Betwixt The Sheets: The History of Sex, Scandal & Society - Real Wives of Dictators | Eva Braun, Adolf Hitler's Wife
Episode Date: March 14, 2025What was life like as Adolf Hitler's other half?Although their marriage came (very) late in their lives, Eva Braun was with Hitler from the earlier days in his political career, and was a confidant to... him through the rise (and fall) of the Nazi Party.How complicit was she in the evil ideologies Hitler set out? Was she in any way a victim? And what was it like to be part of the inner circle?Joining Kate in the second episode of our limited series, Real Wives of Dictators, is Clare Mulley, historian and author of books including The Women Who Flew For Hitler, and recently, Agent Zo: The Untold Story of Fearless WW2 Resistance Fighter Elzbieta Zawacka.This episode was edited and produced by Stuart Beckwith. The senior producer was Charlotte Long.If you'd like to get in touch with the show you can contact us at betwixt@historyhit.com.Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe. You can take part in our listener survey here.All music from Epidemic Sounds.Betwixt the Sheets: History of Sex, Scandal & Society is a History Hit podcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hello, my lovely betwixters.
It's me, Kate Lister.
I am me, you are you, and this is betwixt the sheets.
But before we can keep going together, I have to tell you,
this is an adult podcast, spoken by adults to other adults,
bad, doughty things, and an adulty way occurring a range of adults subjects,
and you should be an adult too.
And if you've been listening to this show for long enough now,
you must know the drill by now.
For any newbies, if you're of a sensitive position,
just bugger off now.
We don't need you around here.
Right, on with the show.
They say they're behind every great man there's a great woman.
I've never really believed that.
But what about evil men?
Are there crap and evil women behind them too?
And whilst it's the men in these horror stories that seem to get the most attention,
in this brand new mini-series, we're exploring the lives of four of the wives of some of history's most bloody and notorious dictators.
Were they victims?
She was certainly young at the beginning.
She was drawn to the flame, absolutely.
Or were they enablers?
She famously defied the judges, calling them fascists,
and she said,
I was Mao's dog.
I bit who he told me to bite.
She's aware of the anti-Semitism.
It's not that she looks the other way.
She doesn't think it's a problem.
She doesn't need to look the other way.
What was their life like behind closed doors?
She's grown up in a revolutionary family, and she married a revolutionary.
So you can assume that she's on the revolutionary side.
And were any of these women thirsty for power themselves?
The rest of the leadership was dead set against it.
They sensed her ambition.
They had an instinct about her.
I'm Kate Lister, and these are the real wives of dictators.
Episode 2, Eva Braun, wife of Adolf Hitler.
Why do you look for a man?
Oh, money, of course.
You're supposed to rise when an adult speaks to you.
I make perfect copies of whatever my boss needs by just turning it up and pushing the funny.
Yes, social courtesy does make a difference.
Goodness, for a beautiful time.
Goodness has nothing to do with it, Derry.
Hello, and welcome back to Betwixt the Sheets, the history of sex scandal in society.
With me, Kate Lister.
Life sure does throw you some crazy twists and turns, doesn't it?
For example, one moment you're a 17-year-old photographer's assistant in Munich,
and the next minute, you're swallowing cyanide in a bunker with the Fuhrer.
That's a hell of a plot twist, not to mention a very chilling thought,
but who was the woman who was romantically involved with Hitler,
throughout his rise through German politics?
Well, it was Eva Braun, but how did she handle being kept out of the spotlight as much as she was?
Was she in any way complicit, supportive even of Hitler's evil ideology?
Well, joining me today is Claire Mully, and she is going to help us get to know Eva Braun a little bit better, as if anybody wants to know her. But here we go anyway.
Hello and welcome to Betwixt the Sheets. It's only Claire Mully. How are you doing?
Very happy to be Betwixt the Sheets with you, Kate.
Betwixt the Sheets with me and Eva Braun.
Oh, not so good. I'm not so happy about that bit.
