Authors: Roger Moorhouse
Belgium: German invasion of (1940), 59;
ultimatum issued, 24, 25–6; declares war on
Belgian labourers in Germany, 122, 128
Germany, 26–7, 28; Embassy staff leave
Below, Nicolaus von, 358
Berlin, 27–8; Hitler’s early ‘peace offering’
Berger, Heinrich, 266
to, 29–33; German opinion of military
Berlin: war defence preparations, 21–2; political
prowess, 52; RAF raid on Sylt, 57; some
leanings, 271; anti-invasion defences, 350–6,
Germans blame for the war, 57; German
361–2; Battle for, 357, 360–80; ceasefire and
triumphalism after defeat of British troops
aftermath, 380–8
in Norway, 58–9; Nazi propaganda against,
Berlin City Library, 76
60; events of 1940 cause Germans to lose
Berlin Museum of Prehistory, 230
fear of, 65; German plans to invade, 68;
Berlin Olympic Stadium, 102
Hitler blames for his invasion of Soviet
Berlin Technical High School, 76
Union, 70; air raids on Germany, 136–59,
Berlin University, 76
307–9, 317–25; BBC German-language
Berlin Zoo, 13, 94, 143, 323–4, 366–7
service, 208–14; Nazi forging of British
Bernhardt, Heinz, 169
banknotes, 243–4; German air raids on
Beseler, Hanna von, 371–2
London, 308, 333
Bielenberg, Christabel: reaction to outbreak of
Bruckner, Anton, 215
war, 28–9; on Berliners’ reaction to early
Brüning, Heinrich, 204
peace negotiations, 30, 31, 32; on German
Brunner, Alois, 263
fear of impending attack, 56; on food
Buchenwald, 220
shortages, 87, 90; starts keeping chickens,
building projects: overview, 100–16; labour and
93; on bomb damage to Anhalter Station,
materials, 112–13, 121; rehousing those
202; listens to BBC radio broadcasts, 210;
affected, 113; effect on Jews, 113–15; flak
interview with Gestapo after husband’s
towers, 309–11; bunkers, 313–14
arrest, 234; on Berliners’ interest in the
Bukofzer, Ernst, 290
technical aspects of air raids, 326
Bulgaria, 67
Bileski, Ruth, 287
Büngener, Elisabeth, 43
Bittner, Else, 213
Burgdorf, General Wilhelm, 357
Black Carl
see
Hoernle, Alfred
burials
see
cemeteries; funerals and burials
black market, 97–9, 300
blackout measures: overview, 34–49;
cabaret shows, 69
punishments for offenders, 37–8; accidents
Café Kranzler, 132
caused by, 38–9, 42–3, 47; effect on crime
capital punishment, 239, 245–6
rate, 39–47; effect on prostitution and
Carl Peters
(film), 69
morals, 40–1
Cavanna, François, 122
Bloch, Hans, 287
celebrity culture, 65–7
Blockwarte
(‘block wardens’), 224–5
cemeteries, 247–51, 261–6
Boeselager, Philipp von, 173, 253
censorship: of newspapers, 51; of letters written
Boev, Viktor, 370
by evacuee children, 197; of broadcast
Borchard, Leo, 351–2
media, 214–15; publication of death notices
Borchardt restaurant, 91–2
limited, 255
Borkowski, Dieter: on increase in meat supply,
ceremonial: Hitler’s fiftieth-birthday
94–5; helps uncle clear Jewish flats, 181–2;
celebrations, 1–12; Hitler’s triumphal return
relationship with forced labourer, 280; on air
to Berlin after fall of Paris, 61; return of
raids, 307, 320, 322; reaction to D-Day, 349;
troops from fall of Paris, 63–4
on celebrations for Hitler’s last birthday, 359;
Chamberlain, Neville, 24, 28, 31
and Battle for Berlin, 365; reaction to
Chausseestrasse, 383
ceasefire, 381
Charlottenburg, 143, 238, 278, 297, 321, 323,
Bormann, Martin: at Hitler’s speech on
324
invasion of Poland, 16; draws up child
chickens, 93
evacuation plan, 185, 186, 187; on Hitler’s
children: evacuation, 25, 185–201; indoctrination,
last birthday, 358
195–7, 200; labour programmes, 200; flak
Bornholmer, Alfred, 295–6
helpers, 312–13;
see also
German Girls
Boveri, Margret, 383
League; Hitler Youth
Brandt, Colonel Heinz, 266
