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Siegfried Uiberreither

Siegfried Uiberreither
Bundesarchiv Bild 121-0723, Marburg-Drau, Adolf Hitler.jpg
Siegfried Uiberreither, on far left, with Martin Bormann and Adolf Hitler
Born (1908-03-29)March 29, 1908
Salzburg
Died December 29, 1984(1984-12-29) (aged 76)
Sindelfingen
Nationality Austrian and German
Other names Friedrich Schönharting
Occupation Gauleiter and Nazi politician
Years active 1938–1945
Known for being the son-in-law of the late German geophysicist Alfred Wegener

Siegfried Uiberreither (29 March 1908 in Salzburg – 29 December 1984 in Sindelfingen) was an Austrian Nazi-Gauleiter in Styria, Austria during the Third Reich.

In 1924, Uiberreither joined the Schill Youth (Schilljugend). He studied law and worked as a construction aid worker. In 1930 he became a secretary for the Workers' Sickness Fund (Arbeiterkrankenkasse) in Graz. In 1931, he joined the SA, and in 1933 he graduated from his studies as a Doctor of Law. In 1937 Uiberreither was leader of the illegal SA Brigade Steiermark, and in 1938 he became an SA Brigadeführer. That same year, which saw Austria's Anschluss with Nazi Germany, he also became the Commissary Police Director for Graz, and on 25 May 1938, he was appointed Gauleiter of Styria [1].

In 1939 Uiberreither married Käte Wegener (*1918), the daughter of Alfred and Else Wegener. They had four sons.

The years 1939 and 1940 were ones of military service for Uiberreither, who became a mountain trooper (Gebirgsjäger) and participated in the German landing in Norway. In April 1940, he was discharged from the Wehrmacht with the rank of lieutenant.

In 1940, Uiberreither became Reich Governor (Reichsstatthalter) of Styria, in 1941 Chief of the Civil Administration in the occupied areas of Yugoslavian "Lower Styria", and in 1942, also the Reich Defence Commissar for the Gau of Styria. In 1943, he was promoted to SA Obergruppenführer. In 1944 he was the leader of the Volkssturm in Styria, a last-ditch home guard set up on Martin Bormann's order's towards the end of the Second World War, and associated in Styria with the Nazi "Werwolf".


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