Reich Cultural Senate

The Reich Cultural Senate was a body directly subordinate to the Nazi Reich Chamber of Culture, created by Chamber President and Reich Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels on 15 November 1935.[1][2][3]

Members of the Reich Cultural Senate at the time of its founding

Reich Cultural Managers

  • Walther Funk (1890–1960), Vice President of the Reich Chamber of Culture, State President
  • Hans Schmidt-Leonhardt (1886–1945), managing director of the Reich Chamber of Culture, ministerial councillor
  • Franz Moraller (1903–1986), managing director of the Reich Chamber of Culture, SA senior leader
  • Hans Hinkel (1901–1960), managing director of the Reich Chamber of Culture, member of the Reichstag

Members of the Reich Chamber of Literature

Members of the Reich Chamber of Music

  • Peter Raabe (1872–1945)
  • Paul Graener (1872–1944), who was also appointed Vice President of the Reich Music Chamber
  • Heinz Ihlert (1893–1945)
  • Franz Adam (conductor) (1885–1954) from the staff of Adolf Hitler's deputy
  • Fritz Kaiser
  • Friedrich Krebs (1894–1961), Frankfurt am Main
  • Hermann Müller-John (1894–1945), music master of the Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler
  • Horst Sander (1904–1945), head of the German Musical Association
  • Hermann Stange (music director) (1884–1953)
  • Fritz Stein (1879–1961), director of the State University of Music (Berlin)
  • Wilhelm Backhaus (1884–1969)
  • Wilhelm Furtwängler (1886–1954)
  • Clemens Krauss (1893–1954)
  • Hans Pfitzner (1869–1949)
  • Heinrich Schlusnus (1888–1952)
  • Georg Schumann (1866–1952)

Members of the Reich Press Chamber

  • Max Amann (1891–1957), president, Reichsleiter and director of the Central Party Publishing House
  • Otto Dietrich (1897–1952), Vice President, Reich Press Chief of the NSDAP
  • Ildephons Richter (born 1892)
  • Gunter d'Alquen (1910–1998)
  • Hans Schwarz van Berk (1902–1973)
  • Alfred Ingemar Berndt (1905–1945)
  • Willi Bischoff (born 1886)
  • Edgar Brinkmann (publisher) (born 1896)
  • Adolf Dresler (1898–1971)
  • Walther Heide (1894–1945)
  • Hans Hornauer (born 1902)
  • Rolf Rienhardt (1903–1975)
  • Wilhelm Weiß (1892–1950)
  • Josef Berchtold (1897–1962)
  • Heinrich Fetkötter (born 1902)
  • Richard Jügler (born 1889)

Members from the Reich Theater Chamber

Members of the Reich Broadcasting Chamber

  • Horst Dreßler-Andreß (1899–1979)
  • Eugen Hadamovsky (1904–1945)
  • Herbert Packebusch (1902–1944)
  • Kurt von Boeckmann (1885–1950)
  • Herbert Dominik (born 1902)
  • Heinz Franke
  • Julius Christoph Günther
  • Hans Kriegler (1905–1978)
  • Heinz Lotz (industrialist) (1894–1937)
  • Alfred Lau (1898–1971)
  • Goetz Otto Stoffregen (1896–1953)
  • Abraham Esau (1884–1955)
  • Heinrich Glasmeier (born 1892)
  • Paul Goerz (1896–1952)
  • Hugo Fischer (politician) (1902–1979)

Members of the Reich Chamber of Fine Arts

  • Eugen Hönig (1873–1945)
  • Adolf Ziegler (1892–1959)
  • Walter Hoffmann (life dates unknown, missing since 1945)
  • Erich Dammeier
  • Willy Kelter
  • Otto von Keudell (1887–1972)
  • Hans Sauermann (1885–1960)
  • Albert Speer (1905–1981)
  • Kurt Schmid-Ehmen (1901–1968)
  • Ernst Schulte Strathaus (1881–1968)
  • Hans Schweitzer (1901–1980)
  • Ernst Zörner (1895–1945), mayor of Dresden
  • Paul Baumgarten (architect, born 1873) (1873–1946)
  • German Bestelmeyer (1874–1942), President of the Munich Academy
  • Oswald Bieber (1874–1955)
  • Leonhard Gall (1884–1952)
  • Richard Klein (1890–1967)

Members of the Reich Film Chamber

  • Oswald Lehnich (1895–1961)
  • Hans Weidemann (1904–1975)
  • Karl Melzer, Managing Director
  • Franz Belitz (born 1881)
  • Carl Froelich (1875–1953)
  • Siegmund Jung, from the economic staff of Adolf Hitler's deputy
  • Willi Krause (writer) (1907–1945)
  • Botho Mulert (1883–1963)
  • Hans-Jürgen Nierentz (1909–1995)
  • Ernst Seeger (1884–1937)
  • Fritz Scheuermann (jurist) (* 1887)
  • Sepp Allgeier (1895–1968)
  • Friedrich Kayßler (1874–1945)
  • Ludwig Klitzsch (1881–1954)
  • Theodor Loos (1883–1954)

State Cultural Administrators

  • Adolf Schmid, Gau Baden
  • Hans Kolbe, Gau Bavarian Ostmark
  • Hermann Brouwers, Gau Düsseldorf
  • Arnold Fischer, Gau Essen
  • Fritz Lindenberg, Gau Halle-Merseburg
  • Erich Schmidt (Nazi) (1900–1981), Gau Hamburg
  • Friedrich Schmonsees, Gau Hanover-East
  • Herbert Huxhagen, Gau Hanover-South
  • Wilhelm Müller-Scheld, Gau Hesse-Nassau
  • Wilhelm Michels (Nazi functionary), Gau Koblenz-Trier
  • Toni Winkelnkemper, Cologne-Aachen district
  • A. Lindemann; August Heinrich Scherer, Gau Kurmark
  • Alfred Mitsching; Fritz Ihlenburg, Gau Magdeburg-Anhalt
  • Alexander Sondermann, Gau Mecklenburg
  • Hans Bäselsöder, Gau Franconia
  • Otto Nippold, Gau Munich-Upper Bavaria
  • Joachim Paltzo, Gau East Prussia
  • Rudolf Trampler, Gau Rheinpfalz
  • Heinrich Salzmann (Nazi politician), Gau Saxony
  • Gustav Schierholz, Gau Schleswig-Holstein
  • Georg Traeg, Gau Swabia
  • Waldemar Vogt, Gau Lower Franconia
  • Ernst Schulze, Gau Weser-Ems
  • Fritz Schmidt, Gau Westphalia-Nord
  • Hermann Brust, Gau Westphalia-South
  • F. Schmidt, Gau Württemberg

See also

References

  1. ^ "The members of the Reich Cultural Senate" ("Die Mitgliedes der Reichskultursenats"). Dresdner Neueste Nachrichten, 16 November 1935, p. 2.
  2. ^ "Clear order in cultural life" ("Klare Ordnung im Kulturleben"). Der Freiheitskampf, 16 November 1935, pp. 1–2.
  3. ^ Hakenkreuzbanner newspaper, 16 November 1935, No. 530. [1]