Who is hitler's son
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Adolf Hitler's Family Tree
Hitler's Family Tree
Adolf Hitler's family tree is a complicated one. You will notice that the last name "Hitler" had many variations that were often used almost interchangeably. Some of the common variances were Hitler, Hiedler, Hüttler, Hytler, and Hittler. Adolf's father Alois Schicklgruber did change his name on January 7, 1877, to "Hitler"—the only form of the last name that his son used.
His immediate family tree is filled with multiple marriages. In the above image, look carefully at the marriage dates and the birth dates of Hitler's many relatives. Several of these children were born illegitimately or only a couple months after marriage. This gave rise to many disputes such as the contested issue of whether or not Johann Georg Hiedler was Alois Schicklgruber's father (as depicted in the chart above).
Adolf's Parents
Adolf Hitler's father Alois Schicklgruber had two wives before Adolf's mother. The first, Anna Glassl-Hörer (1823–1883) he married in October 1873. Anna became an inval
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Explaining Hitler
The Search for the Origins of His Evil
By RON ROSENBAUM
Random House
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The Mysterious Stranger,
the Serving Girl, and the Family
Romance of the Hitler Explainers
In which the author makes an expedition to the Hitler family "ancestral home" and meditates upon the romantic life of Maria Schicklgruber, as imagined by historical fantasists I was ready to give up and turn back. A surprise mid-autumn snowstorm had blown out of Russia and was blanketing Central Europe, making the relatively primitive back roads of this backwoods quarter of Austria increasingly impassable.
We were only about twenty miles short of our objective, but our rented Volkswagen was beginning to skid, once bringing us perilously close to the brink of one of the woody ravines that crisscrossed the otherwise featureless reaches of snow-covered farmland stretching north to the Czech border.
I'd timidly suggested to my Austrian researcher, Waltraud, who was at the wheel, that we ought t
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Hitler
1889-1936: Hubris
By IAN KERSHAW
W. W. Norton & Company
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FANTASY AND FAILURE
`When the postmaster asked him one day what he wanted to do for a living and whether he wouldn't like to join the post-office, he replied that it was his intention to become a great artist.'
A neighbour of the Hitler family in Urfahr
`I was so convinced that I would be successful that when I received my rejection, it struck me as a bolt from the blue.'
Hitler, on failing his entry examination to study
at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna
I
The first of many strokes of good fortune for Adolf Hitler took place thirteen years before he was born. In 1876, the man who was to become his father changed his name from Alois Schicklgruber to Alois Hitler. Adolf can be believed when he said that nothing his father had done had pleased him so much as to drop the coarsely rustic name of Schicklgruber. Certainly, `Heil Schicklgruber' would have sounded an unlikely salutation to a national hero.
The Schicklgrubers
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