Obergruppenfhrer

Obergruppenfhrer was a Nazi Party paramilitary rank that was first created in 1932 as a rank of the SA. Translated as "Senior Group Leader", the rank of SA-Obergruppenfhrer was held by members of the Oberste SA-Fhrerung (Supreme SA Command) and also by veteran commanders of certain SA-Gruppen (SA Groups). The rank of Obergruppenfhrer was considered senior to the older title of Gruppenfhrer. As an SS rank, Obergruppenfhrer was created due to the growth and expansion of the SS under Heinrich Himmler. Himmler was one of the first SS officers appointed to the rank of SS-Obergruppenfhrer, and held the rank while simultaneously serving as the Reichsfhrer-SS. At the time Himmler held the rank of Obergruppenfhrer, Reichsfhrer was simply a title and not yet an actual rank. In the early days of the SS, the rank of Obergruppenfhrer was occasionally used to make two SS leaders equal in seniority, so as to prevent a power struggle within the Nazi Party. Such was the case with Kurt Daluege, who commanded most of the SS in the Berlin region between 1930 and 1934. To avoid having the SS split into two separate entities, one based in Northern Germany and the other in Bavaria, Adolf Hitler promoted Daluege to the new rank of Obergruppenfhrer making him equal in rank to Himmler. After the Night of the Long Knives, the SS and the SA became two completely separate organizations. The SA continued to use the rank of Obergruppenfhrer, but the title gained predominance mainly in the SS. With the Nazi Party in power, and the SS a state agency of Germany, SS-Obergruppenfhrer was considered the highest rank of the SS, with the exception of Himmlers special rank of Reichsfhrer-SS. Within the Waffen-SS, the rank came to be considered the equivalent of a full General. The rank would remain the highest SS-General rank until 1942, when the SS created the rank of SS-Oberstgruppenfhrer. The rank of Obergruppenfhrer was held by some of the most notorious figures in the SS, with Reinhard Heydrich and Ernst Kaltenbrunner both claiming title to the rank. Karl Wolff was another holder of the rank and was the highest ranking SS officer who was taken alive by the Allies after the close of Second World War. SS-Obergruppenfhrer was also the standard rank for SS and Police Leaders as well as Division commanders of the Waffen-SS.
idth="30%" align="center"|Junior Rank
Gruppenfhrer
width="40%" align="center"|SS rank
Obergruppenfhrer
width="30%" align="center"|Senior Rank
Oberstgruppenfhrer
idth="30%" align="center"|Junior Rank
Gruppenfhrer
width="40%" align="center"|SA rank
Obergruppenfhrer
width="30%" align="center"|Senior Rank
Stabschef

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
london pavilion
yukon legislative assembly
paulo futre
the moon is down (album)
ili
le shok dna (album)
the lottery in babylon
quantum psychology
list of geological features on tethys
le shok s&m (album)
le shok stitches split (album)
gerhard klopfer
temp
jasmonate
brassinosteroid
abscisic acid
ethylene (plant hormone)
local exchange routing guide
salicylic acid (plant hormone)
le shok electric frankenstein (album)
juliana theory
le shok ink & dagger (album)
aras habib
childers, queensland
imperial guard (napoleon iii)
gruppenfhrer
jorge costa
happy felsch
legislative assembly of nunavut
johann georg hiedler
ranks and insignia of the schutzstaffel
admiral ozzel
terri schiavo
sami hyypi
autonomy systems
huntsville stars
marlborough, queensland
david strathairn
montgomery biscuits
liedermacher
strip
party chancellery
intensive property
extensive property