Document 6700045
Transcription
Document 6700045
“Ehrenring der Stadt Wien” (Ring of Honor of the City of Vienna) presented to Kaltenbrunner on 30 January 1943. (Credit: Hermann-Historica, Auctioneers, München) Notes: • Parents: Dr. jur. Hugo Kaltenbrunner (an attorney, born 22.08.1875 in Grieskirchen, died 00.00.1938; he was himself the son of the attorney Dr. Karl Kaltenbrunner and his wife Maria Josefa Augustin). Theresia Elisabeth, née Udwardy (born 07.11.1875 in Eferding / Oberösterreich, died 00.03.1943 in Linz), daughter of Ferdinand Josef Udwardy and his wife Barbara Listner (from Böhmen). • Brothers: Dr. jur. Werner Kaltenbrunner (born 26.07.1905 in Ried, still living as of 25.03.1977). He became an attorney in Vöcklabruck and was also an SS member ( SS-Nr. 487 762 (V), holding the rank of SS-Untersturmführer with the SS-Hauptamt. Dr. jur. Roland Kaltenbrunner (born 02.01.1910 in Raab) rose to become Secretary of Commerce for Gau Oberdonau of the NSDAP in Linz, as well as an SS-Obersturmführer with the Hauptamt SS-Gericht ( SS-Nr. 309 461; Commissioned SSUntersturmführer on 09.11.1938). • Religion: Catholic; left the church with his wife, and they subsequently declared themselves “gottgläubig.” • Married on 14.01.1934 to Elisabeth ("Lisl") Eder (born 20.10.1908 in Linz; NSDAPNr. 301 490; Member of the NS-Frauenschaft), daughter of a grocery store owner. With his wife he fathered one son (born 28.02.1935) and two daughters (born 25.07.1937 and ca. 1944). In 1943, he became acquainted with his eventual mistress, Gisela Gräfin von Westarp (born 27.06.1920 in Wittenberg an der Elbe, Died 02.06.1983 in Munchen), who was then working in Himmler’s Berlin headquarters. A widow, she had been married on 16.11.1940 to Paul Wolf (born 25.02.1912 in Etterbeek, Belgium; died 07.04.1943 as an Oberfähnrich in Tunis). With his mistress, he had a son (Wolfgang) and a daughter (Ursula), twins, born on 12.03.1945. In his postwar recollections of the capture of Kaltenbrunner, “The Last Days of Ernst Kaltenbrunner,” former U.S. Army officer Robert Eliot Matteson writes of von Westarp (whom he met and interrogated in Alt Aussee on 09.05.1945): “On March 12, 1945, she bore [the] twins…, in a cowshed in Alt Aussee. I still have a letter she wrote to her mother describing the event, declaring that she ‘almost deserved the Mother Cross,’ and pointing out that Mrs. Kaltenbrunner had taken twelve years to produce only three children. One of the 408