What a place to be. We are talking.
today about this woman who, I think it's fair to say the most famous thing she did was
Mary Hitler, but before we even get on to her, you are the author of such books as the women
who flew for Hitler and Agent Zoe, the untold story of fearless World War II resistance fighter
Elizabeth Zawaka. So as a question before we even get to Ava, what brought you to World War II
history? Just going to nip in and say Elspietta Zavatska, but pleasingly her code name is
Zoe Z-O, and that's what she's known as throughout the book, so no worries there.
I was, my first book was actually a woman in sort of whose story touches on the First World War,
who was really remarkable.
And she was a woman from Shropshire.
And I was interested in her when the British bank, the main bank, said, right, we're going to have a new £20 note and a new £2 coin.
And we want to put women on there.
I said, oh, fantastic.
And they were asking the public for suggestions.
So I said, Eben and I'm sorry, this fantastic woman I'd written about.
And when the new currency came out, there was Jane Austen on both.
I love Jane Austen, but it's like saying there are no other women worth celebrating or mentioning.
So I thought, damn, this, you know, we need to do some work.
So I wrote a biography of Eggington, called The Woman Who Saved the Children, my first book.
And it's just been an option for films.
I'm very happy this week.
Oh, congratulations.
That's amazing.
It is amazing.
She is amazing.
But there weren't very many people who I could interview who had known her.
She was born in 1876, died in 1928.
So I move forward a war to talk about all these untold stories of women at the heart of the Second World War, again, who've been pretty much written out of history.
Or when these stories are told, they're told quite romantically.
It seems to be a lot of focus on appearance and not much focus on achievements.
So I'm trying to do something about that.
Oh, thank God you are, because when you actually go looking for these stories, they're almost embarrassingly abundant.
Like, you kind of have this idea of, well, women's stories aren't told that much.
much because they probably weren't, there just weren't that many of them doing this stuff.
Yes, there were.
Yes, there absolutely was.
Yeah, exactly.
There are loads of them.
But women do get often deliberately, but a lot of the time just from, you know, misogyny
written out.
So when I was doing my research for one of my books called The Women Who Flewere, there
were only two test pilots who were female for the Third Reich, secondered in.
They were civilians.
They weren't actually in the Luftwaffe.
Lots of women did work in the Luftwaffe, actually, but in admin, you know, secretarial roles,
whatever. But these two women served as test pilots and one was a development engineer, which
really amazing stuff. And one of them tried to save Hitler's life and the other one actually tried to
kill him. There are only two of them. And they knew each other. They not surprisingly actually
loathed each other. They kind of knew there was something off, but they didn't know all each other's
secrets, but they knew each other. And anyhow, so I was researching that and the famous one is
the Nazis, quite a lot of stuff on her. But the other one, I went to find her family and very kindly,
they brought out a load of information and files.
And I said, why aren't these files in the military archives?
Where the men's files were...
She was involved in the most famous plot to kill Hitler.
And all the guys' files are in the military archives and Freiburg and so on.
And they showed me a word on the outside of the file.
And someone had written, back in the day, had written domestic.
So basically, because she's a woman, they sent the files back to the family.
They thought, well, she can't possibly have a role.
So women get written out even at the archive stage, not just the struggle at debt,
sometimes they get a publisher to take it on, or...
the interest in it. So, yeah, so there's lots of reasons. But yeah, like you say, there are lots
of stories. One woman who probably would quite like to have been written out from history is
probably Ava Brom. Like if she would probably wish that like we didn't know anything about her
with what happened in the end. No, I completely disagree, actually. I think she'd still be
believing that the third Reich will rise again and she will be recognised as a great heroine. I think
she went out of her way to make sure that she would be in history as much as possible.
And Hitler obviously kept her quiet for a long time.
Talk a bit more about that, if you like.
But she's constantly, she's, you know, she loves photography.
She is taking photographs.
She's taking cine film.
And she is making sure that she has a role.
And she was always hoping that ultimately it would be shown that always behind the scenes
there is this evidence that she was there all along,
silently supporting the great man as she saw him.
So, yeah, no, she was very detailed.
to be that great heroine of the Third Reich as she felt it was.
God Almighty, trying to unpick this mindset.