Chopin, Frédéric, 215
Brauchitsch, Walther von, 8, 98
Christianity: Nazi attitude, 54; Nazis deprive
Braun, Helene, 307
churches of heat, 76; Christian resistance
bread, 88, 368
groups, 274–6; help given to Jews by
Breker, Arno, 107, 250
churches, 296–7
index
425
Christmas: first war Christmas, 52–6; Nazi
East-West Axis, 5–6, 108
attitude, 54
Ebauer, Hedwig, 43
Chug Chaluzi see
Pioneer Circle
Eden, Anthony, 31
Chuikov, Marshal Vasily, 361
Edward VIII, King
see
Windsor, Duke of
Churchill, Winston, 320
Elola, Marcel, 128, 212, 316, 327, 330–1, 386
Ciano, Count Galeazzo, 158
entertainment
see
leisure
cinema, 51, 69, 353–6
Erkner, Dorit, 191, 192, 373
Circus, the, 107, 111, 112
ersatz, 88–90
clothing: rationing, 81, 83; ersatz, 89–90;
Etzdorf, Marga von, 248
plunder from abroad, 96; black market, 97
evacuation, child, 25, 185–201, 318–20; KLV
coal, 75–6, 78–9
camps, 191–200
Cohn, Anna, 228
Exmouth
, HMS, 56
Cohn, Siegfried, 286, 287
communists: running street battles with Nazis
Fabrik-Aktion
, 285–91
in 1930s, 220; resistance groups, 72, 268–71,
Falkenberg, Bertha, 177
271–4, 278–9
Fehrbellin AEL, 129, 132, 237
concentration camps: rabbit keeping, 93; use of
Fenet, Henri, 363
inmates to supply materials for rebuilding
Fiala, Vojte˘ch, 120
Berlin, 112–13, 241–2; death camps, 172; life in
Fick, Roderich, 103
Sachsenhausen, 240–6; use of inmates to
films
see
cinema
test soles for Wehrmacht boots, 242–3;
see
Findahl, Theo, 97–8, 283, 284, 347, 386
also
labour camps; work education camps
Finke, Ursula, 305
Confessing Church (
Bekennende Kirche
), 297
fires: caused by fuel shortages, 78
crime: effect of blackouts on crime rate, 39–47;
Fish-Harnack, Mildred, 274
S-Bahn Murderer, 41–7; effect of coal
flak batteries, 153–4, 155–6, 311–13
shortages, 79; effect of food shortages, 87;
flak towers, 309–11, 361, 366
black market, 97–9, 300; and foreign
Flammant, Albert, 117
labourers, 133; Nazi concept of justice, 222–
Flannery, Henry, 71–2, 148, 151–2, 157
3;
see also
Gestapo
Flossenbürg camp-quarry, 113
Czarnecka, Kazimiera, 119, 126–7
Flotow, Hans, 347
Czechoslovakia: German occupation, 12; Czech
food: early rationing measures, 21; first war
labourers in Germany, 122, 123, 127, 133, 135, 387
Christmas, 53; harsh winter of 1940 disrupts
supplies, 79–81; rationing system, 81–5, 99;
D-Day (1944), 349
shortages, 86–8, 91–2, 99; ersatz, 88–9, 90;
Dahlerus, Birger, 15
Eintopf
, 90–1; growing your own, 92–3;
dancing, public, 69
bartering, 93–4, 96; cattle from Eastern
Daring
, HMS, 56
Front, 94–5; sent home by soldiers from
Darré, Walther, 98
abroad, 95; black market, 97–9; supplies
death: cemeteries, 247–51, 265–6; state funerals,
during Battle for Berlin, 368–9; rations
248–51, 265–6; treatment of ordinary war
distributed by Soviets, 383–4;
see also
dead, 251–8; Nazi cult of, 258–61; Jewish
restaurants
cemeteries, 261–5; treatment of those killed
Ford, Henry, 3
in air raids, 330–1; breakdown of normal
foreign and forced labourers, 44, 117–35, 147–8,
burial procedures during Battle for Berlin,
212, 316, 386–7
372–3; clean-up of bodies after fall of Berlin,
Foreign Travel Office
see Haus des
386
Fremdenverkehrs
Denmark: German invasion of (1940), 58; Danes
Forster, Albert, 4
involved in defence of Berlin, 363
France: orders general mobilisation, 23;
Deutmann, Karl, 387
Ribbentrop tries to put blame for war on,
Deutsch, Leopold, 329–30
24; Hitler’s early ‘peace offering’ to, 29–33;
Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung
(newspaper), 44
French labourers in Germany, 44, 100, 117,
Deutschkron, Inge, 114–15, 164–5
122, 123, 128, 133, 212, 316, 327, 330–1, 386;
Diederichs, Else, 20
