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This is a list of members of the 20 July plot, a coup d'état which involved a failed attempt to assassinate Adolf Hitler. At least 7,000 persons were arrested by the Gestapo.[1] According to records of the Fuehrer Conferences on Naval Affairs, 4,980 persons were executed.[2] Few of these are believed to be involved. The most prominent conspirators were ordered to be "hanged like cattle" by Hitler. At the Plötzensee prison, those persons were hung on symbolic meathooks with rope.[3] Among those executed were two field marshals, 19 generals, 26 colonels, two ambassadors, seven diplomats, one minister, three secretaries of state, as well as the head of the Reich Police.

A[]

  • Colonel Otto Armster (1891–1957), Head of the counterintelligence ("Abwehr") station in Vienna; arrested on 23 July 1944 and held captive until the end of the war. Liberated but was later arrested and imprisoned by NKVD until 1955.

B[]

  • Colonel General Ludwig Beck, Chief of the German General Staff (1880–1944); voluntarily committed suicide when the plot failed. He was to be arrested whilst the other captives were to be executed under the order of Friedrich Fromm.
  • Lieutenant Colonel Robert Bernardis (1908–1944) executed on 8 August 1944
  • Albrecht Graf von Bernstorff (1890–1945); executed by firing squad at Gestapo headquarters, 22 April 1945[4]
  • Count Gottfried Graf von Bismarck-Schönhausen, Civil Governor of Potsdam (1901–1949), arrested and kept in a concentration camp. Survived.
  • Major Count Hans-Jürgen von Blumenthal (1907–1944) Hanged October 13, 1944.
  • Lieutenant Colonel (General Staff) Hasso von Boehmer (1904–1945) Executed 5 March 1945.
  • Lieutenant Colonel Baron Georg von Boeselager, cavalry officer (1915–1944) Killed in action 29 August 1944.
  • Lieutenant Colonel Baron Philipp von Boeselager, cavalry officer (1917–2008) Undetected. Survived.
  • Eugen Bolz, State President of Württemberg till 1933 (1881–1945) Executed (beheaded) 23 January 1945.
  • Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Pastor and Theologian (1906–1945); executed by hanging 9 April 1945.
  • Klaus Bonhoeffer, Lawyer (1901–1945); executed by Gestapo, 22 April 1945[4]
  • Randolph von Breidbach-Bürresheim
  • Dr. Eduard Brücklmeier, Diplomat (1903–1944); Executed by hanging 20 October 1944
  • Major Baron Axel Freiherr von dem Bussche-Streithorst (1919–1993); made plans to assassinate Hitler with suicide bomb. Avoided detection and survived.[5]

C[]

D[]

  • Professor Alfred Delp, Pater S.J. (1907–1945); executed 2 February 1945[7]
  • Dr. Wilhelm Dieckmann, Ministry Official
  • Major General Count Heinrich Graf zu Dohna-Schlobitten (1882-1944); Chief of the Acting General Command; executed by hanging 14 September 1944.
  • Court official Hans von Dohnanyi (1902–1945); arrested for treason, 1943; executed 9 April 1945[8]
  • Lieutenant Hans Martin Dorsch
  • Captain Max-Ulrich Graf von Drechsel

E[]

  • Professor Fritz Elsas, Deputy Mayor of Berlin
  • Lieutenant (General Staff) Karl-Heinz Engelhorn
  • Lieutenant Colonel Hans Otto Erdmann

F[]

  • General Baron Alexander von Falkenhausen, Military Commander of Belgium and Northern France (1878–1966); freed by American troops from Niederhorf on 4 May 1945, before Gestapo could carry out death sentence; imprisoned until 1951 for war crimes[6]
  • General Erich Fellgiebel, Chief of the Military Signals (1886–1944); in charge of cutting off communications on 20 July, hanged on 4 September 1944
  • Colonel (General Staff) Eberhard Finckh, Chief Quartermaster to Günther Blumentritt (1899–1944); executed by hanging 30 August 1944
  • Professor Max Fleischmann
  • Reinhold Frank, Lawyer (1896-1945); executed by hanging 23 January 1945
  • Ehrengard Frank-Schultz
  • Colonel (General Staff) Baron Wessel von Freytag-Loringhoven, (1899–1944), who provided the explosives for the plot
  • Walter Frick, Salesman
  • Colonel General Friedrich Fromm (1888–1945). Aware of the conspiracy, betrayed and executed conspirators, including Stauffenberg, on 20 July. Arrested on orders of Himmler the next day, and executed by firing squad for "cowardice" on 19 March 1945[9]

