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German SS officer and writer (1904–1939) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Otto Wilhelm Rahn (18 February 1904 – 13 March 1939) was a German medievalist, Ariosophist, and SS officer who researched Holy Grail myths.
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Otto Rahn | |
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Born | 18 February 1904 |
Died | 13 March 1939 35) | (aged
Alma mater | University of Giessen (BA) |
Known for | Crusade Against the Grail Lucifer's Court in Europe |
Scientific career | |
Thesis | To the Research of Master Kyot of Wolfram von Eschenbach |
Military career | |
Branch | Allgemeine SS |
Years | 1936–1939 |
Rank | Obersturmführer |
Rahn was born on 18 February 1904 to Karl and Clara (née Hamburger) in Michelstadt in the Hesse region of the German Empire. From an early age, Rahn's mother introduced him to the stories and legends of the Holy Grail, Parzival, Lohengrin and the Nibelungenlied. While attending the University of Giessen, he was inspired by his professor, Baron von Gall, to study the Albigensian (Catharism) movement and the massacre that occurred at Montségur. In 1924, he gained a degree in philology, specializing in the literary history of the language and romances of France.
In 1931, he travelled to the Pyrenees region of southern France where he conducted research. Aided by the French mystic and historian Antonin Gadal, Rahn argued that there was a direct link between Wolfram von Eschenbach's Parzival and the Cathars. Rahn further believed that the Cathars were associated with the Holy Grail and that the keys to this mystery lay beneath the mountain peak where the fortress of Montségur remains, the last Cathar fortress to fall during the Albigensian Crusade.
In 1934, Rahn published his first book, Kreuzzug gegen den Gral ("Crusade Against the Grail"), which attempted to link the medieval romance of Parzival with the persecution of the Cathars by Pope Innocent III. The book came to the attention of Karl Maria Wiligut, head of the Department for Pre- and Early History of the SS Race and Settlement Main Office. Wiligut was impressed by the work and passed it to Heinrich Himmler, the head of the SS, who, from an early age, had a marked interested in ancient history, chivalry and the occult, especially ariosophy.[2] Rahn joined Himmler's staff as a junior, non-commissioned officer and became a full member of the SS in March 1936, attaining the rank of SS-Unterscharführer the following month. In an interview with Rüdiger Sünner for the 1998 documentary Schwarze Sonne, Adolf Frisé, a confidante of Rahn's, said of him: "He was only devoted to one person in the SS, and that was Himmler... to him, Himmler was a saint, and he protected him".[3]
Research for his second book Lucifer's Court led Rahn to sacred sites across Nazi Germany, France, Italy, and Iceland, and during this time he maintained frequent correspondence with Himmler who was interested in Rahn's research and, through the SS, funded his expeditions.[2]
Rahn's homosexuality had been known to Himmler but, in 1937, it became the subject of difficulties with other SS officers, who had long contrasted their conduct with the open homosexuality common in Ernst Röhm's Sturmabteilung.[4] Following a "drunken homosexual scrape", Rahn was assigned guard duty at the Dachau concentration camp in order to "toughen him up".[5]
Deeply concerned by what he had witnessed in Dachau, Rahn offered his resignation from the SS in February 1939. This was accepted by Himmler. On 13 March, Rahn's body was found by local children in a ravine near Söll (Kufstein, Tyrol), in Austria.[5] Sixty years later, in an interview with Sünner, one of those who found Rahn's body described finding "two empty bottles" next to it.[6] Rahn's death was privately ruled a suicide but was presented by Himmler to the SS as having occurred following a "mountaineering accident".
Rahn has been the object of many rumours and strange stories, including that his death had been faked, although all such speculation is unsubstantiated.[5]
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