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List of speeches given by Adolf Hitler

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This list isincomplete; you can help byadding missing items.(February 2011)
Hitler's prophecy speech of 30 January 1939

From his first speech in 1919 inMunich until the last speech in February 1945,Adolf Hitler, dictator ofNazi Germany from 1933 to 1945, gave a total of 1525 speeches. In 1932, for thepresidential campaign and two federal elections that year, he gave the most speeches (totalling 241). Not all have been listed, as it is not practical to do so.

Because theReichstag building was destroyed by afire on 27 February 1933, all of Hitler’s addresses to theReichstag were held at the neighbouringKroll Opera House.

Speeches

[edit]

Bolded dates indicate a link to a separate article or full text on that particular speech.

DatePlaceSpeech
16 October1919MunichHofbräukeller. Hitler's first arranged public speech. He had joined theGerman Workers' Party the previous month. 111 attended.[1]
13 November1919MunichEberlbräukeller. Hitler's second arranged public speech. 130 attended. 4 speakers. Subject of the meeting: "Brest-Litovsk orVersailles?"[2] Hecklers began to shout out in the middle of the speech and were violently ejected.[3]
24 February1920MunichHofbräuhaus. First speech at a larger venue. 2000 attended. The 25 article political programme founding the newNational Socialist German Workers' Party was presented.[4]
11 May1920MunichHofbräuhaus.[5]
13 August1920MunichHofbräuhaus. Speech title "Why are we Antisemites?". 2000 attended. 2-hour speech interrupted 58 times by cheering.[6]
3 February1921MunichFirst speech at theCircus Krone, Munich's biggest venue. Speech title "Future or Ruin" – denouncing reparation payment to Allies. 6,000 attended.[7]
4 November1921MunichHofbräuhaus. Meeting degenerated into a full scale brawl with political opponents while Hitler was speaking.[8]
9 November1921Munich...[citation needed]
12 April1922Munich"There are only two possibilities: either victory of the Aryan, or annihilation of the Aryan and the victory of the Jew."[9][10]
18 September1922Munich"...Economics is a secondary matter. World history teaches us that no people became great through economics: it was economics that brought them to their ruin."
13 April1923Munich"We ask: 'Must there be wars?' The pacifist answers 'No!' "
24 April1923Munich"The Jew who coined the word meant by 'Proletariat,' not the oppressed, but those who work with their hands."
27 April1923MunichCall for a need to reform, from land reform to reform of press, art, culture, etc.
1 May1923Munich"..then it must symbolize the renewal of the body of a people which has fallen into senility."
1 August1923Munich"..there are two things which can unite men: common ideals and common criminality. "
12 September1923Munich"..the Republic was founded to be a milk-cow for its founders – for the whole parliamentary gang."
26 February1924Munich Trial"It seems strange to me that a man who, as a soldier, was for six years accustomed to blind obedience, should suddenly come into conflict with the State and its Constitution."
27 March1924Munich Trial"When did the ruin of Germany begin?"
27 February1925MunichBürgerbräukeller – Re-founding the National Socialist German Workers' Party. 3,000 attended. On 9 March 1925 Hitler was banned from public speaking by Bavarian government. Most other German states followed suit.[11]
4 July1926Weimar2nd National Socialist German Workers' Party Congress. 6–7,000 attended. First public display of SS.[12]
23 November1926Essen... (Party Convention)
6 March1927VilsbiburgOn 5 March 1927 the Bavarian government lifted the public speaking ban on Hitler, provided the initial speech was not in Munich. 1,000 attended.[13]
9 March1927MunichIn the Circus Krone for the first time since 1923. 7,000 capacity audience[13]
30 March1927MunichIn the Circus Krone. 5,000 attended[14]
6 April1927MunichIn the Circus Krone. Only 1,500 attended."[14]
1 May1927BerlinIn the Clou concert hall – Hitlers first speech in Berlin. Hitler was still banned from making public speeches in Prussia so the only legal way he could speak was to make this a private event open only to 4,000 party members[15]