German opinion of military prowess, 52;
Dietrich, Benedikt, 92, 325
German invasion (1940), 59–65; German
Dietrich, Marlene, 51
plunder of, 64, 95–6; liberation of, 349;
dissent
see
protest and dissent
French involved in defence of Berlin, 363
Ditter, Gerda, 41
Franke, Elfriede, 42
Dönitz, Admiral Karl, 342, 357, 387
Frankfurt, 225–6
Düsseldorf, 138
Frankfurter, Justice Felix, 175
Dzhalil, Musa, 237
Freikorps, 272
Frese, Irmgard, 42
426
berlin at war
Frick, Wilhelm, 98
Berlin to be free of Jews, 172; on policy of
Friedenau, 113, 376, 383
expropriating Jewish property, 182; on child
Friedmann, Charlotte, 288
evacuation plan, 187; use of radio as
Friedrichshain, 220, 259, 271, 310, 381
propaganda tool, 204, 205, 206; attempts to
Friedrichstrasse, 5, 308
prevent people from listening to foreign
Fritsch, General Werner von, 248–9
radio broadcasts, 208, 212–13, 214; on ‘
Lili
Fritz Werner factory, 122
Marleen
’, 216; on
Wunschkonzert
, 218; at
Frykman, Sven, 367
Fritsch’s funeral, 248; limits publication of
fuel
see
coal; gas, domestic
death notices, 255; and Wessel’s funeral, 259;
funerals and burials: state, 248–51, 265–6;
propagandisation of military losses, 260; on
ordinary soldiers, 251; Jewish, 264; during
arrest of some Jewish dissenters, 268–9, 270;
and immediately after Battle for Berlin,
on threat posed by renewed Allied air raids,
372–3, 386
318–19; on damage caused by same, 321–2;
Fuss, Lieutenant Hans, 265
‘total war’ speech, 336–41; jokes about, 349–50;
speech to
Volkssturm
recruits, 353;
Kolberg
Gablenz, Carl August von, 265
(propaganda film), 353–6; birthday greetings
Galland, Adolf, 65, 67
to Hitler, 357; speech urging people to
gas, domestic, 78, 79
defend Berlin, 369; phoned by Soviet
gas chambers, 172
interpreter, 370
gasometers: use as air-raid shelters, 314
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, 51
Gebel, Ursula, 323
Goldschlag, Stella (later Kübler), 303–4
Gehre, Max, 180
Goldstein, Ernst, 303
George VI, King, 3
Göring, Edda, 53
George, Heinrich, 51, 354
Göring, Emmy, 53
German armed forces: parade at Hitler’s
Göring, Hermann: at Hitler’s fiftieth-birthday
fiftieth-birthday celebrations, 9–11; ersatz
celebrations, 8, 9; role in Reichstag
clothing, 89, 90; Speer’s plans for supreme
meetings, 16; at Hitler’s speech on invasion
HQ, 107–8; attempts on Hitler’s life, 261,
of Poland, 17; newsreel of him reviewing
280–4; help given to by Berlin public during
troops, 20; plunders Paris museums and
Battle for Berlin, 373–4
galleries, 64; announces price rises, 79–80;
German Girls League (BdM), 350, 358
sanctions soldiers’ plundering, 95, 96; avoids
‘Germania’
see
building projects
food rationing, 98; assures German public
Germany: economy, influence and political
Berlin will never be bombed, 137; intrigue
model in 1939, 12; basis of Nazi political and
against Fritsch, 248; at Fritsch’s funeral, 248;
legislative power, 16; regional tensions, 190;
scapegoats Udet, 249; at Schmundt’s
homeland defences, 350–6, 360
funeral, 266; jokes about, 349–50
Gestapo: overview, 220–37; and Jews, 162, 164–7,
Görlitzer, Artur, 142
169, 263, 302–6; origins and power, 222–3;
Görlitzer Station, 140, 144
size of organisation, 223–4; sources of
Graf Spee
(battleship), 52
information, 224–9; public attitude to, 228–9;
Grawitz, Ernst-Robert, 371
procedures, 229–37; numbers of arrests, 232;
Great Hall, 106, 108, 111
and resistance groups, 268–71, 273, 276, 277,
Greece, 67
283
Grensemann, Friederike, 360
Gesundbrunnen U-Bahn Station, 314
Gross, Ruth, 288, 290
Giesler, Hermann, 103
Grossbeeren AEL, 129, 130
Gisevius, Hans, 281–2
Grosse Hamburger Strasse Jewish cemetery,