Max de Crinis: Difference between revisions
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{{PropDel}}<br><br>{{subpages}} | {{PropDel}}<br><br>{{subpages}} | ||
'''Max de Crinis''' (1889-1945) was a German academic psychiatrist who worked with the Nazis in a number of efforts, including the planning of the | '''Max de Crinis''' (1889-1945) was a German academic psychiatrist who worked with the Nazis in a number of efforts, including the planning of the Nazi euthanasia program|euthanasia]] program<ref name=ND>{{citation | ||
| author = Robert Jay Lifton | | author = Robert Jay Lifton | ||
| title = The Nazi Doctors: medical killing and the psychology of genocide | | title = The Nazi Doctors: medical killing and the psychology of genocide | ||
| url = http://www.holocaust-history.org/lifton/ | | url = http://www.holocaust-history.org/lifton/ | ||
| publisher = Basic Books | date = 1986}}, p. 65</ref> and, assisting | | publisher = Basic Books | date = 1986}}, p. 65</ref> and, assisting counterespionage]] personnel of the SD]], in field operations. He assisted Walter Schellenberg]] in capturing British agents in the Venlo Incident]]. | ||
De Crinis, who | De Crinis, who Robert Jay Lifton]] called the "most outspoken and influential Nazi in the German psychiatric establishment", was both a respected physician and a Nazi activist. He worked with the RuSHA]], but also performed respected research and probably protected some concentration camp and potential euthanasia victims.<ref>{{citation | ||
| author = Gerstenbrand, Franz and Karamat, Elisabeth | | author = Gerstenbrand, Franz and Karamat, Elisabeth | ||
| title = (Abstract) Adolf Hitler's Parkinson's disease and an attempt to analyse his personality structure | | title = (Abstract) Adolf Hitler's Parkinson's disease and an attempt to analyse his personality structure | ||
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| url = http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-1331.1999.tb00003.x | | url = http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-1331.1999.tb00003.x | ||
| year = 1999 | | year = 1999 | ||
}}</ref> After he examined Hitler and diagnosed | }}</ref> After he examined Hitler and diagnosed Parkinson's disease]], he was part of an initiative for a 1945 armistice with the West, working with Heinrich Himmler]], Leonardo Conti]], and Walter Schellenberg]]. <ref>Lifton, pp. 120-122</ref> | ||
He committed suicide in May 1945. | He committed suicide in May 1945. | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} |
Revision as of 07:32, 18 March 2024
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Max de Crinis (1889-1945) was a German academic psychiatrist who worked with the Nazis in a number of efforts, including the planning of the Nazi euthanasia program|euthanasia]] program[1] and, assisting counterespionage]] personnel of the SD]], in field operations. He assisted Walter Schellenberg]] in capturing British agents in the Venlo Incident]]. De Crinis, who Robert Jay Lifton]] called the "most outspoken and influential Nazi in the German psychiatric establishment", was both a respected physician and a Nazi activist. He worked with the RuSHA]], but also performed respected research and probably protected some concentration camp and potential euthanasia victims.[2] After he examined Hitler and diagnosed Parkinson's disease]], he was part of an initiative for a 1945 armistice with the West, working with Heinrich Himmler]], Leonardo Conti]], and Walter Schellenberg]]. [3] He committed suicide in May 1945. References
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