16 November1928BerlinOn 28 September 1928, following the poor performance of the National Socialists in the 20 May 1928 general election, the Prussian government lifted its speaking ban on Hitler. This was Hitlers first speech in theBerlin Sportpalast (Germany's largest venue) which was packed to 12,000 capacity.[14]
2 May1930BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
18 July1930MunichOpening speech of the 1930 election campaign. 8,000 audience.[17]
3 August1930Frankfurt25,000 audience.[17]
5 August1930Würzburg8,000 audience.[17]
7 August1930Grafing4,000 audience.[17]
10 August1930Kiel4,000 audience.[17]
12 August1930MunichCircus Krone. 6,000 audience.[17]
15 August1930Essen30,000 audience.[17]
18 August1930Cologne20,000 audience.[17]
21 August1930Koblenz12,000 audience.[17]
26 August1930Ludwigshafen20,000 audience.[17]
29 August1930MunichCircus Krone. 6,000 audience.[17]
4 September1930Königsberg16,000 audience.[17]
6 September1930Hamburg10,000 audience.[17]
7 September1930Nuremberg15,000 audience.[17]
8 September1930Augsburg10,000 audience.[17]
10 September1930BerlinSportpalast – 16,000 audience.[18]
12 September1930BreslauJahrhunderthalle – 20,000–25,000 audience.[18]
13 September1930MunichCircus Krone. 6,000 audience. Last speech of the 1930 election campaign. At the 14 September 1930 election the National Socialist Party increased its seats in the Reichstag from 12 to 107, becoming the 2nd largest party. A political earthquake.
4 December1930BerlinHasenheide – in front of students[19]
19 May1931BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
7 June1931ChemnitzAt theSüdkampfbahn in front of around 16,000brownshirts andHitler Youth boys.[20] Hitler was recorded for the first time on sound film.[21]
1931Berlin... (Hasenheide Beer Hall)
27 January1932Düsseldorf... (Industry Club)
9 February1932BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
27 February1932BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
4 April1932BerlinAt theLustgarten in front of over 200,000 people for the second round of theGerman presidential election on 10 April 1932.[22]
4 April1932BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
22 April1932BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
20 July1932 (publication date)Munich (publication place)Franz Eher Nachfolger published Hitler's firstphonograph recording titledHitlers Appell an die Nation ("Hitler's Appeal to the Nation") as propaganda for theGerman federal election on 31 July 1932.[23]
27 July1932Berlin... (Berlin Stadium)
1 September1932BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
2 November1932BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
20 January1933BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
22 January1933BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
1 February1933Berlin... (Proclamation to the German Nation)[24][25]
10 February1933BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16][26]
15 February1933Stuttgart...
2 March1933BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
23 March1933Berlin...
8 April1933BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
1 May1933Berlin... (At Tempelhof airfield)
24 October1933BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
10 November1933Berlin... (At Siemens Factory)[27][28]
13 July1934Berlin... (Justification of his actions against the SA leadership in the Night of the Long Knives)[citation needed]
8 November1934Munich...[citation needed]
9 November1934Munich...[citation needed]
7 March1936BerlinAnnouncingremilitarisation of the Rhineland
27 March1936EssenFrom the frame of a locomotive at theKrupp locomotive building for theGerman parliamentary election on 29 March 1936. Broadcast on all German radio stations. 120,000 audience.[29][30]
12 September1936Nuremberg... (Labour Front)[citation needed]
14 September1936Nuremberg...[citation needed]
30 October1936BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
30 January1937Reichstag...
19 July1937Munich... (On the Opening of the German House of Art)
5 November1937... (given to Foreign Minister and military heads of the Reich)
