the brown-shirted stormtroopers were a powerful and feared organization. Wary of the SA's power, Goering did not want to stand alone against them. His anxiety over the power of the SA was stronger than his dislike for Himmler and Heydrich and on April 20th 1934, he formed a partnership and placed the Gestapo into the eager hands of the dangerous pair. With control of the Gestapo the first order of business for Himmler and Heydrich was to crush the SA.
[[File:Pruchtnow and Himmler.jpg|thumb|upright=1.5|Heydrich and other SS officers with their wives in 1937]]
On 17 June 1936, all police forces throughout Germany were united, following Hitler's appointment of Himmler as Chief of German Police. With this appointment by Hitler, Himmler and his ''de facto'' deputy, Heydrich, became two of the most powerful men in the internal administration of Germany.{{sfn|Reitlinger|1989|p=90}} Himmler immediately reorganised the police into two groups: the ''[[Ordnungspolizei]]'' (Order Police; Orpo), consisting of both the national uniformed police and the municipal police, and the ''[[Sicherheitspolizei]]'' (Security Police; SiPo), consisting of the ''Geheime Staatspolizei'' (Secret State Police; Gestapo) and ''Kriminalpolizei'' (Criminal Police; [[Kripo]]).{{sfn|Williams|2001|p=77}} At that point, Heydrich was head of the SiPo and SD. [[Heinrich Müller (Gestapo)|Heinrich Müller]] was the Gestapo's operations chief.{{sfn|Weale|2010|pp=132, 135}}


Heydrich was assigned to help organise the [[1936 Summer Olympics]] in Berlin. The games were used to promote the [[Nazi propaganda|propaganda aims]] of the Nazi regime. Goodwill ambassadors were sent to countries that were considering a boycott. Anti-Jewish violence was forbidden for the duration, and news stands were required to stop displaying copies of ''[[Der Stürmer]]''.{{sfn|Calic|1985|p=157}}{{sfn|Kershaw|2008|pp=358–59}} For his part in the games' success, Heydrich was awarded the ''Deutsches Olympiaehrenzeichen'' or German [[Olympic Games Decoration]] (First Class).<ref name="National Archives"/>
Reinhard Heydrich also wanted the SA out of the way, he was not keen on the idea of the SD and Gestapo sharing the spotlight with the power hungry stormtroopers. Heydrich was not about to let a fourteen-year friendship between Hitler and Roehm stand in the way of his quest for power. Turning Hitler against his friend was almost too easy for Heydrich, he simply had his SD men uncover false "evidence" that Roehm was plotting to overthrow Hitler. Heydrich and Himmler put pressure on Hitler to slaughter the leading members of the SA, and they assured him that the SS would carry out the murders. Heydrich drew up lists of all of the powerful SA men that needed to be killed along with Roehm. Through surveillance, members of the SD had learned the routines of all of the marked men and knew the best time to strike. Himmler and Heydrich took care of the details; all that was left was for Hitler to give the go ahead. On the Friday of June 30th 1934, the SS attacked the SA in a bloody massacre that lasted throughout the entire weekend. Roehm was killed along with all of the important members of the stormtroopers in this bloodbath which the nazis coined the [[Night of the Long Knives]].


[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 119-5243, Wien, Arthur Seyß-Inquart, Adolf Hitler.jpg|thumb|left|upright|[[Arthur Seyss-Inquart]], [[Adolf Hitler]], [[Heinrich Himmler]], and Heydrich in Vienna, March 1938]]
With the SA out of the way, Heydrich began building the Gestapo into an instrument of fear. He improved his index card system; since he created more categories of offenders, the cards were now color-coded. The line between criminal and law abiding citizen became blurred and the most trivial things became crimes; even if someone made an anti-Hitler comment in jest, the penalty was death. The Gestapo had the authority to arrest citizens on the mere suspicion that they might commit a crime. People were arrested for walking suspiciously, and since the Gestapo obeyed no law but their own, it was their discretion to decide what was considered "walking in a suspicious manner". The Gestapo had the right to arrest, beat, and murder whomever they wished. People were hesitant to speak in public places out of the morbid fear that their words might be misconstrued and they would find themselves under arrest. The members of the Gestapo were instructed to be merciless and people began disappearing throughout Germany never to be seen again. Sometimes a person would disappear for no apparent reason and at a later date, their family would receive an urn containing their ashes. Under Himmler and Heydrich, Germany became a legitimate and terrifying police state.


In January 1937, Heydrich directed the SD to secretly begin collecting and analysing public opinion and report back its findings.{{sfn|Kitchen|1995|p=40}} He then had the Gestapo carry out house searches, arrests, and interrogations, thus in effect exercising control over public opinion.{{sfn|Delarue|2008|p=85}} In February 1938 when the Austrian Chancellor [[Kurt Schuschnigg]] resisted Hitler's proposed merger with Germany, Heydrich intensified the pressure on [[Austria]] by organising Nazi demonstrations and distributing propaganda in Vienna emphasising the common Germanic blood of the two countries.{{sfn|Blandford|2001|pp=135–37}} In the ''[[Anschluss]]'' on 12 March, Hitler declared the unification of Austria with Nazi Germany.{{sfn|Evans|2005|p=655}}
==Night and Fog Decree ==
By late 1940, Hitler's armies had swept through most of western Europe. To Hitler's dismay, anti-Nazi resistance was alive and well, especially in the countries of France, Holland, and Belgium. In an effort to crush them, Hitler issued the Night and Fog Decree on December 7th 1941. In 1941, the SD was given the responsibility of carrying out an ominous decree, the [[Nacht und Nebel|Nacht und Nebel Erlass - Night and Fog Decree]]. This decree was born out of Hitler's frustration with anti-Nazi resistance in occupied countries. The decree was signed by Wilhelm Keitel, chief of Staff of the German army, thus it was sometimes referred to as "the Keitel Order". According to the decree, suspects had to be arrested in a maximally discrete way "under the cover of night and fog". People simply disappeared without a trace and no one was told of their whereabouts or their fate, not even family members or friends. The main intention of the decree was to generate a climate of fear and intimidation, thus making organized resistance more difficult. As Hitler intended, enemies of the Reich were to "vanish into the night and fog". These people were captured and handed over to the SD. In the files of the SD, they were categorized with the initials "NN" for Nacht und Nebel [Night and Fog]. For each "NN" prisoner, the SD was required to fill out a questionnaire containing personal information, country of origin and details of their crimes against the Reich. This questionnaire was to be put into an envelope inscribed with a seal that read Nacht und Nebel and submitted to the [[Reich Central Security Office]] (RSHA). This decree remained in effect after Heydrich's assassination in 1942. The exact number of people who vanished in the name of the decree has never been positively established, but it is estimated to be roughly 7,000.


In mid-1939, Heydrich created the [[Stiftung Nordhav]] Foundation to obtain real estate for the SS and Security Police to use as guest houses and vacation spots.{{sfn|Lehrer|2000|p=55}} The [[Wannsee Conference|Wannsee Villa]], which the Stiftung Nordhav acquired in November 1940,{{sfn|Lehrer|2000|pp=61–62}} was the site of the [[Wannsee Conference]] (20 January 1942). Heydrich was the lead speaker. At Wannsee, senior Nazi officials formalised plans to deport and exterminate all Jews in German-occupied territory and those countries not yet conquered.{{sfn|Goldhagen|1996|p=158}} This action was to be coordinated among the representatives from the Nazi state agencies present at the meeting.{{sfn|Kershaw|2008|p=696}}
On June 17th 1936, all political police forces throughout Germany were united with Heinrich Himmler as the chief. On June 26th, Himmler reorganized the police into two groups:


On 27 September 1939, the SD and SiPo—made up of the Gestapo and the Criminal Police, or Kripo—were folded into the new [[Reich Security Main Office]] or ''Reichssicherheitshauptamt'' (RSHA), which was placed under Heydrich's control.{{sfn|Longerich|2012|pp=469–70}} The title of ''Chef der Sicherheitspolizei und des SD'' (Chief of Security Police and SD) or CSSD was conferred on Heydrich on 1 October.{{sfn|Headland|1992|p=22}} Heydrich became the president of the International Criminal Police Commission (later known as [[Interpol]]) on 24 August 1940,{{sfn|Dederichs|2009|p=83}} and its headquarters were transferred to Berlin. He was promoted to SS-''[[Obergruppenführer]] und General der Polizei'' on 24 September 1941.{{sfn|Dederichs|2009|p=12}}
- [[Ordnungspolizei]] (ORPO) which consisted of the national uniformed police and the municipal police.


===Red Army purges===
- [[Sicherheitspolizei]] (SIPO) which consisted of the Gestapo and the Criminal Police.
In 1936, Heydrich learned that a top-ranking Soviet officer was plotting to overthrow [[Joseph Stalin]]. Sensing an opportunity to strike a blow at both the Soviet Army and [[Admiral Canaris]] of Germany's [[Abwehr]], Heydrich decided that the Soviet officer should be "unmasked".{{sfn|Williams|2001|p=85}} He discussed the matter with Himmler and both in turn brought it to Hitler's attention. Hitler approved Heydrich's plan to act immediately. But the "information" Heydrich had received was actually misinformation planted by Stalin himself in an attempt to legitimise his planned purges of the [[Red Army]]'s high command. Stalin ordered one of his best [[NKVD]] agents, General [[Nikolai Skoblin]], to pass Heydrich false information suggesting that Marshal [[Mikhail Tukhachevsky]] and other Soviet generals were plotting against Stalin.{{sfn|Blandford|2001|p=112}}


Heydrich's SD forged documents and letters implicating Tukhachevsky and other Red Army commanders. The material was delivered to the NKVD.{{sfn|Williams|2001|p=85}} The [[Great Purge]] of the Red Army followed on Stalin's orders. While Heydrich believed they had deluded Stalin into executing or dismissing 35,000 of his officer corps, the importance of Heydrich's part is a matter of conjecture.{{sfn|Williams|2001|p=88}} Soviet military prosecutors did not use SD forged documents against the generals in their secret trial; they instead relied on false confessions extorted or beaten out of the defendants.{{sfn|Conquest|2008|pp=200–02}}
Reinhard Heydrich was placed in charge of the Sicherheitspolizei. In 1939, the SD, the Gestapo, and the Criminal Police were unified under one office, the Reich Central Security Office [RSHA], which was placed under the control of Reinhard Heydrich.


==Himmler and Heydrich ==
===Night-and-Fog decree===
[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-R98683, Reinhard Heydrich.jpg|thumb|upright|Heydrich in 1940]]
As chief of all police forces, Himmler was technically responsible to Wilhelm Frick, the minister of the Interior, however, Himmler had no time for such silly formalities. Everyone knew the pecking order; Himmler answered to no one but Adolf Hitler. Himmler's police forces were independent and they obeyed no government laws. Rather than protecting the citizens of the Reich, the role of the police had become that of protecting the Reich from its citizens. Reinhard Heydrich's ruthlessness in this department earned him the nicknames "the blonde beast" and "Himmler's evil genius".
By late 1940, German armies had invaded most of Western Europe. The following year, Heydrich's SD was given responsibility for carrying out the ''[[Nacht und Nebel]]'' (Night-and-Fog) decree.{{sfn|Bracher|1970|p=418}} According to the decree, "persons endangering German security" were to be arrested in a maximally discreet way: "under the cover of night and fog". People disappeared without a trace with no one told of their whereabouts or fate.{{sfn|Snyder|1994|p=242}} For each prisoner, the SD had to fill in a questionnaire that listed personal information, country of origin, and the details of their crimes against the Reich. This questionnaire was placed in an envelope inscribed with a seal reading "Nacht und Nebel" and submitted to the Reich Security Main Office (RSHA). In the [[SS-Wirtschafts-Verwaltungshauptamt|WVHA]] "Central Inmate File", as in many camp files, these prisoners would be given a special "covert prisoner" code, as opposed to the code for POW, Felon, Jew, [[Romani people|Gypsy]], etc.{{efn|name=coding}} The decree remained in effect after Heydrich's death. The exact number of people who vanished under it has never been positively established, but it is estimated to be 7,000.<ref name="ushmm Night And Fog Decree"/>


===Anti-Polish policies===
<center>
Heydrich created the "Zentralstelle IIP Polen" unit of the Gestapo to coordinate the [[Nazi crimes against the Polish nation|ethnic cleansing of Poles]] in "[[Operation Tannenberg]]" and the ''[[Intelligenzaktion]]'',<ref>{{cite journal |url=http://www.sierpien1980.pl/download/10/15909/biuletyn8-967-68.pdf |title=Kolebka (Cradle) |publisher=[[Institute of National Remembrance]] |journal=IPN Bulletin No. 8–9 (67–68), 152 Pages |location=Warsaw |date=September 2006 |access-date=8 November 2015 |author=Piotr Semków, [[IPN Gdańsk]] |at=42–50 (44–51/152 in PDF) |via=direct download: 3.44 MB |issn=1641-9561 |archive-date=17 September 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180917203328/http://www.sierpien1980.pl/download/10/15909/biuletyn8-967-68.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> two codenames for extermination actions directed at the [[Polish people]] during the German occupation of Poland.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Levene |first1=Mark |title=Annihilation: Volume II: The European Rimlands 1939–1953 |date=2013 |publisher=OUP Oxford |isbn=978-0191505553 |page=28}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Pakulski |first1=Jan |title=Violence and the state |date=2015 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-1784996543}}</ref> Among the 100,000 people murdered in the ''Intelligenzaktion'' operations in 1939–1940, approximately 61,000 were members of the Polish intelligentsia: scholars, clergy, former officers, and others, whom the Germans identified as political targets in the ''[[Special Prosecution Book-Poland]]'', compiled before the war began in September 1939.<ref>Dr. Jan Moor-Jankowski, [http://www.pacwashmetrodiv.org/events/holoc04/moor-jankowski.htm Holocaust of Non-Jewish Poles During WWII.] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160516004415/http://www.pacwashmetrodiv.org/events/holoc04/moor-jankowski.htm |date=16 May 2016 }} Polish American Congress, Washington.</ref>
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===Acting Reich Protector of Bohemia and Moravia===
Heydrich and Himmler had an odd but practical working relationship. Although Himmler was the boss, Heydrich was the true force behind the SD. The two men were vastly different personalities but they were united by their desire to succeed. Heydrich was everything that Himmler wished to be: tall, blonde, blue-eyed, cold, calculating, and intelligent. Himmler suppressed his jealousy because Heydrich was helping him to achieve power. By the same token, Heydrich blindly obeyed Himmler despite the fact that he considered him to be a fool. He knew that Himmler was his ticket to power. Thus the two men formed a solid partnership and became a dangerous duo. Their thirst for power took them beyond the periphery of the SD.
{{further|Resistance in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia}}
[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1972-039-26, Reinhard Heydrich im Prager Schloß crop.jpg|thumb|upright=1.02|Heydrich (''left'') with [[Karl Hermann Frank]] at [[Prague Castle]] in 1941]]
On 27 September 1941, Heydrich was appointed Deputy Reich Protector of the [[Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia]] (the part of [[Czechoslovakia]] incorporated into the Reich on 15 March 1939) and assumed control of the territory. The Reich Protector, [[Konstantin von Neurath]], remained the territory's titular head, but was sent on "leave" because Hitler, Himmler, and Heydrich felt his "soft approach" to the [[Czechs]] had promoted anti-German sentiment and encouraged anti-German resistance via strikes and sabotage.{{sfn|Williams|2003|p=82}} Upon his appointment, Heydrich told his aides: "We will Germanize the Czech vermin."{{sfn|Horvitz|Catherwood|2006|p=200}}


Heydrich came to [[Prague]] to enforce policy, fight resistance to the Nazi regime, and keep up production quotas of Czech motors and arms that were "extremely important to the German war effort".{{sfn|Williams|2003|p=82}} He viewed the area as a bulwark of [[German nationalism|Germandom]] and condemned the Czech resistance's "stabs in the back". To realise his goals, Heydrich demanded racial classification of those who could and could not be [[Germanized]]. He explained, "Making this Czech garbage into Germans must give way to methods based on racist thought."{{sfn|Bryant|2007|p=140}}
American journalist [[John Gunther]], during his trip to [[Germany]] in 1934, while collecting research materials for his book ''Inside Europe'', showed considerable knowledge of [[Nazism|Nazi]] intrigues and backgrounds when he said that Himmler actually had a relatively small tolerance for butchery compared to a man like Heydrich, who was far more cruel. At this time, Heydrich was regarded as an obscure medium-ranked officer in the SS bureaucracy.