G[]

  • Major General Reinhard Gehlen, Chief of Intelligence-Gathering on the Eastern Front (1902-1979) avoided detection; survived.
  • Captain Ludwig Gehre (1895–1945); executed by hanging 9 April 1945.
  • Major General Rudolf von Gersdorff (1905–1980), Chief of Intelligence for Field Marshal Günther von Kluge, planned suicide bomb attack for 21 March 1943; hid explosives for 20 July 1944 plot. Avoided detection and survived.[10]
  • Eugen Gerstenmaier (1906–1986), Consistory Councillor, subsequently Speaker of the Bundestag; sentenced to 7 years in prison. Survived.
  • Hans Bernd Gisevius (1904–1974), Diplomat, went into hiding, then fled to Switzerland (January 1945). Survived.
  • Erich Gloeden, Architect (born 23 August 1888 in Berlin); guillotined 30 November 1944, Plötzensee Prison
  • Elisabeth Charlotte Gloeden, wife of Erich Gloeden, guillotined 30 November 1944, Plötzensee Prison
  • Dr. Carl Friedrich Goerdeler (1884–1945), Mayor of Leipzig; arrested 12 August 1944 in Konradswalde; hanged 2 February 1945[7]
  • Fritz Goerdeler, Municipal and Treasurer of Königsberg; brother of Carl Goerdeler, hanged 1 March 1945[7]
  • Lieutenant Gereon Karl Goldmann (1916–2003) Franciscan priest, conveyed coded messages to the German delegation in Rome. Captured by British forces in Italy January 1944. Falsely accused and convicted of War Crimes but exonerated.
  • Colonel (General Staff) Helmuth Groscurth
  • Nikolaus Gross, Journalist (1898–1945); executed by hanging 23 January 1945
  • Baron Karl Ludwig Freiherr von und zu Guttenberg (1902–1945) publisher of the White Pages from 1934, arranged the first meeting of Carl Goerdeler and Ulrich von Hassell in 1939, Counterintelligence under Admiral Canaris, arrested by the Gestapo after 20 July 1944, murdered 23–24 April 1945

H[]

  • Max Habermann, Christian syndicate leader
  • Baron Hans Bernd von Haeften, Official in the Foreign Office, executed 15 August 1944, Plötzensee Prison
  • Lieutenant Werner von Haeften (1908–1944); Adjutant to Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg and fellow conspirator. Executed 20 July 1944, by firing squad on orders of General Fromm[11]
  • Syndic Albrecht von Hagen (1904–1944); among the first eight executed by hanging 8 August 1944
  • Colonel Kurt Hahn
  • Nikolaus-Christoph von Halem, merchant (1905–1944)
  • Eduard Hamm, Ministry Official (1879–1944)
  • Colonel (General Staff) Georg Hansen; executed by hanging 8 September 1944[4]
  • Colonel (General Staff) Baron Bodo von Harbow
  • Baron Ernst von Harnack, District President; executed 5 March 1945
  • Lieutenant General Paul von Hase, Commander of 56. Infanterie-Division and Commander of Berlin (1885–1944); among the first eight executed by hanging 8 August 1944 [12]
  • Ulrich von Hassell, German Ambassador to Italy (1881–1944); executed 8 September 1944[7]
  • Theodor Haubach, SDP Politician, executed 23 January 1945
  • Professor Albrecht-Georg Haushofer; executed by firing squad at Gestapo prison, 23 April 1945[4]
  • Major (General Staff) Egbert Hayessen (1913-1944); executed by hanging 15 August 1944
  • Wolf-Heinrich Graf von Helldorf, Chief of the Berlin Police; executed 15 August 1944 at Plötzensee Prison[4]
  • Major General Otto Herfurth, Chief of Staff of the III Military District; collaborated with, then betrayed, conspirators; executed by hanging 29 September 1944 [13]
  • Andreas Hermes, Finance Minister of the Weimar Republic (1878–1964) Hermes was sentenced to death 11 January 1945; execution was postponed several times until the end of the war. Survived.
  • Colonel General Erich Hoepner, Commander of Panzergruppe 4 (1886–1944); among the first eight hanged 8 August 1944[12]
  • Colonel Caesar von Hofacker (1896–1944); testimony led to suspicion of General Erwin Rommel and his ultimate suicide, executed by hanging 20 December 1944[14]
  • Major Roland von Hößlin (1915-1944), executed by hanging 13 October 1944
  • Wilhelm Konrad Hossë
  • Otto Hübener, Director of the insurance brokers Jauch & Hübener, hanged 21, 22 or 23 April 1945[15]

J[]

  • Colonel Friedrich Gustav Jaeger (1895–1944); executed by hanging 21 August 1944.
  • Max Jennewein, technician
  • Professor Jens-Peter Jessen
  • Hans John, Lawyer (1911-1945); executed by firing squad April 23, 1945
  • Otto John (1909–1997), 20 July 1944 was in Spain, escaped to Britain. Survived.

