_Actually, Germany's _*_REICHJÄGERMEISTER_*_ wasn't unpopular in Germany at all. My grandfather, for example, appreciated the fact, he was the only Nazi, that could read _*_AND_*_ write almost flawlessly_ *. . .*
@@ГенрихАйхенвоцен These antiwhites don't actually care about any war crimes. It is just a way to get White children in the school classrooms to cry and hate themselves. I saw through this at only 13 years old.
One anecdote about how flamboyant Göring was once told to me by my neighbour, who died a few years ago, aged 106. She was in Soviet captivity for a few years after WW2, since she had been working as a secretary in J. Göbbels' propaganda ministry. Göbbels was a workaholic and quite the opposite of Göring. He wore down one personal assistant per months who was asked to live in JG's appartment and had to bring his own foodstamps to pay for his provisions. My neighbour was locked up together with a woman who had a similar job in one of H. Göring's departments (HG held several offices, all of which he got handsomely paid for), and HG would treat them with extra money from his own pockets, theater tickets and even fur coats, when he liked their work.
I think it’s so important to remember that these people were humans; nothing more, nothing less. They all had good and bad points. As far as I can tell from the literature, Hitler was a good boss. He was often very personable and likeable. It’s important we remember this to remember that humans did these monstrous things. If you look for Demons out in this world who could commit evil acts, you won’t find them. Only terrible people.
I think the goring depicted in the Battle of Britain is the most accurate , it should be worth mentioning that the German actor who played him , Hein Rees I believe actually met him
it helps that you had Adolf Galland as a consultant for the film recounting his encounter with Goering, including all of his displeasure and opionon of the man
I always think of the end of the movie when Goering screams "You have failed me" at his commanders from his luxury train carriage leaving to go back to Berlin. 😂
He was closeted. Others were not. This resulted in the Night of the Long Knives. Röhm and his gay clique were purged by the other Nazis. The closeted ones.
worth mentioning that in 1936 Hitler made him a Reichsbevollmächtigter, which gave him immense power among civilian institutions and effective control over Germany's economy and industry during the buildup to war. On paper he was certainly the 2nd most powerful man, but eventually people like Himmler & Bormann started to eclipse him.
The hell they did,Himmler was hated by the german society as a whole from civilians to army to politicians,Bormann was powerful only because of his schemes but eventually he would be exposed,not even close to eclipsing Goring which was Officially named by Hitler as his succesor,how can they eclipse the heir?
As a drug addict in recovery from opiate painkillers, I can personally attest to Herman’s pomposity and grandiosity. He was a fellow “junkie “.Being in active addiction to opiates lends itself to a feeling of superiority , grandness and overall idiocy. Thank God I’m clean today. It’s a miserable way to live.
He doesn't look like a evil Villain. it's just that the victors won the war and told us that the Germans were "Evil Racists". It's funny how the Americans, who segregated African people, and called them N words. And did all sorts of horrific acts towards harmless gentle African people. Yet somehow, somehow the Germans are super evil and super racist right lol, while the Americans literally made life for Africans hell. Then the UK said ' The Evil Germans are trying to take over the world" super Ironic thing for the UK to say after having recently taken over and colonized a large portion of the earth. But nobody at that time clicked right. I mean it's so obvious that it becomes, not obvious at all. Sort of just flew right over the top of everyones head. EVIL germans have invaded Switzerland! EVIL Germans are taking over the world lol. It's just ridiculous.
Goring would've been the perfect social media star in todays world, flamboyant, showy, always seeking the opportunity to garner attention and never letting an ounce of his slip away.
Well, there is one certain figure in American politics, who shows the very same flamboyant behaviour (and probably shares quite a few of HG's believes), just usually in a less lavish wardrobe.
He was wounded in the hip in WW1, and to keep him flying his planes were fitted with a fold down flap on the port side of the cockpit to make it easier for him to get in and out. This injury is to a large extent the cause of his massive weight gain. He took over Richthoffen’s squadron (Jasta) after his death and was not popular with the remaining pilots. He inherited the commanders authority baton (known as a Geshwader stock) when taking command of the Jasta.
Was that the injury that led him to morphine addiction? I've read conflicting stories about whether that started from his injury in ww1 and the injury he had after the beer hall putsch.
For a while I thought Goring might have successfully escaped to Antarctica or even to Spain, but then I remember one thing. There was no Luftwaffe left to lift his sorry ass up there .
_Antarctica wasn't the worst idea, 'cause that's what Meyer had eaten his immense fat insulation for. But then the six-engined flying boat _*_BV 238,_*_ built especially for his exceptional weight, was destroyed at the end of April 1945. And that meant the sudden end of his plans for emigrating to _*_NEUSCHWABENLAND_** . . .*
Lmao y’all have no idea about the secret long range U boats that took thousands of Nazis down to Antarctica, the real end game was their 🛸‘s, not their conventional Air Force or jets/rockets. People have no idea of our true history since we made a secret peace deal with Germans in 1950. The rest is history…..that hardly anyone knows.
The most flamboyant thing I can think of that Herman did was make a Fallschimjaeger Panzer division and Fallschimjeager Panzergrenadier division. Basically making units that were specialized in paradrops and use them as just another Panzer or Panzergrenadier division. I know near the end of the war Fallschimjeager basically became normal infantry due to no paradrops but still redundant to waste resources to make a new Panzer and Panzergrenadier division then give it to one of the already existing divisions.
While the Fallschirm-Panzer divisions certainly had some flamboyant elements to it, its formation was not an unreasonable or redundant one. Firstly, the luftwaffe weren't going to make any large paradrops by 1942, and in 1943 with the Allied invasion coming, Germany rightfully needs heavy ground divisions like panzer divisions more than it needs light "paratrooper" division, and it would be a waste of high quality men if they weren't supported with tanks and vehicles. Secondly, making a new Luftwaffe division rather than giving the men piecemeal to army panzer divisions was important as it helped maintain unit cohesion and avoid mixing units up as the Luftwaffe Fallschirmjager had different trainings than army regular infantry, and most importantly, though they were excellent soldiers, they did not receive trainings on working and supporting tanks and vehicles in combats, unlike actual panzergrenadiers in existing panzer divisions. So it would be much better to form a new division and train them completely ground up. In the end, the two Fallschirm-Panzer divisions proved its worth in combat on the Italian front, and later on the Eastern, still a formidable opponent to the Allies up till the very end of war.
More of these historical documentaries on figures, please! I especially appreciate the backdrop with historical films. Perhaps you can use your "in the movies" format for certain historical figures to see how they're often portrayed?
@@JohnnyJohnsonEsq I'd say it's a healthy direction for the channel. I think a video on Napoleon and his portrayals on film could be an intriguing one, especially for a very polarizing and nearly legendary figure.
“It was very easy, it has nothing to do with Nazism, it has something to do with human nature. You can do it in a Nazi, socialist, communist regime, in a monarchy and even in a democracy. The only thing that needs to be done to enslave people is to scare them. If you manage to find a way to scare people, you can make them do what you want.”
The guards at Nuremberg were not Americans (though nominally under the Command of Allied Officers) but in fact Germans mostly former SS men. Not too much of a stretch to figure out who gave him the cyanide. Point of fact when he surrendered he was not wearing the Walther PPK but rather a very large Colt New Service revolver in .45 Colt. The American Officer who took his surrender kept it for many years and I believe it now resides in the WWII Museum in New Orleans.
He was liked and admired by many of the Americans. Herbert Stivers admitted to being approached by outside sources and talked into giving Goring an ink pen with what he thought was drugs inside. An OSS man also claimed responsibility.
@@tavish4699 they were Estonian SS troops, they specifically guarded the prison. They wore American uniforms during this. Mark Felton did a video on them
The blue baton he received when becoming Generalfeldmarschall. It was blue, was for all later Luftwaffe Generalfeldmarschalls. The Heer had red. When Göring became Reichsmarschall, he received the unique white baton.
I remember reading about the making of Battle of Britain (1969) that Goring often wore pink leather boots but the writers decided that this might not be well received if included in the film so they eschewed this detail.
@@micahthezilla9432 Hey Micah... it really is a nice museum West Point has. Like I said we visited many years ago... but I'll bet the displays have only gotten better. But hey, if you're in the area still... here's another GREAT museum for you... The American Heritage Museum in Hudson Massachusetts. There you will see... drumroll please... one of the few remaining PANTHER TANKS in the world. I've been there... and yes, I was able to touch the Panther, lol. Go online to check the museum out. Take care my friend. 👍🏽🇺🇸
If I remember my history correctly, after he got injured in the leg in the Munich putsch, he became morbidly obese and addicted to pain relieving medicine (like morphine, right?). Kinda like Henry 8th, don't you think? Once fit and very athletic, after a leg injury becomes a fat slob. Cheers, great informative video!
Late war Göring reminds me of that kid from School of Rock who was more interested in designing crazy outfits for the band, instead of playing the actual music.
Im not sure if Goring made any big mistakes but I think reasons why the Luftwaffe failed is because the allies had better supplies, they decoded the axis enigma machines which made sure Germany would lose critital supply shipments, The Germans did not have a capable long range bomber because they were not planning for another world war. I think most of the faults of the Luftwaffe were rather incidental and due to logistics and unforseen events rather than actual tactical incompetency. Ultimately they failed because they were spread too thin and did not have the resources the allies had. There's also the factor that one man isnt the entire organization.
