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Kanukassel-TV: FRANCE 2020 - Nachlese \By 12 June, his forces were across the Marne and advancing south-east towards Alsace. Dijon fell on 16 June and Lyon on 20 June.
By this time French resistance was crumbling and on 22 June the French requested an armistice. In July, Hitler announced that Rundstedt and a number of other field commanders were to be promoted to the rank of Field Marshal Generalfeldmarschall during the Field Marshal Ceremony.
There he oversaw the planning for the proposed invasion of Britain, Operation Sealion , but never took the prospects for this operation seriously, and was not surprised when Hitler called it off in September after the Luftwaffe's setback in the Battle of Britain.
By July Hitler was turning his mind to the invasion of the Soviet Union , commissioning General Erich Marcks to prepare preliminary plans.
At this point Rundstedt learned that he was to give up his quiet life in occupied France and assume command of Army Group South, tasked with the conquest of Ukraine.
Leeb would command in the north, heading for Leningrad , and Bock in the centre, charged with capturing Moscow. On the way, the three army groups were to encircle and destroy the Red Army before it could retreat into the Russian interior.
Rundstedt, like most German officers, had favoured the policy of good relations with the Soviets followed by the Reichswehr commander General Hans von Seekt during the Weimar Republic years, when the Soviet connection was seen as a counter to the threat from Poland.
He was also apprehensive about launching a new war in the east while Britain was undefeated. Even the most experienced officers shared Hitler's contempt for the Soviet state and army.
On the way he attended a conference in Berlin at which Hitler addressed senior officers. He made it clear that the ordinary rules of warfare would not apply to the Russian campaign.
As part of this strategy, the Commissar Order was issued, which stated that all Red Army commissars were to be executed when captured. Immediately after the conference we approached Brauchitsch and told him that this was impossible The order was simply not carried out.
Barbarossa was initially scheduled for May, at the beginning of the Russian spring, but was postponed until June because unseasonably wet weather made the roads impassable for armour not because of the German invasion of Yugoslavia and Greece in April, as is commonly supposed.
Sodenstern was again his chief of staff. These three armies, bunched between Lublin and the Carpathians, were to thrust south-eastwards into Ukraine, aiming to capture Kyiv and encircle and destroy the Soviet forces west of the Dnieper.
It's unlikely that Rundstedt thought a decisive victory was possible at this point; while saying farewell to the commander of Army Group North in early May, he remarked: "See you again in Siberia.
The attack began on 22 June. Despite ample warning from intelligence sources and defectors, Joseph Stalin and the Soviet Command were caught by surprise, and the Germans rapidly broke through the frontier defences, helped by their total command of the air.
Rundstedt testified at Nuremberg: "The resistance at the frontier was not too great, but it grew continually as we advanced into the interior of the country.
Very strong tank forces, tanks of a better type, far superior to ours, appeared. By 30 July the Red Army in Ukraine was in full retreat.
Despite these successes, the campaign did not go according to plan. Once this became apparent, at the end of July, Hitler and his commanders had to decide how to proceed.
Hitler ordered Army Group Centre to pause at Smolensk , while the panzer divisions were shipped to the north and the south. Although Rundstedt opposed this diversion of forces, he was its beneficiary as attention was shifted to the southern front.
He also benefited from disastrous decisions made by the Soviets. On 10 July Stalin appointed his old crony Marshal Semyon Budyonny commander in the Ukraine, with orders to stop the German advance at all costs.
Budyonny ordered Kirponos to push his forces forwards to Kyiv and Uman , despite the danger of encirclement, rather than withdraw and make a stand on the Dnieper.
Rundstedt therefore decided to break off the advance towards Kyiv, and to direct Kleist's armour south-eastwards, towards Krivoy Rog.
Meanwhile, Schobert's 11th Army was advancing north-eastwards from Bessarabia. On 2 August the two armies met, trapping over , Soviet troops, virtually all of whom were killed or captured.
Southern Ukraine was thus left virtually defenceless, and by 25 August, when they entered Dniepropetrovsk , the Germans had occupied everything west of the Dnieper except Odessa , which held out until October.
Nevertheless, this had all taken longer than expected, and the Red Army was showing no signs of collapse.
Rundstedt wrote to his wife on 12 August: "How much longer? I have no great hope that it will be soon.
The distances in Russia devour us. Neither the success at Uman nor what followed at Kyiv would have happened had Rundstedt not backed his subordinates and resisted Hitler's interference in the conduct of the campaign.