K[]

  • Hermann Kaiser, grammar school teacher
  • Jakob Kaiser, CDU co-founder and Chairmen of the Christian Democratic Union of Germany (DDR) (1888–1961), was member of the Resistance and close to the conspirators but was not directly involved in the plot. Went into hiding and survived.
  • Franz Kempner, Retired Ministry Official (Undersecretary of State)
  • Albrecht von Kessel, Diplomat, Mission Adviser at the Vatican
  • Otto Kiep, Envoy and Chief of the Reich Press Office (1886–1944), executed 23 August 1944, Plötzensee Prison
  • Georg Conrad Kißling, farmer
  • Lieutenant Colonel Bernhard Klamroth, executed 15 August 1944 by hanging, Plötzensee Prison
  • Major Hans Georg Klamroth (1898–1944); executed 26 August 1944 by hanging, Plötzensee Prison
  • Captain Friedrich Karl Klausing (1920–1944)
  • Ewald von Kleist-Schmenzin, Diplomat (1890–1945) Executed 16 April 1945[5]
  • Lieutenant Ewald-Heinrich von Kleist-Schmenzin (1922-2013)
  • Major Gerhard Knaack
  • Dr. Hans Koch, lawyer (1893–1945); murdered by a Sonderkommando April 24, 1945.
  • Heinrich Körner, Union Leader
  • Lieutenant Commander Alfred Kranzfelder (1908-1944); executed by hanging 10 August 1944
  • Richard Kuenzer, Councillor
  • Major Joachim Kuhn, (1913–1994)
  • Elise Auguste Kutznitzki, née von Liliencron
  • Elizabeth Kuznitzky, (1978-1944), guillotined 30 November 1944, Plötzensee Prison

L[]

  • Lieutenant Colonel Fritz von der Lancken, Headmaster of a Boarding School
  • Carl Langbehn, Lawyer (1901-1944); executed by hanging, 12 October 1944
  • Dr. Julius Leber, Social Democratic politician (1891–1945); executed 5 January 1945
  • Count Heinrich Graf von Lehndorff-Steinort, Landowner. (1909-1944); executed 4 September 1944[16]
  • Syndic Dr. Paul Lejeune-Jung (1882–1944), executed 8 September 1944, Plötzensee prison
  • Major Ludwig Freiherr von Leonrod (1906-1944) executed 26 August 1944
  • Bernhard Letterhaus, Leader of the Catholic worker community (1894–1944); executed 14 November 1944
  • Franz Leuninger, Former Secretary General of the Christian Metal Workers' Association
  • Wilhelm Leuschner, Minister for Internal Affairs of Hesse (1890-1944); executed 29 September 1944, Plötzensee prison
  • General of the Artillery Fritz Lindemann, Commander of 132. Infanterie-Division, went into hiding, wounded during arrest; died in prison 14 November 1944.
  • Colonel (General Staff) Ottfried von Linstow (1999-1944); executed 30 August 1944.
  • Paul Löbe (1875–1967), arrested and sent to concentration camp, survived.
  • Ewald Löser (1888–1970); tried 20 October 1944 but successfully feigned memory loss. Later imprisoned for Crimes Against Humanity in Krupp Trial.
  • Ferdinand Freiherr von Lüninck, Governor of Westphalia (1988-1944); executed by hanging 13 November 1944
  • Wilhelm Graf zu Lynar[17]

M[]

  • Hermann Maaß (1897-1944), Leading Social Democrat, executed 20 October 1944, Plötzensee Prison
  • Colonel Count Rudolf Graf von Marogna-Redwitz (1886-1944), executed 12 October 1944, Plötzensee prison
  • Karl Marks, Merchant
  • Michael Graf von Matuschka (1888-1944), District President; executed 14 September 1944, Plötzensee Prison
  • Colonel Joachim Meichßner, (1906-1944); executed 29 September 1944, Plötzensee Prison
  • Lieutenant Colonel (General Staff) Karl Michel
  • Carlo Mierendorff, SPD (1897–1943)
  • Joseph Müller, Catholic Priest, Dissident but not connected to July 1944 Plot. Executed 11 September 1944, Brandenburg-Gőrden prison
  • Dr. Otto Müller, Prelate
  • Herbert Mumm von Schwarzenstein, Legation Councillor
  • Lieutenant Colonel Ernst Munziger
  • Helmuth James Graf von Moltke, lawyer (1907-1945); executed 23 January 1945.

