Leo_von_Jena

Leo von Jena

Leo von Jena

German SS commander (1876–1957)


Leo von Jena, also called Leo Ferdinand von Jena (July 8, 1876 - April 7, 1957), was a German military officer who became an Schutzstaffel (SS) general during World War II and commander of the Waffen-SS in Berlin. Von Jena joined the German National People's Party and the Sturmabteilung (SA) in 1921. He joined the Nazi Party in 1936. On November 9, 1936, he joined the Schutzstaffel and Heinrich Himmler personally accepted him as an honorary Sturmbannführer, where he rose through the SS ranks. On March 30, 1941, he was promoted to Brigadeführer of the Waffen-SS. On January 30, 1944, he was promoted to Obergruppenführer of the Allgemeine SS and Lieutenant General (Generalleutnant) in the Waffen-SS.[1][2]

Quick Facts Born, Died ...

World War I

Von Jena was the eleventh child of the Prussian officer and later general of the infantry Eduard von Jena (1834–1911) and his first wife Elisabeth Auguste Karoline Helene, née Freiin von Dalwigk (1840–1880).

In May 1896 he joined the cadet corps (Kadettenkorps) with the Life Grenadier Regiment König Friedrich Wilhelm III. (1st Brandenburg) with the rank of Fahnenjunker. On November 18, 1897, he was promoted to second lieutenant and assigned to the war school in Danzig. In May 1902 he transferred to the Holstein Field Artillery Regiment No. 24 in Güstrow. Between April 30, 1903, and 1911 he served in various military units. On February 18, 1908, Jena was promoted to Oberleutnant. In 1911 he became adjutant of the Landwehr district of Frankfurt (Oder). In September 1912 he became an aid and adviser to Prince Friedrich Leopold of Prussia. On October 18, 1912, he was promoted to Hauptmann (captain). In August 1913 von Jena was appointed personal adjutant to Prince Friedrich.[3]

At the beginning of World War I in August 1914, he joined the 2nd Cavalry Division in Belgium and France. On 21 October 1914 he married his then-fiancée Josefine Margarethe Schumacher. In December 1914 he became a company commander and battalion commander in the 5th Guards Regiment in Masuria, East Prussia. In the spring of 1915, von Jena was deployed back to France and suffered a knee injury during the Second Battle of the Marne. After recovery, he was deployed to the reserve battalion of the 5th Guards Regiment in Spandau, where he was appointed deputy adjutant of the 4th Guards Infantry Brigade in the fall of 1915. Soon he transferred to the Landwehr division of the Guards Corps. In November 1916 von Jena was promoted to commander of the 1st Battalion of the 4th Foot Guards Regiment and assigned to the staff for the 1st Foot Guards Regiment in October 1917. Towards the end of the war, von Jena was commander of Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 932.[4]

Weimar Republic

Von Jena viewed himself as a victim of the November criminals, those that lost in the war due to an antisemitic conspiracy theory. On December 16, 1918, he founded the National Association of German Officers with other officers loyal to the monarchy, like Alfred Krauss. On January 12, 1919, von Jena joined one of the approximately 200 Freikorps in Germany. In Berlin he became leader of the Volunteer Detachment Jena in the Freikorps von Oven. In 1919 von Jena was accepted as a captain in the provisional Reichswehr army and was promoted to major in October 1919 of Reichswehr Infantry Regiment 6. On December 31, 1920, von Jena was released from the Reichswehr at his own request. On January 1, 1921, he was employed by the Reichswehr leadership as leader of the clean up command of the Reichswehr Infantry Regiment 6. In 1921 he joined Alfred Hugenberg's German National People's Party and became a leader in its military arm, the Stahlhelmbund, where he met Prussian Lieutenant General Paul Hausser. In the Stahlhelmbund he became the liaison officer of the Bund to the German ex-Kaiser Wilhelm II and was on friendly terms with him. He stayed several times with Wilhelm II in exile at Doorn in the Netherlands.[5]

National Socialism

In 1934 von Jena joined Wilhelm Reinhard's Kyffhäuserbund for war veterans in Berlin. The veterans group became aligned with Adolf Hitler's Sturmabteilung (SA). Thus von Jena joined the Reichsbetriebszellenabteilung (Spandau Comradeship of Life Grenadiers No. 8) of the Nazi Party.