As during the French campaign, Hitler was panicked by his own success. By early July he was full of anxiety that the German armour was advancing too quickly, without infantry support, and that it was exposed to Soviet counter-attacks.
On 10 July Brauchitsch arrived at Rundstedt's headquarters at Brody , with instructions from Hitler that Kleist was turn south towards Vinnitsa and link up with Schobert's army there, rather than continue south-east to Kirovograd.
This would still have trapped many Soviet divisions, but it would have allowed the mass of Soviet forces at Uman and Kyiv to escape. Rundstedt defended Kleist's ability to execute the larger encirclement, and persuaded Brauchitsch that he was right.
Brauchitsch then contacted Halder, who succeeded in persuading Hitler to support Rundstedt. This was a sign that Rundstedt still had Hitler's respect, as were Hitler's two visits to Rundstedt's armies during this period.
The danger of encirclement was obvious, but Stalin stubbornly refused to consider withdrawal, despite warnings from both Budyonny and Kirponos that catastrophe was imminent.
Budyonny has been freely blamed by postwar writers for the disaster at Kyiv, but it is clear that while he was out of his depth as a front commander, he warned Stalin of the danger, and was dismissed for his pains.
Although many Soviet troops were able to escape eastwards in small groups, around , men — four whole armies comprising 43 divisions, nearly one-third of the Soviet Army's strength at the start of the war — were killed or captured, and the great majority of those captured died in captivity.
Kirponos was killed in action on 20 September, shortly before resistance ceased. Rundstedt had thus presided over one of the greatest victories in the history of warfare.
But this catastrophe for the Red Army resulted far more from the inflexibility of Stalin than it did from the talents of Rundstedt as a commander or the skill of the German Army.
David Stahel , a recent historian of the Kyiv campaign, wrote: "Germany had been handed a triumph far in excess of what its exhausted armoured forces could have achieved without Stalin's obduracy and incompetence.
Stahel sums the situation up with his chapter heading: "Subordinating the generals: the dictators dictate. Despite their successes, they had sustained high levels of casualties and even higher levels of loss of equipment, both of which were impossible to replace.
Despite the triumph at Kyiv, by the end of September Rundstedt was becoming concerned about the state of his command.
After three months of continuous fighting, the German armies were exhausted, and the Panzer divisions were in urgent need of new equipment as a result of losses in battle and damage from the poorly-paved Ukrainian roads.
As autumn set in, the weather deteriorated, making the situation worse. Reichenau advanced east towards Kharkiv and Kleist and Stülpnagel headed south-east towards the lower Donets.
In the south 11th Army and the Romanians commanded by Manstein following the death of Schobert advanced along the Sea of Azov coast towards Rostov.
The Soviet armies were in a poor state after the catastrophes of Uman and Kyiv, and could offer only sporadic resistance, but the German advance was slowed by the autumn rains and the Soviet scorched earth policy, which denied the Germans food and fuel and forced them to rely on overstretched lines of supply.
Rundstedt's armies were also weakened by the transfer of units back to Army Group Centre to take part in the attack on Moscow Operation Typhoon. Nevertheless, during October Rundstedt's forces won another great victory when Manstein and Kleist's tanks reached the Sea of Azov, trapping two Soviet Armies around Mariupol and taking over , prisoners.
On 3 November Brauchitsch visited Rundstedt's headquarters at Poltava , where Rundstedt told him that the armies must halt and dig in for the winter.
But Hitler drove his commanders on, insisting on an advance to the Volga and into the North Caucasus , to seize the oilfields at Maikop.
These demands put Rundstedt under severe strain. The Russian winter set in with full force in mid-November. The Germans were short of food, fuel, ammunition, vehicles, spare parts and winter clothing.
Partisan activity was growing in their rear areas, threatening their supplies. Rundstedt was now 65 and not in good health — he was a heavy smoker, and in October in Poltava he suffered a mild heart attack.
This was a recipe for defeat, but Rundstedt obeyed Hitler's orders. But the Soviets had had time to prepare, and launched a counter-offensive on the 25th.
When Hitler heard of this the next day, he ordered that Rostov should be held, although it had in fact already been evacuated. Rundstedt replied by insisting on his decision, and adding: "Should confidence in my leadership no longer exist, I beg to request someone be substituted who enjoys the necessary confidence of the Supreme Command.