@@krel3358 He was the big man. Nobody could work with him. Ernst Udet and Hans Jeschonnek killed themselves in despair. Milch and Galland fought with him throughout the war. He was a buffoon from a different era. Had the Luftwaffe been better managed, it would have been a far more powerful weapon.
@@TheSMR1969 The Germans were doomed before they even attacked Poland. A tactical Air Force attempting to fight a strategic war was guaranteed to fail. A lack of innovation was apparent early on. They ended the war with much of the equipment they started with. The jets were an expensive diversion which achieved nothing. Göring was on a downward spiral after his failure in 1940. Stalingrad sealed his fate. His shoddy treatment of the RLV pilots was particularly crass.
@@johnearle1 absolutely not in my opinion, Germany easily took out Poland and most of Europe, if he had kept his word at the Ribbentrop pact and just put full focus on Britain, he would have crushed Britain, you're being far too harsh, the air force of Germany had many victories as did they make many key mistakes for example in battle of Britain, it wasn't just Goering in charge, some of the best pilots of the war where German just like some of the best planes like the messerschmitt me 262. But I have no idea where you're getting the idea they were doomed regardless, the only ones that had enough production capabilities, natural resources readily available supplies was the US and the USSR, Britain stood no chance if Germany attacked them with what they attacked the USSR with, but Hitler's obsession with Nazi ideology took present (ie commiting resources to camps and wanting to wipe out USSR asap) I'd have invaded Europe, then unleashed operation Barbarossa on to Britain and crush them, I'd then build up my forces and secure the natural resources from Africa, Japan would be busy keeping the US, and thousands of miles keep them safe and sound from the battle, then once I'd built up enough force, I'd have attacked the USSR. Also don't understand how you say the jets achieved nothing, they were literally the first combat operational fighter jets, not too mention the rocket fueled fighters like the comet, again just seems like you're not giving credit where it's due
A gunstore near me also has the owners personal museum showcased throughout. Many cool gun related things, but one display was particularly random. The top of the case was "37mm flare launcher, used on screen by al Pacino in scarface on "my little friend". Bottom of case "ornate belt buckle belonging to Hermann Goring".
Goering in the first world war as kite ace we also see in the 1971 film "Von Richthofen and brow" , played by Barry Primus. And in the German TV movie titled "Der Gute Goring" (2016) in this movie you can see the relationship between Albert & Hermann Goering. Nice video John...
The list of Goering's broken promises is a subject worth studying in its own right. It says it all when he stated on the radio if an Allied aircraft gets through, 'you may call me Mayer!' I wonder how many Allied interrogators would reminded him of this at war's end! Excellently portrayed by Hein Reiss in the classic 1969 film the Battle of Britain. Adolf Galland who was a technical advisor to the film company paid him the greatest compliment, saying he was impressed with his performance and his voice actually sounded like him! Today he will probably best remembered from a quote from the film when he asked a fighter ace what do you want? to which the reply was *A squadron of Spitfires* Ironically a captured British Spitfire Mk 5 EN 380 that landed on the island of Guernsey, after running out of fuel, after shooting up a targets of opportunity in France. Was almost intact & was flown back to Germany renumbered CJ ZY, after evaluation a Daimler Benz engine was fitted becoming a 'Messerspit'. Surprisingly the Frankenstein aeroplane outperformed both the BF109 and Spitfires of the day and reached an altitude record of 41,000 feet. The aircraft was destroyed when the USAF bombed the Daimler Benz factory!
A video like this would be really cool for all the major personalities of WW2, especially the German leadership since there were a lot of quite eccentric people within it. Videos on Himmler, Tojo or McArthur in particular would be really interesting.
Hermann Göring in big movie & series: -Der Gute Göring (2016). -Valkyrie (2008). -The Bunker (1981). -Hitler (1962). -Von Richthofen and Brown (1971). WW1 Goering. -Young Indiana Jones and the Attack of the Hawkmen (1995 - serie) WW1 Goering. -Hitler: The Rise of Evil is a Canadian television miniseries. (2003. -Battle of Britain (1969) British war film Goering played bye Riess. -The Ogre (1996) Goering and his Lion at Karinhall. -The Man Who Lived at the Ritz (1989 / serie) Goering in Hotel Ritz in Paris. -Inglourious Basterds (2007) Goering in Paris. -Liberation is a film series released in 1970 and 1971, Russian warmovies. Освобождение. -The Empty Mirror (1996). Goering & Hitler in 1 room. -The Winds of War (1983) miniseries WW2. -War and Remembrance (1988) miniseries WW2. -Churchill: The Hollywood Years (2004) British war /comedy film. -Jackboots on Whitehall ( 2010) British adult animated/puppet satirical action comedy. -Nuremberg ( 2000) Canadian-American television docudrama. - The Fall of Berlin (Russian: Падение Берлина, romanized: Padeniye Berlina) is a 1950 Soviet war and propaganda film. -Allo Allo / ep. 'A fistfull of Francs" (1992) Von Strom as Hermann Goering. -The Great Dictator (1940 ) American anti-war political satire black comedy. Goering is Herring. -Die Kirschenkönigin (2004). DramaFamilyWar. Goering visits town. -Nuremberg: Nazis on Trial (2006), is a BBC documentary film. -The Last Ten Days (German: Der letzte Akt) is a 1955 . -Downfall (German: Der Untergang) is a 2004. Goering in 1945 Berlin. -"The Death of Adolf Hitler" (1973 ) a British television play. Goering in 1945 Berlin. -Inside the Third Reich (1982) television film. -Indiana Jones And the last Crusade (1989) Goering in Berlin 1938. -Countdown to War ( 1989 ) TV-film goering. -Herr Meets (1945) anti-Nazi Merrie Melodies cartoon directed by Friz Freleng. -I'll Never Heil Again (1941) short subject . -The Magic Face (1951) American drama film. - Speer und Er (literally "Speer and He", released as Speer and Hitler: The Devil's Architect) (2005). -Plane Daffy (1944 )Warner Bros. Looney Tunes cartoon. Cartoon Goering. -Munich - The Edge of War (2021) Hermann the Negotiator. -Der Gute Göring (2016) . Albert and Hermann Goering. -Nazi Murder Mysteries: (2018).
Five days before he died, he wrote a defensive letter to Churchill. Excerpt: "Today I regret my and the National Socialist Government's greatest mistake, the fateful error to believe in your discernment as a statesman. I regret to have trusted you with justifiability recognizing the world-political necessity of a peaceful and progressive (prosperous) Germany for the existence of a flourishing England. I regret that our means did not suffice to convince you at the last moment that the liquidation of Germany would also be the beginning of the liquidation of Britain's world power."
@@starventure the liquidation of Britian's empire and power in great part could be linked to the national socialist actions because outside of India, the british empire was mostly a drain of resource, one britain couldn't justify or hold after the very costly WWII (they only repaid their war debt in the XXIst century), it would have fallen apart anyway as people called for self determination and nationalism rose (case in point: India) but the war only accelerated that fact
I remember seeing his Luftwaffe baton on my first day of Infantry training years ago. As my buddy and I were looking at it some DS we’ve never seen before came up to us and asked “What do you guys think about Hitler?”. I’ll never forget that day haha
Ironic considering Goebbels was a massive womanizer and him sleeping around caused a massive issue until Hitler had to literally intervene to stop him lol
Your video on Göring was very informative. I got more out of this 12 minute video than I did a lot of others that were way longer. I really got fascinated by Göring for a bit just cause his story is just so interesting. Thank you for listing those movies. I want to watch a couple and now I can.
If Goring had been a Bond villain in the 1960s people would say he was too over the top. Also, it’s hilarious that the US Army ganked both of his stupid batons and put them in museums Stateside.
@@marclandreville6367 all the (modern, can't speak for pre-republican ones) french field marshal batons together were by comparison more restrained than either of goering's the french batons were a solid wood rod, covered in dark blue velvet and 30 gold stars, terminated at each end with a simple round, gold plated cap with a star at the end, one engraved with the holder's name and the other sporting the motto "Terror Belli, Decus Pacis" (terror of war, honor of peace) they are ornate, but simple Goering's batons... his field marshal baton is a metallic tube covered in light blue velvet, with an alternating pattern of 20 gold eagles, 10 silver/enamel balkenkreuz and 10 silver/enamel iron crosses, each end sported a large cap, plated in gold and inlaid with diamonds, one bearing a silver and enamel balkenkreuz and the other a luftwaffe eagle inlaid in diamonds, the caps bore further engravings and diamonds along their perimeter and a silver band on one bore the name, rank and date of the holder, the other sported a citation his reich marshal baton was much the same, but this time the shaft (made/covered, unsure) in ivory, and the inscriptions on platinum bands sure the french batons are ornate and one could say unnecessary (their purpose being mostly symbolic, and they still carry them to this day, if France was to name a new field marshal as the last, Alphonse Juin, died in 1962) but compared to Goering's they are downright reasonable
Years of morphine addiction from his ear drums being blown out during a decompression accident at high altitude, really affected his mind. Because Himmler had Waffen SS divisons fighting , he insisted on forming Herman Goering divisions. Military ground formations that drained Germany of needed resources and achieved very little on the battle field.
