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Arthur Seyss-Inquart

Arthur Seyss-Inquart
Arthur-Seyss-Inquart-1940.jpg
Seyss-Inquart, 1940
12th Chancellor of Austria
Federal State of Austria
In office
11 March 1938 – 13 March 1938
President Wilhelm Miklas
Preceded by Kurt Schuschnigg
Succeeded by Anschluss
(Adolf Hitler as Führer and Reich Chancellor of Nazi Germany)
Karl Renner (1945)
Reich Minister without portfolio
Nazi Germany
In office
1 May 1939 – 30 April 1945
Chancellor Adolf Hitler (Führer and Reich Chancellor)
Reichskommissar for the Occupied Dutch Territories
In office
29 May 1940 – 7 May 1945
Appointed by Adolf Hitler
Preceded by Alexander von Falkenhausen (military governor)
Succeeded by None
Reich Minister of Foreign Affairs
Nazi Germany
In office
30 April 1945 – 2 May 1945
President Karl Dönitz
Chancellor Joseph Goebbels
Preceded by Joachim von Ribbentrop
Succeeded by Lutz Graf Schwerin von Krosigk
Personal details
Born

22 July 1892 (1892-07-22)
Stannern, Moravia,
Austria-Hungary

(now Stonařov, Vysočina Region, Czech Republic)
Died 16 October 1946(1946-10-16) (aged 54)
Nuremberg, Germany
Political party Independent (1933-1938)
Nazi (1938-1945)
Spouse(s) Gertrud Maschka (m. 1916)
Children 3
Profession Lawyer

22 July 1892 (1892-07-22)
Stannern, Moravia,
Austria-Hungary

About this sound Arthur Seyss-Inquart  (in German: Seyß-Inquart; 22 July 1892 – 16 October 1946) was an Austrian Nazi politician who served as Chancellor of Austria for two days – from 11 to 13 March 1938 – before the Anschluss annexation of Austria by Nazi Germany, signing the constitutional law as acting head of state upon the resignation of President Wilhelm Miklas.

During World War II, he served the Third Reich in the General Government of Poland and as Reichskommissar in the Netherlands. At the Nuremberg trials, he was found guilty of crimes against humanity, was sentenced to death, and was subsequently executed for his crimes.

Seyss-Inquart was born in 1892 in Stonařov, at that time Stannern, a German-speaking village in the neighbourhood of the predominantly German-speaking town of Jihlava (Iglau). This area constituted a German linguistic island in the midst of a Czech-speaking environment and this situation may have contributed to the outspoken national consciousness of the family and the young Arthur in particular. Iglau was an important town in Moravia, one of the Czech provinces of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, in which an increasing competition between Germans and Czechs was going on. His parents were the school principal Emíl Seyss-Inquart and Augusta Hirenbach.


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