This was the first significant defeat the German Army suffered in World War II, and Rundstedt was the first senior commander to be dismissed.
Hitler, however, immediately realised that he had gone too far in arbitrarily sacking the most senior commander of the German Army. He arrived in Poltava on 3 December, where he found both Reichenau and Dietrich firm in defending the correctness of Rundstedt's actions.
Sodenstern explained the full circumstances of the retreat from Rostov to Hitler, an explanation which Hitler grudgingly accepted.
Hitler then met with Rundstedt and excused himself on the grounds that it had all been a misunderstanding. He suggested that Rundstedt take a period of leave, "and then once more place your incomparable services at my disposal.
Shortly after his return to Kassel, on his 66th birthday, Rundstedt received a cheque from Hitler for , Reichsmarks. Many found this offensive, but none turned down these gifts.
Rundstedt tried to do the next best thing by failing to cash the cheque. By February this was attracting adverse comment in Berlin, and Rundstedt then cashed it.
Some writers have sought to connect Rundstedt's acceptance of this money with his continuing refusal to support the resistance movement against Hitler's regime within the German Army.
The Einsatzgruppen were initially ordered to establish "security" in the rear areas by killing communists and partisans, but by the identity between Jews and communism was strongly established in the minds of most SS men and Police officers.
In addition, various units participated in killing 33, Kyiv Jews at Babi Yar in September , only days after the city was occupied by the Army.
The Army did participate directly in these mass killings, officers of Reichenau's 6th Army took part in organising the massacre at Babi Yar.
Therefore, the soldier must have full understanding of the necessity of hard but just atonement of Jewish subhumanity [ Untermenschentum ].
Since Reichenau's order was widely understood as endorsing the mass killings of Ukrainian Jews which were going on behind the German lines, with which 6th Army at any rate was actively co-operating, Rundstedt's open endorsement of its strongly anti-Semitic language clearly contradicts his later assertions that he did not know what the Einsatzgruppen were doing.
He told interrogators in that he was aware of just one atrocity, at Berdichev on 30 July. No army in the world can tolerate such conditions for any length of time, but in the interests of the security and protection of its own troops it must take sharp, energetic measures.
But this should, of course, be done in a correct and soldierly manner. He described Zamosc as "a dirty Jewish hole. In September Rundstedt issued an order that soldiers were not to participate in or take photos of "Jewish operations", [80] [Notes 13] indicating awareness of their existence.
The killings took place with the knowledge and support of the German Army in the east. Under Rundstedt's command, Army Group South actively participated in the policies outlined in the Hunger Plan , the Nazi racial starvation policy, by "living off the land" and denying food supplies to Soviet prisoners of war and civilians.
German troops "plundered huge quantities of livestock, grain and dairy produce", enough to feed themselves and to create substantial reserves for the Reich.
As a consequence, mass starvation set in in urban areas, especially in Kyiv and Kharkiv. But his position was to grow increasingly difficult.
Hitler did not intend giving him real authority, seeing him as a dignified figurehead. Secondly, the internal situation in France had changed greatly since Rundstedt's departure in March The result was an escalating cycle of assassinations and reprisal killings that rapidly alienated the hitherto quiescent French population.
Rundstedt had no direct control over the Army's response to Resistance attacks. Nevertheless, many held him responsible, then and later. Rundstedt had more direct responsibility for the Commando Order of , which later served as the basis of war crimes charges against him.
There were in fact two German orders concerning captured Allied commandos. The first was issued by Rundstedt in July , and stated that captured Allied parachutists were to be handed over to the Gestapo, whether in uniform or not , rather than made prisoners of war.
This was a response to the increasing number of British agents being parachuted into France by the Special Operations Executive.
It stipulated that all captured Allied commandos were to be executed, again regardless of whether they were in uniform. As a consequence, six British commandos captured in Operation Frankton , a raid on shipping at Bordeaux in December , were executed by the German Navy.
Although Rundstedt neither ordered nor was informed of this action, he was later held responsible as German commander in France.
Meanwhile, the military situation for the Germans was deteriorating. The entry of the United States into the war in December raised the likelihood of an Allied invasion of France.
Hitler's response was to order the construction of the Atlantic Wall , a system of coastal fortifications from Norway to the French-Spanish border, to be constructed by the Organisation Todt using slave labour.
There was also a steady build-up of German forces in France, despite the demands of the eastern front. By June Rundstedt commanded 25 divisions.