On February 1, 1934, he was elected to the federal leadership of the National Socialist Reichskriegerbund (NSRKB), a Nazi veteran group and took over the personnel department of the Federal Leader's staff. On the same day he joined the SA Reserve II, and was put in charge of member support for the staff of Supreme State Leader Adolf Hitler. In 1936 Paul Hausser who had joined the SS-Schutzstaffel persuaded von Jena to switch his membership from the SA to the SS (SS no. 277,326). On November 9, 1936, von Jena was accepted into the SS at the rank of Sturmbannführer by Reichsfuhrer SS Heinrich Himmler. As Sturmbannführer he became leader of the staff of the SS main office.[6][7]

While he joined the SS at his friend's urging, he still had strong ties and feelings to the House of Hohenzollern monarchy and Wilhelm II. SS leaders criticized him for his old views and not strongly adhering to Nazism. Two days after being accepted into the SS, the staff chancellery information center of the SS security service reported to the Reichsführer after examining "the political background" of von Jena:

"Major a. D. Jena was still strongly nationalist after the takeover. (...) Jena is considered an outspoken monarchist and was the liaison between the Stahlhelm leadership and the ex-Kaiser. In this capacity, he was in Doorn for a long time. Because of this fact, von Jena cannot be called politically reliable. (...)” [8]

On November 15, 1937, von Jena applied for admission to the Nazi Party and was admitted retroactive to May 1, 1937 (membership number 4,359,167).[9] In 1938 he became a substitute member in the German Reichstag.[10]

World War II

In September 1939 von Jena was transferred to the SS Totenkopf Unit, where became a leader in the 5th Totenkopfstandarte for the Brandenburg Euthanasia Centre, he departed the centre before the killing began in February 1940. On December 1, 1939, Jena was transferred to the emerging Waffen-SS, when he set up the 8th SS Totenkopfstandarte in Kraków. He also became leader of police reinforcements, in occupied Poland. The police reinforcements were a special police task force for "gang and anti-partisan use".[11][full citation needed][12]

On May 1, 1940, von Jena was appointed "SS-Oberführer for the Reserve" of the Waffen-SS. On July 11, 1940, he was transferred to the Command Office of the Waffen-SS. As Group Leader II (Organization), he headed a department in the Management and Organization Office Group of Office I, part of the SS Führungshauptamt.[13]

On March 30, 1941, he was appointed Brigadeführer of the Allgemeine SS and received the right from Himmler to wear the "uniform and rank insignia of a major general of the Waffen SS".[citation needed] With Himmler's permission, von Jena was now outwardly wearing the same rank in the Waffen-SS as in the Allgemeine SS and which he had not yet received in the Waffen-SS. But within the SS leadership office, which was responsible for the command of the Waffen-SS, his position was controversial. A letter from SS Personnel Manager Maximilian von Herff to Karl Wolff (November 23, 1942) read:

Around Hans Jüttner there is a circle that needs to be monitored because it can become dangerous. This is the liaison of Gruppenfuhrer Petri, Brigadefuhrer Jena and Hansen. They are far removed from SS-like thinking and willing. They only want to be officers of the Guard, the other things are just a side issue for them! (...)[14]

On April 1, 1941, von Jena was appointed location commander (Standortkommandanten) of the Waffen-SS in Berlin, but on February 10, 1942, he wrote to Himmler asking to be dismissed, citing health problems:

My state of health has deteriorated so much in recent times that I am afraid that I will no longer be able to fill the post of SS site commander for Berlin in any case, as the Führer may have to demand. (...) I therefore ask you, Reichsfuhrer, to arrange for me to be relieved of my current position. (...) Should I be able to serve the Fuehrer in any other position within the Waffen-SS, I will of course remain available to you at any time for any other use you may have. (...).[15][16]

On March 1, 1943, von Jena was replaced as Berlin site commander of the Waffen-SS, but remained a member of the SS and was promoted to brigade leader of the reserve on July 1, 1944. Himmler had granted him the right to wear the Waffen-SS uniform and the rank insignia of a major general.