Not really. The airforce ground troops were eather literally just air force ground staff forced to serve as infantery for obvious reasons (The "Luftwaffe Field Division"s) or his very few actual combat units like the infamous Hermann Göring Panzer Division. They didnt really drain any ressources because it was effectively jsut a normal tank division staffed by primarily airforce personal that was fighting under army command in actual combat. Same thing as with the Paratroopers which were basically just regualr divisions in mid and late war. In short, it was just the same as renaming an army tank division and exchanging personal with airforce personal or reasigning them to the airforce. No drain on the military as a hole because in actual combat practice they were under army command and thereby didnt take up any ressources that were supposed to go to the army. The paratrooper divisions were actually a bigger drain on german ressources because even solely used as regualr infantery they were still getting their special airforce weaponary instead of standart german army stuff (The FNG42 gun, special uniform and special helmets for example). I mean for fucks sake the entire german army in Italy was under command of a german air force general to begin with: Kesselring
I take a lot of morphine for health issues and it's not the kind of thing that will make you act differently or unpredictable or anything, it's not even particularly intoxicating. I do believe the man was just evil and the morphine didn't have much to do with it
He was a morphine addict as early as 1923, after suffering serious wounds during the Beer Hall Putsch. He was also wounded in World War I and was probably suffering from chronic pain from one or both. I doubt that he ever was in a pressurized plane, which did not exist in Germany.
Personally, I find Goering fascinating from another angle: his involvement in the Holocaust. He held a tremendous amount of direct responsibility, but barely seemed to show any more commitment to Nazi ideology than was personally useful to him at any given time. In a way, that makes his actions all the worse; he did them not out of hate or ideological fanaticism, but because it served his personal purposes. He did it for power, money, and influence.
Goering wasn't directly involved in the holocaust, he certainly knew about what was going on, he just didn't care. Himmler and Heydrich were directly responsible to the atrocities going on in those camps.
Had a lot in common with Patton. Both Egomaniacs, and both liked dressing flamboyantly while expecting subordinates to adhere to the rules. I remember in the Patton movie where he fined a cook for not having leggings on in the kitchen, all the while he was carrying nonissue chrome or nickel colt single action cowboy guns, and putting Lt General stars on his jeep while he was still a major general.
@akriegguardsman8425 Patton was a poser and a traitor. He was the coward who led the cavalry charge against America's veterans during the Bonus Army debacle. Patton killed American women and children on orders. Burned down their homes and put them to the sword. Literally. He was a complete scumbag.
Goring was actuslly liked by many Germans. He was the only high ranking Nazi that would poke fun of himself, he also visited german cities that were bombed by the allies. Goring was also known to have a very high IQ.
Remember, German citizens in one documentary called "Hermann Goering a life" mention that even through an act, Goering was more laid back and cracked jokes, which made him more popular than most other Nazi leaders. Who tended to be stern and uptight.
the most flamboyant thing he did, at least in my mind, when captured he had not one but two suitcases full of eukodol pills... *goring was the original oxy addict, and in a big **_big_** way*
@@gregorymalchuk272 But what was never mentioned, for obvious political reasons, was that Goring cured his addiction. Goring had cured his morphine addiction via help from overseas friends in Sweden and got clinical help for his addiction, curing it by 1927.
This was a really enjoyable video. I applaud your use of movie footage to provide the visuals, and I loved your scans of Goering's various different flags - I ended up pausing the video to study them more closely. Great information and just the sort of content about the Nazi high command I enjoy. This was a random recommendation for me tonight and I'm so glad I watched. Subscribing.
Hitler once joked that Frau Goering had found her husband waving a baton over his dresser drawer and asked what he was doing. "I'm promoting my underpants to overpants!"
I had read in Count Ciano's diary that Goring had come one day to visit with him. Ciano said that Goring was fiddling around with something in his pocket and then pulled out all these beautiful diamonds that he had apparently "aquired" while on a trip to Holland. Without a word he lined them up on a window ledge and started playing with them. My guess is he was going to use them, perhaps, in another one of his custom-made bejewelled weapons projects but Ciano never said what became of them.
There is also video of his surrender where he relinquishes a US Made Smith & Wesson Revolver (I think an M&P) and I believe it is now located in a museum at West Point along with the baton.
@@acaperic9070 I just searched "Hermann Goering Smith & Wesson revolver", and it is indeed a S&W Military and Police .38 Spl revolver, located in the West Point Military Museum. Read on further to discover it is thought he purchased it in a Hamburg gun shop prior to the war.
Goring became the No.2 because he played the key if not the most important role in Nazi being elected and immediately afterward, consolidation of power, you know, the most important behind scene organizer, Hitler had oratory skills that could rile up the crowd but politics ultimately couldn't function without someone being superior at organizing the actual politics, Goring's later image painted him as a fat buffoon with few people understanding why he got the No.2 role: it ain't because of his WWI laurels, nor did he have any particularly close relationship with Hitler, he got where he sat cuz he's one of the key figures, along with Hitler himself and maybe no other, in Nazi Party that could truly be considered indispensable for Nazi's rise to power
While I enjoy all you videos this longer one as a history video is particularity good. I can imagine it takes longer with a lot of extra research behind the scenes to make, but well worth it. Hope you do more in a similar way.
Hermann Goering was the sun king of the Third Reich. 10 years ago, Herman's silk underpants were auctioned including the dubious stains that were still in them. I like the Goering movie part in "Churchill the Hollywood Years" (2004).
If you are doing a series on military leaders/characters it would be good to see one on General John Monash, the Australian General who orchestrated the battle planning which lead to breaking the stalemate in WW1.
I heard most of the guards weren't American but Germans, Hungarians etc....at least in the courtroom where hitherto the sight of US MPs was a somehow comforting sight.
I have been reading a memoir by the son of the first president of Iceland. He was in the SS and was stationed in the Caucasus Mountains late in the war. He said in his memoir during the time he was a citizen living in Berlin after the 1933 election that the gas stations would run out of fuel when Goering took his clothing to the cleaners.
Whats especially strange is compared to the other leaders of the Nazi party, is that in photos taken throughout the war, Goring was one of the few to be seen consistently smiling. Its honestly creepy how Goring appeared so quirky and joyful, even in the thick of the Nazi's invasion. It baffles me how someone could be so outwardly comical, yet no less dangerous. Goring was truly an enigma.
The man had few fears, and was quite an optimist and was really made of rubber. Even when he became the butt of jokes or his attitude during the trials. It seemed he just enjoyed simply living at all.
@@McDago100 I don't think ODing was a big issue back in day compare to now. Stresses were different, people were built different, and most if not all drugs weren't created in the jungle or a sweat shop
@@Theanimeisforme He was addicted to pharmaceuticals, so you are right about quality control. The amount he took, was unusually large. I don't the amount off the top of my head, but it was quite a bit. At Nuremburg he certainly put up a brilliant defense, but his fate was decided already. He was a charmer though.
@@McDago100 "unusually large amounts of drugs" are what every addict takes in the 21st century. actual fentanyl addicts (not opioid addicts who overdose from fentanyl toxicity due to cut and laced drugs) have an insane tolerance to fetty because its tolerability increases at an extremely high rate.
One thing i find interesting about Goring was that, out of almost all of the Nazi party inner circle, he was the only one who stayed truly faithful to his wife, never having mistresses. This despite many other Nazi party officials who praised conservative family values yet had many affairs and mistresses and Goring being a flamboyant and self obsessed character. His wife and daughter stayed staunch supporters of Goring for their entire lives and defended him at the Nuremburg trials (as Goring was the star witness at the trials and one of the few Nazi officials who were actually able to be tried). Of course, he was still a vile and reprehensible man that caused countless suffering through his actions and official positions in the war, but just an interesting fact about an interesting man.
Crossdressing didn’t help either. Speer wrote that he was shocked by Goering greeting him at his home while wearing womens nightgarb with rouge on his face. Literally a 400 lb crossdressing morphine addict in charge of the Luftwaffe, and people wonder why Hitler lost.
Probably, because that was considered an officer's execution. Allies did not grant that (citing that Hitler in the last days stripped him of all his ranks, titles and medals) primarily for avoiding to give the sentenced any sense of honor and pride. They were hanged by a wire on a meat hook with their pants down usually. And while hanging usually meant dropping so that a neck would snap, they didn't do that either - a sentenced person was left to suffocate rather than granting them a quick death. All of those reasons are why Goering requested a firing squad, and why Allies denied them. Basically, they would be killed in the same way that Nazis killed common folk who wronged them - short rope/wire hanging until strangulation. No honor or quick death for the Nazis basically. I guess some exceptions were made, there were a lot of death sentences after the war, but most got it that way, humiliated as much as possible in death, to degrade their cult of personality as much as possible.
9:25 Many of the high ranking Nazis thought they would be retained by the allies after the war ended, to help run the country. All of them became highly concerned when they found out what happened to Mussolini.
I would recommend another movie about the Nuremberg trials called "Judgement at Nuremberg" which sort of recognises this phenomenon. It mainly looked at the Judicial Figures rather than the way criminals. It was a classic drama of dilemma. It also features actors Spencer Tracey in his most favourite role and a very young William Shatner...