When the Vichy authorities in Africa surrendered after token resistance, the Germans responded by occupying all of France and dissolving what remained of the French Army.
The catastrophe of Stalingrad prompted renewed efforts by dissident German officers to remove Hitler from power while there was still time, as they believed, to negotiate an honourable peace settlement.
The conspirators were centered on Halder, Beck and Witzleben, but by all had been removed from positions of authority.
Their strategy at this time was to persuade the senior field commanders to lead a coup against Hitler. Their initial target was Manstein, now commanding Army Group Don , but he turned Tresckow down at a meeting in March Several sources say that Rundstedt was also approached, although they do not say specifically who approached him.
Let Manstein and Kluge do it. It was true, however, that Rundstedt was well past his best. The military historian Chester Wilmot wrote soon after the war: "The truth was that Rundstedt had lost his grip.
He was old and tired and his once active brain was gradually becoming addled, for he had great difficulty in sleeping without the soporific aid of alcohol.
But his health was a matter of increasing concern to his staff and his family. His son Leutnant Hans-Gerd von Rundstedt was posted to his command as an aide-de-camp, partly to monitor his health and report back to Bila in Kassel.
In one of his letters, Hans-Gerd referred to his father's "somewhat plentiful nicotine and alcohol consumption," but assured his mother that Rundstedt's health was basically sound.
Nevertheless, in May Rundstedt was given leave and was sent to a sanatorium at Bad Tölz , south of Munich , which was also the site of an SS-Junker school.
Later he stayed some time at Grundlsee in Austria , and was received by Hitler at his summer house at Berchtesgaden , a sign of Hitler's continuing respect for him.
He was back at work by July. The Allied invasion of Italy in September removed Rundstedt's fears that France would be invaded that summer, but he could not have doubted that the massive build-up of American troops in Britain meant that a cross-channel invasion would come in He placed no faith in the Atlantic Wall, seeing it merely as useful propaganda.
There were several problems with this, particularly the lack of fuel for rapid movements of armour, the Allied air superiority which enabled them to disrupt the transport system, and the increasingly effective sabotage efforts of the French resistance.
Hitler was not persuaded: his view was that the invasion must be defeated on the beaches. Characteristically, however, he told Rundstedt he agreed with him, then sent Field Marshal Erwin Rommel to France with orders to hasten the completion of the Atlantic Wall; while Rundstedt remained the commander in France, Rommel became the official commander of Army Group B.
Rundstedt was extremely angered by this decision; although he admired Rommel's tactical skill, he knew from his colleagues that Rommel was notoriously difficult to work with and would mostly be able to ignore Rundstedt's authority thanks to his patronage by Hitler and Goebbels.
Rommel in fact agreed with Rundstedt that the Atlantic Wall was a "gigantic bluff", but he also believed that Allied air power made Rundstedt's proposed defense plan impossible.
By the spring of Rommel had turned the mostly nonexistent 'Wall' into a formidable defensive line, but since he believed the invasion would come somewhere between Dunkirk and the mouth of the Somme , much of his work was directed at strengthening the wrong area, although in late he had focused on Normandy.
As fears of an imminent invasion mounted, conflict broke out among the commanders. Rommel wanted the armoured divisions positioned close to the coast, mostly in the area he considered at highest risk.
The commander of armoured forces in France, General Leo Freiherr Geyr von Schweppenburg , backed by Rundstedt, strongly disagreed, wanting his forces to be positioned inland to preserve their manoeuvrability.
Eventually Hitler intervened, imposing a compromise: half the armour would be allocated to the Army Groups defending the beaches, and half would be kept in reserve under Geyr von Schweppenburg; the latter, however, were not to be deployed without Hitler's direct order.
Hitler made matters worse by appointing Rommel commander of Army Group B, covering all of northern France. This unworkable command structure was to have dire consequences when the invasion came.
The invasion duly came before dawn on 6 June , in Normandy , far to the west of the sector where Rundstedt and Rommel had expected it.
Rommel was on leave in Germany, many of the local commanders in Normandy were at a conference in Rennes , and Hitler was asleep at Berchtesgaden.
But Rundstedt, now 68, was up before , [] trying to take charge of a confusing situation. He immediately saw that the reported Allied airborne landings in Normandy presaged a seaborne invasion.
He contacted OKW and demanded that he be given authority to deploy the armoured reserves, but OKW could not agree to this without Hitler's approval.