Heydrich started his rule by terrorising the population: he proclaimed [[martial law]], and 142 people were executed within five days of his arrival in Prague.<ref name="1.heydrichiada">{{cite web |last1=Šír |first1=Vojtěch |title=První stanné právo v protektorátu |url=https://www.fronta.cz/dotaz/prvni-stanne-pravo-v-protektoratu |website=Fronta.cz |access-date=24 June 2018 |language=cs |date=3 April 2011|trans-title=The First Martial Law in Protectorate }}</ref> Their names appeared on posters throughout the occupied country.{{sfn|Bryant|2007|p=143}} Most of them were the members of the resistance that had previously been captured and were awaiting trial.
[[Image:Reinhard Heydrich Poster.jpg|thumb|right|Poster depicting Reinhard Heydrich.]]While Heydrich's abilities were never doubted by superiors and subordinates alike, his constant sarcasm, occasionally boorish behaviour, extreme oversensitivity to being underestimated (in contrast to Himmler who preferred to be underestimated by would-be opponents) and aggressiveness won him few loyalists, while his propensity for rash actions such as the arrest of a [[Kreisleiter]] in 1935, or telling [[Hermann Göring|Göring]] and the council of ministers in 1940 that the security police would exercise limitless powers whether they granted them or not, was an ever present annoyance for Himmler, who had to clean up the messes. Himmler would occasionally lose his patience with Heydrich, berating and abusing him, sometimes calling him "[[Genghis Khan]]". Although Himmler thought Heydrich was at times exasperating, he generally found him indispensable.


According to Heydrich's estimate, between 4,000 and 5,000 people were arrested{{sfn|Bryant|2007|p=143}} and between 400 and 500 were executed by February 1942.<ref name="1.heydrichiada" />{{efn|name=deathcamp}} Those who were not executed were sent to [[Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp]], where only four per cent of Czech prisoners survived the war.{{sfn|Bryant|2007|p=143}} Czech prime minister [[Alois Eliáš]] was among those arrested the first day. He was [[People's Court (Germany)|put on trial]] in Berlin and sentenced to death, but was kept alive as a hostage. He was later executed in retaliation for Heydrich's assassination.<ref name="vets">{{cite web |last1=Jedlička |first1=František |title=armádní generál in memoriam Alois Eliáš |url=https://www.vets.cz/vpm/alois-elias-355/ |website=vets.cz |publisher=Spolek pro vojenská pietní místa, o.s. |access-date=24 June 2018 |language=cs}}</ref><ref name="vlada">{{cite web |title=Ing. Alois Eliáš |url=https://www.vlada.cz/cz/clenove-vlady/historie-minulych-vlad/prehled-vlad-cr/1939-1945-protektorat-cechy-a-morava/rudolf-beran/alois-elias-45302/ |website=vlada.cz |publisher=[[Government of Czech Republic|Vláda České republiky]] |access-date=24 June 2018 |language=cs}}</ref><ref name="lidovky">{{cite news |last1=Zídek |first1=Petr |title=Pohnuté Osudy: Alois Eliáš. Generál v srdci nepřítele s cenou tří divizí |url=https://www.lidovky.cz/alois-elias-general-s-cenou-tri-divizi-dxk-/lide.aspx?c=A150802_205022_lide_ELE |access-date=24 June 2018 |work=Lidovky.cz |date=16 August 2015 |language=cs}}</ref>
In Light of the [[Blomberg-Fritsch Affair]] Heydrich braced himself for the possibility of being fired by Himmler. Himmler did not fire Heydrich, but he was clearly angered. In a public speech, Himmler stated that he was misguided by his incapable subordinates. Although he did not name Heydrich specifically, Heydrich knew that he was one of them. But this only made Heydrich more driven to prove himself.


In March 1942, further sweeps against Czech cultural and patriotic organisations, the military, and the intelligentsia resulted in the practical paralysis of the London-based Czech resistance. Almost all avenues by which Czechs could express the Czech culture in public were closed.{{sfn|Bryant|2007|p=140}} Although small disorganised cells of [[Resistance in German-occupied Czechoslovakia#Consolidation of resistance groups: ÚVOD|Central Leadership of Home Resistance (Ústřední vedení odboje domácího, ÚVOD)]] survived, only the communist resistance was able to function in a coordinated manner (although it also suffered arrests).{{sfn|Bryant|2007|p=143}} The terror also served to paralyse resistance in society, with public and widespread reprisals by the Nazis against any action resisting German rule.{{sfn|Bryant|2007|p=143}} Heydrich's brutal policies during that time quickly earned him the nickname "the Butcher of Prague".{{sfn|Paces|2009|p=167}} The reprisals are referred to by Czechs as the ''Heydrichiáda''.{{sfn|Roberts|2005|p=56}}
Upon the establishment of the [[Third Reich]], Heydrich helped [[Adolf Hitler]] and [[Heinrich Himmler]] gather information on many political opponents, keeping an impressive filing system listing individuals and organizations who opposed the party and the regime. He is believed to be the creator of the forged documents of Russian correspondence with the German High Command. While it is now known that the [[Stalinist]] [[Great Purge]] of the Soviet military officer corps was at most tangentially related to these forgeries, at the time it was widely believed to have resulted from Heydrich's actions, enormously adding to his prestige. He was also instrumental in establishing the [[Gleiwitz incident|false 'attack' by Poland on German national radio at Gleiwitz]], intended to provide the Nazi justification for the beginning of [[World War II]], though this failed miserably and only came to light post-war when allied investigators began researching the captured German documents, since the station selected was merely a relay station for Radio Breslau whose stronger signal drowned out the fake `Polish propaganda` emanating from Gleiwitz.


As Acting Reich Protector of [[Bohemia]] and [[Moravia]], Heydrich applied [[carrot-and-stick]] methods.{{sfn|Williams|2003|p=100}} Labor was reorganised on the basis of the [[German Labour Front]]. Heydrich used equipment confiscated from the Czech gymnastics organisation [[Sokol (sport organization)|Sokol]] to organise events for workers.{{sfn|Bryant|2007|p=144}} Food rations and free shoes were distributed, pensions were increased, and (for a time) free Saturdays were introduced. [[Unemployment insurance]] was established for the first time.{{sfn|Williams|2003|p=100}} The [[black market]] was suppressed. Those associated with it or the resistance movement were tortured or executed. Heydrich labelled them "economic criminals" and "enemies of the people", which helped gain him support. Conditions in Prague and the rest of the Czech lands were relatively peaceful under Heydrich, and industrial output increased.{{sfn|Williams|2003|p=100}} Still, those measures could not hide shortages and increasing inflation; reports of growing discontent multiplied.{{sfn|Bryant|2007|p=144}}
Reinhard Heydrich's masterful abilities in matters of intrigue made him useful to Adolf Hitler and he involved himself in matters outside of his duties as head of the Sicherheitspolizei. Heydrich was the driving force behind some of the Nazis' most hair raising exploits.Heydrich was one of the main architects of [[the Holocaust]] during the first years of [[World War II]], answering only to, and taking orders only from [[Adolf Hitler]] and [[Heinrich Himmler]] in all matters that pertained to the Holocaust. He had initially gained some control over Jewish policy, when in November 1938, Göring assigned him as head of the [[Central Office for Jewish Emigration]] following the ''[[Kristallnacht]]''. In this position, he worked tirelessly both to coordinate various initiatives for the [[Final Solution]], and to assert SS dominance over Jewish policy. Most famously in this respect, on [[20 January]] [[1942]], Heydrich chaired the [[Wannsee Conference]], at which he presented to the heads of a number of German Government departments a plan approved by Hitler for the deportation of the [[Jew]]s of Europe to German-occupied parts of the Soviet Union, where the Jews fit for labour would be used for building roads. (That plan was not implemented in full, and instead most of the Jews under German control were later sent to [[extermination camp]]s or concentration camps).


{{listen
===Additional service as fighter pilot===
| filename= Reinhardt Heydrich speech excerpt.ogg
Reinhard Heydrich also served as Reserve [[Hauptmann]], then [[Major]] in the [[Luftwaffe]]. Some sources claim that he served in the [[Invasion of Poland (1939)|Invasion of Poland]] as a bomber gunner, but this is not confirmed. Then, despite his advanced age, he completed a fighter pilot course in 1940, probably due to his ambition. Heydrich wanted to set an example and show that the SS were not "asphalt" soldiers behind the front lines, but the elite of the Third Reich. In April 1940 he flew a [[Bf 110]] in the Fighter Group II./[[JG 77]] "Herz As"<ref>For an explanation of the meaning of Luftwaffe unit designation see [[Luftwaffe Organization]]</ref> in Norway. The planes flown by Heydrich had an ancient Germanic runic character S for ''Sieg'' -- "victory" painted on the side of the fuselage. On [[May 13]] [[1940]] he crashed his plane during take-off and was injured. For a short time in May, he flew patrol flights over North Germany and the Netherlands. Then, after another accident, he returned to Berlin. In mid-June 1941, before the German attack on the USSR, he resumed flying, ignoring Himmler's orders. He flew his personal Bf 109E-7 again with Group II./JG 77 from [[Bălţi]], [[Romania]] on the southern [[Eastern Front (World War II)|Eastern Front]], which put the wing commander under pressure due to Heydrich's position and lack of experience. On [[July 22]] [[1941]], his plane was badly damaged over [[Yampil]] by Soviet AA artillery. Heydrich managed to crash-land in no-man's land, and run back to the German lines. After this, he was forbidden to fly once more, as it was realized that Heydrich's capture as a POW would be a major security breach for Germany, and he never again returned to active flying.
| title= Excerpt from a speech by Reinhard Heydrich in 1941
| description=
| format= [[Ogg]]
| pos = left
}}


Despite public displays of goodwill towards the populace, privately Heydrich was very clear about his eventual goal: "This entire area will one day be definitely German, and the Czechs have nothing to expect here." Eventually up to two-thirds of the populace were to be either [[Generalplan Ost|removed to regions of Russia]] or exterminated after Nazi Germany won the war. Bohemia and Moravia faced annexation directly into the German Reich.{{sfn|Garrett|1996|p=60}}
Heydrich was really too old and too inexperienced to be a fighter pilot and he lacked the necessary free time for training flights. But despite his lack of experience, he was decorated with the [[Iron Cross]] Second (1940) and First (1941) Classes. The number of missions flown by Heydrich is not known, but he was awarded the ''Frontflugspange'' (Front Pilot Badge) in silver, which usually was awarded after 60 combat missions. According to Alan Wykes in Heydrich (War Leader book #22 as part of Ballantine's ''Illustrated History of the Violent Century'' 1973), Heydrich flew 97 missions in a Me-110 twin engine fighter.


The Czech workforce was exploited as Nazi-conscripted labour.{{sfn|Bryant|2007|p=144}} More than 100,000 workers were removed from "unsuitable" jobs and conscripted by the [[Ministry of Labour]]. By December 1941, Czechs could be called to work anywhere within the Reich. Between April and November 1942, 79,000 Czech workers were taken in this manner for work within Nazi Germany. Also, in February 1942, the work day was increased from eight to twelve hours.{{sfn|MacDonald|1989|p=133}}
==Reichsprotektor of Bohemia & Moravia and Assassination in Prague==
{{main|Operation Anthropoid}}
On [[27 September]] [[1941]] Heydrich was appointed acting [[Reichsprotektor]] in the [[Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia]] (the part of Czechoslovakia incorporated into the Reich on March 15, 1939). He replaced [[Konstantin von Neurath]] whom Hitler considered ineffective. (Neurath remained titular Protector until [[20 August]] [[1943]]).


Heydrich was, for all intents and purposes, military dictator of Bohemia and Moravia. His changes to the government's structure left President [[Emil Hácha]] and his cabinet virtually powerless. He often drove alone in a car with an open roof{{snd}}a show of his confidence in the occupation forces and in his government's effectiveness.{{sfn|Williams|2003|p=141}}
Neurath's policy as Protector was based on giving privileges to the nobility and upper classes. This led to passive resentment among ordinary people, mainly workers. The Protectorate was a vital weapons and war material producer for the Third Reich. During Neurath's service as Protector, war production substantially dropped. Heydrich came to Prague to restore production quotas.


By 3 October 1941, Czechoslovak [[military intelligence]] in London had made the decision to kill Heydrich.<ref>{{cite web |title=Plán atentátu (anniversary) |url=https://www.fronta.cz/kalendar/plan-atentatu |website=Fronta.cz |access-date=24 June 2018|language=cs}}</ref><ref name="Stehlík">{{cite journal |last1=Stehlík |first1=Eduard |title=SOE a příprava atentátu na Reinharda Heydricha |journal=Paměť a Dějiny |date=2012 |volume=2 |page=4 |trans-title=SOE and the preparation of Reinhard Heydrich's assassination |url=https://www.ustrcr.cz/data/pdf/pamet-dejiny/pad1202/003-015.pdf |publisher=[[Institute for the Study of Totalitarian Regimes|ÚSTR]] |language=cs}}</ref>
[[Image:Heydrich's_car.jpg |thumb|The car in which Heydrich was assassinated (currently in the [http://www.vhu.cz/ Military History Museum] in [[Prague]]).]]
[[Image:Heydrich's_car_Color.jpg |thumb|The car, another view.]]
[[Image:Heydrich's_car.JPG |thumb|The scene of assassination.]]
[[Image:Pragaue_1940.jpg#filelinks |thumb|The road corner where Heydrich was assassinated.]]
[[Image:Pragaue_1999.jpg#filelinks |thumb|The corner as it looked in 1999.]]
As the governor of Bohemia and Moravia, Heydrich applied "carrot-and-stick" methods. The black market was suppressed, food rations and pensions were increased, and unemployment insurance was established for the first time. Those associated with the resistance movement or black market were tortured or executed. Under Heydrich, Prague and the rest of the Czech lands became quite pacified and industrial output went up. Because of his success in Prague, Hitler was considering making Heydrich the governor of Paris. When British intelligence heard this, they wanted to stop this at all costs. They would not let a man who butchered the Czechs and Jews of Prague to do the same to the [[French Resistance]].{{Fact|date=October 2007}}<!-- Wilhelm Canaris article gives another reason: "The assassination of Reinhard Heydrich in Prague, organized by MI6, was done in part to preserve Canaris in his important position." The [[Operation Anthropoid]] states on the other hand: "As [[Adolf Hitler]]’s groomed successor, Reinhard Heydrich was one of the most important men in Nazi Germany. His death would be a huge loss(...)" Maybe there should be one version on all those articles. -->


==Role in the Holocaust==
While virtual military governor of Bohemia and Moravia, exercising real executive power above the President and Prime Minister of the so called Protectorate, Heydrich often drove alone in a car with an open roof &mdash; a show of confidence in the occupation forces and the effectiveness of his government (''See [[Czech resistance to Nazi occupation]]'').
{{multiple image
| direction = horizontal
| image1 = Kristallnacht rh telegram pg1.png
| width1 = 160
| caption1 = 1938 telegram giving orders during [[Kristallnacht]], signed by Heydrich
| image2 = Carta Göring.JPG
| width2 = 155
| caption2 = July 1941 letter from [[Hermann Göring|Göring]] to Heydrich concerning the [[Final Solution]] of the [[Jewish question]]
}}


Historians regard Heydrich as the most fearsome member of the Nazi elite.{{sfn|Sereny|1996|p=325}}{{sfn|Evans|2005|p=53}}{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=xiii}} Hitler called him "the man with the iron heart".{{sfn|Dederichs|2009|p=92}} He was one of the main architects of [[the Holocaust]] during the early war years, answering to and taking orders from only Hitler, Göring, and Himmler in all matters pertaining to the deportation, imprisonment, and extermination of Jews.
In London, the Czechoslovak government in exile (Prozatímní státní zřízení) was plotting for the assassination of Reinhard Heydrich. Two specially trained men were chosen for the operation: [[Jan Kubiš]] and [[Jozef Gabčík]]. These were [[Czechoslovak]] soldiers who fled the country earlier in 1941. After receiving training from the British, they returned by parachute in December, dropped from a [[Handley-Page Halifax|Halifax]] of [[No. 138 Squadron RAF|138 Squadron RAF]].


Heydrich was one of the organisers of ''[[Kristallnacht]]'', a [[pogrom]] against Jews throughout Germany on the night of 9–10 November 1938. Heydrich sent a [[Telegraphy|telegram]] that night to various SD and Gestapo offices, helping to coordinate the pogrom with the SS, SD, Gestapo, uniformed police (Orpo), SA, Nazi party officials, and even the fire departments. In the telegram, Heydrich granted permission for arson and destruction of Jewish businesses and synagogues, and ordered the confiscation of all "archival material" from Jewish community centres and synagogues. The telegram ordered that "as many Jews{{snd}}particularly affluent Jews{{snd}}are to be arrested in all districts as can be accommodated in existing detention facilities&nbsp;... Immediately after the arrests have been carried out, the appropriate concentration camps should be contacted to place the Jews into camps as quickly as possible."<ref name="ushmm Glass"/>{{sfn|Calic|1985|p=192}} Twenty thousand Jews were sent to concentration camps in the days immediately following;{{sfn|Calic|1985|p=193}} historians consider ''Kristallnacht'' the beginning of the Holocaust.<ref name="Hutchinson Encyclopedia"/>
On [[27 May]], [[1942]], Heydrich was scheduled to attend a meeting with Hitler in Berlin. In Heydrich's travel to Berlin, he would have to pass a section where the Dresden-Prague road merged with road leading to the Troja Bridge. That intersection was a perfect spot for the attack because Heydrich's car would have to slow down to make a hairpin turn. The attack was, therefore, scheduled for May 27th. They ambushed Heydrich while he rode in his open car in the [[Prague]] suburb of [[Kobylisy]]. As the car slowed to take the hairpin bend in the road, Gabčík took aim with a [[Sten]] [[sub-machine gun]] but it failed to fire. At that very moment, instead of ordering his driver to speed away Heydrich called his car to a halt in an attempt to take on the two attackers. Kubiš then immediately threw a bomb (a converted anti-tank mine) at the rear of the car. The explosion wounded Heydrich and also Kubiš himself.