9:06 in the video: Mistake because that is an SS dagger, that must be a Luftwaffe sword! You did miss the film images from "Hitler the rise of Evil" from 2003. You then see Goering during and before the 1923 Putsch.
yes, the german medal from a time when speaking french was a sign of high class and education the british coat of arms is because the long family history tracing to a French Norman called "Guillaume" (William) who conquered a lot
I have always enjoyed your videos, and the content has always stood up to verification. You have missed one point, Herman G. was the architect of the Gestapo. Be that as it may, keep up the exceptional work.
Göring wearing make up and acting flamboyant? Yikes! It reminds of a 2011 article about Montana National Guard General Mayhew "Bo" Foster, who as a Captain back in 1945 had to fly the recently captured Göring to 7th Army HQ for interrogation. In a letter to his wife, Foster described Göring as "effeminate" and said "...he gave me the creeps."
I’m from the US. I visited England with one of my sons. Along our way to the biggest model store in the world we 12:09 noticed the RAF Museum. There were many Goring items. Some the heroic young man and then the WW2 ego maniac. There was a dress uniform for each era. The WW2 jacket was what my friend would call ginormous. There were winter infantry boots which were insulated with hay. You could track the decline of Germany’s wealth in The decline of Goring’s Uniforms.
The ice & bling, the pimpin clothes, the lions & tigers, the parties, the car collection and love of opiates and brandy, he would fit in with any modern rapper. Herman "Big Pimpin" Goering.
Remember well, next time you go to an art museum or many times a “natural history” museum, when you see art from places not Europe or EuroAmerica, that Goering, in some senses, was completely unremarkable for his time, because you are seeing likely and likewise stolen works
Not just unremarkable for his time, but for all times, in that regard. There's even proof of that in this very video, with it's offhand mention of his baton being at that army base museum (cuz they stole it)
You know, I hope the Luftwaffe put something in its regs after this: "You must be able to still fit in a fighter cockpit if you are going to be in charge." Something like that.
Martin Bormann was the most influential figure among Hitler’s inner circle but he was NOT the second most powerful of the Reich. To be considered as powerful leader you need prestige as well as publicity. Bormann had none as he worked from behind scene. Goring was the second most powerful Nazi without question. He is the official successor to the Führer, his military rank of Reichsmarschall outranks anyone in Wehrmacht. He has real power bases among Nazi upper echelon: commander of the Luftwaffe , leader of the Four Year Plan (in charge of German economy). Additionally he simultaneously held many high offices even if they are mainly figurehead positions: speaker of the Reichstag (German national legislature), prime minister of Prussia, etc.
At one point hitler appointed him head of the department of the interior. Goering was really upset because it had nothing to do with window treatments and interior design.
What everyone forgets is that most of the Nazi leadership were WW1 veterans with actual combat experience over protracted periods, these days they would be diagnosed as suffering from various stress and combat related psychosis. In respect of Goering, while he was a good/gifted pilot in WW1, he was no leader, the record of the Circus while he commanded was abysmal and “his” pilots lampooned him.
Apart from his contextual place in history Goring would fit into today's image obsessed, social media marketing world very well.
the perfect Aryan!
Wouldn't the existence of men like Goring be an argument that today is no more image-obsessed than the past?
Imagine Hushpuppi, but a Nazi war criminal.
_Actually, Germany's _*_REICHJÄGERMEISTER_*_ wasn't unpopular in Germany at all. My grandfather, for example, appreciated the fact, he was the only Nazi, that could read _*_AND_*_ write almost flawlessly_ *. . .*
imagine Goering in 2023 doing a medal polishing and cleaning tutorial similar to a makeup tutorial
"Dress badly and they will remember the clothes, dress impeccably and they will remember the man." - Hermann Göring
The Nazi during WW2 in a nutshell, everyone remembers their aesthetics just as much as their attrocities.
@@someguy1747If they were gonna commit war crimes, they were gonna do it in style
@@someguy1747Hiroshima? Nagasaki? Hamburg? Dresden? Gulags?
@@ГенрихАйхенвоцен These antiwhites don't actually care about any war crimes. It is just a way to get White children in the school classrooms to cry and hate themselves. I saw through this at only 13 years old.
@@mah2418Apparently you've never heard of Alexander Solzhenitsyn.
One anecdote about how flamboyant Göring was once told to me by my neighbour, who died a few years ago, aged 106. She was in Soviet captivity for a few years after WW2, since she had been working as a secretary in J. Göbbels' propaganda ministry. Göbbels was a workaholic and quite the opposite of Göring. He wore down one personal assistant per months who was asked to live in JG's appartment and had to bring his own foodstamps to pay for his provisions. My neighbour was locked up together with a woman who had a similar job in one of H. Göring's departments (HG held several offices, all of which he got handsomely paid for), and HG would treat them with extra money from his own pockets, theater tickets and even fur coats, when he liked their work.
Wow. Awesome to hear that from someone that was there...
Goering seemed like he would be a really nice guy if he wasnt, you know, a fucking nazi
Goebbels was probably hooked on amphetamines (Pervitin) like a lot of the Nazis were.
I think it’s so important to remember that these people were humans; nothing more, nothing less.
They all had good and bad points. As far as I can tell from the literature, Hitler was a good boss. He was often very personable and likeable.
It’s important we remember this to remember that humans did these monstrous things. If you look for Demons out in this world who could commit evil acts, you won’t find them. Only terrible people.
Well Goering was born from a rich family. Meanwhile Goebbels was poor and nearly committed suicide out of depression when he was failing as a writer.
I think the goring depicted in the Battle of Britain is the most accurate , it should be worth mentioning that the German actor who played him , Hein Rees I believe actually met him
Volker Spengler played Goering the BEST in 1996 "The Ogre". Check it out!
it helps that you had Adolf Galland as a consultant for the film recounting his encounter with Goering, including all of his displeasure and opionon of the man
@@WatcherMovie008 Galland also said he portrayed Goering perfectly
Better than the silent version played by mathias gnadinger in downfall
I always think of the end of the movie when Goering screams "You have failed me" at his commanders from his luxury train carriage leaving to go back to Berlin. 😂
Calling him flamboyant is a huge understatement
He was closeted.
Others were not.
This resulted in the Night of the Long Knives.
Röhm and his gay clique were purged by the other Nazis. The closeted ones.
I see what you did there.😊
@@long-hair-dont-care88.What's he'd do
Snappy dresser, liked show tunes, in love with his boss….He was Smithers!
@@Highly3666fr
worth mentioning that in 1936 Hitler made him a Reichsbevollmächtigter, which gave him immense power among civilian institutions and effective control over Germany's economy and industry during the buildup to war. On paper he was certainly the 2nd most powerful man, but eventually people like Himmler & Bormann started to eclipse him.
The hell they did,Himmler was hated by the german society as a whole from civilians to army to politicians,Bormann was powerful only because of his schemes but eventually he would be exposed,not even close to eclipsing Goring which was Officially named by Hitler as his succesor,how can they eclipse the heir?
You forget the mentioned about Albert Speer
Did y’all forget about Hess??? He was literally the only other one that could carry on National Socialism
@@Burakilbasan1Speer was close to Hitler but he wasn’t that powerful.
Bormann powerful than him?
As a drug addict in recovery from opiate painkillers, I can personally attest to Herman’s pomposity and grandiosity. He was a fellow “junkie “.Being in active addiction to opiates lends itself to a feeling of superiority , grandness and overall idiocy. Thank God I’m clean today. It’s a miserable way to live.
Congrats on your continued sobriety and thank you for sharing.
@@JohnnyJohnsonEsq Thank you. 😊
Noble…yet humble confession. Hats off for your honesty
That's verry intresting to know also congrats on being clean
Congratulation on your sobriety! Take care.
Herman Groing looks more like a James Bond Villain, than most James Bond Villains.
Considering Ian Flemming's work for the Real MI6 he probably did model a ton of his Villains after Goring
goldfinger?
@@brulsmurfyes
He doesn't look like a evil Villain. it's just that the victors won the war and told us that the Germans were "Evil Racists". It's funny how the Americans, who segregated African people, and called them N words. And did all sorts of horrific acts towards harmless gentle African people. Yet somehow, somehow the Germans are super evil and super racist right lol, while the Americans literally made life for Africans hell. Then the UK said ' The Evil Germans are trying to take over the world" super Ironic thing for the UK to say after having recently taken over and colonized a large portion of the earth. But nobody at that time clicked right. I mean it's so obvious that it becomes, not obvious at all. Sort of just flew right over the top of everyones head. EVIL germans have invaded Switzerland! EVIL Germans are taking over the world lol. It's just ridiculous.
Goring would've been the perfect social media star in todays world, flamboyant, showy, always seeking the opportunity to garner attention and never letting an ounce of his slip away.
And most importantly, complete lack of morals or humanity.
You basically described an abominable lovechild of Silvio Berlusconi and Donald Trump...
Well, there is one certain figure in American politics, who shows the very same flamboyant behaviour (and probably shares quite a few of HG's believes), just usually in a less lavish wardrobe.
Sounds like Patrick Bateman
Cancelled swiftly for being antisemitic.
He was wounded in the hip in WW1, and to keep him flying his planes were fitted with a fold down flap on the port side of the cockpit to make it easier for him to get in and out. This injury is to a large extent the cause of his massive weight gain. He took over Richthoffen’s squadron (Jasta) after his death and was not popular with the remaining pilots. He inherited the commanders authority baton (known as a Geshwader stock) when taking command of the Jasta.
Was that the injury that led him to morphine addiction? I've read conflicting stories about whether that started from his injury in ww1 and the injury he had after the beer hall putsch.