N[]

  • Arthur Nebe, Head of the National Police, commanding officer of Einsatzgruppe B (1994-1945); executed 2 March 1945, Plötzensee prison
  • Wilhelm zur Nieden, Local Government Building Officer, shot by Gestapo 23 April 1945

O[]

  • Major (General Staff) Hans-Ulrich von Oertzen (1915-1944); committed suicide 21 July 1944
  • General Friedrich Olbricht (1880–1944) Executed on orders of Colonel General Fromm, 20 July 1944[18]
  • Major General Hans Oster (1888-1945); hanged at Flossenburg with Admiral Canaris, 9 April 1945[6]

P[]

  • Friedrich Justus Perels, Legal Advisor of the Confessing Church
  • Erwin Planck, Former Undersecretary of State (son of renowned physicist Max Planck) (1893-1945), executed 23 January 1945.
  • Kurt Freiherr von Plettenberg, Plenipotentiary of the former Royal House of Prussia (1891-1945); committed suicide in Gestapo custody 10 March 1945.
  • Dr. Johannes Popitz, Prussian Minister of Finance (1884-1945); executed 2 February 1945, Plőtzensee prison[7]

Q[]

R[]

  • Cuno Raabe, Lawyer (1888–1971)
  • General Friedrich von Rabenau (1884-1945), executed 15 April 1945, Flossenbŭrg concentration camp
  • Lieutenant Colonel (General Staff) Karl Ernst Rathgens
  • Professor Adolf Reichwein (1898-1944) Leading Social Democrat, executed 20 October 1944, Plőtzensee prison
  • Colonel Baron Alexis Freiherr von Roenne, executed 12 October 1944, Plőtzensee prison
  • General Field Marshal (Generalfeldmarschall) Erwin Johannes Eugen Rommel (1891-1944), Wermacht's most celebrated commander, forced by Hitler to commit suicide 14 October 1944.

S[]

  • Karl Sack, Judge Advocate General of the Army (1896–1945)[19] executed 9 April, Flossenbürg concentration camp
  • Lieutenant Colonel (General Staff) Joachim Sadrozinski (1907-1944) executed by hanging 29 September 1944
  • Anton Saefkow (1903-1944); executed 18 September 1944 [20]
  • Major Count Hans-Viktor Graf von Salviati
  • First Lieutenant Fabian von Schlabrendorff, after the war Member of the Federal Constitutional Court (1907–1980); was put on trial but the trial was aborted when an allied bomb killed the presiding judge. Sent to concentration camps but survived.
  • Professor Rüdiger Schleicher, (1895-1945) shot on 23 April 1945, Berlin
  • Ernst Wilhelm Schneppenhorst, former Minister of War (1981-1945); executed 24 April 1945.
  • Friedrich Scholz-Babisch, Farmer, executed 13 October 1944, Plötzensee Prison
  • Colonel Hermann Schöne
  • Lieutenant Colonel Werner Schrader (1885-1944); committed suicide July 28, 1944
  • Count Friedrich Werner Graf von der Schulenburg, German Ambassador to Soviet Union (1875-1944). Executed 10 November 1944[21]
  • Count Fritz-Dietlof Graf von der Schulenburg, district president (1902-1944). Hanged 10 August 1944[22]
  • Colonel (General Staff) Georg Schultze-Büttger
  • Ludwig Schwamb (1890-1945), Leading Social Democrat, executed 23 January 1945, Plötzensee Prison
  • Count Ulrich Wilhelm Graf Schwerin von Schwanenfeld, Landowner (1902-1945),executed by hanging 8 September 1944
  • Hans-Ludwig Sierks, Local Government Building Officer
  • Lieutenant Colonel (General Staff) Günther Smend (1912-1944); executed 8 September 1944, Plötzensee Prison
  • General Hans Speidel, Rommel's Chief of Staff, later Commander of NATO Ground Forces (1897–1984); found by military court of honour not guilty but not free of suspicion; arrested and imprisoned by Gestapo but evaded discovery of his direct involvement; survived.
  • Franz Sperr, legate, executed 23 January 1945, Plötzensee Prison
  • Colonel Wilhelm Staehle
  • Count Berthold Schenk von Stauffenberg (1905–1944), Lawyer and brother of Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg, executed by hanging 10 August 1944
  • Count Claus Schenk von Stauffenberg (1907–1944), Colonel (General Staff) plot leader and bomber; executed by firing squad at Bendlerblock 20 July 1944 on the order of General Fromm.
  • Colonel (General Staff) Hans-Joachim Freiherr von Steinaecker
  • Major General Helmuth Stieff (1901-1944); executed 8 August 1944, Plötzensee Prison
  • Theodor Strünck, Lawyer (1895-1945), executed by hanging on 9 April 1945.
  • Colonel General Carl-Heinrich von Stülpnagel (1886–1944), executed 30 August 1944, Plötzensee Prison
  • Major Carl Szokoll (1915-2004), Austrian officer (captain); 20 July 1944 rounded up leading Nazis in Vienna, evaded prosecution by claiming superior orders without the knowledge of the plot; in 1945 sabotaged German resistance in Vienna to avoid damage to the city; again evaded arrest and survived.