When Hitler asked for a [[casus belli|pretext]] for the [[invasion of Poland]] in 1939, Himmler, Heydrich, and Heinrich Müller masterminded a [[false flag]] plan code-named [[Operation Himmler]]. It involved a fake attack on the German radio station at [[Gliwice|Gleiwitz]] on 31 August 1939. Heydrich masterminded the plan and toured the site, which was about {{convert|4|mi|km|0|spell=in}} from the Polish border. Wearing Polish uniforms, 150 German troops carried out several attacks along the border. Hitler used the ruse as an excuse to launch his invasion.{{sfn|Shirer|1960|pp=518–20}}{{sfn|Calic|1985|pp=194–200}}
It is alleged that when the smoke cleared, Heydrich emerged from the wreckage with his gun still in his hand and he gave chase after Kubis and tried to return fire but his pistol was not loaded. He ran for half a block, became weak from shock, and sent his driver Klein on foot to chase Gabčík. In the ensuing firefight, Gabčík shot Klein in the leg and escaped. Heydrich appeared not to be injured seriously.


[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-B01718, Ausstellung "Planung und Aufbau im Osten".jpg|thumb|left|[[Rudolf Hess]], Himmler, [[Philipp Bouhler]], [[Fritz Todt]], and Heydrich listening to [[Konrad Meyer]] at a ''[[Generalplan Ost]]'' exhibition, 20 March 1941]]
One version suggests that a Czech woman is said to have come to Heydrich's aid and flagged down a truck delivering floor polish. First, Heydrich was placed in the back seat, but after complaining that the movement of the truck was causing him pain, he was placed in the back of the truck, lying on his stomach, and he was taken to Bulovka hospital. He suffered a severe injury to the left side of his body with major damage to his diaphragm, spleen, lung, and he also had a broken rib. The doctors immediately performed an operation and despite a slight fever, his recovery appeard to progress quite well. On June, 2nd, he had a visit from Himmler, who it is said to have broken down into tears when he heard of the attempt on Heydrich's life. During Himmler's visit, Heydrich reconciled himself with his fate by reciting a part of one of his father's operas:
On Himmler's instructions, Heydrich formed the ''[[Einsatzgruppen]]'' (task forces) to travel in the wake of the German armies at the start of World War II.{{sfn|Longerich|2012|p=425}} On 21 September 1939, Heydrich sent out a teleprinter message on the "Jewish question in the occupied territory" to the chiefs of all ''Einsatzgruppen'' with instructions to round up Jewish people for placement into ghettos, called for the formation of [[Judenrat|Judenräte]] (Jewish councils), ordered a census, and promoted [[Aryanization (Nazism)|Aryanization]] plans for Jewish-owned businesses and farms, among other measures.{{efn|name=telegram}} The ''Einsatzgruppen'' units followed the army into Poland to implement the plans. Later, in the Soviet Union, they were charged with rounding up and murdering Jews via firing squad and gas vans.{{sfn|Shirer|1960|pp=958–63}} Historian [[Raul Hilberg]] estimates that between 1941 and 1945 the ''Einsatzgruppen'' and related auxiliary troops murdered more than two million people, including 1.3&nbsp;million Jews.{{sfn|Rhodes|2002|p=257}} Heydrich ensured the safety of certain athletes, such as Paul Sommer, a Jewish German champion fencer he knew from his pre-SS days, and the Polish Olympic fencing team that competed at the [[1936 Summer Olympics]].{{sfn|Donnelley|2012|p=48}}
<blockquote>"The world is just a barrel-organ which the Lord God turns Himself.
We all have to dance to the tune which is already on the drum."<ref>Macdonald, Callum. ''The Killing of SS-Obergruppenfuehrer Reinhard Heydrich''. NY, 1989.</ref></blockquote>


{{quote box|width=20em| quote =...&nbsp;the planned total measures are to be kept strictly secret&nbsp;... the first prerequisite for the final aim ("Endziel") is the concentration of the Jews from the countryside into the larger cities. |author=Heydrich |source=September 1939{{efn|name=telegram}}}}
After Himmler's visit, Heydrich slipped into a coma and never regained consciousness. He is said to have died at 4:30am on June 4th at the age of 38. Although the exact cause of death has not been definitively established, the autopsy states that Heydrich's death was most likely caused by bacteria and toxins from the bomb splinters.
{{quote box|width=20em| quote = By order of the Reichsführer-SS, residency without possession of an identification card is punishable by death. |author=Heydrich |source=November 1939<ref name="Götz, Roth et al. 2004"/>}}


On 29 November 1939, Heydrich issued a cable about the "Evacuation of New Eastern Provinces", detailing the deportation of people by railway to concentration camps, and giving guidance surrounding the December 1939 census, which would be the basis on which those deportations were performed.<ref name="Götz, Roth et al. 2004"/> In May 1941 Heydrich drew up regulations with [[Quartermaster general]] [[Eduard Wagner]] for the upcoming [[Operation Barbarossa|invasion of the Soviet Union]], which ensured that the ''Einsatzgruppen'' and army would co-operate in murdering Soviet Jews.{{sfn|Hillgruber|1989|pp=94–96}}
The bomb explosion drove fragments from the car seats into Heydrich's body, including bits of springs and dirty upholstery. This led to massive infections of his internal organs. Despite Himmler sending his best doctors, Heydrich died in a Prague hospital eight days later. The autopsy stated that Heydrich's death was the result of [[septicemia]].


On 10 October 1941, Heydrich was the senior officer at a "[[Final Solution]]" meeting of the RSHA{{efn|name=Hilberg description}} in Prague that discussed deporting 50,000 Jews from the [[Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia]] to ghettos in [[Minsk Ghetto|Minsk]] and [[Riga ghetto|Riga]]. Given his position, Heydrich was instrumental in carrying out these plans since his Gestapo was ready to organise deportations in the West and his ''Einsatzgruppen'' were already conducting extensive killing operations in the East.{{sfn|Hilberg|1985|p=164}} The officers attending also discussed taking 5,000 Jews from Prague "in the next few weeks" and handing them over to the ''Einsatzgruppen'' commanders [[Arthur Nebe]] and [[Otto Rasch]]. Establishing ghettos in the Protectorate was also planned, resulting in the construction of the [[Theresienstadt Ghetto]],<ref name="ghwk room7-2 a"/> where 33,000 people would eventually die. Tens of thousands more passed through the camp before being sent East to be murdered.<ref name="ushmm Theresienstadt"/> In 1941 Himmler named Heydrich as "responsible for implementing" the forced movement of 60,000 Jews from Germany and [[Czechoslovakia]] to the [[Łódź Ghetto|Łódź (Litzmannstadt) Ghetto]] in Poland.<ref name="ghwk room7-2 b"/>
==Aftermath==
Upon Himmler's orders, the Nazi retaliation was brutal. About 13,000 people were arrested, deported, imprisoned or killed. On [[10 June]] all males over the age of 16 in the village of [[Lidice]], 22 km north-west of [[Prague]], and another village, [[Ležáky]], were murdered. The towns were burned and the ruins leveled.


Earlier on 31 July 1941, Hermann Göring gave written authorisation to Heydrich to ensure the co-operation of administrative leaders of various government departments in the implementation of a "[[Final Solution]] to the [[Jewish question]]" in territories under German control.{{sfn|Browning|2004|p=315}} On 20 January 1942, Heydrich chaired a meeting, now called the [[Wannsee Conference]], to discuss the implementation of the plan.{{sfn|Kershaw|2008|pp=696–97}}<ref name="holocaust-history Wannsee"/>
Heydrich's assassins took refuge in the crypt of an Orthodox church in Prague. Their presence there was betrayed to the Nazis, who surrounded the church and started firing on it. Rather than surrender, the assassins took their own lives.


==Death==
There is a special memorial to both the assassins and the dead of Lidice and Lezaky in [[Jephson Gardens]], [[Royal Leamington Spa]], UK. This was the town where the Czech forces were stationed during the war, and where their training took place. The memorial fountain is in the form of a parachute, with water running over the centre fold. Planted around the fountain is the special white Lidice Rose, grown in commemoration of the dead. This memorial is believed to be the only place outside of Czechoslovakia where the special rose is grown. The fountain was designed and is maintained by [[Warwick district]] council.
{{Main|Assassination of Reinhard Heydrich}}


[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1972-039-44, Heydrich-Attentat.jpg|thumb|upright=1.2|The [[Mercedes-Benz W142|Mercedes-Benz 320 Convertible B]] in which Heydrich was mortally wounded]]
An elaborate [[funeral]] was conducted for Heydrich in Prague and [[Berlin]], with Hitler attending (and placing Heydrich's decorations on his funeral pillow, the highest grade of the [[German Order (decoration)|German Order]] and the [[Blood Order]] Medal). Although Heydrich's death was employed as pro-Reich propaganda, Hitler seemed privately to blame Heydrich for his own death, through carelessness:
{{multiple image
| align = right
| direction = horizontal
| image1 = Operace Anthropoid - Jozef Gabčík.jpg
| width1 = 115
| caption1 = Jozef Gabčík, {{circa}} 1942
| image2 = Operace Anthropoid - Jan Kubiš.jpg
| width2 = 148
| caption2 = Jan Kubiš, {{circa}} 1942
| header = Czechoslovak [[Special Operations Executive|SOE]] agents who killed Heydrich
| header_align = center
}}


In London, the [[Czechoslovak government-in-exile]] resolved to kill Heydrich. [[Jan Kubiš]] and [[Jozef Gabčík]] headed the team chosen for the mission, trained by the British [[Special Operations Executive]] (SOE). On 28 December 1941 they parachuted into the Protectorate, where they lived in hiding, preparing for the mission.{{sfn|Calic|1985|p=254}}
<blockquote>Since it is opportunity which makes not only the thief but also the assassin, such heroic gestures as driving in an open, unarmoured vehicle or walking about the streets unguarded are just damned stupidity, which serves the [[Fatherland]] not one whit. That a man as irreplaceable as Heydrich should expose himself to unnecessary danger, I can only condemn as stupid and idiotic.<ref>MacDonald, Callum. ''The Killing of Reinhard Heydrich: The SS "Butcher of Prague"''. 1998, page 182.</ref></blockquote>


On 27 May 1942, Heydrich planned to meet Hitler in Berlin. German documents suggest that Hitler intended to transfer him to [[Nazi occupied France|German-occupied France]] where the [[French Resistance]] was gaining ground.{{sfn|Bryant|2007|p=175}} To get from his home to the airport, Heydrich would have to pass a section where the [[Dresden]]-Prague road merges with a road to the [[Troja Bridge]]. The junction in the Prague suburb of [[Libeň]] was well suited for the attack because motorists have to slow for a hairpin bend. As Heydrich's car slowed, Gabčík took aim with a [[Sten]] [[submachine gun]], but it jammed and failed to fire. Heydrich ordered his driver, Klein, to halt and attempted to confront Gabčík rather than speed away. Kubiš, who had not been spotted by Heydrich or Klein, threw a converted [[anti-tank mine]] at the car as it stopped, which landed against the rear wheel. The explosion ripped through the right rear fender and wounded Heydrich, with metal fragments and fibres from the upholstery causing serious damage to his left side: he suffered major injuries to his [[thoracic diaphragm|diaphragm]], [[spleen]], and one lung, as well as a broken rib. Kubiš received a minor shrapnel wound to his face.{{sfn|Williams|2003|pp=145–47}}{{sfn|MacDonald|1998|pp=205, 207}} After Kubiš fled, Heydrich ordered Klein to chase Gabčík on foot, but Gabčík escaped after he shot and wounded Klein.{{sfn|Williams|2003|pp=147, 155}}{{sfn|MacDonald|1998|pp=206, 207}}
Lina Heydrich later stated that she believed Heydrich had expected an early death, saying that she saw his frequent unnecessary risk-taking (such as his recklessness during his stint as a fighter pilot) as an attempt to ensure that, should he die, his would be a dramatic death.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}


A Czech woman went to Heydrich's aid and flagged down a delivery van. He was placed on his stomach in the back of the van and taken to the emergency room at [[Bulovka Hospital]].{{sfn|Williams|2003|p=155}} A [[splenectomy]] was performed, and the chest wound, left lung, and diaphragm were all [[debridement|debrided]].{{sfn|Williams|2003|p=155}} Himmler ordered [[Karl Gebhardt]] to fly to Prague to assume care. Despite a fever, Heydrich's recovery appeared to progress well. Hitler's personal doctor [[Theodor Morell]] suggested the use of the new antibacterial drug [[sulfonamide (medicine)|sulfonamide]], but Gebhardt thought that Heydrich would recover and declined the suggestion.{{sfn|Williams|2003|p=165}} Heydrich reconciled himself to his fate on 2 June, during a visit by Himmler, by reciting a quotation from one of his father's operas:
Heydrich was buried in Berlin's [[Invalidenfriedhof]], which had the misfortune to be on the border between West and East Berlin. His plot was between those of two famous German war heroes, Oven{{Fact|date=February 2007}} and [[Gerhard von Scharnhorst|Scharnhorst]].<ref>[http://www.findagrave.com/php/famous.php?page=cem&FScemeteryid=639249 Find A Grave - Invalidenfriedhof<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>. In 1945, however, his headstone and grave marker were removed by the Allies, who feared his tomb would become a rallying point for [[Neo-Nazis]]. During the time when the [[Berlin Wall]] was standing, the grave was part of the so-called "death strip" between the two Berlins and inaccessible to the public.


<poem lang="de" style="float:left;">Ja, die Welt ist nur ein Leierkasten,
Heydrich's eventual replacements were [[Ernst Kaltenbrunner]] as the chief of [[RSHA]], and [[Karl Hermann Frank]] 27 - [[28 May]] [[1942]] and [[Kurt Daluege]] [[28 May]] [[1942]] - [[14 October]] [[1943]] as the new acting [[Reichsprotektor]]s.
den unser Herrgott selber dreht.
Jeder muß nach dem Liede tanzen,
das gerade auf der Walze steht.<ref>{{cite web |title=Das Spiel ist aus – Arthur Nebe |url=https://www.spiegel.de/politik/das-spiel-ist-aus-arthur-nebe-a-c93ff157-0002-0001-0000-000044446464 |website=Der Spiegel |date=June 1950 |access-date=29 June 2023}}</ref></poem>
<poem style="margin-left:2em; float:left;">The world is just a barrel-organ
which the Lord God turns Himself.
We all have to dance to the tune
which is already on the drum.{{sfn|Lehrer|2000|p=86}}</poem>{{Clear|left}}


On 3 June, Heydrich fell into a coma; he died the following day. An autopsy concluded that he died of [[sepsis]].{{sfn|Höhne|2000|p=495}}<ref>{{Cite book |last=Johnson |first=Steven |authorlink=Steven Johnson (author) |title=Extra Life |publisher=[[Riverhead Books]] |year=2021 |isbn=978-0-525-53885-1 |edition=1st |pages=150 |language=en}}</ref> Professors R. J. Defalque and A. J. Wright of the [[University of Alabama at Birmingham]] suggest that [[pulmonary embolism]] and/or [[brain ischemia]] may have been decisive factors.{{sfn|Defalque|Wright|2009|p=6}}{{efn|G. M. Weisz of the [[University of New South Wales]] and W. R. Albury of the [[University of New England (Australia)]] have argued that the failure to administer [[Sulfonamide (medicine)|thiazole sulfonamides]], through negligence or otherwise, may have precipitated his death.{{sfn|Weisz|Albury|2014|pp=212–216}} }} He was 38 years old.
After Heydrich's death, his legacy lived on; the first three "trial" death camps were constructed and put into operation at [[Treblinka extermination camp|Treblinka]], [[Sobibór]], and [[Belzec]]. The project was named [[Operation Reinhard]] in Heydrich's honor.