Hitler's refusal came through at , followed by his change of mind at , by which time the Allies were well ashore and the cloud cover had lifted, preventing the armour from moving until dusk.
In mid-afternoon Rundstedt ordered that "the Allies [be] wiped out before the day's end, otherwise the enemy would reinforce and the chance would be lost", [] but it was too late.
Rundstedt's biographer concludes: "If Hitler had released the Panzer reserves as soon as Rundstedt had asked for them, the Allies would have experienced a much harder day on 6 June than they did.
Ambrose wrote: "The only high-command officer who responded correctly to the crisis at hand was Field Marshal Rundstedt, the old man who was there for window-dressing and who was so scorned by Hitler and OKW Rundstedt's reasoning was sound, his actions decisive, his orders clear.
Being right was little consolation to Rundstedt. By 11 June it was evident that the Allies could not be dislodged from their beach-head in Normandy.
Their total command of the air and the sabotage of roads and bridges by the Resistance made bringing armoured reinforcements to Normandy slow and difficult, but without them there was no hope of an effective counter-offensive.
Supported by Rommel, he tried to persuade Keitel at OKW that the only escape was to withdraw from Normandy to a prepared defensive line on the Seine , but Hitler forbade any withdrawal.
Both Field Marshals argued that the situation in Normandy required either massive reinforcements which were not available or a rapid withdrawal.
Remarkably, they both also urged that Hitler find a political solution to end the war, which Rommel told him bluntly was unwinnable.
Rommel warned Hitler about the inevitable collapse in the German defences, but was rebuffed and told to focus on military operations.
It was during the desperate German attempts to bring reserve units to the front that men of the Das Reich SS Panzer Division destroyed the village of Oradour-sur-Glane in central France, in retaliation for partisan attacks in the area.
This was enough for the French government to demand after the war that he stand trial for the massacre at Oradour.
On 29 June Rundstedt and Rommel were summoned to Berchtesgaden for a further meeting with Hitler, at which they repeated their demands, and were again rebuffed.
On his return to Saint-Germain, on 30 June, Rundstedt found an urgent plea from Schweppenburg, who was commanding the armoured force at Caen , to be allowed to withdraw his units out of range of Allied naval gunfire, which was decimating his forces.
Rundstedt at once agreed, and notified OKW of this decision. On 1 July he received a message from OKW countermanding his orders.
In a fury, he phoned Keitel, urging him to go to Hitler and get the decision reversed. Keitel pleaded that this was impossible.
Rundstedt is said to have replied "Macht Schluss mit dem Krieg, ihr Idioten! This literally means "End the war, you idiots!
Keitel conveyed to Hitler that Rundstedt felt unable to cope with the increased demands, and Hitler relieved him of his command, replacing him with Kluge.
It is likely that Hitler had already decided that Rundstedt should be replaced after the meetings of 17 and 29 June.
It was officially given out that Rundstedt was retiring on the grounds of age and ill-health. Hitler wrote him a "very cordial" letter, and awarded him the Oak Leaves to his Knight's Cross , one of the highest of the new decorations created in Rundstedt departed Saint-Germain for the last time on 4 July, accompanied by his son, and was driven back to the sanatorium at Bad Tölz, to be reunited with his wife.
He told Rommel on departing that he would never hold another military command. Rundstedt had resisted all attempts to recruit him to the various conspiracies against Hitler that had been operating inside the German Army since Although he had not denounced or reported any of the officers who had approached him, he had shown no sympathy with their appeals.
By June the conspirators had given up on him and indeed on all the senior field commanders , because he was not approached by the group around Tresckow and Stauffenberg who hatched the unsuccessful plot to kill Hitler with a bomb at the Wolf's Lair Wolfsschanze , his headquarters in East Prussia , and had no inkling of what was planned.
A year later, in June , he told the investigating commission preparing for the Nuremberg Trials: "I would never have thought of such a thing, that would have been base, bare-faced treachery.
He also argued, however, that the attempt to kill Hitler was pointless, because the German Army and people would not have followed the conspirators.
Officers like Rundstedt who argued that a coup against Hitler would not have won support in the Army or among the German people were, in the view of most historians, correct.
Joachim Fest , writing of Tresckow, says: "Even officers who were absolutely determined to stage a coup were troubled by the fact that everything they were contemplating would inevitably be seen by their troops as dereliction of duty, as irresponsible arrogance, and, worst, as capable of triggering a civil war.
