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HITLER'S ABUSIVE childhood, his mother fixation, his inner sense of failure and depression, his poor health, his warped philosophy and sexual impotence, his drug addiction and Parkinson’s disease [from 1935], his predominant homosexual tendencies and his ‘perversions’ all affected his attempts to have romantic liaisons with the opposite sex. The fact that he had undersized genitals and only one testicle did not help his cause or his confidence when dealing with women,” (Siobhan Pat Mulcahy: 2015) View Table of Contents...
His Munich chauffeur, Julius Schreck fulfilled Hitler's fantasies about the great love between a powerful man and his obedient servant. One of Hitler’s most treasured possessions was a love letter written by the homosexual Bavarian-King Ludwig to his coachman and lover for 20 years, Richard Hornig, for which he had paid a fortune when it came up for auction.
…The other man in the Landsberg love triangle was Rudolf Hess (b.1894-d.1987) described politely by some scholars as “a somewhat neurotic member of the Nazi party”. Gay lawyer, Erich Ebermayer (Ebermayer Diary: 1959) said: “In view of all who have an intimate knowledge of the circumstances, Hess, known in Party circles as ‘Black Emma,’ was for many years the Fuhrer’s partner, especially during their joint detention in Landsberg.” Ebermayer pointed out that after his release from prison in 1925, Hess served for several years as Hitler’s personal secretary in spite of having “no official rank in the Nazi Party”.
His Munich chauffeur, Julius Schreck fulfilled Hitler's fantasies about the great love between a powerful man and his obedient servant. One of Hitler’s most treasured possessions was a love letter written by the homosexual Bavarian-King Ludwig to his coachman and lover for 20 years, Richard Hornig, for which he had paid a fortune when it came up for auction.
…The other man in the Landsberg love triangle was Rudolf Hess (b.1894-d.1987) described politely by some scholars as “a somewhat neurotic member of the Nazi party”. Gay lawyer, Erich Ebermayer (Ebermayer Diary: 1959) said: “In view of all who have an intimate knowledge of the circumstances, Hess, known in Party circles as ‘Black Emma,’ was for many years the Fuhrer’s partner, especially during their joint detention in Landsberg.” Ebermayer pointed out that after his release from prison in 1925, Hess served for several years as Hitler’s personal secretary in spite of having “no official rank in the Nazi Party”.
Like so many of the Hitler paintings floating around after his death, the
Fuhrer personality was a fake. It masked the internal struggle raging between
his masculine and feminine self. Women may have thrown themselves at his feet
during his speeches but in reality, Hitler was an extreme turn-off as a sexual
being.
As historian Joseph Howard Tyson said, it was only when he was sick and tired of paying off blackmailers who knew of his homosexuality that he decided in the late 1920s to “go straight”. In fact, the first time he is known to have had a girlfriend, he was already 37 while the unlucky girl in question, Maria Reiter, was aged only 16. Also, while he attempted to conduct his heterosexual relationships, he continued to enjoy secret dalliances with men in the background.
As historian Joseph Howard Tyson said, it was only when he was sick and tired of paying off blackmailers who knew of his homosexuality that he decided in the late 1920s to “go straight”. In fact, the first time he is known to have had a girlfriend, he was already 37 while the unlucky girl in question, Maria Reiter, was aged only 16. Also, while he attempted to conduct his heterosexual relationships, he continued to enjoy secret dalliances with men in the background.
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Hitler is known to have had seven “heterosexual” relationships. And though he had rejected the Catholic Church during WW1, he chose Catholic, convent-educated teenagers as his ideal [Aryan] woman. He also enjoyed the company of women, usually actresses, with sexual experience who were not afraid to indulge his darkest fantasies.
Five of the seven women Hitler had sexual contact with committed suicide and the other two attempted suicide but failed. Four of the women were aged 16 or 17 when he first made sexual advances toward them. (Henriette Hoffmann was aged only 13 when he molested her but they did not have a relationship).
There are chapters in the book covering each of Adolf Hitler's gay relationships with August Kubizek, Reinhold Hanisch, Ernst Schmidt, Rudolf Hess, Julius Schreck, (and bodyguards and chauffeurs: Emil Maurice, Christian Weber and Ulrich Graf); there are also chapters on each of his suicidal girlfriends, when he tried to “go straight”, these include: Suzi Liptauer, Maria Reiter, Geli Raubal, Renate Mueller, Unity Mitford, Inge Ley and Eva Braun (and his dalliances with actresses Jenny Jugo and Leni Riefenstahl and his "intimacy" with Princess Stephanie von Hohenloe are also covered). The beginning of the book has a chapter devoted to both of Adolf Hitler's parents and their influence on his sexuality; his mother Klara Hitler, for whom he had a bizarre mother fixation, the woman he loved and had sexual fantasies about, and of course his father, Alois Sr. whose savage beatings Adolf Hitler, ultimately enjoyed .The book is 498 pages long and costs €5.25.here
Hitler is known to have had seven “heterosexual” relationships. And though he had rejected the Catholic Church during WW1, he chose Catholic, convent-educated teenagers as his ideal [Aryan] woman. He also enjoyed the company of women, usually actresses, with sexual experience who were not afraid to indulge his darkest fantasies.
Five of the seven women Hitler had sexual contact with committed suicide and the other two attempted suicide but failed. Four of the women were aged 16 or 17 when he first made sexual advances toward them. (Henriette Hoffmann was aged only 13 when he molested her but they did not have a relationship).
There are chapters in the book covering each of Adolf Hitler's gay relationships with August Kubizek, Reinhold Hanisch, Ernst Schmidt, Rudolf Hess, Julius Schreck, (and bodyguards and chauffeurs: Emil Maurice, Christian Weber and Ulrich Graf); there are also chapters on each of his suicidal girlfriends, when he tried to “go straight”, these include: Suzi Liptauer, Maria Reiter, Geli Raubal, Renate Mueller, Unity Mitford, Inge Ley and Eva Braun (and his dalliances with actresses Jenny Jugo and Leni Riefenstahl and his "intimacy" with Princess Stephanie von Hohenloe are also covered). The beginning of the book has a chapter devoted to both of Adolf Hitler's parents and their influence on his sexuality; his mother Klara Hitler, for whom he had a bizarre mother fixation, the woman he loved and had sexual fantasies about, and of course his father, Alois Sr. whose savage beatings Adolf Hitler, ultimately enjoyed .The book is 498 pages long and costs €5.25.here