===Funeral===
It is said that when told of Heydrich's death, [[Odilo Globocnik]] said, "Thank God that sow's gone to the butcher."
[[File:Heydrich funeral.jpg|thumb|upright=1.2|Second funeral ceremony, 9 June 1942]]


After an elaborate funeral held in Prague on 7 June 1942, Heydrich's coffin was placed on a train to Berlin, where a second ceremony was held in the new [[Reich Chancellery]] on 9 June. Himmler gave the eulogy.{{sfn|Dederichs|2009|pp=148–50}} Hitler attended and placed Heydrich's decorations—including the highest grade of the [[German Order (distinction)|German Order]], the [[Blood Order]] Medal, the [[Wound Badge]] in Gold, and the [[War Merit Cross]] 1st Class with Swords—on his funeral pillow.{{sfn|Williams|2003|p=223}} Although Heydrich's death was employed for pro-Reich propaganda, Hitler privately blamed Heydrich for his own death, through carelessness:
== Family==
In December 1930 Heydrich met [[Lina Mathilde von Osten]] ([[14 June]] [[1911]] - [[14 August]] [[1985]]). She was the daughter of Jürgen von Osten, a minor German aristocrat. They were married on [[26 December]] [[1931]] in [[Großenbrode]]. The couple had four children. According to historian Jaroslav Čvančara, Heydrich had an additional child with a mistress, a leader of [[League of German Girls]] (BDM).<ref>{{cite book|first=Jaroslav|last=Čvančara|title=Heydrich|year=2005|language=Czech|isbn=80-86010-87-2|others=Čvančara is author of several books abot Heydrich and his assassination.}}</ref>


{{blockquote|Since it is opportunity which makes not only the thief but also the assassin, such heroic gestures as driving in an open, unarmoured vehicle or walking about the streets unguarded are just damned stupidity, which serves the [[Fatherland]] not one whit. That a man as irreplaceable as Heydrich should expose himself to unnecessary danger, I can only condemn as stupid and idiotic.{{sfn|MacDonald|1989|p=182}}}}
Heydrich's younger brother Heinz Siegfried ([[September 29]] [[1905]] in Halle/S), though initially as fanatical a Nazi as his brother, gradually became disenchanted with Nazism and even became involved in obtaining false identification documents for Jews to save them from persecution. When his activities were uncovered by the Gestapo he was given the choice of committing suicide rather than face trial with the attendant hardships for his family (and embarrassment to the regime). He shot himself on [[November 19]], [[1944]].{{Fact|date=September 2007}}<!-- On http://forum.panzer-archiv.de/viewtopic.php?p=132139&sid=fd031fe1668d2c16d25b8dedb232b57c is a discussion (in German) about Heinz, basically saying that there are several contradicting opinions why he died.-->
[[File:GraveReinhardHeydrich-InvalidenfriedhofBerlin RomanDeckert15042023-01.jpg|thumb|Heydrich's anonymous grave]]
Heydrich was interred in Berlin's [[Invalidenfriedhof]], a military cemetery.{{sfn|Dederichs|2009|p=107}} The exact burial spot is no longer public knowledge—a temporary wooden marker that disappeared when the Red Army overran the city in 1945 was never replaced, so that Heydrich's grave could not become a rallying point for [[Neo-Nazism|Neo-Nazis]].{{sfn|Lehrer|2000|p=87}} Nevertheless, on 16 December 2019, the BBC reported that Heydrich's unmarked grave had been opened by unknown persons, without anything being taken.{{sfn|BBC|2019}} A photograph of Heydrich's burial shows the wreaths and mourners to be in section A, which abuts the north wall of the Invalidenfriedhof and Scharnhorststraße, at the front of the cemetery.{{sfn|Lehrer|2000|p=87}} A recent biography of Heydrich also places the grave in Section A.{{sfn|Dederichs|2009|p=176}} Hitler planned for Heydrich to have a monumental tomb (designed by sculptor [[Arno Breker]] and architect [[Wilhelm Kreis]]) but, due to Germany's declining fortunes, it was never built.{{sfn|Lehrer|2000|p=87}}


Heydrich's widow, Lina, won the right to a pension following a series of court cases against the [[West German]] government in 1956 and 1959. She was declared entitled to a substantial pension as her husband was a German general killed in action. The government had previously declined to pay due to Heydrich's role in the Holocaust.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=291}} The couple had four children: Klaus, born in 1933, killed in a traffic accident in 1943; Heider, born in 1934; Silke, born in 1939; and Marte, born shortly after her father's death in 1942.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|pp=77, 83, 113, 289}} Lina wrote a memoir, ''Leben mit einem Kriegsverbrecher'' (''Living With a War Criminal''), which was published in 1976.{{sfn|Browder|2004|p=260}} She remarried once and died in 1985.{{sfn|Lehrer|2000|p=58}}
Heydrich had four children: Klaus, born in 1933; Heider, born in 1934; Silke, born in 1939; and Marte, born shortly after her father's death in 1942. In 1943, Klaus lost his life in a traffic accident. In 1944, Lina Heydrich had Heider removed from the Hitler Youth out of fear that he may meet the same fate as his father. After the war, Lina moved to the island of Fehmarn, located in the Baltic sea, where she operated a hotel.


===Aftermath===
At the end of the war Heydrich's widow Lina returned to the island of Fehmarn with the surviving three of her four children. She owned and ran a hotel and restaurant. The Finnish theatre director and poet [[Mauno Manninen]] (1915-1969), a nephew of the composer Sibelius, was a frequent guest at the hotel. He took pity on the difficulties she experienced as a result of her infamous name and offered to marry her to enable her to change it. They married in 1965 but did not live together. She died in 1985, claiming till the end that she had known nothing about the atrocities committed and ordered by her first husband.
{{Main|Lidice massacre}}


Heydrich's assailants hid in safe houses and eventually took refuge in [[Saints Cyril and Methodius Cathedral]], an Orthodox church in Prague. After a traitor in the Czech resistance betrayed their location,{{sfn|Dederichs|2009|p=152}} the church was surrounded by 800 members of the SS and Gestapo. Several Czechs were killed, and the remainder hid in the church's crypt. The Germans attempted to flush the men out with gunfire and tear gas, and by flooding the crypt. Eventually an entrance was made using explosives. Rather than surrender, the soldiers killed themselves. Supporters of the assassins who were killed in the wake of these events included the church's leader, [[Gorazd (Pavlík)|Bishop Gorazd]], who is now revered as a martyr of the Orthodox Church.{{sfn|Dederichs|2009|pp=153–55}}
Since Heydrich's death, it has also been suggested that Heydrich had Jewish grandparents and that this was known to high Nazi leaders including Hitler and Himmler. Under the [[Nuremberg Laws]] of 1935, Jewishness was defined as any person with one Jewish grandparent. That would have classified Heydrich as "a person of mixed Jewish blood in the second degree", meaning he had one pure German and one half Jewish parent. As a "[[Mischling]]" (of mixed blood) Heydrich would, at the very least, have been subject to expulsion from the SS.


[[File:CyrilMethodious.JPG|thumb|left|upright=1.2|Bullet-scarred window to the crypt of [[Saints Cyril and Methodius Cathedral]] in Prague, where Kubiš and his compatriots were cornered]]
The testimony of [[Walter Schellenberg]] is cited in support of this view. He stated in the 1950s that Heinrich Himmler had met privately with Heydrich in 1935, after learning that one of Heydrich's relatives had held the surname of "Süss", a common Jewish name. According to Schellenberg, Heydrich admitted that one of his grandparents was Jewish and Himmler had reportedly informed Hitler. Hitler, however, stated Heydrich was a special case since "his Aryan blood far suppressed his Jewish heritage". Shortly thereafter, Gestapo personnel were dispatched to Halle, where Heydrich had been born, to erase certain records of Heydrich's past.


Infuriated by Heydrich's death, Hitler ordered the arrest and execution of 10,000 randomly selected Czechs. But after consultations with [[Karl Hermann Frank]], he altered his response. The Czech lands were an important industrial zone for the German military, and indiscriminate killing could reduce the region's productivity.{{sfn|Craig|2005|p=189}} Hitler ordered a quick investigation. Intelligence falsely linked the assassins to the towns of [[Lidice]] and [[Ležáky]]. A Gestapo report stated that Lidice, {{convert|22|km}} north-west of Prague, was suspected as the assailants' hiding place because several Czech army officers, then in England, had come from there; additionally, the Gestapo had found a resistance radio transmitter in Ležáky.{{sfn|Dederichs|2009|pp=151–52}} On 9 June, after discussions with Himmler and [[Karl Hermann Frank]], Hitler ordered [[Lidice massacre|brutal reprisals]].{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=280}} On 9 June, in the village of [[Lidice]] 172 boys and men between age 14 to 84 were shot. Thereafter, all adults in [[Ležáky]] were murdered.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|pp=281, 285}}
It was not long before other Nazis had heard insinuations that Heydrich might have had a Jewish relative in his background. Dr. [[Achim Gercke]], the Nazi Party's leading genealogist, was commissioned by [[Gregor Strasser]] to look into Heydrich's background after a Nazi official, [[Rudolf Jordan]], revealed Heydrich's suspected Jewish grandfather to Party Headquarters in 1932. Gercke said that research showed that not only was the Süss in question, a locksmith, not even a Jew, but that he wasn't even Heydrich's genetic grandfather, whose name was Reinhold Heydrich. The accuracy of both Schellenberg's and Gercke's accounts are debated among historians.


All but four of the women from Lidice were deported immediately to [[Ravensbrück]] concentration camp (four were pregnant{{snd}}they were subjected to [[forced abortion]]s at the same hospital where Heydrich had died and the women were then sent to the concentration camp). Some children were chosen for [[Germanization]], and 81 were murdered in [[Nazi gas van|gas van]]s at the [[Chełmno extermination camp]]. Both towns were burned and Lidice's ruins were levelled.{{sfn|Calic|1985|p=253}}{{sfn|Frucht|2005|p=236}} Overall, at least 1,300&nbsp;Czechs, including 200 women, were killed in reprisal for Heydrich's assassination.{{sfn|Kershaw|2000|p=519}}{{sfn|Burian|Knížek|Rajlich|Stehlík|2002}}{{sfn|Kershaw|2008|p=714}}
Heydrich had four children, mainly:
*Klaus (born [[17 June]] [[1933]]) died in a traffic accident in the lower castle in [[Panenské Břežany]] (Jungfern-Breschan) on [[24 October]] [[1943]]
*Heider (born [[28 December]] [[1934]])<!-- uncorfirmed date of death July 3, 2007 had appeared on Wikipedia at a time-->
*Silke (born [[9 April]] [[1939]])
*Marte (born [[23 July]] [[1942]])


Heydrich's replacements were [[Ernst Kaltenbrunner]] as the chief of [[RSHA]],{{sfn|Dederichs|2009|p=107}} and [[Karl Hermann Frank]] (27–28 May 1942) and [[Kurt Daluege]] (28 May 1942{{snd}}14 October 1943) as the new acting ''[[Reichsprotektor]]s''. After Heydrich's death, implementation of the policies formalised at the Wannsee conference he chaired was accelerated. The first three true [[death camps]], designed for mass murder with no [[legal process]] or pretext, were built and operated at [[Treblinka extermination camp|Treblinka]], [[Sobibor extermination camp|Sobibór]], and [[Belzec extermination camp|Bełżec]]. The project was named [[Operation Reinhard]] after Heydrich.{{sfn|Arad|1987|p=13}}
As of 2008, Heider, Marte and Silke are reported as still being alive.


==Summary of SS career==
==Service record==
Heydrich's time in the SS was a mixture of rapid promotions, reserve commissions in the regular armed forces, and front-line combat service. During his 11 years with the SS Heydrich "rose from the ranks" and was appointed to every rank from private to full general. He was also a [[Major (Germany)|major]] in the [[Luftwaffe]], flying nearly 100 combat missions until 22 July 1941, when his plane was hit by Soviet anti-aircraft fire. After this, Hitler personally ordered Heydrich to return to Berlin to resume his SS duties.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|pp=174, 196–97}} His service record also gives him credit as a Navy Reserve Lieutenant, but in 1931 he was dismissed for conduct unbecoming an officer with [[Reduction in rank|loss of rank]], and during World War II he had no contact with the Navy Reserve.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011a|pp=64–65}}<ref name="Krojc">{{cite web |last=Kříž |first=Jiří |title=Propuštění R. Heydricha z námořnictva |url=https://www.fronta.cz/dotaz/propusteni-heydricha-z-namornictva |website=Fronta.cz |access-date=17 June 2018 |language=cs |date=15 May 2007}}</ref>
===Dates of rank===
* SS-[[Mann (military rank)|Mann]]: [[14 July]] [[1931]]
* SS-[[Sturmführer]]: [[10 August]] [[1931]]
* SS-[[Sturmhauptführer]]: [[1 December]] [[1931]]
* SS-[[Sturmbannführer]]: [[25 December]] [[1931]]
* SS-[[Standartenführer]]: [[29 July]] [[1932]]
* SS-[[Oberführer]]: [[21 March]] [[1933]]
* SS-[[Brigadeführer]]: [[9 November]] [[1933]]
* SS-[[Gruppenführer]]: [[30 June]] [[1934]]
* SS-[[Obergruppenführer]] und [[General]] der [[Ordnungspolizei|Polizei]]: [[27 September]] [[1941]]


Heydrich began training as a pilot in 1935, and undertook fighter pilot training at the flight school at [[Werneuchen]] in 1939. Himmler initially forbade Heydrich from flying combat missions, but later relented, allowing him to join ''[[Jagdgeschwader 77]]'' "Herz As" (Ace of Hearts) in Norway, where he was stationed from 15 April 1940 during [[Operation Weserübung]]. He returned to Berlin on 14 May after having crashed his plane on takeoff at [[Stavanger]] the previous day.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=174}}{{sfn|Semerdjiev|2019}} While in Norway, Heydrich also organised the arrests of political opponents and arranged for a contingent of 200 SiPo and SD men to be stationed in several major cities.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=175}}
The earliest official photographs of Heydrich wearing an SS uniform are from 1933 when he held the rank of SS-[[Oberführer]]. Some private photographs exist showing him as an SS-[[Standartenführer]] from 1932, but there are no known pictures of Heydrich wearing a junior SS rank from before this time.


On 20 July 1941, without seeking authorisation from Himmler, Heydrich rejoined ''Jagdgeschwader 77'' during [[Operation Barbarossa]], arriving at [[Yampil, Vinnytsia Oblast]] in a borrowed [[Messerschmitt Bf 109|Bf 109]]. His aircraft was hit by Soviet flak in action near the [[Dniester]] on 22 July, and he had to land the plane in enemy territory. He avoided capture and returned to Berlin after being rescued by a patrol.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|pp=196–97}} It was his final combat mission.{{sfn|Semerdjiev|2019}}
===Service history===
* July 1931: Appointed as an SS member under SS Number 10120
* August 1931: Appointed as SS officer and tasked with forming the SS Security Service
* July 1932: Founded the ''[[Sicherheitsdienst]]''
* 1936: Appointed Commander of the ''[[Sicherheitspolizei]]''
* September 1939: Founder and first Commander of the [[RSHA|''Reichssicherheitshauptamt'']]
* September 1941: Appointed as Deputy Reichsprotector of [[Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia]]
* January 1942: Chairman of the [[Wannsee Conference]]
* May 1942: [[Operation Anthropoid|Attacked]] by British supported Czechoslovak partisans in [[Prague]]
* June 1942: Died from wounds received in [[Partisan (military)|partisan]] attack


Heydrich received a number of Nazi and military awards. These included the [[German Order (decoration)|German Order]],{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=279}} [[Blood Order]],{{sfn|Dederichs|2009|pp=148–50}} [[Golden Party Badge]], [[Aviator Badge#Germany|Luftwaffe Pilot's Badge]], bronze and silver [[Front Flying Clasp of the Luftwaffe]] for combat missions, and the [[Iron Cross]] First and Second Classes.{{sfn|Gerwarth|2011|p=174}}
===Heydrich's decorations===
* [[German Order (decoration)|German Order]] (Posthumous)
* [[Blood Order]] (Posthumous)
* [[Golden Party Badge|Golden Nazi Party Badge]]
* [[Iron Cross]] Second (1940) and First (1941) Classes
* [[Aviator Badge|Luftwaffe Pilot's Badge]] (Flugzeugführerabzeichen)
* Luftwaffe Front Pilot Badge (Frontflugspange) in bronze (1940) and in silver (1941)
* [[Danzig Cross]] (First Class)
* [[Anschluss Medal]]
* [[Sudetenland Medal]] with Prague Castle Bar
* [[Memel Medal]]
* Olympic Games Decoration (First Class)
* Social Welfare Decoration (First Class)
* NSDAP Long Service Ribbon for 10 years service
* Police Service Ribbon for 18 years service


==See also==
==Heydrich in popular culture==
{{Portal|Biography}}
*[[Kenneth Branagh]] reportedly said that he had trouble portraying Heydrich in ''[[Conspiracy (film)|Conspiracy]]'' due to the evil that surrounded him ([[Stanley Tucci]] also had similar reservations about playing [[Adolf Eichmann]] in the same film).
*[[Dramatic portrayals of Reinhard Heydrich]]
*Actor [[Anton Diffring]] played the central character Heydrich in the film "Operation Daybreak" about the assassination of the ''Reichsprotektor''. Interestingly, Diffring was 57 years old when he shot this movie; the real Heydrich died at 38.
*[[Glossary of Nazi Germany]]
*Heydrich was portrayed by [[David Warner]] twice: in the 1978 TV [[miniseries]] ''[[Holocaust (TV miniseries)|Holocaust]]'', and in the 1985 TV movie ''[[Hitler's S.S.: Portrait in Evil]]''. The movie followed the career of his subordinate Helmut Hoffmann, played by [[Bill Nighy]].
*[[List of Nazi Party leaders and officials]]
*A Heydrich action figure has been produced by In The Past Toys, amongst many other people of the Third Reich military and police organization.
*[[List of rulers of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia]]
*The English indie band [[British Sea Power]] wrote a song called "A Lovely Day Tomorrow" about Heydrich's assassination by the Czech resistance. Originally a b-side, the song was re-recorded in 2004 as a limited edition single in collaboration with Czech band the [[Ecstasy of Saint Theresa]]. The single included both English and Czech versions of the song.
*[[Register of SS leaders in general's rank#List of SS-Obergruppenführer|List of SS-Obergruppenführer]]
*The song SS-3 from thrash metal band [[Slayer]]'s [[Divine Intervention]] album is about Heydrich, the title coming from the numberplate of the car he was killed in.
*The [[Black metal]] band [[Marduk]] released a song called “The Hangman of Prague” in their [[Plague Angel]] album inspired by Heydrich's assassinations in Prague.
*The song 1942 by Czech punk band [[Incrux]] is about Heydrich, referring to year of Heydrich's assassination.
*The 1943 Fritz Lang film ''Hangmen Also Die'' takes place in Prague and is based on Heydrich's assassination.
*The 1962 fictional work [[The Man in the High Castle]] by [[Philip K. Dick]] mentions Heydrich in a timeline without his assassination.