T[]

  • Lieutenant Colonel Gustav Tellgmann
  • Elisabeth von Thadden (1890-1944); headmistress of a boarding school, executed 8 September 1944 Plötzensee Prison, not conneted to the 20 July plot.
  • Lieutenant General Fritz Thiele (1894-1944); executed 4 September 1944, Plötzensee prison
  • Major Busso Thoma (1899-1945); executed by hanging 23 January 1945, Plötzensee prison
  • General Georg Thomas (1890-1946); involved in earlier (1938-1939) plots but not 1944 plot. Arrested, sent to concentration camps but survived. Died in Allied custody in 1946.
  • General Karl Freiherr von Thüngen (1993-1944); executed by firing squad 24 October 1944
  • Lieutenant Colonel Gerd von Tresckow
  • Major General Henning von Tresckow (1901–1944), committed suicide 21 July 1944
  • Adam von Trott zu Solz (1909-1944); Legation Councillor, executed 26 August 1944, Plötzensee prison

U[]

  • Colonel (retired) Nikolaus Graf von Üxküll-Gyllenband (1877-1944); executed by hanging 14 September 1944, Plötzensee prison

V[]

  • Fritz Voigt, Police President of Breslau, executed 1 March 1945, Plötzensee prison
  • Lieutenant Colonel Hans-Alexander von Voss

W[]

Carl Wentzel at his trial

Carl Wentzel appearing before the Volksgerichtshof.

  • General quartermaster of the army Eduard Wagner
  • Colonel Siegfried Wagner (1894-1944), supplied a plane for von Stauffenberg; committed suicide 26 August 1944
  • Chaplain Hermann Josef Wehrle (1999-1944); executed 14 September 1944, Plötzensee Prison
  • Carl Wentzel, (1875–1944); executed 20 December 1944, Plötzensee Prison
  • Joachim von Willisen (1900-1983); Public official, arrested but lacking proof of involvement, released; survived
  • Josef Wirmer (1899-1944); Lawyer, executed 8 September 1944, Plötzensee Prison
  • Oswald Wiersich, Labour Union Leader, executed 1 March 1945, Plötzensee Prison
  • Field Marshal Erwin von Witzleben (1881-1944); The highest ranking general actively involved; executed 8 August 1944, Plötzensee Prison

Y[]

  • Peter Yorck von Wartenburg (1904-1944); Ministry Official, executed 8 August 1944, Plötzensee Prison

Z[]

References[]

  1. William Shirer, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, p. 1393.
  2. Shirer, Id.
  3. In the Name of the Volk: Political Justice in Hitler's Germany by H. W. Koch
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 Shirer, p1393
  5. 5.0 5.1 Shirer, p1333
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Shirer, p1394
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 Shirer, p1392
  8. Shirer, p1330
  9. Shirer, pp 1382–84, 1394
  10. Shirer, p1326
  11. Shirer, p1386
  12. 12.0 12.1 Shirer, p1391
  13. Shirer, p1384
  14. Shirer, p1398
  15. de:Otto Hübener
  16. Shirer, p1182
  17. http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilhelm_Graf_zu_Lynar
  18. 18.0 18.1 Shirer, p1387
  19. Shirer, p197
  20. Shirer, p1355
  21. Shirer, pp1392
  22. Shirer, pp1399-1400
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