But before we get to, I suppose that's kind of where she ended up.
I don't even know where she started from.
Where did Eva even come from?
Eva Brown.
Well, she is a Munich girl.
She sort of middle class.
Her father was a teacher, Franz Fanny.
Her mother, Francisco, was seamstress.
They had three daughters.
She's the middle one.
Ilsa is the eldest. She actually married a Jewish doctor. Amazing, eh? He was expatriated. She was never
part of the inner circle. But the younger two, Eva and her sister Gretel, were very close. They were
confidants. And they were just good fun girls. Eva liked sports. She liked dogs. She like fashion.
She liked going to the cinema with her girlfriends. She liked photography. She was working
at a photography studio in Munich, Heinrich Hoffman's studio. And Hoffman became Hitler's
personal photographer.
Right.
So that's where they met, actually.
She was introduced to Hare Wolf, as Hitler was known to her at first, over a plate of
sausages at the photography studio.
He was much older than her.
And she was, I think she thought he was an impressive older man.
He was 40 and she was 17, over 20 years between them.
Right.
But he was already getting a lot of attention.
You know, he was a bit of a, he was an impressive figure for her.
and she appealed to him too.
She was, I think, young, malleable, probably not that bright, admiring, giving him a bit of an ego boost in that way.
And so they both provided something for the other.
What year was this?
I'm trying to get a sort of sense of what the hell was happening in Germany when they met.
Because she's very young, 17.
When you think of what you were like at 17, what I was like at 17.
Oh, I'd love to know.
And she...
I wasn't flirting with dictators, I like to think.
But still, like, you know, you make bad choices, right?
But he wasn't then a dictator, although he was on the way up.
It was 1929, late 1929 that they met.
So 10 years before the war and four years, three years, really, before he became Chancellor.
So he's on the up.
He's big in Munich.
And she is definitely sort of drawn to this.
He's got a circle around him of adoring people, including her boss.
And she, you know, she started off at the photography studio just as a secretary.
and she ends up, you know, taking photographs, developing photographs.
Here is a great subject for her.
Great.
She can be in there taking pictures.
Taking photographs of Hitler is quite a large part of what she does.
Wow.
And selling them, you know, taking private pictures and then selling them for large amounts
of cash, but also thereby helping to create his profile, the image of Hitler.
So she will take photographs of him with her girlfriends and their children later on
and present him as a caring, fatherly figure.
Right.
and get paid a lot of money for it and help his career.
So they meet just as things are starting.
He's on the up, as you said, things are changing in Germany.
There's a buzz around this man,
and it's only a few years before he is Chancellor of Germany.
Did they stay in touch the whole way through this,
or did they sort of like meet up a little bit later on?
Well, I mean, they kind of stayed in touch because she's working.
He's often at Hoffman's studios.
Hoffman, Hitler had a very terrible family himself.
And throughout his life, you see him trying to build kind of alternative families.
And one of his close families that you like to hang out with was the Hoffman's.
So he could kind of relax in that company without having a family of his own.
So he would see her, but they aren't seeing each other in that sense of a relationship for a couple of years.
He's got his half-nie-neiss, Geli Raubal.
Just going to ask about her.
Yeah.
apartment, yeah. So he is exceedingly fond of her and we don't know if it was more than that.
Seems that she didn't want it. He was very domineering. He was definitely controlling and manipulating.
And she ends up with a room in his apartments. And she wants to have a friendship with his driver.
He sacks the driver and he, you know, says she can't go out anywhere. Even if she goes to the cinema, she's escorted.
It is appalling behaviour.
And eventually she shot herself with her father's pistol in the lung.
And it's the next year that Hitler starts his affair with Eva Brown.
I know that we'll never know what was going on between him and Gilly,
but what's your take on it?
What do you think?
Well, he was definitely controlling and manipulating.
It was a deeply unhealthy relationship.
It wasn't a true relationship between uncle and niece.
And it's, I mean, we won't know.
I mean, there are all sorts of stories that perhaps she was pregnant, this, that and the other.
We don't know.