==Informational notes==
===Fiction===
{{notelist
The events of the Wannsee conference are recreated in the 1984 TV Movie ''[[Wannseekonferenz (film)|Wannseekonferenz]]'' (''The Wannsee Conference'')[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0088377/] directed by [[Heinz Schirk]], and remade in 2001 under the title [[Conspiracy (film)|''Conspiracy'']] [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0266425/], with [[Kenneth Branagh]] playing Reinhard Heydrich. The Conference was also the subject of a 1992 [[English language]] [[documentary film]] entitled ''The Wannsee Conference'' directed by [[the Netherlands|Dutch]] director [[Willy Lindwer]] [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0393959/].
| refs =
{{efn
| name = coding
| For the coding of prisoners, see ''[[IBM and the Holocaust]]'' by Edwin Black, pp 355 and 362. Black references the "Administration of German Concentration Camps", 9 July 1945, PRO FO 371/46979 (Public Record Office, London), as well as "Decoding Key for Concentration Camp Card Index Files", n.d. NARG242/338 T-1021 Roll 5, JAG (National Archives, College Park); and in the last source Frame 99 is mentioned.
}}
{{efn
| name = telegram
| The telegram is evidence number PS-3363 from the Oswald Pohl case at the Nuremberg Trials. A translation of the text is available at yadvashem.org.
}}
{{efn
| name = Hilberg description
| This description of the meeting was employed by Holocaust historian [[Raul Hilberg]] in ''[[The Destruction of the European Jews]]''. {{harvnb|Hilberg|1985|p=164}}.
}}
{{efn
| name = deathcamp
| According to Czech historians, during the first martial law period (from 28 September 1941 until 20 January 1942), 486 people were executed. In addition, many of the 2,242 people sent to Mauthausen died before the end of the period, some within days or weeks of their arrival. {{harvnb|Šír|2011}}.
}}
}}


==Citations==
The plan to kill Heydrich is central to the plot of the [[1998]] [[novel]] ''As Time Goes By'', a sequel to the movie [[Casablanca (film)|''Casablanca'']], written by [[Michael Walsh]]. (ISBN 0-446-51900-6). The assassination itself has been dramatised in the 1943 [[Fritz Lang]] [[film]] ''[[Hangmen Also Die]]'' (written by [[Bertolt Brecht]]) [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0035966], the 1964 Czechoslovak film [[Atentat|''Atentát'']] [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0174476/] and the 1975 film ''[[Operation Daybreak]]'', starring [[Anthony Andrews]] (Jozef Gabcik), [[Timothy Bottoms]] (Jan Kubis), [[Martin Shaw]] (Karel Curda) and [[Anton Diffring]] (Heydrich) [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0075019/]. As another instance of Heydrich's courting of disaster, this film shows him risking death by wearing the Crown of Bohemia which was historically fatal to anyone unentitled to do so.
{{reflist
| colwidth = 20em
| refs =


<ref name="National Archives">
Heydrich, as the "Reich's Crown Prince of Terror", plays a leading role in ''March Violets'' and ''The Pale Criminal'', the first two novels in Philip Kerr's ''Berlin Noir'' trilogy (ISBN 0-14-023170-6), in which Bernie Gunther, a Berlin private eye in the tradition of [[Raymond Chandler]]'s [[Philip Marlowe]] who left the Berlin police when the Nazis came to power, finds his investigations embroiling him in the internal feuding of the Nazi High Command.
Reinhard Heydrich at the SS [[service record]] collection, United States National Archives. College Park, Maryland
</ref>


<ref name="ushmm Night And Fog Decree">
Heydrich and the events of the Wannsee conference are also the subjects of Robert Harris's novel [[Fatherland (novel)|''Fatherland'']]. The book portrays an alternate history where Heydrich is promoted to the rank of [[Reichsführer-SS]] (4-star General) after the death of Himmler. For a brief three seconds at movie's end (an ending in direct contradiction to that in the novel) he is shown standing with two other officials while the evidence of the Holocaust is given to U.S. President [[Joseph P. Kennedy]].
{{cite web
|title = Night and Fog Decree
|publisher = United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
|url = http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10007465
|access-date = 27 January 2012
|url-status = dead
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120509193355/http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10007465
|archive-date = 9 May 2012
|df = dmy-all
}}
</ref>


<ref name="ushmm Glass">
''[[The Man in the High Castle]]'', an alternate-history novel by science fiction writer [[Philip K. Dick]] set in the 1960s describes Heydrich as head of the SS and maneuvering to become Reich Chancellor after Hitler and his immediate successor, [[Martin Bormann]], are dead.
{{cite web
|title = Document: Page 3
|publisher = United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
|url = http://www.ushmm.org/information/exhibitions/online-features/special-focus/kristallnacht/historical-overview/role-of-the-police/document-page-3
|access-date = 18 September 2014
|url-status = dead
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160704093600/https://www.ushmm.org/information/exhibitions/online-features/special-focus/kristallnacht/historical-overview/role-of-the-police/document-page-3
|archive-date = 4 July 2016
|df = dmy-all
}}
</ref>


<ref name="Hutchinson Encyclopedia">
In the [[Robert Ludlum]] novel, [[The Tristan Betrayal]], Heydrich plays a small but pivotal role. In this [[World War II]] thriller Heydrich is the master and father figure to a German assassin, Kleist, who serves as one of the antagonists of the novel. The book portrays Heydrich as a cruel, calculating man (nothing new) who had utmost respect from his fellow Nazi officials (debatable).
{{cite encyclopedia
|encyclopedia= The [[Hutchinson Encyclopedia]]
|title= Kristallnacht
|edition= 18
|year= 1998
|publisher= Helicon
|location= Oxford
|isbn= 978-1-85833-951-1
|page=1199
}}
</ref>


<ref name="Götz, Roth et al. 2004">
Heydrich also plays a pivotal role in William Harrington's novel "The English Lady".
{{cite book
|last1= Aly
|first1= Götz
|author-link1= Götz Aly
|last2= Roth
|first2= Karl Heinz
|last3= Black
|first3= Edwin
|author-link3= Edwin Black
|last4= Oksiloff
|first4= Assenka
|year= 2004
|title= The Nazi Census: Identification and Control in the Third Reich
|publisher= Temple University Press
|location= Philadelphia
|isbn= 978-1-59213-199-0
|page= 5
}}
</ref>


<ref name="ghwk room7-2 a">
"The Assassination of Reinhard Heydrich" is a short story by [[Jim Shepard]] which explores the plot to assassinate Heydrich from the conspirators' perspective.
{{cite web
|title= The Path to the Mass Murder of European Jews, part 2. Notes from the meeting on the solution of Jewish Questions held on 10.10.1941 in Prague
|publisher= Haus der Wannsee-Konferenz&nbsp;– Gedenk- und Bildungsstätte
|url= http://www.ghwk.de/2006-neu/room7-2.htm
|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20090221045253/http://www.ghwk.de/2006-neu/room7-2.htm
|archive-date= 21 February 2009
|access-date= 18 September 2014
}}
</ref>


<ref name="ushmm Theresienstadt">
==See also==
{{cite web
* [[List of rulers of the Protectorate Bohemia and Moravia]]
|title= Theresienstadt
* [[Ernst Kaltenbrunner]]
|publisher= United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
|url= http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10005424
|access-date= 18 September 2014
}}
</ref>


<ref name="ghwk room7-2 b">
==References==
{{cite web
===Bibliography===
|title= The Path to the Mass Murder of European Jews, part 2: Letter of 18 September 1941 from Himmler to Reichsstatthalter Greiser
* SS Service Record of Reinhard Heydrich, [[National Archives and Records Administration]], [[College Park, Maryland]]
|publisher= Haus der Wannsee-Konferenz&nbsp;– Gedenk&nbsp;– und Bildungsstätte
*''The Killing of Reinhard Heydrich: The SS "Butcher of Prague"'', by Callum MacDonald (Da Capo Press, N.Y. 1989), ISBN 0-306-80860-9
|url= http://www.ghwk.de/2006-neu/room7-2.htm
*''Assassination : Operation Anthropoid 1941-1942'', by Michael Burian (Avis, Prague 2002)
|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20090221045253/http://www.ghwk.de/2006-neu/room7-2.htm
*''The Face of the Third Reich: Portraits of the Nazi Leadership'', by Joachim Fest (Da Capo Press)
|archive-date= 21 February 2009
* "Reinhard Heydrich - Der deutsche Polizeichef als Jagdflieger", by Stefan Semerdjiev, ''Deutsche Militärzeitschrift,'' No 41 Sept/Okt.2004, pp. 36-38.
|access-date= 18 September 2014
* "Leben mit einem Kriegsverbrecher" ("Life with a War Criminal"), by Lina Heydrich (Ludwig Verlag, Pfaffenhofen 1976) ISBN 3-7787-1025-7
}}
*''Heydrich: The Face of Evil'', by Mario R. Dederichs, tr. Geoffrey Brooks (Greenhill Books, London 2006)
</ref>
*''Hitler: A Study In Tyranny'', by Alan Bullock (HarperCollins, New York 1962)
*''Der Orden unter dem Totenkopf'' (Verlag der Spiegel, Hamburg, 1966), by Heinz Höhne; translated as ''The Order of the Death’s Head: The Story of Hitler’s SS'' (Richard Barry, transl.) (Pan Books 1972).
*''The Labyrinth'', by [[Walter Schellenberg]], with introduction by Alan Bullock (Da Capo Press, original copyright, 1956 by Harper & Brothers)
*''The Assassination of Heydrich'', by Jan Wiener (Grossman Publishers, N.Y. 1969)
*''The Life and Times of Reinhard Heydrich'', by G.S. Graber (Robert Hale, London 1980)


<ref name="holocaust-history Wannsee">
===Notes===
{{cite web
{{reflist}}
|title= The Wannsee Conference
|publisher= Holocaust-history.org
|date= 4 February 2004
|url= http://phdn.org/archives/holocaust-history.org/short-essays/wannsee.shtml
|access-date= 12 September 2017
}}
</ref>


}}
==External links==
{{wikiquote}}
* [http://motlc.learningcenter.wiesenthal.org/pages/t029/t02968.html Wiesenthal Center Information Page]
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GScid=639249&GRid=11953& Heydrich's gravesite (Find-a-Grave)]
* [http://www.archive.org/details/UnknownReinhardHeydrich Special SS memorial publication. In English.]
* [http://www.reinhardheydrich.org/ Website with many contemporary photographs]
* [http://usenet.jyxo.cz/soc.culture.czecho-slovak/0411/the-assassination-of-reinhard-heydrich.html The assassination of Reinhard Heydrich]
* [http://www.adolfhitler.ws/lib/nsdap/Heydrich.html Reinhard Heydrich on www.adolfhitler.ws]
* [http://forum.axishistory.com/viewtopic.php?t=26208&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=0#p233135 Axis History Forums]


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}}
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}}
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}}
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|year= 2000
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}}
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|last= MacDonald
|first= Callum
|year= 1989
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}}
* {{cite book
|last = MacDonald
|first = Callum
|year = 1998
|orig-year = 1989
|title = The Killing of Reinhard Heydrich: The SS 'Butcher of Prague'
|publisher = Da Capo Press
|location = Boston
|isbn = 978-0-306-80860-9
}}
*{{cite book
|last= McNab
|first= Chris
|year= 2009
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}}
*{{cite book
|title= Merriam Webster's Collegiate Dictionary
|year= 1996
|edition= Tenth
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|ref= {{sfnRef|Merriam Webster|1996}}
|url= https://archive.org/details/merriamwebstersc01merr
}}
*{{cite book
|last1= Miller
|first1= Michael D.
|last2= Schulz
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|title= Leaders of the SS & German Police
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}}
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|author-link = Peter Padfield
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}}
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|first= Fred
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}}
*{{cite book
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|first= Gerald
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}}
*{{cite book
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|first= Richard
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|location= New York
|publisher= Vintage Books
|year= 2002
|isbn= 0-375-70822-7
}}
*{{cite book
| last= Roberts
| first= Andrew Lawrence
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| year= 2005
| publisher= Central European University Press
| isbn= 978-963-7326-26-4
}}
*{{cite web
| last1=Semerdjiev
| first1=Stefan
| title=Reinhard Heydrich: A Devil With Many Faces
| url=https://www.historynet.com/reinhard-heydrich-a-devil-with-many-faces/
| website=Historynet
| access-date=11 March 2022
| date=10 June 2019
}}
*{{cite book
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|first= Gitta
|author-link= Gitta Sereny
|orig-year= 1995
|year= 1996
|title= Albert Speer: His Battle With Truth
|publisher= Vintage
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}}
*{{cite book
|last= Shirer
|first= William L.
|author-link= William L. Shirer
|year= 1960
|title= The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich
|publisher= Simon & Schuster
|location= New York
|isbn= 978-0-671-62420-0
|title-link= The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich
}}
*{{cite book
|last= Snyder
|first= Louis
|author-link= Louis Leo Snyder
|year= 1994
|orig-year= 1976
|title= Encyclopedia of the Third Reich
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}}
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|last=Steigmann-Gall
|first=Richard
|title=The Holy Reich: Nazi Conceptions of Christianity, 1919–1945
|publisher=Cambridge University Press
|location=Cambridge
|date=2003
|isbn=978-0-521-82371-5
}}
*{{cite book
|last= Waite
|first= Robert George Leeson
|author-link= Robert G. L. Waite
|year= 1969
|orig-year= 1952
|title= Vanguard of Nazism: The Free Corps Movement in Postwar Germany, 1918–1923
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}}
*{{cite book
|last= Weale
|first= Adrian
|author-link= Adrian Weale
|year= 2010
|title= The SS: A New History
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|location= London
|isbn= 978-1408703045
}}
*{{ cite journal| title =The Attempt on the Life of Reinhard Heydrich, Architect of the 'Final Solution': A Review of his Treatment and Autopsy
| last1= Weisz| first1=George M.
| last2= Albury | first2 =William R.
| journal = [[Israel Medical Association|IMAJ]]
| volume =16
| date = 4 April 2014
| issue= 4| pages =212–216
| pmid= 24834756| url = https://www.ima.org.il/FilesUploadPublic/IMAJ/0/77/38660.pdf
}}
*{{cite book
|last= Williams
|first= Max
|year= 2001
|title= Reinhard Heydrich: The Biography, Volume 1 – Road To War
|publisher= Ulric Publishing
|location= Church Stretton
|isbn= 978-0-9537577-5-6
}}
*{{cite book
|last= Williams
|first= Max
|year= 2003
|title= Reinhard Heydrich: The Biography, Volume 2 – Enigma
|publisher= Ulric Publishing
|location= Church Stretton
|isbn= 978-0-9537577-6-3
}}
{{refend}}


