ID | 128549 |
Title Proper | Search for Hitler |
Other Title Information | Hugh Trevor-Roper, Humphrey Searle, and the last days of Adolf Hitler |
Language | ENG |
Author | Douglas, Sarah K |
Publication | 2014. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | In September 1945, British intelligence officer Hugh Trevor-Roper was asked to investigate the circumstances surrounding the death of Adolf Hitler. Two years later, he published his conclusions in The Last Days of Hitler, still recognized as the standard work. But, despite some delving into the subject in a recent biography of the author by Adam Sisman, it has remained unclear until now how Trevor-Roper managed to so rapidly gather the evidence on which his book is based. The account below, rooted in heretofore unseen or underused archival sources, highlights the crucial but unacknowledged support Trevor-Roper received from Allied intelligence services and from a timeline drafted by intelligence officer Captain Humphrey Searle, later a well-known composer, that combined all of the data assembled into a single record of events of the last days in the Führerbunker. |
`In' analytical Note | Journal of Military History Vol.78, No.1; January 2014: p.159-210 |
Journal Source | Journal of Military History Vol.78, No.1; January 2014: p.159-210 |
Key Words | History ; Germany ; German History ; Hitler ; Adolf Hitler ; Hugh Trevor-Roper ; Humphrey Searle ; Military History ; War ; World War - II ; German Strategy ; Political Account ; Political History |