We can speculate, but that's, you know, that's not my game.
I'm a non-fiction writer.
Yes, I know.
I'm forever trying to push people to, like, you know, come down on one side of the other,
but we just don't have.
What we can say, I think is it was weird.
Definitely unhealthy, domineering, controlling relationship.
Yeah.
And ultimately led her to take her own life.
So, yeah.
Wow.
Wow.
And then the year after that is when he starts, what would we even say, dating,
courting, what?
That sounds quite romantic, doesn't it?
I don't think we need to dress it up.
He begins a more physical relationship with Eva.
She becomes more important in his life.
So, yeah, and her parents are against it
because she's still quite young at this point,
and he's a much older man with a lot of power,
so they're initially against it.
I mean, later they come on side and enjoy all the side benefits,
the fringe benefits of that relationship.
But it's difficult at first.
I mean, they really get together in 32, and in August 1932, that's when she attempts to kill herself the first time.
She actually had three attempts to kill herself and her life and was successful, of course, in the last.
So, yeah.
Do we have any idea why?
What was going on there?
Well, there's a lot of pressure on her.
She wants the relationship.
Her parents are against it.
Hitler's in favour of it, but he's not in favour of it in any public sense.
she's not that important to him at this point.
She's useful, she's fun, she's comfort, she helps him relax.
But she wants a bit more than that and she's not getting it.
So, I mean, I don't know if she really intended to actually kill herself if it was a cry for help.
I mean, even that phrase I don't really like that much.
But she certainly, I mean, this is important that we do talk about these suicide attempts
because they're one way of showing that she actually had agency.
This is not someone who is just tagging along all the time doing whatever she's told.
Here, she is making a really significant move.
And as a result, it works.
She gets hit there's attention.
And after that, she gets a sort of recognition within the inner circle.
I mean, albeit completely privately, this is totally off the public sphere.
But yeah, she gets a room.
He provides her then a house.
She stays at his place when he comes to Munich.
And it becomes this, you know, she's demonstrated devotion and loyalty to him.
I mean, he gets her checked out by Dr. C.
Oh, do you think?
And it could have killed her.
So yes, he thinks, yeah, she's really demonstrated something here.
But as well, slightly more cynically, I think we need to take him back.
He's already had one young woman die of suicide in his care.
And so he really can't afford the scandal of another young woman dying, having shot herself.
So he there begins to take more care of her.
And that's when the relationship really becomes sort of confirmed.
Yeah.
So what's weird about this is the Nazi party, one of their many things that they thought was really important was the nuclear family.
And being married and having lots of little Aryan babies.
And there was like this whole big, we shall get married and have babies, babies, babies, babies.
Why was Hitler hiding a relationship then?
Why wasn't it like, look, this is our leader and he's married and having baby?
Why was he keeping her a secret?
Well, you know, this, I always think it's a bit like Elizabeth first. I don't think any other historians ever said that. In a minor way, he's married, he's married to Germany. You know, he has got this image of being the father of the nation. And so he is, he wants to maintain this myth of self-sacrificing devotion. I mean, he would love to have a family, but obviously the country comes first. He's the great leader. So it's partly that, it's partly, as you say, she's not really the type that they're flagging up. You know, she's much younger.
I don't suppose that bit matters so much, I'll eat you. But she's quite sporty. She smokes,
which she disapproves of. She likes to wear makeup. She likes parties. She drinks champagne.
You know, he's a teetotaler. She doesn't have, well, is it, or is he just a hypocrite,
you know, in his private life? This is someone who's keeping quiet. So she's not on the public
radar. I mean, had she been seen out there, it might have been hypocritical. But I think,
so it's partly that. He doesn't want to expose himself as a hypocrite with this young, pretty young,
Flippity gibbetty, not the classic Germanic mothery type.
But partly it's just that image thing.
And he really felt that a lot of women,
a lot of women did vote for him as well as men.
I think they actually voted for him for the same reasons as the men did.
It doesn't seem to be a particularly big gender divide on voting reasons.
You know, it's economy and stability and fear of communism, all these big issues.