"Richtofen", "Geschwader".
@@kennymackay4134 Sorry, but the man was not an oven (ofen). His name was Manfred Albrecht Freiherr von Richthofen!
well the injury didnt directly made him gain weight obviously. he become addicted to morphine that was mostly the thing.
He wasn’t wounded in ww1 , he was wounded in the failed coup in 1923
For a while I thought Goring might have successfully escaped to Antarctica or even to Spain, but then I remember one thing. There was no Luftwaffe left to lift his sorry ass up there .
Oh sorry , I was supposed to say Argentina.
_Antarctica wasn't the worst idea, 'cause that's what Meyer had eaten his immense fat insulation for. But then the six-engined flying boat _*_BV 238,_*_ built especially for his exceptional weight, was destroyed at the end of April 1945. And that meant the sudden end of his plans for emigrating to _*_NEUSCHWABENLAND_** . . .*
Lmao y’all have no idea about the secret long range U boats that took thousands of Nazis down to Antarctica, the real end game was their 🛸‘s, not their conventional Air Force or jets/rockets.
People have no idea of our true history since we made a secret peace deal with Germans in 1950. The rest is history…..that hardly anyone knows.
@@patriotenfield3276 Argentinian here. He is in Bariloche 🎉
Iirc the Americans had a hard time airlifting him too
The most flamboyant thing I can think of that Herman did was make a Fallschimjaeger Panzer division and Fallschimjeager Panzergrenadier division. Basically making units that were specialized in paradrops and use them as just another Panzer or Panzergrenadier division. I know near the end of the war Fallschimjeager basically became normal infantry due to no paradrops but still redundant to waste resources to make a new Panzer and Panzergrenadier division then give it to one of the already existing divisions.
Private Army like all oligark’s
i mean not really Germany was making new divisions even very late in the war
after Crete, Hitler forbade any more large scale parachute assaults. Airborne troops from Allied nations also fought as regular infantry in Europe.
Not really, the HG division nearly drove the allies off the beach at Gela during Operation Husky.
While the Fallschirm-Panzer divisions certainly had some flamboyant elements to it, its formation was not an unreasonable or redundant one. Firstly, the luftwaffe weren't going to make any large paradrops by 1942, and in 1943 with the Allied invasion coming, Germany rightfully needs heavy ground divisions like panzer divisions more than it needs light "paratrooper" division, and it would be a waste of high quality men if they weren't supported with tanks and vehicles.
Secondly, making a new Luftwaffe division rather than giving the men piecemeal to army panzer divisions was important as it helped maintain unit cohesion and avoid mixing units up as the Luftwaffe Fallschirmjager had different trainings than army regular infantry, and most importantly, though they were excellent soldiers, they did not receive trainings on working and supporting tanks and vehicles in combats, unlike actual panzergrenadiers in existing panzer divisions. So it would be much better to form a new division and train them completely ground up.
In the end, the two Fallschirm-Panzer divisions proved its worth in combat on the Italian front, and later on the Eastern, still a formidable opponent to the Allies up till the very end of war.
I like the change from your usual subject, and you did it well, sir. Your summary was excellently done.
More of these historical documentaries on figures, please! I especially appreciate the backdrop with historical films. Perhaps you can use your "in the movies" format for certain historical figures to see how they're often portrayed?
Can do! It's fun to switch things up sometimes.
@@JohnnyJohnsonEsq
I'd say it's a healthy direction for the channel. I think a video on Napoleon and his portrayals on film could be an intriguing one, especially for a very polarizing and nearly legendary figure.
@@JohnnyJohnsonEsqhere’s a suggestion, the history of looting art in war
I first thought that "in the movies" is the main thing of this channel.
I read that Goring opposed the war. He didn't want to risk losing the easy life of wealth, status, and power he had by 1939.
My I get some sources. I'm interested to see.
Britain actually provoked the war
@@josephhawkins5750 Poland gave cause and Britain did the norm and said German bad.
“It was very easy, it has nothing to do with Nazism, it has something to do with human nature. You can do it in a Nazi, socialist, communist regime, in a monarchy and even in a democracy. The only thing that needs to be done to enslave people is to scare them. If you manage to find a way to scare people, you can make them do what you want.”
@josephhawkins5750 Don't know why you mentioned this but Germany still got their ass kicked!
The guards at Nuremberg were not Americans (though nominally under the Command of Allied Officers) but in fact Germans mostly former SS men. Not too much of a stretch to figure out who gave him the cyanide. Point of fact when he surrendered he was not wearing the Walther PPK but rather a very large Colt New Service revolver in .45 Colt. The American Officer who took his surrender kept it for many years and I believe it now resides in the WWII Museum in New Orleans.
Estonian SS, 💊by OSS /Dulles
He was liked and admired by many of the Americans. Herbert Stivers admitted to being approached by outside sources and talked into giving Goring an ink pen with what he thought was drugs inside. An OSS man also claimed responsibility.
Bullshit
The guards were not mostly ss
There was a small number of them but they werent the norm
@@tavish4699 they were Estonian SS troops, they specifically guarded the prison. They wore American uniforms during this. Mark Felton did a video on them
@@kentuckyace1068 i know but first of all they weere stated to be germans which was wrong
and secondly they were only one of many guard units
Also known as Herr Meier in Germany. "If as much as a single enemy aircraft flies over German soil, my name is Meier!"
"Meyer! Meyer! Where is Meyer?! Where is his Luftwaffe?!"
_M e _*_Y_*_ e r . . ._
"If only one enemy plane will fly over the Reichs's territory, I want to be named Meier" - would be closer to the original quote.
First name Oscar. Why not; he was a hot dog.
I wonder how soon he realised that once again he was on the losing side?
"His refusal to accept any accountability at the trial only solidified him as an evil manipulative man"
Nope, that just makes him a Politician.
haha yess
useful idiot
what's the difference
Why'd you say politician twice?
You think (most) politicians are evil? What country are you from??
The blue baton he received when becoming Generalfeldmarschall. It was blue, was for all later Luftwaffe Generalfeldmarschalls. The Heer had red. When Göring became Reichsmarschall, he received the unique white baton.
This has to be the only "double-marshall" in history.
@@lucianene7741 If you would like to say it like that.
Your relaxed cadence is really easy to listen to and helps me retain and remember information better. Thank you!
Thanks for that kind feedback some people find my voice boring so it's good to hear lol
I remember reading about the making of Battle of Britain (1969) that Goring often wore pink leather boots but the writers decided that this might not be well received if included in the film so they eschewed this detail.
I remember that as well. Good decision as it may have seemed cartoonish in the film.
Wouldn’t want to make Goering look bad
Field marshal Von Manstein:,, Goring's uniform were like of Cuban admiral,,
@@FoxWolfWorld Just wouldn't be believable to most people.
I gotta ask where exactly did you read about this detail? It sounded so funny I tried looking it up but failed to find anything myself
Made a road trip to the West Point Museum years ago. We did see Goerings baton... and it IS impressive!!
I was just there today! I caught a glimpse of it but I was on a time hack so, I didn’t take the time to study it more.
@@micahthezilla9432 Hey Micah... it really is a nice museum West Point has. Like I said we visited many years ago... but I'll bet the displays have only gotten better.
But hey, if you're in the area still... here's another GREAT museum for you... The American Heritage Museum in Hudson Massachusetts. There you will see... drumroll please... one of the few remaining PANTHER TANKS in the world. I've been there... and yes, I was able to touch the Panther, lol.
Go online to check the museum out.
Take care my friend.
👍🏽🇺🇸
@@jerryjeromehawkins1712 AAAAAAH LUCKYYYYYYY!!! I gotta put that on my bucket list or at least a to-do list if I’m back up in the North.
If I remember my history correctly, after he got injured in the leg in the Munich putsch, he became morbidly obese and addicted to pain relieving medicine (like morphine, right?). Kinda like Henry 8th, don't you think? Once fit and very athletic, after a leg injury becomes a fat slob. Cheers, great informative video!
2 Jewish sisters helped heal him and he remembered them later during the holocaust. Goering helped them get out of Germany
But in contrast to Henry the 8th he remained charismatic and flamboyand all the way.
@@nobody-hp7fg: Hitler himself allowed the jewish doctor who treated his dying mother to emigrate to the USA.
Thanks for keeping his history family-friendly. Catch ya next time Johnny.
So weird, I just found out about your channel a few hours ago and I've been binging it, now there's a new episode.
Late war Göring reminds me of that kid from School of Rock who was more interested in designing crazy outfits for the band, instead of playing the actual music.
Fancy pants?
How Liberace ever got to run an Air Force into the ground is beyond me.
Im not sure if Goring made any big mistakes but I think reasons why the Luftwaffe failed is because the allies had better supplies, they decoded the axis enigma machines which made sure Germany would lose critital supply shipments, The Germans did not have a capable long range bomber because they were not planning for another world war. I think most of the faults of the Luftwaffe were rather incidental and due to logistics and unforseen events rather than actual tactical incompetency. Ultimately they failed because they were spread too thin and did not have the resources the allies had. There's also the factor that one man isnt the entire organization.
@@krel3358 He was the big man. Nobody could work with him. Ernst Udet and Hans Jeschonnek killed themselves in despair. Milch and Galland fought with him throughout the war. He was a buffoon from a different era. Had the Luftwaffe been better managed, it would have been a far more powerful weapon.