15 March1938ViennaHofburg (Commemorating the Austrian Anschluss)
28 March1938BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
1 April1938Stuttgart... (Schwaben Hall)
1 May1938Berlin... (Olympic Stadium)
1 May1938Berlin... (Lustgarten)
12 September1938NurembergOn theSudetenland. The speech was carried live in theUnited States onCBS Radio, the first time many Americans heard Hitler speak.[31]
26 September1938BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
5 October1938BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
9 October1938Saarbrücken...
6 November1938Weimar...
9 January1939BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
30 January1939BerlinProphecy speech: "If international finance Jewry inside and outside Europe should succeed in plunging the nations once more into a world war, the result will be not the Bolshevization of the earth and thereby the victory of Jewry, but the annihilation of the Jewish race in Europe."[32]
1 April1939Wilhelmshaven...
28 April1939Berlin...(Response to Franklin Roosevelt)[33][34]
22 August1939Berchtesgaden...Obersalzberg: speech to military leaders,Invasion of Poland will begin
1 September1939DanzigDeclaration of war with Poland. "This night for the first time Polish regular soldiers fired on our territory. Since 5.45 A.M. we have been returning the fire... I am from now on just first soldier of the German Reich. I have once more put on that coat that was the most sacred and dear to me. I will not take it off again until victory is secured, or I will not survive the outcome."[35]
19 September1939Danzig...
6 October1939BerlinCelebratory description of the conquest of Poland, and peace offer to the Allies, in the Reichstag.
10 October1939BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
24 January1940BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
30 January1940BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
3 May1940BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
19 July1940Reichstag...
4 September1940BerlinIn the Sportpalast.
"When the British Air Force drops two or three or four thousand kilograms of bombs, then we will in one night drop 150, 230, 300 or 400,000 kilograms. When they declare they will increase their attacks on our cities, then we will raze their cities to the ground. We will stop the handiwork of those night air pirates, so help us God! The hour will come when one of us will break and it will not be National Socialist Germany!"[36][37][38][39]
18 December1940BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
10 December1940Berlin... (RheinmetallBorsig Works)
30 January1941BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
24 February1941MunichIn the Hofbräuhaus. 21 years from the foundation of the NSDAP.[40]
16 March1941Berlin...
6 April1941Berlin... (Order of the Day)
4 May1941Reichstag, BerlinAddress to the Reichstag
3 October1941BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
11 December1941KrolloperDeclaration of war against United States
30 January1942BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
15 February1942BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
30 May1942BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
28 September1942BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
30 September1942BerlinIn the Sportpalast.[16]
8 November1942Löwenbräukeller (Stiglmaierplatz)Hitler's Stalingrad speech
23 March1943BerlinZeughaus: Address to the Heldengedenktag
8 November1943Löwenbräukeller (Stiglmaierplatz)Speech on the 20th anniversary of theMunich Putsch, the so-calledmarch on the Feldherrnhalle[41]
11 November1943BreslauJahrhunderthalle: Address to 10,000 officer cadets
1 July1944BerlinReichskanzlei: Act of state, funeral speech Generaloberst Dietl
4 July1944BerchtesgadenPlatterhof, Obersalzberg: Speech to 200 senior managers of German industry
20 July1944Wolf's LairRadio address following assassination attempt byClaus von Stauffenberg
1 January1945AdlerhorstFührerhauptquartier: Radio address: New year speech
30 January1945Reichskanzlei, BerlinRadio address: Anniversary of coming to power.
24 February1945BerlinLast Speech on theSilver Jubilee anniversary of the founding of theNazi Party.