Rundstedt was thus above suspicion of involvement in the 20 July plot, but he could not escape entanglement in its bloody aftermath.
Many of these would have been known personally to Rundstedt. Witzleben was an old colleague, and Stülpnagel had been his subordinate in Ukraine and his colleague in France.
Hitler was determined not only to punish those involved in the plot, but to break the power, status, and cohesion of the Prussian officer corps once and for all.
Since traditionally German officers could not be tried by civilian courts, he decided that the Army must expel all those accused of involvement.
They could then be tried before the People's Court Volksgerichtshof , a special court established in to try political crimes and presided over by the fanatical Nazi Roland Freisler.
Hitler therefore ordered the convening of a Court of Honour Ehrenhof to carry out the expulsions, and appointed Rundstedt to head it.
This court considered only evidence placed before it by the Gestapo. No defence counsel was permitted, and none of the accused was allowed to appear.
On this basis, several officers were expelled from the Army, while others were exonerated. Among those the court declined to expel were Halder who had no involvement in the plot , and Speidel, Rommel's chief of Staff who was deeply implicated.
Rundstedt and Heinz Guderian have been singled out as the two who most contributed to Rommel's expulsion from the army, especially as both had good reason to dislike him; however, Rommel and Rundstedt had always had a grudging respect for one another, and Rundstedt later served as Hitler's representative at Rommel's state funeral.
No incident in Rundstedt's career has damaged his posthumous reputation as much as his involvement in this process. Unterseiten , die sich beim Anklicken der Hauptseite links im Inhaltsverzeichnis öffnen:.
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Mai Wir, das sind meine kleine Tochter Samira und ich, bekannt als kanukassel www. Sie drücken aus, was mir hier gerade durch den Kopf geht Under Stieler von Heydekampf the first Wankel powered car, [14] a small low volume open topped sports car, the NSU Spider , appeared in However, it was the appearance in of the futuristic NSU Ro 80 which caught the attention both of the pundits [16] and of the business press.
Massive enthusiasm [18] for the car's virtues was accompanied by massive warranty costs as the company found itself replacing engines that had lost pressure in their revolutionary combustion chambers.
Even in September , when the Spider had first been exhibited at the Frankfurt Motor Show , doubts had been expressed as to whether a company the size of NSU would have the financial capability properly to develop and produce a car that was such a departure from the industry norm.
Problems were exacerbated by insufficient training in preparation for the new technology across the company's dealership network. Engine problems were addressed in when the "soft carbon" used for the rotor-tip seals was replaced with a harder compound, [19] and this development was accompanied with the fitting of a warning device that provided drivers with audible discouragement when they exceeded recommended engine speeds, but the reputational damage and the shortage of technical expertise across the dealership network was not so quickly addressed, and in the end only 37, Ro80s were manufactured, [19] which was nothing like enough to recover the massive amounts invested in developing the car.
Having gambled massively on the commercial success of the Ro80, Gerd Stieler von Heydekampf's final years at the helm of NSU were spent trying to save the company from bankruptcy.
It was Volkswagen that acquired the company. The deal that emerged was described in the press reports of the time as a "Fusion" merger.
Interviewed in March , Stieler von Heydekampf insisted that the deal was "not a sale [of the NSU business] but a transaction" " Volkswagen, who were by now encountering unplanned financial headwinds as the world's appetite for the Beetle finally appeared to have been satisfied, merged the NSU business with the Audi business which they had acquired five years earlier in another convoluted deal.
During the next few years Volkswagen acquired the remaining NSU shares. Gerd Stieler von Heydekampf and his wife lived for many years in Heilbronn.
They also owned a second house in Stocksberg , a hamlet in the hills to the east of the city. In Stieler von Heydekampf hit the headlines nationally when he endowed a chapel with a little bell tower and a small cemetery at Stocksberg.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Gerd Stieler von Heydekampf. Berlin , Germany. Heilbronn , Baden-Württemberg , West Germany.
Heydekampf verstorben with parallel translated text in English " PDF. Audi AG , Ingolstadt. Retrieved 6 December Gerd Stieler von Heydekampf: - ".
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Es ist schade, dass ich mich jetzt nicht aussprechen kann - ist erzwungen, wegzugehen. Ich werde befreit werden - unbedingt werde ich die Meinung in dieser Frage aussprechen.