@@johnearle1far more powerful but ultimately irrelevant, it was the decision to attack the USSR that doomed the Germans.
@@TheSMR1969 The Germans were doomed before they even attacked Poland. A tactical Air Force attempting to fight a strategic war was guaranteed to fail. A lack of innovation was apparent early on. They ended the war with much of the equipment they started with. The jets were an expensive diversion which achieved nothing. Göring was on a downward spiral after his failure in 1940. Stalingrad sealed his fate. His shoddy treatment of the RLV pilots was particularly crass.
@@johnearle1 absolutely not in my opinion, Germany easily took out Poland and most of Europe, if he had kept his word at the Ribbentrop pact and just put full focus on Britain, he would have crushed Britain, you're being far too harsh, the air force of Germany had many victories as did they make many key mistakes for example in battle of Britain, it wasn't just Goering in charge, some of the best pilots of the war where German just like some of the best planes like the messerschmitt me 262.
But I have no idea where you're getting the idea they were doomed regardless, the only ones that had enough production capabilities, natural resources readily available supplies was the US and the USSR, Britain stood no chance if Germany attacked them with what they attacked the USSR with, but Hitler's obsession with Nazi ideology took present (ie commiting resources to camps and wanting to wipe out USSR asap)
I'd have invaded Europe, then unleashed operation Barbarossa on to Britain and crush them, I'd then build up my forces and secure the natural resources from Africa, Japan would be busy keeping the US, and thousands of miles keep them safe and sound from the battle, then once I'd built up enough force, I'd have attacked the USSR.
Also don't understand how you say the jets achieved nothing, they were literally the first combat operational fighter jets, not too mention the rocket fueled fighters like the comet, again just seems like you're not giving credit where it's due
A gunstore near me also has the owners personal museum showcased throughout. Many cool gun related things, but one display was particularly random. The top of the case was "37mm flare launcher, used on screen by al Pacino in scarface on "my little friend". Bottom of case "ornate belt buckle belonging to Hermann Goring".
I’d read the soldier in charge of Goring’s continued living wasn’t punished for his suicide, but that he never rose from rank from that day on.
Nicely done, this is a very good video and it would be good to see other videos of other leaders like Eisenhower, Montgomery, Haig, Pershing.
Goering in the first world war as kite ace we also see in the 1971 film "Von Richthofen and brow" , played by Barry Primus. And in the German TV movie titled "Der Gute Goring" (2016) in this movie you can see the relationship between Albert & Hermann Goering. Nice video John...
The list of Goering's broken promises is a subject worth studying in its own right. It says it all when he stated on the radio if an Allied aircraft gets through, 'you may call me Mayer!' I wonder how many Allied interrogators would reminded him of this at war's end! Excellently portrayed by Hein Reiss in the classic 1969 film the Battle of Britain. Adolf Galland who was a technical advisor to the film company paid him the greatest compliment, saying he was impressed with his performance and his voice actually sounded like him! Today he will probably best remembered from a quote from the film when he asked a fighter ace what do you want? to which the reply was *A squadron of Spitfires*
Ironically a captured British Spitfire Mk 5 EN 380 that landed on the island of Guernsey, after running out of fuel, after shooting up a targets of opportunity in France. Was almost intact & was flown back to Germany renumbered CJ ZY, after evaluation a Daimler Benz engine was fitted becoming a 'Messerspit'. Surprisingly the Frankenstein aeroplane outperformed both the BF109 and Spitfires of the day and reached an altitude record of 41,000 feet. The aircraft was destroyed when the USAF bombed the Daimler Benz factory!
He never said the "i want a squad of spitfires"
Broken promises … our government hasn’t changed
@@HeroInTheSun Whilst I agree with your comment, we're talking about Goering as the subject of our conversation!
I knew I was tired when I thought I was watching a Mark Felton video until the very end. Keep these vids coming J
A video like this would be really cool for all the major personalities of WW2, especially the German leadership since there were a lot of quite eccentric people within it. Videos on Himmler, Tojo or McArthur in particular would be really interesting.
Hermann Göring in big movie & series:
-Der Gute Göring (2016).
-Valkyrie (2008).
-The Bunker (1981).
-Hitler (1962).
-Von Richthofen and Brown (1971). WW1 Goering.
-Young Indiana Jones and the Attack of the Hawkmen (1995 - serie) WW1 Goering.
-Hitler: The Rise of Evil is a Canadian television miniseries. (2003.
-Battle of Britain (1969) British war film Goering played bye Riess.
-The Ogre (1996) Goering and his Lion at Karinhall.
-The Man Who Lived at the Ritz (1989 / serie) Goering in Hotel Ritz in Paris.
-Inglourious Basterds (2007) Goering in Paris.
-Liberation is a film series released in 1970 and 1971, Russian warmovies. Освобождение.
-The Empty Mirror (1996). Goering & Hitler in 1 room.
-The Winds of War (1983) miniseries WW2.
-War and Remembrance (1988) miniseries WW2.
-Churchill: The Hollywood Years (2004) British war /comedy film.
-Jackboots on Whitehall ( 2010) British adult animated/puppet satirical action comedy.
-Nuremberg ( 2000) Canadian-American television docudrama.
- The Fall of Berlin (Russian: Падение Берлина, romanized: Padeniye Berlina) is a 1950 Soviet war and propaganda film.
-Allo Allo / ep. 'A fistfull of Francs" (1992) Von Strom as Hermann Goering.
-The Great Dictator (1940 ) American anti-war political satire black comedy. Goering is Herring.
-Die Kirschenkönigin (2004). DramaFamilyWar. Goering visits town.
-Nuremberg: Nazis on Trial (2006), is a BBC documentary film.
-The Last Ten Days (German: Der letzte Akt) is a 1955 .
-Downfall (German: Der Untergang) is a 2004. Goering in 1945 Berlin.
-"The Death of Adolf Hitler" (1973 ) a British television play. Goering in 1945 Berlin.
-Inside the Third Reich (1982) television film.
-Indiana Jones And the last Crusade (1989) Goering in Berlin 1938.
-Countdown to War ( 1989 ) TV-film goering.
-Herr Meets (1945) anti-Nazi Merrie Melodies cartoon directed by Friz Freleng.
-I'll Never Heil Again (1941) short subject .
-The Magic Face (1951) American drama film.
- Speer und Er (literally "Speer and He", released as Speer and Hitler: The Devil's Architect) (2005).
-Plane Daffy (1944 )Warner Bros. Looney Tunes cartoon. Cartoon Goering.
-Munich - The Edge of War (2021) Hermann the Negotiator.
-Der Gute Göring (2016) . Albert and Hermann Goering.
-Nazi Murder Mysteries: (2018).
Five days before he died, he wrote a defensive letter to Churchill. Excerpt: "Today I regret my and the National Socialist Government's greatest mistake, the fateful error to believe in your discernment as a statesman. I regret to have trusted you with justifiability recognizing the world-political necessity of a peaceful and progressive (prosperous) Germany for the existence of a flourishing England. I regret that our means did not suffice to convince you at the last moment that the liquidation of Germany would also be the beginning of the liquidation of Britain's world power."
He wasn’t wrong. The UK would become a has been with a decade after that letter.
@@starventure All empires fall. It's futile to build and maintain an empire, a lesson that Russia and China have yet to learn.
@@ostrich67 The key to longevity, I believe, is decentralization. Empires are too dependent on one place, one person.
@@ostrich67 a statement entirely irrelevant to the OP
@@starventure the liquidation of Britian's empire and power in great part could be linked to the national socialist actions
because outside of India, the british empire was mostly a drain of resource, one britain couldn't justify or hold after the very costly WWII (they only repaid their war debt in the XXIst century), it would have fallen apart anyway as people called for self determination and nationalism rose (case in point: India) but the war only accelerated that fact
I remember seeing his Luftwaffe baton on my first day of Infantry training years ago. As my buddy and I were looking at it some DS we’ve never seen before came up to us and asked “What do you guys think about Hitler?”. I’ll never forget that day haha
Utter bs Walter Mitty
lol what are you even on about
Was that at the museum in Georgia that the narrator mentioned?
I wish someone would do a video just on Gorings model railroad he had. People have touched on it but have not fully explored just this topic
Hitler has only got one ball
Goering has two but very small
Himler is rather simlar
But poor old Goebbles has no balls at all
Ironic considering Goebbels was a massive womanizer and him sleeping around caused a massive issue until Hitler had to literally intervene to stop him lol
That was good man. LOL..
Goebbels had six children or so !
Goebbels got lots of ass & had balls of steel to stay at his post in Berlin til the end.
Your video on Göring was very informative. I got more out of this 12 minute video than I did a lot of others that were way longer. I really got fascinated by Göring for a bit just cause his story is just so interesting.
Thank you for listing those movies. I want to watch a couple and now I can.
If Goring had been a Bond villain in the 1960s people would say he was too over the top.
Also, it’s hilarious that the US Army ganked both of his stupid batons and put them in museums Stateside.
French field marshals also carried marshal's batons, until 1918, and they were also ornate. Were the French stupid?