==Further reading==
<!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]] -->
{{refbegin}}
{{Persondata
*{{cite book
|NAME = Heydrich, Reinhard Tristan Eugen
|last= Aronson
|ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
|first= Shlomo
|SHORT DESCRIPTION = [[Schutzstaffel|SS]]-[[Obergruppenführer]] officer
|year= 1984
|DATE OF BIRTH = [[7 March]] [[1904]]
|orig-year= 1971
|PLACE OF BIRTH = [[Halle an der Saale]], [[Germany]]
|title= Reinhard Heydrich und die Frühgeschichte von Gestapo und SD
|DATE OF DEATH = [[4 June]] [[1942]]
|publisher= Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt
|PLACE OF DEATH = [[Prague]], [[Protectorate Bohemia and Moravia]]
|location= Stuttgart
|isbn= 978-3-421-01569-3
}}
}}
*{{cite book
|last= Fest
|first= Joachim
|author-link= Joachim Fest
|year= 1999
|orig-year= 1970
|title= The Face of the Third Reich: Portraits of the Nazi Leadership
|publisher= Da Capo Press
|location= Boston
|isbn= 978-0-306-80915-6
}}
*{{cite book
|last= Graber
|first= G. S.
|year= 1996
|orig-year= 1978
|title= The History of the SS
|publisher= Robert Hale
|location= London
|isbn= 978-0-7090-5880-9
}}
*{{cite book
|last= Graber
|first= G. S.
|year= 1980
|title= The Life and Times of Reinhard Heydrich
|publisher= David McKay
|location= Philadelphia
|isbn= 978-0-679-51181-6
}}
*{{cite book
|last= Heydrich
|first= Lina
|year= 1976
|title= Leben mit einem Kriegsverbrecher
|trans-title= Life with a War Criminal
|publisher= Ludwig Verlag
|location= Pfaffenhofen
|isbn= 978-3-7787-1025-8
}}
*{{cite book
|last= Lemons
|first= Everette
|year= 2005
|title= The Third Reich, A Revolution of Ideological Inhumanity: The Power Of Perception
|publisher= Lulu Press
|isbn= 978-1-4116-1932-6
}}
*{{cite book
|last= Schellenberg
|first= Walter
|author-link= Walter Schellenberg
|year= 2000
|orig-year= 1956
|title= The Labyrinth: Memoirs of Walter Schellenberg, Hitler's Chief of Counterintelligence
|publisher= Da Capo Press
|location= Boston
|isbn= 978-0-306-80927-9
}}
*{{cite book
|last= Schreiber
|first= Carsten
|year= 2008
|title= Elite im Verborgenen. Ideologie und regionale Herrschaftspraxis des Sicherheitsdienstes der SS und seines Netzwerks am Beispiel Sachsens
|series= Studien zur Zeitgeschichte; Bd. 77
|language= de
|publisher= Oldenbourg
|location= München
|isbn= 978-3-486-58543-8
}}
*{{cite book
|last1=Suppan
|first1=Arnold
|author-link=Arnold Suppan
|title-link=Hitler–Beneš–Tito
|title=Hitler–Beneš–Tito: National Conflicts, World Wars, Genocides, Expulsions, and Divided Remembrance in East-Central and Southeastern Europe, 1848–2018
|date=2019
|publisher=[[Austrian Academy of Sciences Press]]
|location=Vienna
|isbn=978-3-7001-8410-2
|jstor=j.ctvvh867x
|chapter=The Tyranny of Reinhard Heydrich and His Assassination
|pages=443–460
|doi=10.2307/j.ctvvh867x
|s2cid=214097654
}}
*{{cite book
|last= Wiener
|first= Jan G.
|year= 1969
|title= The Assassination of Heydrich
|publisher= Grossman Publishers
|location= New York
|oclc= 247895
}}
{{refend}}


==External links==
{{BD|1904|1942|Heydrich, Reinhard}}
{{Commons category}}
{{Wikiquote}}
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20160304090853/http://www.ghwk.de/wannsee-conference/documents.html?lang=gb Documents concerning the Wannsee Conference], Wannsee House Museum
*[http://www1.yadvashem.org/odot_pdf/Microsoft%20Word%20-%206366.pdf?WT.mc_id=wiki Reinhard Heydrich] on the [[Yad Vashem]] website
*{{YouTube|o9P17nUoG0Q|Reinhard Heydrich funeral, German newsreel}}
**{{YouTube|o9P17nUoG0Q|Reinhard Heydrich funeral in Prague & Berlin}}, unissued [[British Pathé]] newsreel (muted)
*{{YouTube|qtb1nBtheZM|Reinhard Heydrich speech}}
*{{YouTube|7Dhh21hKrzk|Hitler eulogises Reinhard Heydrich}}


{{s-start}}
{{s-gov}}
{{s-bef|before = [[Konstantin Freiherr von Neurath]]}}
{{s-ttl|title = [[List of rulers of the Protectorate Bohemia and Moravia|Deputy Protector of Bohemia and Moravia]] (acting Protector)|years = 29 September 1941 – 4 June 1942}}
{{s-aft|after = [[Kurt Daluege]]}}
{{s-bef|before = [[Otto Steinhäusl]]}}
{{s-ttl|title = President of the [[Interpol|ICPC]]|years = 24 August 1940 – 4 June 1942}}
{{s-aft|after = [[Arthur Nebe]]}}
{{s-bef|before = ''Post created''}}
{{s-ttl|title = [[RSHA|Director of the Reich Main Security Office]]|years = 27 September 1939 – 4 June 1942}}
{{s-aft|after = Heinrich Himmler (acting)}}
{{s-bef|before=[[Rudolf Diels]]}}
{{s-ttl|title=[[Gestapo|Director of the Gestapo]]|years=22 April 1934 – 27 September 1939}}
{{s-aft|after=[[Heinrich Müller (Gestapo)|Heinrich Müller]]}}
{{s-ach}}
{{s-bef
| before = [[Boris Shaposhnikov]]
}}
{{s-ttl
| title = [[Time (magazine)|Cover of Time Magazine]]
| years = 23 February 1942
}}
{{s-aft
| after = [[Tomoyuki Yamashita]]
}}
{{s-end}}
{{The Holocaust}}
{{Einsatzgruppen}}
{{Heinrich Himmler}}
{{Czechoslovakia in World War II}}
{{Rulers of Bohemia and Moravia}}
{{NSDAP}}
{{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Heydrich, Reinhard}}
====tags:====
[[Category:Reinhard Heydrich| ]]
{{Citations missing|date=October 2007}}
[[Category:1904 births]]

[[Category:SS and Police Leaders]]
[[Category:1942 deaths]]
[[Category:SS generals]]
[[Category:20th-century Freikorps personnel]]
[[Category:Nazi leaders]]
[[Category:Anti-Czech sentiment]]
[[Category:Nazi leaders assassinated by the Allies]]
[[Category:Burials at the Invalids' Cemetery]]
[[Category:Holocaust perpetrators]]
[[Category:Deaths by explosive device]]
[[Category:Deaths from sepsis]]
[[Category:Einsatzgruppen]]
[[Category:Former Roman Catholics]]
[[Category:German mass murderers]]
[[Category:German military personnel killed in World War II]]
[[Category:German World War II pilots]]
[[Category:German World War II pilots]]
[[Category:Assassinated military personnel]]
[[Category:Gestapo personnel]]
[[Category:People from Halle, Saxony-Anhalt]]
[[Category:Heydrich family|Reinhard]]
[[Category:Holocaust perpetrators]]
[[Category:Holocaust perpetrators in Bohemia and Moravia]]
[[Category:Infectious disease deaths in Czechoslovakia]]
[[Category:Interpol officials]]
[[Category:Luftwaffe pilots]]
[[Category:Members of the Prussian State Council (Nazi Germany)]]
[[Category:Members of the Reichstag of Nazi Germany]]
[[Category:Military personnel from Halle (Saale)]]
[[Category:Military personnel from Saxony-Anhalt]]
[[Category:Nazi leaders assassinated by the Allies]]
[[Category:Assassinated German politicians]]
[[Category:Nazi Party officials]]
[[Category:Night and Fog program]]
[[Category:Operation Anthropoid]]
[[Category:People from the Province of Saxony]]
[[Category:People from the Province of Saxony]]
[[Category:Military history of Czechoslovakia during World War II]]
[[Category:People killed in United Kingdom intelligence operations]]
[[Category:Deaths by sepsis]]
[[Category:Planning the Holocaust]]
[[Category:Presidents of Interpol]]

[[Category:Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia]]
{{Link FA|fr}}
[[Category:Recipients of the German Order (decoration)]]
{{Link FA|ru}}
[[Category:Recipients of the Iron Cross (1939), 1st class]]
[[br:Reinhard Heydrich]]
[[Category:Recipients of the War Merit Cross]]
[[bg:Райнхард Хайдрих]] {{Link FA|bg}}
[[Category:Romani genocide perpetrators]]
[[ca:Reinhard Heydrich]]
[[Category:Perpetrators of the Night of the Long Knives]]
[[cs:Reinhard Heydrich]]
[[Category:SS-Obergruppenführer]]
[[da:Reinhard Heydrich]]
[[Category:Wannsee Conference attendees]]
[[de:Reinhard Heydrich]]
[[el:Ράινχαρντ Χάιντριχ]]
[[es:Reinhard Heydrich]]
[[eo:Reinhard Heydrich]]
[[fa:رینهارد هایدریش]]
[[fr:Reinhard Heydrich]]
[[ko:라인하르트 하이드리히]]
[[hr:Reinhard Heydrich]]
[[id:Reinhard Heydrich]]
[[is:Reinhard Heydrich]]
[[it:Reinhard Heydrich]]
[[he:ריינהרד היידריך]]
[[ka:რაინჰარდ ჰაიდრიხი]]
[[hu:Reinhard Heydrich]]
[[nl:Reinhard Heydrich]]
[[ja:ラインハルト・ハイドリヒ]]
[[no:Reinhard Heydrich]]
[[nn:Reinhard Heydrich]]
[[pl:Reinhard Heydrich]]
[[pt:Reinhard Heydrich]]
[[ro:Reinhard Heydrich]]
[[ru:Гейдрих, Рейнхард]]
[[sk:Reinhard Heydrich]]
[[sl:Reinhard Heydrich]]
[[sr:Рајнхард Хајдрих]]
[[fi:Reinhard Heydrich]]
[[sv:Reinhard Heydrich]]
[[tr:Reinhard Heydrich]]
[[yi:ריינהארד היידריך]]
[[zh:莱因哈德·特里斯坦·尤根·海德里希]]

Latest revision as of 20:39, 10 June 2024

Reinhard Heydrich
Heydrich in 1940
Deputy Protector of Bohemia and Moravia
Acting Protector
In office
29 September 1941 – 4 June 1942
Appointed byAdolf Hitler
Preceded byKonstantin von Neurath
(Protector until 24 August 1943)
Succeeded byKurt Daluege
(Acting Protector)
President of Interpol
In office
24 August 1940 – 4 June 1942
Secretary-GeneralOskar Dressler
Preceded byOtto Steinhäusl
Succeeded byArthur Nebe
Director of the Reich Security Main Office
In office
27 September 1939 – 4 June 1942
Appointed byHeinrich Himmler
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byHeinrich Himmler (acting)
Director of the Gestapo
In office
22 April 1934 – 27 September 1939
Appointed byHeinrich Himmler
Preceded byRudolf Diels
Succeeded byHeinrich Müller
Additional positions
1939–1942Commander of the Einsatzgruppen
1936–1942Deputy to the Reichsführer-SS [1]
(de facto)
1936–1939Director of the Sicherheitspolizei
1934–1942Member of the Prussian State Council
1931–1942Director of the Sicherheitsdienst
Personal details
Born
Reinhard Tristan Eugen Heydrich

(1904-03-07)7 March 1904
Halle an der Saale, Prussia, German Empire
Died4 June 1942(1942-06-04) (aged 38)
Prague-Libeň, Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia
(now Prague, Czech Republic)
Manner of deathAssassination
Resting placeInvalidenfriedhof (Invalids' Cemetery), Berlin
Political partyNazi Party
Spouse
(m. 1931)
Children4
Parents
RelativesHeinz Heydrich (brother)
Signature
Nicknames
  • The Hangman[2]
  • The Butcher of Prague[3]
  • The Blond Beast[3]
  • Himmler's Evil Genius[3]
  • Young Evil God of Death[4]
  • The Man with the Iron Heart[5]
Military service
Allegiance
Branch/service
Years of service1922–1942
Rank
Battles/warsWorld War II
AwardsSee service record section

Reinhard Tristan Eugen Heydrich (/ˈhdrɪk/ HY-drik; German: [ˈʁaɪnhaʁt ˈtʁɪstan ˈʔɔʏɡn̩ ˈhaɪdʁɪç] ; 7 March 1904 – 4 June 1942) was a high-ranking German SS and police official during the Nazi era and a principal architect of the Holocaust.

Heydrich was chief of the Reich Security Main Office (including the Gestapo, Kripo, and SD). He was also Stellvertretender Reichsprotektor (Deputy/Acting Reich-Protector) of Bohemia and Moravia. He served as president of the International Criminal Police Commission (ICPC, now known as Interpol) and chaired the January 1942 Wannsee Conference which formalised plans for the "Final Solution to the Jewish question"—the deportation and genocide of all Jews in German-occupied Europe.

Many historians regard Heydrich as one of the darkest figures within the Nazi regime;[6][7][8] Adolf Hitler described him as "the man with the iron heart".[5] He was the founding head of the Sicherheitsdienst (Security Service, SD), an intelligence organisation charged with seeking out and neutralising resistance to the Nazi Party via arrests, deportations, and murders. He helped organise Kristallnacht, a series of coordinated attacks against Jews throughout Nazi Germany and parts of Austria on 9–10 November 1938. The attacks were carried out by SA stormtroopers and civilians and presaged the Holocaust. Upon his arrival in Prague, Heydrich sought to eliminate opposition to the Nazi occupation by suppressing Czech culture and deporting and executing members of the Czech resistance. He was directly responsible for the Einsatzgruppen, the special task forces that travelled in the wake of the German armies and murdered more than two million people by mass shooting and gassing, including 1.3 million Jews.

Heydrich was mortally wounded in Prague on 27 May 1942 as a result of Operation Anthropoid. He was ambushed by a team of Czech and Slovak soldiers who had been sent by the Czechoslovak government-in-exile to kill him; the team was trained by the British Special Operations Executive. Heydrich died from his injuries on 4 June. Nazi intelligence falsely linked the Czech and Slovak soldiers and resistance partisans to the villages of Lidice and Ležáky. Both villages were razed; the men and boys age 14 and above were shot and most of the women and children were deported and murdered in Nazi concentration camps.

Early life[edit]

Reinhard Tristan Eugen Heydrich[9] was born in 1904 in Halle an der Saale to composer and opera singer Richard Bruno Heydrich and his wife, Elisabeth Anna Maria Amalia Heydrich (née Krantz). His father came from a Protestant family, but converted to Elisabeth's Roman Catholic faith upon marriage.[10] Reinhard was an altar boy, attending evening prayers and Mass every week with his mother as part of the Catholic minority in Halle.[11] Two of his forenames were musical references: "Reinhard" referred to the hero from his father's opera Amen, and "Tristan" stems from Richard Wagner's Tristan und Isolde. Heydrich's third name, "Eugen", was his late maternal grandfather's forename (Eugen Krantz had been the director of the Dresden Royal Conservatory).[12]

Heydrich's family held social standing and substantial financial means. Music was a part of Heydrich's everyday life; his father founded the Halle Conservatory of Music, Theatre, and Teaching and his mother taught piano there.[13] As the oldest son, Reinhard was expected to inherit his father's music conservatory and was trained in music by his father. He learned the piano and violin by the time he was six years old.[10] Heydrich developed a passion for the violin and carried that interest into adulthood; he impressed listeners with his musical talent.[14]

His father was a German nationalist with loyalties to the Kaiser, who instilled patriotic ideas in his three children but was not affiliated with any political party until after World War I.[15] The household was strict. Heydrich, initially a frail and sickly youth, was encouraged by his parents to exercise to build up his strength.[11] He engaged his younger brother, Heinz, in mock fencing duels. He excelled in his schoolwork at the secular "Reformgymnasium", especially in the sciences.[16] A talented athlete, he became an expert swimmer and fencer. He was shy, insecure, and was frequently bullied for his high-pitched voice and rumoured Jewish ancestry.[17] These rumours increased after his maternal uncle Hans Krantz married a Hungarian Jew named Iza Jarmy.[18] However, the family maintained cordial relations with the Jewish community; many Jewish students attended the Halle Conservatory, and its cellar was rented out to a Jewish salesman. Heydrich was friends with Abraham Lichtenstein, son of the cantor.[19]

In 1918, World War I ended with Germany's defeat. In late February 1919, civil unrest—including strikes and clashes between communist and anti-communist groups—took place in Heydrich's home town of Halle. Under Defense Minister Gustav Noske's directives, a right-wing paramilitary unit was formed and ordered to "recapture" Halle. [20] Heydrich, then 15 years old, joined Maercker's Volunteer Rifles (a paramilitary Freikorps unit). This was largely symbolic, as Heydrich was too young for military service. There is no evidence that he participated in the fighting, and when the skirmishes ended, he was part of the force assigned to protect private property.[21] Heydrich began to form positive opinions about the Völkisch movement and anti-communism, as well as a distaste for the Treaty of Versailles and the positioning of the German-Polish border.[22] Heydrich stated he joined the Deutschvölkischer Schutz- und Trutzbund (National German Protection and Shelter League), an antisemitic organisation.[23] However, there is very little documentation of this, beyond a single postcard he received.[24]

As a result of the conditions of the Treaty of Versailles as well as Germany's large war debt, hyperinflation spread across Germany and many lost their life savings. Halle was not spared. By 1921, few townspeople there could afford a musical education at Bruno Heydrich's conservatory. This led to a financial crisis for the Heydrich family.[25]

Naval career[edit]

Heydrich as a Reichsmarine cadet in 1922

In 1922, Heydrich joined the German Navy (Reichsmarine), taking advantage of the security, structure, and pension it offered. He became a naval cadet at Kiel, Germany's primary naval base. Many of Heydrich's fellow cadets falsely regarded him as Jewish. To counteract these rumours, Heydrich told people he had joined several antisemitic and nationalist organisations, such as the Deutschvölkischer Schutz und Trutzbund. On 1 April 1924 he was promoted to senior midshipman (Oberfähnrich zur See) and sent to officer training at the Naval Academy Mürwik. In 1926 he advanced to the rank of ensign (Leutnant zur See) and was assigned as a signals officer on the battleship SMS Schleswig-Holstein, the flagship of Germany's North Sea Fleet. With the promotion came greater recognition. He received good evaluations from his superiors and had few problems with other crewmen. He was promoted on 1 July 1928 to the rank of first lieutenant.[26]