Other

[edit]
Main article:Hitler and Mannerheim recording

Only one known recording exists of Hitler's voice when he is not giving a speech. An engineer forFinnish state broadcasterYle secretly recorded 11 minutes of Hitler's 1942 meeting with Finnish leaderCarl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Ian KershawHitler: 1889–1936 Hubris. Penguin, 1998. p. 140
  2. ^Payne, Robert (1973).The Life and Death of Adolf Hitler. London: Jonathan Cape. p. 142.ISBN 0-224-00927-3.
  3. ^Toland, John (1976).Adolf Hitler. New York: Doubleday & Company. p. 94.ISBN 0-385-03724-4.
  4. ^Ian KershawHitler: 1889–1936 Hubris. Penguin, 1998. p. 141
  5. ^"bc.edu". Archived fromthe original on 29 July 2018. Retrieved18 June 2017.
  6. ^Ian KershawHitler: 1889–1936 Hubris. Penguin, 1998. p. 152
  7. ^Ian KershawHitler: 1889–1936 Hubris. Penguin, 1998. p. 156
  8. ^Ian KershawHitler: 1889–1936 Hubris. Penguin, 1998. p. 176
  9. ^"Adolf Hitler - Collection of Speeches 1922 - 1945"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 9 April 2016.
  10. ^"Adolf Hitler".history.hanover.edu. Retrieved24 March 2023.
  11. ^Ian KershawHitler: 1889–1936 Hubris. Penguin, 1998. p. 266
  12. ^Ian KershawHitler: 1889–1936 Hubris. Penguin, 1998. p. 278
  13. ^abIan KershawHitler: 1889–1936 Hubris. Penguin, 1998. p. 292
  14. ^abcIan KershawHitler: 1889–1936 Hubris. Penguin, 1998. p. 293
  15. ^Spiegel Online, Hamburg, Germany (29 November 2012)."Conquering the Capital".Der Spiegel.
  16. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzaaabacadae"Berlin West".www.hitlerpages.com.
  17. ^abcdefghijklmnoMühlberger, Detlef (2017).Hitler's Voice: Organisation & development of the Nazi Party. Peter Lang.ISBN 978-3906769721.
  18. ^abIan KershawHitler: 1889–1936 Hubris. Penguin, 1998. p. 330
  19. ^Brechtken, Magnus (2017).Albert Speer. Siedler. p. 31.
  20. ^Goschler, Constantin, ed. (1994).Hitler: Reden, Schriften, Anordnungen: Februar 1925 bis Januar 1933 (in German). Vol. IV: Von der Reichstagswahl bis zur Reichspräsidentenwahl: Oktober 1930–März 1932. Teil 1: Oktober 1930–Juni 1931. Munich; New Providence; London; Paris: K. G. Saur. p. 402.ISBN 3-598-21935-0.
  21. ^"Fox Tönende Wochenschau (Originaltitel) Woche 15 / 1933" [Fox Movietone News (original title) Week 15 / 1933].German Federal Archives (in German). n.d. 2:48 minutes in. Retrieved18 August 2025.
  22. ^Fritzsche, Peter (2021).Hitler's First Hundred Days: When Germans Embraced the Third Reich. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 65.ISBN 978-0-19-887112-5.
  23. ^Lankheit, Klaus A., ed. (1996).Hitler: Reden, Schriften, Anordnungen: Februar 1925 bis Januar 1933 (in German). Vol. V: Von der Reichspräsidentenwahl bis zur Machtergreifung: April 1932–Januar 1933. Teil 1: April 1932–September 1932. Munich; New Providence; London; Paris: K. G. Saur. p. 216.ISBN 3-598-21936-9.
  24. ^"GHDI – Document".ghdi.ghi-dc.org. Retrieved24 January 2022.
  25. ^"Hitler's First Radio Address".www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Retrieved22 January 2023.
  26. ^"Proclamation to the German Nation – Adolf Hitler 1933".www.emersonkent.com. Retrieved24 January 2022.
  27. ^"10 November 1933 | Hitler Archive | A Biography in Pictures".www.hitler-archive.com. Retrieved24 March 2023.
  28. ^"Pre-WWII - 1933, Germany: Goering [sic: read Goebbels] Introduces Hitler, Speech At Siemens. 10Nov33".footagefarm.com. Retrieved13 August 2024.
  29. ^Sandner, Harald (2021).Hitler – The Itinerary: Whereabouts and Travels from 1889 to 1945(PDF). Vol. III: 1934–1939. Berlin: Berlin Story Verlag. p. 1360.ISBN 978-3-95723-180-2.
  30. ^Longerich, Peter (2019).Hitler: A Life. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 444.ISBN 978-0-19-879609-1.
  31. ^Cashman, Sean Dennis (1989).America in the Twenties and Thirties: The Olympian Age of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. New York University. p. 555.ISBN 978-0-8147-1413-3.
  32. ^Hitler, Adolf.Führer and Reichskanzler Adolf Hitler's Address to the Reichstag.
  33. ^"The British War Blue Book Miscellaneous No. 9 (1939) Documents Concerning German-Polish Relations and the Outbreak of Hostilities Between Great Britain and Germany on September 3, 1939 Presented by the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs to Parliament by Command of His Majesty".avalon.law.yale.edu. Retrieved26 March 2023.
  34. ^"HITLER'S REPLY TO PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT'S MESSAGE Will Give Assurances Provided There Is Absolute Reciprocity".Morning Bulletin. 29 April 1939. Retrieved26 March 2023.
  35. ^Adolf Hitler (1 September 1939). William C. Fray; Lisa A. Spar (eds.)."Address by Adolf Hitler – September 1, 1939".Teacher's Guide to the Holocaust. Avalon Project, via Florida Institute for Instructional Technology, University of South Florida. Retrieved31 January 2021.
  36. ^Sound recordings of Hitler and Himmler World Future Fund website
  37. ^Britain alone page on script for movie aboutBattle of Britain
  38. ^"September 4th 1940".www.battleofbritain1940.net. Archived fromthe original on 29 March 2023. Retrieved7 April 2023.
  39. ^"Sound Recordings".National Archives. 15 August 2016. Retrieved7 April 2023.
  40. ^"Adolf Hitler Speech by Chancellor Hitler to the Nazi Party in Munich (February 1941)".www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Retrieved27 January 2023.
  41. ^1943-11-08 - Adolf Hitler - Rede im Löwenbräukeller zum 20. Jahrestag des Marsches auf die Feldherrenhallearchive.org

Bibliography

[edit]
For a more comprehensive list, seeList of books by or about Adolf Hitler.

External links

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