@@marclandreville6367 all the (modern, can't speak for pre-republican ones) french field marshal batons together were by comparison more restrained than either of goering's
the french batons were a solid wood rod, covered in dark blue velvet and 30 gold stars, terminated at each end with a simple round, gold plated cap with a star at the end, one engraved with the holder's name and the other sporting the motto "Terror Belli, Decus Pacis" (terror of war, honor of peace)
they are ornate, but simple
Goering's batons...
his field marshal baton is a metallic tube covered in light blue velvet, with an alternating pattern of 20 gold eagles, 10 silver/enamel balkenkreuz and 10 silver/enamel iron crosses, each end sported a large cap, plated in gold and inlaid with diamonds, one bearing a silver and enamel balkenkreuz and the other a luftwaffe eagle inlaid in diamonds, the caps bore further engravings and diamonds along their perimeter and a silver band on one bore the name, rank and date of the holder, the other sported a citation
his reich marshal baton was much the same, but this time the shaft (made/covered, unsure) in ivory, and the inscriptions on platinum bands
sure the french batons are ornate and one could say unnecessary (their purpose being mostly symbolic, and they still carry them to this day, if France was to name a new field marshal as the last, Alphonse Juin, died in 1962) but compared to Goering's they are downright reasonable
the french also wore bright red pants during the first year of the war lol
Years of morphine addiction from his ear drums being blown out during a decompression accident at high altitude, really affected his mind.
Because Himmler had Waffen SS divisons fighting , he insisted on forming Herman Goering divisions. Military ground formations that drained Germany of needed resources and achieved very little on the battle field.
Not really. The airforce ground troops were eather literally just air force ground staff forced to serve as infantery for obvious reasons (The "Luftwaffe Field Division"s) or his very few actual combat units like the infamous Hermann Göring Panzer Division. They didnt really drain any ressources because it was effectively jsut a normal tank division staffed by primarily airforce personal that was fighting under army command in actual combat. Same thing as with the Paratroopers which were basically just regualr divisions in mid and late war.
In short, it was just the same as renaming an army tank division and exchanging personal with airforce personal or reasigning them to the airforce.
No drain on the military as a hole because in actual combat practice they were under army command and thereby didnt take up any ressources that were supposed to go to the army.
The paratrooper divisions were actually a bigger drain on german ressources because even solely used as regualr infantery they were still getting their special airforce weaponary instead of standart german army stuff (The FNG42 gun, special uniform and special helmets for example).
I mean for fucks sake the entire german army in Italy was under command of a german air force general to begin with: Kesselring
I take a lot of morphine for health issues and it's not the kind of thing that will make you act differently or unpredictable or anything, it's not even particularly intoxicating.
I do believe the man was just evil and the morphine didn't have much to do with it
He was a morphine addict as early as 1923, after suffering serious wounds during the Beer Hall Putsch. He was also wounded in World War I and was probably suffering from chronic pain from one or both. I doubt that he ever was in a pressurized plane, which did not exist in Germany.
He had no morphine addiction by 1927. He sought clinical help for it during the inter war years from friends living in Sweden
It was more likely oxycodone not morphine...but any who lmao😏
I wouldn’t have sentenced him to death, i would have sentenced him to life with out parole. So he could think long and hard for what he had done…
I held that baton in the thumbnail at Ft. Benning, GA in 2000.
Personally, I find Goering fascinating from another angle: his involvement in the Holocaust. He held a tremendous amount of direct responsibility, but barely seemed to show any more commitment to Nazi ideology than was personally useful to him at any given time. In a way, that makes his actions all the worse; he did them not out of hate or ideological fanaticism, but because it served his personal purposes. He did it for power, money, and influence.
Goering wasn't directly involved in the holocaust, he certainly knew about what was going on, he just didn't care. Himmler and Heydrich were directly responsible to the atrocities going on in those camps.
Goering's motives are the default, it's the leaders who are truly loyal to, and motivated by, the ideology they espouse who are the outliers.
A top tier collector friend of mine has Goering’s traveling suitcase that he took to Nuremberg. You can still smell the cologne.
Had a lot in common with Patton. Both Egomaniacs, and both liked dressing flamboyantly while expecting subordinates to adhere to the rules. I remember in the Patton movie where he fined a cook for not having leggings on in the kitchen, all the while he was carrying nonissue chrome or nickel colt single action cowboy guns, and putting Lt General stars on his jeep while he was still a major general.
Yea but Patton had the skill to back it up unlike borman over here
@@akriegguardsman Did he now?
Imma hit X to doubt on that one chief
@@Elenrai look at what Patton did, he beat the Germans everywhere he went
@akriegguardsman8425
Patton was a poser and a traitor.
He was the coward who led the cavalry charge against America's veterans during the Bonus Army debacle. Patton killed American women and children on orders. Burned down their homes and put them to the sword. Literally.
He was a complete scumbag.
@@akriegguardsman Goring was an ace. You’re a nobody. No one’s going to listen to you
Goring was actuslly liked by many Germans. He was the only high ranking Nazi that would poke fun of himself, he also visited german cities that were bombed by the allies. Goring was also known to have a very high IQ.
In addition… he was a monster… who cares if he was liked or not.
@gna8an in addition, you're a dumbass.
Remember, German citizens in one documentary called "Hermann Goering a life" mention that even through an act, Goering was more laid back and cracked jokes, which made him more popular than most other Nazi leaders. Who tended to be stern and uptight.
the most flamboyant thing he did, at least in my mind, when captured he had not one but two suitcases full of eukodol pills...
*goring was the original oxy addict, and in a big **_big_** way*
Damn the plug. I am the plug!
He was shot through the leg while in the air in the first world war and was in chronic pain thereafter.
@@gregorymalchuk272 But what was never mentioned, for obvious political reasons, was that Goring cured his addiction. Goring had cured his morphine addiction via help from overseas friends in Sweden and got clinical help for his addiction, curing it by 1927.
@@gregorymalchuk272 he was a junkie, sorry bout it
Well presented clip, good job 👏
This was a really enjoyable video. I applaud your use of movie footage to provide the visuals, and I loved your scans of Goering's various different flags - I ended up pausing the video to study them more closely. Great information and just the sort of content about the Nazi high command I enjoy. This was a random recommendation for me tonight and I'm so glad I watched. Subscribing.
Thanks so much for the feedback. Very encouraging. And welcome to the channel!
I would quite enjoy a series of videos on the various personalities of WWII and even other wars.
Hey Johnny, today we tend to underestimate 'den Dicken'! Great episode. Best from Hamburg, Germany
Oh snap, I thought I clicked on a Marc Felton video. Having watched a lot of his videos, this seems like a very good summary.
Hitler once joked that Frau Goering had found her husband waving a baton over his dresser drawer and asked what he was doing.
"I'm promoting my underpants to overpants!"
Ha Ha, good joke
I had read in Count Ciano's diary that Goring had come one day to visit with him. Ciano said that Goring was fiddling around with something in his pocket and then pulled out all these beautiful diamonds that he had apparently "aquired" while on a trip to Holland. Without a word he lined them up on a window ledge and started playing with them. My guess is he was going to use them, perhaps, in another one of his custom-made bejewelled weapons projects but Ciano never said what became of them.
There is also video of his surrender where he relinquishes a US Made Smith & Wesson Revolver (I think an M&P) and I believe it is now located in a museum at West Point along with the baton.
I dont think s&w began their m&p series until this century.
wasn't it a colt?
@@acaperic9070 I just searched "Hermann Goering Smith & Wesson revolver", and it is indeed a S&W Military and Police .38 Spl revolver, located in the West Point Military Museum. Read on further to discover it is thought he purchased it in a Hamburg gun shop prior to the war.
@@JF-xq6fr Oh wow! I had no idea the "S&W M&P " series is from the old school.
@@ManDuderGuy Amazing isn't it - this series of revolvers came about in 1899; the 19th century.
Fantastic video, JJ! Maybe the best of yours I have seen so far. Hope you do more videos of war figureheads.
Excellent video. Quite a step upwards, mate. Top notch JJ 😊
A complicated man. I doubt that he would be so evil if he didn't have chronic pain and his first wife didn't die.
Goring became the No.2 because he played the key if not the most important role in Nazi being elected and immediately afterward, consolidation of power, you know, the most important behind scene organizer, Hitler had oratory skills that could rile up the crowd but politics ultimately couldn't function without someone being superior at organizing the actual politics, Goring's later image painted him as a fat buffoon with few people understanding why he got the No.2 role: it ain't because of his WWI laurels, nor did he have any particularly close relationship with Hitler, he got where he sat cuz he's one of the key figures, along with Hitler himself and maybe no other, in Nazi Party that could truly be considered indispensable for Nazi's rise to power
Very true. He also was one of the ministers in Hitler’s first cabinet.
Though he did later develop that flamboyant personality.
Good video. Just wanted to say thanks for putting the movie titles into the clip. Not all do this.
While I enjoy all you videos this longer one as a history video is particularity good. I can imagine it takes longer with a lot of extra research behind the scenes to make, but well worth it. Hope you do more in a similar way.
11:54 where did you get this footage? I would like to see it in full.
Hermann Goering was the sun king of the Third Reich. 10 years ago, Herman's silk underpants were auctioned including the dubious stains that were still in them. I like the Goering movie part in "Churchill the Hollywood Years" (2004).