Heydrich became notorious for his countless affairs. In December 1930 he attended a rowing-club ball and met Lina von Osten. They became romantically involved and soon announced their engagement. Lina was already a Nazi Party follower and antisemite; she had attended her first rally in 1929.[27] Early in 1931 Heydrich was charged with "conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman" for a breach of promise, having been engaged to marry another woman he had known for six months before the Lina von Osten engagement.[28] Admiral Erich Raeder dismissed Heydrich from the navy in April. He received severance pay of 200 Reichsmarks (equivalent to €755 in 2021) a month for the next two years.[29] Heydrich married Lina in December 1931.[30]

Career in the SS[edit]

On 30 May 1931, Heydrich's discharge from the navy became legally binding,[31] and either the following day[31] or on 1 June he joined the Nazi Party in Hamburg.[32][33] Six weeks later, on 14 July, he joined the SS.[34] His party number was 544,916 and his SS number was 10,120.[35] Those who joined the party after Hitler's seizure of power in January 1933 faced suspicions from the Alte Kämpfer (Old Fighters; the earliest party members) that they had joined for reasons of career advancement rather than a true commitment to Nazi ideology. Heydrich's date of enlistment in 1931 was early enough to quell suspicion that he had joined only to further his career, but was not early enough for him to be considered an Old Fighter.[32]

In 1931, Heinrich Himmler began setting up a counterintelligence division of the SS. Acting on the advice of his associate Karl von Eberstein, who was Lina's friend and Heydrich's godbrother, Himmler agreed to interview Heydrich, but cancelled their appointment at the last minute.[36][37] Lina ignored this message, packed Heydrich's suitcase, and sent him to Munich. Eberstein met Heydrich at the railway station and took him to see Himmler.[36] Himmler asked Heydrich to convey his ideas for developing an SS intelligence service. Himmler was so impressed that he hired Heydrich immediately.[38][39]

Although the starting monthly salary of 180 Reichsmarks (equivalent to €679 in 2021) was low, Heydrich decided to take the job because Lina's family supported the Nazi movement, and the quasi-military and revolutionary nature of the post appealed to him.[40] At first he had to share an office and typewriter with a colleague, but by 1932 Heydrich was earning 290 Reichsmarks a month (equivalent to €1,191 in 2021), a salary he described as "comfortable".[41] As his power and influence grew throughout the 1930s, his wealth grew commensurately; in 1935 he received a base salary of 8,400 Reichsmarks (equivalent to €38,766 in 2021) and an allowance of 12,000 Reichsmarks (equivalent to €55,379 in 2021) and by 1938 his income increased to 17,371 Reichsmarks (equivalent to €77,580 in 2021), annually.[42] Heydrich later received a Totenkopfring from Himmler for his SS service.[43]

On 1 August 1931, Heydrich began his job as chief of the new 'Ic Service' (intelligence service).[39] He set up office at the Brown House, the Nazi Party headquarters in Munich. By October he had created a network of spies and informers for intelligence-gathering purposes and to obtain information to be used as blackmail to further political aims.[44] Information on thousands of people was recorded on index cards and stored at the Brown House.[45] To mark the occasion of Heydrich's December wedding, Himmler promoted him to the rank of SS-Sturmbannführer (major).[46]

In 1932, rumours were spread by Heydrich's enemies of his alleged Jewish ancestry.[47] Wilhelm Canaris said he had obtained copies of documents proving Heydrich's Jewish ancestry.[48] Nazi Gauleiter Rudolf Jordan claimed Heydrich was not a pure Aryan.[47] Within the Nazi organisation such innuendo could be damning, even for the head of the Reich's counterintelligence service. Gregor Strasser passed the allegations on to the Nazi Party's racial expert, Achim Gercke, who investigated Heydrich's genealogy.[47] Gercke reported that Heydrich was "... of German origin and free from any coloured and Jewish blood".[49] He insisted that the rumours were baseless. Even so, Heydrich privately engaged SD member Ernst Hoffmann to further investigate and dispel the rumours.[47]

Gestapo and SD[edit]

Gestapo headquarters on Prinz-Albrecht-Strasse in Berlin, 1933

In mid-1932, Himmler appointed Heydrich chief of the renamed security service—the Sicherheitsdienst (SD).[39] Heydrich's counterintelligence service grew into an effective machine of terror and intimidation. With Hitler striving for absolute power in Germany, Himmler and Heydrich wished to control the political police forces of all 17 German states. They began with Bavaria. In 1933, Heydrich gathered some of his men from the SD and together they stormed police headquarters in Munich and took over the organisation using intimidation tactics. Himmler became the Munich police chief and Heydrich became the commander of Department IV, the political police.[50]

In 1933, Hitler became Chancellor of Germany, and through a series of decrees[51] became Germany's Führer und Reichskanzler (leader and chancellor).[52] The first concentration camps, which were originally intended to house political opponents, were established in early 1933. By year's end there were over fifty camps.[53]

Hermann Göring founded the Gestapo in 1933 as a Prussian police force. When Göring transferred full authority over the Gestapo to Himmler in April 1934, it immediately became an instrument of terror under the SS's purview.[54] Himmler named Heydrich to head the Gestapo on 22 April 1934.[55] Also in April, Göring made Heydrich an advisor to the Prussian government with an appointment to the Prussian State Council.[56] On 9 June 1934, Rudolf Hess declared the SD the official Nazi intelligence service.[57]

Crushing the SA[edit]

SS-Brigadeführer Heydrich, head of the Bavarian police and SD, in Munich, 1934

Beginning in April 1934, and at Hitler's request, Heydrich and Himmler began building a dossier on Sturmabteilung (SA) leader Ernst Röhm in an effort to remove him as a rival for party leadership. At this point, the SS was still part of the SA, the early Nazi paramilitary organisation which now numbered over 3 million men.[58] At Hitler's direction, Heydrich, Himmler, Göring, and Viktor Lutze drew up lists of those who should be killed, starting with seven top SA officials and including many more. On 30 June 1934 the SS and Gestapo acted in coordinated mass arrests that continued for two days. Röhm was shot without trial, along with the leadership of the SA.[59] The purge became known as the Night of the Long Knives. Up to 200 people were killed in the action. Lutze was appointed SA's new head and it was converted into a sports and training organisation.[60]

With the SA out of the way, Heydrich began building the Gestapo into an instrument of fear. He improved his index-card system, creating categories of offenders with colour-coded cards.[61] The Gestapo had the authority to arrest citizens on the suspicion that they might commit a crime, and the definition of a crime was at their discretion. The Gestapo Law, passed in 1936, gave police the right to act extra-legally. This led to the sweeping use of Schutzhaft—"protective custody", a euphemism for the power to imprison people without judicial proceedings.[62] The courts were not allowed to investigate or interfere. The Gestapo was considered to be acting legally as long as it was carrying out the leadership's will. People were arrested arbitrarily, sent to concentration camps, or killed.[53]

Himmler began developing the notion of a Germanic religion and wanted SS members to leave the church. In early 1936, Heydrich left the Catholic Church in favour of the Gottgläubig movement.[63] His wife, Lina, had already done so the year before. Heydrich not only felt he could no longer be a member, but came to consider the church's political power and influence a danger to the state.[64]

Consolidating the police forces[edit]

Heydrich and other SS officers with their wives in 1937

On 17 June 1936, all police forces throughout Germany were united, following Hitler's appointment of Himmler as Chief of German Police. With this appointment by Hitler, Himmler and his de facto deputy, Heydrich, became two of the most powerful men in the internal administration of Germany.[65] Himmler immediately reorganised the police into two groups: the Ordnungspolizei (Order Police; Orpo), consisting of both the national uniformed police and the municipal police, and the Sicherheitspolizei (Security Police; SiPo), consisting of the Geheime Staatspolizei (Secret State Police; Gestapo) and Kriminalpolizei (Criminal Police; Kripo).[66] At that point, Heydrich was head of the SiPo and SD. Heinrich Müller was the Gestapo's operations chief.[67]

Heydrich was assigned to help organise the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin. The games were used to promote the propaganda aims of the Nazi regime. Goodwill ambassadors were sent to countries that were considering a boycott. Anti-Jewish violence was forbidden for the duration, and news stands were required to stop displaying copies of Der Stürmer.[68][69] For his part in the games' success, Heydrich was awarded the Deutsches Olympiaehrenzeichen or German Olympic Games Decoration (First Class).[43]

Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Adolf Hitler, Heinrich Himmler, and Heydrich in Vienna, March 1938

In January 1937, Heydrich directed the SD to secretly begin collecting and analysing public opinion and report back its findings.[70] He then had the Gestapo carry out house searches, arrests, and interrogations, thus in effect exercising control over public opinion.[71] In February 1938 when the Austrian Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg resisted Hitler's proposed merger with Germany, Heydrich intensified the pressure on Austria by organising Nazi demonstrations and distributing propaganda in Vienna emphasising the common Germanic blood of the two countries.[72] In the Anschluss on 12 March, Hitler declared the unification of Austria with Nazi Germany.[73]

In mid-1939, Heydrich created the Stiftung Nordhav Foundation to obtain real estate for the SS and Security Police to use as guest houses and vacation spots.[74] The Wannsee Villa, which the Stiftung Nordhav acquired in November 1940,[75] was the site of the Wannsee Conference (20 January 1942). Heydrich was the lead speaker. At Wannsee, senior Nazi officials formalised plans to deport and exterminate all Jews in German-occupied territory and those countries not yet conquered.[76] This action was to be coordinated among the representatives from the Nazi state agencies present at the meeting.[77]

On 27 September 1939, the SD and SiPo—made up of the Gestapo and the Criminal Police, or Kripo—were folded into the new Reich Security Main Office or Reichssicherheitshauptamt (RSHA), which was placed under Heydrich's control.[78] The title of Chef der Sicherheitspolizei und des SD (Chief of Security Police and SD) or CSSD was conferred on Heydrich on 1 October.[79] Heydrich became the president of the International Criminal Police Commission (later known as Interpol) on 24 August 1940,[80] and its headquarters were transferred to Berlin. He was promoted to SS-Obergruppenführer und General der Polizei on 24 September 1941.[35]

Red Army purges[edit]

In 1936, Heydrich learned that a top-ranking Soviet officer was plotting to overthrow Joseph Stalin. Sensing an opportunity to strike a blow at both the Soviet Army and Admiral Canaris of Germany's Abwehr, Heydrich decided that the Soviet officer should be "unmasked".[81] He discussed the matter with Himmler and both in turn brought it to Hitler's attention. Hitler approved Heydrich's plan to act immediately. But the "information" Heydrich had received was actually misinformation planted by Stalin himself in an attempt to legitimise his planned purges of the Red Army's high command. Stalin ordered one of his best NKVD agents, General Nikolai Skoblin, to pass Heydrich false information suggesting that Marshal Mikhail Tukhachevsky and other Soviet generals were plotting against Stalin.[82]

Heydrich's SD forged documents and letters implicating Tukhachevsky and other Red Army commanders. The material was delivered to the NKVD.[81] The Great Purge of the Red Army followed on Stalin's orders. While Heydrich believed they had deluded Stalin into executing or dismissing 35,000 of his officer corps, the importance of Heydrich's part is a matter of conjecture.[83] Soviet military prosecutors did not use SD forged documents against the generals in their secret trial; they instead relied on false confessions extorted or beaten out of the defendants.[84]

Night-and-Fog decree[edit]

Heydrich in 1940

By late 1940, German armies had invaded most of Western Europe. The following year, Heydrich's SD was given responsibility for carrying out the Nacht und Nebel (Night-and-Fog) decree.[85] According to the decree, "persons endangering German security" were to be arrested in a maximally discreet way: "under the cover of night and fog". People disappeared without a trace with no one told of their whereabouts or fate.[86] For each prisoner, the SD had to fill in a questionnaire that listed personal information, country of origin, and the details of their crimes against the Reich. This questionnaire was placed in an envelope inscribed with a seal reading "Nacht und Nebel" and submitted to the Reich Security Main Office (RSHA). In the WVHA "Central Inmate File", as in many camp files, these prisoners would be given a special "covert prisoner" code, as opposed to the code for POW, Felon, Jew, Gypsy, etc.[a] The decree remained in effect after Heydrich's death. The exact number of people who vanished under it has never been positively established, but it is estimated to be 7,000.[87]

Anti-Polish policies[edit]

Heydrich created the "Zentralstelle IIP Polen" unit of the Gestapo to coordinate the ethnic cleansing of Poles in "Operation Tannenberg" and the Intelligenzaktion,[88] two codenames for extermination actions directed at the Polish people during the German occupation of Poland.[89][90] Among the 100,000 people murdered in the Intelligenzaktion operations in 1939–1940, approximately 61,000 were members of the Polish intelligentsia: scholars, clergy, former officers, and others, whom the Germans identified as political targets in the Special Prosecution Book-Poland, compiled before the war began in September 1939.[91]

Acting Reich Protector of Bohemia and Moravia[edit]

Heydrich (left) with Karl Hermann Frank at Prague Castle in 1941

On 27 September 1941, Heydrich was appointed Deputy Reich Protector of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia (the part of Czechoslovakia incorporated into the Reich on 15 March 1939) and assumed control of the territory. The Reich Protector, Konstantin von Neurath, remained the territory's titular head, but was sent on "leave" because Hitler, Himmler, and Heydrich felt his "soft approach" to the Czechs had promoted anti-German sentiment and encouraged anti-German resistance via strikes and sabotage.[92] Upon his appointment, Heydrich told his aides: "We will Germanize the Czech vermin."[93]

Heydrich came to Prague to enforce policy, fight resistance to the Nazi regime, and keep up production quotas of Czech motors and arms that were "extremely important to the German war effort".[92] He viewed the area as a bulwark of Germandom and condemned the Czech resistance's "stabs in the back". To realise his goals, Heydrich demanded racial classification of those who could and could not be Germanized. He explained, "Making this Czech garbage into Germans must give way to methods based on racist thought."[94]

Heydrich started his rule by terrorising the population: he proclaimed martial law, and 142 people were executed within five days of his arrival in Prague.[95] Their names appeared on posters throughout the occupied country.[96] Most of them were the members of the resistance that had previously been captured and were awaiting trial.

According to Heydrich's estimate, between 4,000 and 5,000 people were arrested[96] and between 400 and 500 were executed by February 1942.[95][b] Those who were not executed were sent to Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp, where only four per cent of Czech prisoners survived the war.[96] Czech prime minister Alois Eliáš was among those arrested the first day. He was put on trial in Berlin and sentenced to death, but was kept alive as a hostage. He was later executed in retaliation for Heydrich's assassination.[97][98][99]

In March 1942, further sweeps against Czech cultural and patriotic organisations, the military, and the intelligentsia resulted in the practical paralysis of the London-based Czech resistance. Almost all avenues by which Czechs could express the Czech culture in public were closed.[94] Although small disorganised cells of Central Leadership of Home Resistance (Ústřední vedení odboje domácího, ÚVOD) survived, only the communist resistance was able to function in a coordinated manner (although it also suffered arrests).[96] The terror also served to paralyse resistance in society, with public and widespread reprisals by the Nazis against any action resisting German rule.[96] Heydrich's brutal policies during that time quickly earned him the nickname "the Butcher of Prague".[100] The reprisals are referred to by Czechs as the Heydrichiáda.[101]

As Acting Reich Protector of Bohemia and Moravia, Heydrich applied carrot-and-stick methods.[102] Labor was reorganised on the basis of the German Labour Front. Heydrich used equipment confiscated from the Czech gymnastics organisation Sokol to organise events for workers.[103] Food rations and free shoes were distributed, pensions were increased, and (for a time) free Saturdays were introduced. Unemployment insurance was established for the first time.[102] The black market was suppressed. Those associated with it or the resistance movement were tortured or executed. Heydrich labelled them "economic criminals" and "enemies of the people", which helped gain him support. Conditions in Prague and the rest of the Czech lands were relatively peaceful under Heydrich, and industrial output increased.[102] Still, those measures could not hide shortages and increasing inflation; reports of growing discontent multiplied.[103]

Despite public displays of goodwill towards the populace, privately Heydrich was very clear about his eventual goal: "This entire area will one day be definitely German, and the Czechs have nothing to expect here." Eventually up to two-thirds of the populace were to be either removed to regions of Russia or exterminated after Nazi Germany won the war. Bohemia and Moravia faced annexation directly into the German Reich.[104]

The Czech workforce was exploited as Nazi-conscripted labour.[103] More than 100,000 workers were removed from "unsuitable" jobs and conscripted by the Ministry of Labour. By December 1941, Czechs could be called to work anywhere within the Reich. Between April and November 1942, 79,000 Czech workers were taken in this manner for work within Nazi Germany. Also, in February 1942, the work day was increased from eight to twelve hours.[105]

Heydrich was, for all intents and purposes, military dictator of Bohemia and Moravia. His changes to the government's structure left President Emil Hácha and his cabinet virtually powerless. He often drove alone in a car with an open roof – a show of his confidence in the occupation forces and in his government's effectiveness.[106]

By 3 October 1941, Czechoslovak military intelligence in London had made the decision to kill Heydrich.[107][108]

Role in the Holocaust[edit]

1938 telegram giving orders during Kristallnacht, signed by Heydrich
July 1941 letter from Göring to Heydrich concerning the Final Solution of the Jewish question

Historians regard Heydrich as the most fearsome member of the Nazi elite.[6][7][8] Hitler called him "the man with the iron heart".[5] He was one of the main architects of the Holocaust during the early war years, answering to and taking orders from only Hitler, Göring, and Himmler in all matters pertaining to the deportation, imprisonment, and extermination of Jews.

