Ulrich de Maizière
Ulrich de Maizière | |
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de Maizière in 1969 | |
Born |
Stade, Province of Hanover, German Empire;[1] | 24 February 1912
Died |
26 August 2006 94) Bonn, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany | (aged
Allegiance |
Weimar Republic (1930-1933) Nazi Germany (1933-1945) West Germany (1955-1972) |
Years of service |
1930–45 1955–72 |
Rank | General |
Ulrich de Maizière (German pronunciation: [də mɛˈzi̯ɛːɐ̯]; 24 February 1912 – 26 August 2006) was a German general. His father was Walter de Maizière, jurist by profession, his mother's name was Elsbeth (née Dückers). He grew up in Hannover and received the Higher School Certificate in 1930 and then joined the Reichswehr in Stettin. From 1931-1933 he was at infantry school in Dresden. He raised from Lieutenant (1933) to Oberleutnant (1935) to Captain (1939). He took part in the Invasion of Poland and Eastern Front. (1942 major, 1943 Lieutenant Colonel). He served as an aide to general Adolf Heusinger during World War II. From 1945-1947 he was prisoner of war. 1955 he joined the Bundeswehr and worked in the federal ministry of defence. (Colonel) 1.4.1962 he became commander of the military academy of the German Armed forces. (1.8.1962 major general). 1.10. 1964 Inspector of the Army (lieutenant general) and 25.8. 1966 the fourth Inspector General of the Bundeswehr (General officer), succeeding Heusinger, holding the position from 1966 to 1972. He retired 31.3.1972 succeeded by Armin Zimmermann. During his retirement he wrote the books: "Führen im Frieden - 20 Jahre Dienst für bundeswehr und Staat." (1974) and "In der Pflicht - Lebensbericht eines deutschen Soldaten im 20. Jahrhundert." (1989). His brother Clemens de Maizière decided to stay in the Soviet-occupied part of Germany and became one of the founding members of the CDU (Ost), his nephew Lothar de Maizière was the last Prime Minister of the German Democratic Republic (East Germany), while his son Thomas de Maizière currently serves as Federal Minister of the Interior.
He belonged to a noble family of French Huguenot origin, originally from Maizières-lès-Metz.
References
- ↑ John Zimmermann: Ulrich de Maizière – General der Bonner Republik, 1912–2006, München 2012, S. 11 f.
External links
- Ulrich de Maizière in the German National Library catalogue
- Biography on BMVg website
Military offices | ||
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Preceded by General Heinz Trettner |
Chief of Staff of the Federal Armed Forces 25 August 1966–31 March 1972 |
Succeeded by Admiral Armin Zimmermann |
Preceded by Generalleutnant Alfred Zerbel |
Inspector of the Army 1 October 1964 –24 August 1966 |
Succeeded by Generalleutnant Josef Moll |