Yes, that's very funny! Then Hermann cuts a canvas out of a picture frame and then says that precision bombing is utopian.😂🍎🍎
Its interesting that Hilter allowed him to be so flashy and have all sorts of special uniforms and ranks. His ego wasn't threatened
Hitler was like let him enjoy it. It’s not going to last long. He worried about being flashy, I’m about to push us to war😂😂
If you are doing a series on military leaders/characters it would be good to see one on General John Monash, the Australian General who orchestrated the battle planning which lead to breaking the stalemate in WW1.
I heard most of the guards weren't American but Germans, Hungarians etc....at least in the courtroom where hitherto the sight of US MPs was a somehow comforting sight.
I have been reading a memoir by the son of the first president of Iceland. He was in the SS and was stationed in the Caucasus Mountains late in the war. He said in his memoir during the time he was a citizen living in Berlin after the 1933 election that the gas stations would run out of fuel when Goering took his clothing to the cleaners.
Who designed all those spectacular embroidered flags for him at 3:20 ?
Hermann: "Does this outfit make me look fat?"
Ha Ha, good joke
Ladies and gentlemen, I present to you the biggest bomber in the Luftwaffe… Herman Goering!
*Meyer
@@warlordofbritanniawho knows, knows
I like the Three Stooges episode "You Natzi Spy" where Curly played the part of Goring. He had medals front and back. Even on his butt.
Would there be a link between the batons and holding faces in ancient Rome?
There was a scale called a Göring. What is the amount of medals a adult man could carry on their chest
Thank you for all the adoration. Much appreciated. 👍
Whats especially strange is compared to the other leaders of the Nazi party, is that in photos taken throughout the war, Goring was one of the few to be seen consistently smiling. Its honestly creepy how Goring appeared so quirky and joyful, even in the thick of the Nazi's invasion. It baffles me how someone could be so outwardly comical, yet no less dangerous. Goring was truly an enigma.
The man had few fears, and was quite an optimist and was really made of rubber. Even when he became the butt of jokes or his attitude during the trials. It seemed he just enjoyed simply living at all.
If you were on as much dope as he was, you would either be smiling or OD.
@@McDago100 I don't think ODing was a big issue back in day compare to now. Stresses were different, people were built different, and most if not all drugs weren't created in the jungle or a sweat shop
@@Theanimeisforme He was addicted to pharmaceuticals, so you are right about quality control. The amount he took, was unusually large. I don't the amount off the top of my head, but it was quite a bit. At Nuremburg he certainly put up a brilliant defense, but his fate was decided already. He was a charmer though.
@@McDago100 "unusually large amounts of drugs" are what every addict takes in the 21st century. actual fentanyl addicts (not opioid addicts who overdose from fentanyl toxicity due to cut and laced drugs) have an insane tolerance to fetty because its tolerability increases at an extremely high rate.
One thing i find interesting about Goring was that, out of almost all of the Nazi party inner circle, he was the only one who stayed truly faithful to his wife, never having mistresses. This despite many other Nazi party officials who praised conservative family values yet had many affairs and mistresses and Goring being a flamboyant and self obsessed character. His wife and daughter stayed staunch supporters of Goring for their entire lives and defended him at the Nuremburg trials (as Goring was the star witness at the trials and one of the few Nazi officials who were actually able to be tried). Of course, he was still a vile and reprehensible man that caused countless suffering through his actions and official positions in the war, but just an interesting fact about an interesting man.
His addiction to morphine was his undoing.
Crossdressing didn’t help either. Speer wrote that he was shocked by Goering greeting him at his home while wearing womens nightgarb with rouge on his face. Literally a 400 lb crossdressing morphine addict in charge of the Luftwaffe, and people wonder why Hitler lost.
But he overcame this addiction by 1927, after seeking clinical treatment in Sweden through his foreign friends.
Nice vid, Mark Felton levels of production here, good job!
Didn’t he requested a firing squad when he was sentenced to death but the court refused his requests?
Probably, because that was considered an officer's execution. Allies did not grant that (citing that Hitler in the last days stripped him of all his ranks, titles and medals) primarily for avoiding to give the sentenced any sense of honor and pride. They were hanged by a wire on a meat hook with their pants down usually. And while hanging usually meant dropping so that a neck would snap, they didn't do that either - a sentenced person was left to suffocate rather than granting them a quick death.
All of those reasons are why Goering requested a firing squad, and why Allies denied them. Basically, they would be killed in the same way that Nazis killed common folk who wronged them - short rope/wire hanging until strangulation.
No honor or quick death for the Nazis basically. I guess some exceptions were made, there were a lot of death sentences after the war, but most got it that way, humiliated as much as possible in death, to degrade their cult of personality as much as possible.
Yes, he did. So did Keitl and the other generals…
It was deliberate to execute them as ordinary civilian criminals not with privilege as soldiers.
@@Wustenfuchs109 You're pretty dumb if you think the Nazis excuted more common folk by extra lengthy and torturous methods than just by shooting them.
9:25 Many of the high ranking Nazis thought they would be retained by the allies after the war ended, to help run the country.
All of them became highly concerned when they found out what happened to Mussolini.
I would recommend another movie about the Nuremberg trials called "Judgement at Nuremberg" which sort of recognises this phenomenon. It mainly looked at the Judicial Figures rather than the way criminals. It was a classic drama of dilemma. It also features actors Spencer Tracey in his most favourite role and a very young William Shatner...
9:06 in the video: Mistake because that is an SS dagger, that must be a Luftwaffe sword! You did miss the film images from "Hitler the rise of Evil" from 2003. You then see Goering during and before the 1923 Putsch.
Interesting how the highest German medal uses "Pour le Merit"
Same I guess as the the British Coat of Arms has "Dieu et Droit" or something like that
yes, the german medal from a time when speaking french was a sign of high class and education
the british coat of arms is because the long family history tracing to a French Norman called "Guillaume" (William) who conquered a lot
I saw this at the Infantry museum at Ft. Benning
I have always enjoyed your videos, and the content has always stood up to verification. You have missed one point, Herman G. was the architect of the Gestapo. Be that as it may, keep up the exceptional work.
Göring wearing make up and acting flamboyant? Yikes! It reminds of a 2011 article about Montana National Guard General Mayhew "Bo" Foster, who as a Captain back in 1945 had to fly the recently captured Göring to 7th Army HQ for interrogation. In a letter to his wife, Foster described Göring as "effeminate" and said "...he gave me the creeps."
That's my take. I think he was cross dressing before it was cool.
@@scottw5315 There is no evidence to suggest Goering was a cross dresser.
I’m from the US. I visited England with one of my sons. Along our way to the biggest model store in the world we 12:09 noticed the RAF Museum.
There were many Goring items. Some the heroic young man and then the WW2 ego maniac. There was a dress uniform for each era. The WW2 jacket was what my friend would call ginormous. There were winter infantry boots which were insulated with hay. You could track the decline of Germany’s wealth in The decline of Goring’s Uniforms.
The ice & bling, the pimpin clothes, the lions & tigers, the parties, the car collection and love of opiates and brandy, he would fit in with any modern rapper.
Herman "Big Pimpin" Goering.
Goring had one hell of a personality.
He was such an old queen
Yo what was that clip in the beginning from.
That comment from the Italian at 5:58 is a sicker burn than the bombing of Dresden
Remember well, next time you go to an art museum or many times a “natural history” museum, when you see art from places not Europe or EuroAmerica, that Goering, in some senses, was completely unremarkable for his time, because you are seeing likely and likewise stolen works
Not just unremarkable for his time, but for all times, in that regard. There's even proof of that in this very video, with it's offhand mention of his baton being at that army base museum (cuz they stole it)
As always great job Johnny! P.s. little request: I hope to see same kind of video about Erwin Rommel, opposite to Göring's attitude.
I'd enjoy making such a video! Though a big project you'd have to give me some time on that one
You know, I hope the Luftwaffe put something in its regs after this: "You must be able to still fit in a fighter cockpit if you are going to be in charge." Something like that.
Yes, Goring was technically second in command of The Third Reich; but most historians acknowledge that Boorman was the 2nd most powerful Nazi leader.
Martin Bormann*, AH's chief of staff and chairman of the NS party.
Martin Bormann was the most influential figure among Hitler’s inner circle but he was NOT the second most powerful of the Reich. To be considered as powerful leader you need prestige as well as publicity. Bormann had none as he worked from behind scene. Goring was the second most powerful Nazi without question. He is the official successor to the Führer, his military rank of Reichsmarschall outranks anyone in Wehrmacht. He has real power bases among Nazi upper echelon: commander of the Luftwaffe , leader of the Four Year Plan (in charge of German economy). Additionally he simultaneously held many high offices even if they are mainly figurehead positions: speaker of the Reichstag (German national legislature), prime minister of Prussia, etc.
@aps During the rise of the Nazi regime in the 30's possibly. But after The Battle of Britian in 1940 he became persona non grata.
At one point hitler appointed him head of the department of the interior. Goering was really upset because it had nothing to do with window treatments and interior design.
Hermann could make a cool opium pipe stem from his field Marshall’s baton. I could only imagine what the bowls/dampers would look like.
"Baton? I thought it was a bong!" - some High School student in history class, probably...
What everyone forgets is that most of the Nazi leadership were WW1 veterans with actual combat experience over protracted periods, these days they would be diagnosed as suffering from various stress and combat related psychosis. In respect of Goering, while he was a good/gifted pilot in WW1, he was no leader, the record of the Circus while he commanded was abysmal and “his” pilots lampooned him.