Heydrich was one of the organisers of Kristallnacht, a pogrom against Jews throughout Germany on the night of 9–10 November 1938. Heydrich sent a telegram that night to various SD and Gestapo offices, helping to coordinate the pogrom with the SS, SD, Gestapo, uniformed police (Orpo), SA, Nazi party officials, and even the fire departments. In the telegram, Heydrich granted permission for arson and destruction of Jewish businesses and synagogues, and ordered the confiscation of all "archival material" from Jewish community centres and synagogues. The telegram ordered that "as many Jews – particularly affluent Jews – are to be arrested in all districts as can be accommodated in existing detention facilities ... Immediately after the arrests have been carried out, the appropriate concentration camps should be contacted to place the Jews into camps as quickly as possible."[109][110] Twenty thousand Jews were sent to concentration camps in the days immediately following;[111] historians consider Kristallnacht the beginning of the Holocaust.[112]

When Hitler asked for a pretext for the invasion of Poland in 1939, Himmler, Heydrich, and Heinrich Müller masterminded a false flag plan code-named Operation Himmler. It involved a fake attack on the German radio station at Gleiwitz on 31 August 1939. Heydrich masterminded the plan and toured the site, which was about four miles (6 km) from the Polish border. Wearing Polish uniforms, 150 German troops carried out several attacks along the border. Hitler used the ruse as an excuse to launch his invasion.[113][114]

Rudolf Hess, Himmler, Philipp Bouhler, Fritz Todt, and Heydrich listening to Konrad Meyer at a Generalplan Ost exhibition, 20 March 1941

On Himmler's instructions, Heydrich formed the Einsatzgruppen (task forces) to travel in the wake of the German armies at the start of World War II.[115] On 21 September 1939, Heydrich sent out a teleprinter message on the "Jewish question in the occupied territory" to the chiefs of all Einsatzgruppen with instructions to round up Jewish people for placement into ghettos, called for the formation of Judenräte (Jewish councils), ordered a census, and promoted Aryanization plans for Jewish-owned businesses and farms, among other measures.[c] The Einsatzgruppen units followed the army into Poland to implement the plans. Later, in the Soviet Union, they were charged with rounding up and murdering Jews via firing squad and gas vans.[116] Historian Raul Hilberg estimates that between 1941 and 1945 the Einsatzgruppen and related auxiliary troops murdered more than two million people, including 1.3 million Jews.[117] Heydrich ensured the safety of certain athletes, such as Paul Sommer, a Jewish German champion fencer he knew from his pre-SS days, and the Polish Olympic fencing team that competed at the 1936 Summer Olympics.[118]

... the planned total measures are to be kept strictly secret ... the first prerequisite for the final aim ("Endziel") is the concentration of the Jews from the countryside into the larger cities.

Heydrich, September 1939[c]

By order of the Reichsführer-SS, residency without possession of an identification card is punishable by death.

Heydrich, November 1939[119]

On 29 November 1939, Heydrich issued a cable about the "Evacuation of New Eastern Provinces", detailing the deportation of people by railway to concentration camps, and giving guidance surrounding the December 1939 census, which would be the basis on which those deportations were performed.[119] In May 1941 Heydrich drew up regulations with Quartermaster general Eduard Wagner for the upcoming invasion of the Soviet Union, which ensured that the Einsatzgruppen and army would co-operate in murdering Soviet Jews.[120]

On 10 October 1941, Heydrich was the senior officer at a "Final Solution" meeting of the RSHA[d] in Prague that discussed deporting 50,000 Jews from the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia to ghettos in Minsk and Riga. Given his position, Heydrich was instrumental in carrying out these plans since his Gestapo was ready to organise deportations in the West and his Einsatzgruppen were already conducting extensive killing operations in the East.[121] The officers attending also discussed taking 5,000 Jews from Prague "in the next few weeks" and handing them over to the Einsatzgruppen commanders Arthur Nebe and Otto Rasch. Establishing ghettos in the Protectorate was also planned, resulting in the construction of the Theresienstadt Ghetto,[122] where 33,000 people would eventually die. Tens of thousands more passed through the camp before being sent East to be murdered.[123] In 1941 Himmler named Heydrich as "responsible for implementing" the forced movement of 60,000 Jews from Germany and Czechoslovakia to the Łódź (Litzmannstadt) Ghetto in Poland.[124]

Earlier on 31 July 1941, Hermann Göring gave written authorisation to Heydrich to ensure the co-operation of administrative leaders of various government departments in the implementation of a "Final Solution to the Jewish question" in territories under German control.[125] On 20 January 1942, Heydrich chaired a meeting, now called the Wannsee Conference, to discuss the implementation of the plan.[126][127]

Death[edit]

The Mercedes-Benz 320 Convertible B in which Heydrich was mortally wounded
Czechoslovak SOE agents who killed Heydrich
Jozef Gabčík, c. 1942
Jan Kubiš, c. 1942

In London, the Czechoslovak government-in-exile resolved to kill Heydrich. Jan Kubiš and Jozef Gabčík headed the team chosen for the mission, trained by the British Special Operations Executive (SOE). On 28 December 1941 they parachuted into the Protectorate, where they lived in hiding, preparing for the mission.[128]

On 27 May 1942, Heydrich planned to meet Hitler in Berlin. German documents suggest that Hitler intended to transfer him to German-occupied France where the French Resistance was gaining ground.[129] To get from his home to the airport, Heydrich would have to pass a section where the Dresden-Prague road merges with a road to the Troja Bridge. The junction in the Prague suburb of Libeň was well suited for the attack because motorists have to slow for a hairpin bend. As Heydrich's car slowed, Gabčík took aim with a Sten submachine gun, but it jammed and failed to fire. Heydrich ordered his driver, Klein, to halt and attempted to confront Gabčík rather than speed away. Kubiš, who had not been spotted by Heydrich or Klein, threw a converted anti-tank mine at the car as it stopped, which landed against the rear wheel. The explosion ripped through the right rear fender and wounded Heydrich, with metal fragments and fibres from the upholstery causing serious damage to his left side: he suffered major injuries to his diaphragm, spleen, and one lung, as well as a broken rib. Kubiš received a minor shrapnel wound to his face.[130][131] After Kubiš fled, Heydrich ordered Klein to chase Gabčík on foot, but Gabčík escaped after he shot and wounded Klein.[132][133]

A Czech woman went to Heydrich's aid and flagged down a delivery van. He was placed on his stomach in the back of the van and taken to the emergency room at Bulovka Hospital.[134] A splenectomy was performed, and the chest wound, left lung, and diaphragm were all debrided.[134] Himmler ordered Karl Gebhardt to fly to Prague to assume care. Despite a fever, Heydrich's recovery appeared to progress well. Hitler's personal doctor Theodor Morell suggested the use of the new antibacterial drug sulfonamide, but Gebhardt thought that Heydrich would recover and declined the suggestion.[135] Heydrich reconciled himself to his fate on 2 June, during a visit by Himmler, by reciting a quotation from one of his father's operas:

Ja, die Welt ist nur ein Leierkasten,
den unser Herrgott selber dreht.
Jeder muß nach dem Liede tanzen,
das gerade auf der Walze steht.[136]

The world is just a barrel-organ
which the Lord God turns Himself.
We all have to dance to the tune
which is already on the drum.[137]

On 3 June, Heydrich fell into a coma; he died the following day. An autopsy concluded that he died of sepsis.[138][139] Professors R. J. Defalque and A. J. Wright of the University of Alabama at Birmingham suggest that pulmonary embolism and/or brain ischemia may have been decisive factors.[140][e] He was 38 years old.

Funeral[edit]

Second funeral ceremony, 9 June 1942

After an elaborate funeral held in Prague on 7 June 1942, Heydrich's coffin was placed on a train to Berlin, where a second ceremony was held in the new Reich Chancellery on 9 June. Himmler gave the eulogy.[142] Hitler attended and placed Heydrich's decorations—including the highest grade of the German Order, the Blood Order Medal, the Wound Badge in Gold, and the War Merit Cross 1st Class with Swords—on his funeral pillow.[143] Although Heydrich's death was employed for pro-Reich propaganda, Hitler privately blamed Heydrich for his own death, through carelessness:

Since it is opportunity which makes not only the thief but also the assassin, such heroic gestures as driving in an open, unarmoured vehicle or walking about the streets unguarded are just damned stupidity, which serves the Fatherland not one whit. That a man as irreplaceable as Heydrich should expose himself to unnecessary danger, I can only condemn as stupid and idiotic.[144]

Heydrich's anonymous grave

Heydrich was interred in Berlin's Invalidenfriedhof, a military cemetery.[145] The exact burial spot is no longer public knowledge—a temporary wooden marker that disappeared when the Red Army overran the city in 1945 was never replaced, so that Heydrich's grave could not become a rallying point for Neo-Nazis.[146] Nevertheless, on 16 December 2019, the BBC reported that Heydrich's unmarked grave had been opened by unknown persons, without anything being taken.[147] A photograph of Heydrich's burial shows the wreaths and mourners to be in section A, which abuts the north wall of the Invalidenfriedhof and Scharnhorststraße, at the front of the cemetery.[146] A recent biography of Heydrich also places the grave in Section A.[148] Hitler planned for Heydrich to have a monumental tomb (designed by sculptor Arno Breker and architect Wilhelm Kreis) but, due to Germany's declining fortunes, it was never built.[146]

Heydrich's widow, Lina, won the right to a pension following a series of court cases against the West German government in 1956 and 1959. She was declared entitled to a substantial pension as her husband was a German general killed in action. The government had previously declined to pay due to Heydrich's role in the Holocaust.[149] The couple had four children: Klaus, born in 1933, killed in a traffic accident in 1943; Heider, born in 1934; Silke, born in 1939; and Marte, born shortly after her father's death in 1942.[150] Lina wrote a memoir, Leben mit einem Kriegsverbrecher (Living With a War Criminal), which was published in 1976.[151] She remarried once and died in 1985.[152]

Aftermath[edit]

Heydrich's assailants hid in safe houses and eventually took refuge in Saints Cyril and Methodius Cathedral, an Orthodox church in Prague. After a traitor in the Czech resistance betrayed their location,[153] the church was surrounded by 800 members of the SS and Gestapo. Several Czechs were killed, and the remainder hid in the church's crypt. The Germans attempted to flush the men out with gunfire and tear gas, and by flooding the crypt. Eventually an entrance was made using explosives. Rather than surrender, the soldiers killed themselves. Supporters of the assassins who were killed in the wake of these events included the church's leader, Bishop Gorazd, who is now revered as a martyr of the Orthodox Church.[154]

Bullet-scarred window to the crypt of Saints Cyril and Methodius Cathedral in Prague, where Kubiš and his compatriots were cornered

Infuriated by Heydrich's death, Hitler ordered the arrest and execution of 10,000 randomly selected Czechs. But after consultations with Karl Hermann Frank, he altered his response. The Czech lands were an important industrial zone for the German military, and indiscriminate killing could reduce the region's productivity.[155] Hitler ordered a quick investigation. Intelligence falsely linked the assassins to the towns of Lidice and Ležáky. A Gestapo report stated that Lidice, 22 kilometres (14 mi) north-west of Prague, was suspected as the assailants' hiding place because several Czech army officers, then in England, had come from there; additionally, the Gestapo had found a resistance radio transmitter in Ležáky.[156] On 9 June, after discussions with Himmler and Karl Hermann Frank, Hitler ordered brutal reprisals.[157] On 9 June, in the village of Lidice 172 boys and men between age 14 to 84 were shot. Thereafter, all adults in Ležáky were murdered.[158]

All but four of the women from Lidice were deported immediately to Ravensbrück concentration camp (four were pregnant – they were subjected to forced abortions at the same hospital where Heydrich had died and the women were then sent to the concentration camp). Some children were chosen for Germanization, and 81 were murdered in gas vans at the Chełmno extermination camp. Both towns were burned and Lidice's ruins were levelled.[159][160] Overall, at least 1,300 Czechs, including 200 women, were killed in reprisal for Heydrich's assassination.[161][162][163]

Heydrich's replacements were Ernst Kaltenbrunner as the chief of RSHA,[145] and Karl Hermann Frank (27–28 May 1942) and Kurt Daluege (28 May 1942 – 14 October 1943) as the new acting Reichsprotektors. After Heydrich's death, implementation of the policies formalised at the Wannsee conference he chaired was accelerated. The first three true death camps, designed for mass murder with no legal process or pretext, were built and operated at Treblinka, Sobibór, and Bełżec. The project was named Operation Reinhard after Heydrich.[164]

Service record[edit]

Heydrich's time in the SS was a mixture of rapid promotions, reserve commissions in the regular armed forces, and front-line combat service. During his 11 years with the SS Heydrich "rose from the ranks" and was appointed to every rank from private to full general. He was also a major in the Luftwaffe, flying nearly 100 combat missions until 22 July 1941, when his plane was hit by Soviet anti-aircraft fire. After this, Hitler personally ordered Heydrich to return to Berlin to resume his SS duties.[165] His service record also gives him credit as a Navy Reserve Lieutenant, but in 1931 he was dismissed for conduct unbecoming an officer with loss of rank, and during World War II he had no contact with the Navy Reserve.[166][167]

Heydrich began training as a pilot in 1935, and undertook fighter pilot training at the flight school at Werneuchen in 1939. Himmler initially forbade Heydrich from flying combat missions, but later relented, allowing him to join Jagdgeschwader 77 "Herz As" (Ace of Hearts) in Norway, where he was stationed from 15 April 1940 during Operation Weserübung. He returned to Berlin on 14 May after having crashed his plane on takeoff at Stavanger the previous day.[168][169] While in Norway, Heydrich also organised the arrests of political opponents and arranged for a contingent of 200 SiPo and SD men to be stationed in several major cities.[170]

On 20 July 1941, without seeking authorisation from Himmler, Heydrich rejoined Jagdgeschwader 77 during Operation Barbarossa, arriving at Yampil, Vinnytsia Oblast in a borrowed Bf 109. His aircraft was hit by Soviet flak in action near the Dniester on 22 July, and he had to land the plane in enemy territory. He avoided capture and returned to Berlin after being rescued by a patrol.[171] It was his final combat mission.[169]

Heydrich received a number of Nazi and military awards. These included the German Order,[172] Blood Order,[142] Golden Party Badge, Luftwaffe Pilot's Badge, bronze and silver Front Flying Clasp of the Luftwaffe for combat missions, and the Iron Cross First and Second Classes.[168]

See also[edit]

Informational notes[edit]

  1. ^ For the coding of prisoners, see IBM and the Holocaust by Edwin Black, pp 355 and 362. Black references the "Administration of German Concentration Camps", 9 July 1945, PRO FO 371/46979 (Public Record Office, London), as well as "Decoding Key for Concentration Camp Card Index Files", n.d. NARG242/338 T-1021 Roll 5, JAG (National Archives, College Park); and in the last source Frame 99 is mentioned.
  2. ^ According to Czech historians, during the first martial law period (from 28 September 1941 until 20 January 1942), 486 people were executed. In addition, many of the 2,242 people sent to Mauthausen died before the end of the period, some within days or weeks of their arrival. Šír 2011.
  3. ^ a b The telegram is evidence number PS-3363 from the Oswald Pohl case at the Nuremberg Trials. A translation of the text is available at yadvashem.org.
  4. ^ This description of the meeting was employed by Holocaust historian Raul Hilberg in The Destruction of the European Jews. Hilberg 1985, p. 164.
  5. ^ G. M. Weisz of the University of New South Wales and W. R. Albury of the University of New England (Australia) have argued that the failure to administer thiazole sulfonamides, through negligence or otherwise, may have precipitated his death.[141]

Citations[edit]

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Bibliography[edit]

Further reading[edit]

External links[edit]

Government offices
Preceded by Deputy Protector of Bohemia and Moravia (acting Protector)
29 September 1941 – 4 June 1942
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the ICPC
24 August 1940 – 4 June 1942
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Post created
Director of the Reich Main Security Office
27 September 1939 – 4 June 1942
Succeeded by
Heinrich Himmler (acting)
Preceded by Director of the Gestapo
22 April 1934 – 27 September 1939
Succeeded by
Awards and achievements
Preceded by Cover of Time Magazine
23 February 1942
Succeeded by