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Emmy and Hermann Göring after the wedding in front of the Berlin Dome with Hitler standing behind them to the left. On 10 April 1935, she married the prominent Nazi and Luftwaffe chief Hermann Göring, becoming Emmy Göring. It was also Göring's second marriage; his first wife, Carin, had died in October 1931. [3]
Carin Axelina Hulda Göring (née Fock; formerly Countess von Kantzow; 21 October 1888 – 17 October 1931) was the Swedish first wife of Hermann Göring.
Hitler and his wife, Eva Braun, committed suicide on 30 April 1945, a few hours after a hastily arranged wedding. Göring was freed on 5 May by a passing Luftwaffe unit, and he made his way to the U.S. lines in hopes of surrendering to them rather than to the Soviets.
12 de jan. de 2000 · His arrest was ordered, but he escaped with his wife into Austria. Given morphine to deaden the pain from his wounds, he became so severely addicted that he twice underwent treatment in 1925–26 at the Långbro mental hospital in Sweden.
- Hermann Göring was a leader of the Nazi Party and one of the primary architects of the Nazi police state (1933–45) known as the Third Reich in Germ...
- Hermann Göring was born in Rosenheim, Bavaria, in Germany and was brought up near Nürnberg, in the small castle of Veldenstein.
- Hermann Göring is known for being one of the primary architects of the Third Reich Nazi police state (1933–45) in Germany. He established the Gesta...
- Hermann Göring committed suicide by ingesting poison on October 15, 1946, after the International Military Tribunal at Nürnberg had condemned him t...
2 de jan. de 2013 · Hermann Goering, a deputy of Adolf Hitler and one of Germany's highest-ranking Nazis, was obsessed with his wife, Carin. The Swedish beauty died young at age 42 and was buried in her native...
2 de abr. de 2014 · Göring's wife died in 1931, and the following year Göring rose to the presidency of the Reichstag (parliament) when the Nazi Party won the majority of seats in the July election.
30 de ago. de 2012 · Göring's wife, Carin, smuggles the wounded Göring out of Germany via Austria to Italy. In 1925, Göring and his wife go to Sweden to live with her family. After the German government declares a general amnesty for political refugees in 1927, Göring will return to Germany.