On November 17, 1943, von Jena asked in writing for "dismissal from active service in the Waffen-SS with the statutory pension as of April 30, 1944".[citation needed] A letter to Heinrich Himmler ended with the words:

(...) With inner satisfaction I will always remember the time when I was allowed to serve the Führer and Greater Germany in the Waffen-SS in this most violent war of all times. (...) Of course, I, Reichsfuhrer, remain at your disposal whenever and wherever I may be needed. My life belongs to the Führer and the fatherland![17]

Von Jena joined HIAG for a short time then joined the Bund Deutscher Officere, a traditional association of former members of the Reichswehr and Wehrmacht, which he departed in 1956 and was not active in veterans groups again. He died on April 7, 1957, from an illness.[18]

Awards

  • Knight's Cross of the Griffin Order (12)
  • Princely Reuss Cross of Honor III. class with crown (12)
  • Iron Cross (1914) 2nd and 1st class
  • Knight's Cross of the Royal House Order of Hohenzollern with Swords
  • Friedrich-August-Kreuz 2nd and 1st class
  • Mecklenburg Military Merit Cross 1st Class
  • SS Civil Badge (No. 192,576)
  • Yule candlesticks of the RFSS (December 1936)
  • Ring of Honor RFSS
  • Honorary Sword of the Reichsfuhrer SS
  • Hungarian World War II Commemorative Medal
  • Honor's Corner of the Ancient Fighters
  • War Merit Cross (1939) 2nd and 1st class with swords

See also


References

  1. Andreas Schulz, Günter Wegmann and Dieter Zinke: Germany's generals and admirals - Part V: The generals of the Waffen-SS and the police 1933-1945 , 2nd volume, Biblio-Verlag Bissendorf 2005, ISBN 3-7648-2592-8 , p .364–369.
  2. Andreas Schulz and Dieter Zinke: Germany's generals and admirals - Part V: The generals of the Waffen-SS and the police 1933-1945 , 3rd volume, Biblio-Verlag Bissendorf 2008, ISBN 3-7648-2375-5 , supplement p. 699 .
  3. Kurt von Priesdorff : Soldier leadership. Volume 10, Hanseatische Verlagsanstalt Hamburg, o.O. [Hamburg], o.J. [1942], DNB 986919810 , pp. 433-434, no. 3311.
  4. Kurt von Priesdorff : Soldier leadership . Volume 10, Hanseatische Verlagsanstalt Hamburg, o.O. [Hamburg], o.J. [1942], DNB 986919810 , pp. 433-434, no. 3311.
  5. SS Personnel Main Office: Length of service list of the SS , 1944 edition, serial no. 162.
  6. Kurt von Priesdorff : Soldier leadership . Volume 10, Hanseatische Verlagsanstalt Hamburg, o.O. [Hamburg], o.J. [1942], DNB 986919810 , pp. 433-434, no. 3311.
  7. SS Personnel Office: Length of service list of the SS , 1936 edition, serial no. 1050.
  8. Bastian Hein: Elite for people and leaders? , p. 172.
  9. Andreas Schulz, Günter Wegmann, Dieter Zinke: The Generals of the Waffen-SS and the Police , Volume 2, article "Leo von Jena", pp. 364-369.
  10. SS personal file from Jena, Leo.
  11. SS personal file from Jena, Leo.
  12. SS personal file from Jena, Leo.
  13. SS personal file from Jena, Leo.
  14. SS personal file from Jena, Leo.
  15. Ranking of the Royal Prussian Army and the XIII. (Royal Württemberg) Army Corps for 1914 , ed.: Ministry of War , Ernst Siegfried Mittler & Sohn , Berlin 1914, p. 32

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