But he felt very much that women, you know, like women adored film stars.
and when the film star came out as married, their appeal would go down.
And he really much saw himself as this idle figure that women adored.
And there are some example, you know, women writing devoted letters to him, all that sort of thing.
If only we met dear Fuhrer, we'd get together sort of thing.
And he thinks, well, they're all voting for me.
This is great.
Keep it going.
So he's keeping that whole thing going as well.
Was she popular amongst his?
Because, you know, if he's the Fuhrer and like an access to him is kind of, it's sort of sacred,
within this world because, you know, the closer you are to him, the more important you're going
to be, Hitler's right-hand man. And now he's got this side piece because he doesn't marry her for
ages, does it? She's sort of there. And I'm wondering how people viewed her within his, like,
did they view her as a threat? Did they think that, oh, she's just very nice and good for him?
Like, what? Well, everyone is viewing everyone strategically in the inner circle. And you're absolutely right.
She has got closer access to Hitler than just about anyone, including many in the highest echelons.
of the party. So she's a gatekeeper in a sense. And she does have some influence there. I mean,
I don't think she had huge political influence. I think that is minimal. But there are occasions
where she does have influence and she does have influence over access to him. So she's petitioned.
She's given gifts. She's praised as the relationship is consolidated. People like Gerbils, you find
he's writing in his diary. Ridiculous sort of praises of her saying that she's a very sensible
girl, very clever, very good eye for art or whatever. You know, he gives her this sort of,
he's readjusting because if the furor likes her, he is trying to kind of take on that mindset.
But a lot of people were just sort of lobbying. So when Huss flew to Scotland, there's a belief that
perhaps the only reason why his wife wasn't arrested and sent to prison after that was because
Eva Bram put a good word in for her. So she has sort of minimal level of influence in that way.
I mean, she did have friends up there. She was friends with some of
especially when she's at the Berkov, she's sort of the society hostess at the Berkhoff,
which has hit us retreat in the mountains where he increasingly goes to do business.
And yeah, she's friends with some of the wives.
She's friends with some of the Nazis like Speer felt he was very close to her, a few of the others as well.
Others like Martin Borman said, you know, if I die, you're going to be in trouble, you know,
told his wife to kind of make some preparations because Eva didn't like him and that, you know,
if there was a chink of weakness, she might have some influence there.
So that's mixed feeling.
She got on with some of the secretaries.
She had lots of parties there.
So in some ways, she's quite fun and she enables Hitler to relax.
And that's quite good for everyone in the Nazi party, if not for everyone else.
I'll be back with Claire and Eva after this short break.
Was she politically ambitious?
Part of this series has been trying to work out, like, what was the attraction?
How much did these women know about what their husbands were going on?
How did you block it out?
I mean, was this just a case of, like, I'm just going to ignore all of this awful stuff
because I get nice parties and nice frocks?
Or was she more politically ambitious than that?
No, I don't think that she was politically ambitious or particularly deeply questioning at all.
But having said that, I also think that she shared his worldview.
So this is not a nice woman, but likes her dresses, prepared to turn a blind eye.
This is someone who goes along with it.
I mean, she's very aware of the anti-Semitism.
She's definitely aware of the violence on the streets.
I mean, she's got limited knowledge, but she has enough knowledge that we can be quite sure that she was very happy to share his worldview.
Certainly never, no hint of ever questioning that in any way.
So, yes, she knew about the racist ideology.
What she wouldn't have been partied to is party business.
She wasn't a member of the Nazi party, although that's really neither here nor there.
I mean, lots of Nazis like Hannah Reich.
Lots of women weren't members, but were still.
Nazis. Some Nazis were not actually members of the party. So that's a moot point, I think,
is often made too much of. But Hitler kept his private and public life, business life separate.
She wouldn't have been party to any of the conversations about military strategy or Nazi party policy.
So she wouldn't have done that. Having said that, he could be quite indiscreet at times.
So there's some of his secretaries mentioned that he's talking about stuff and they kind of get a bit of an
idea of what's going on. And just, you know, she would have known. She would have not.
known something before the war. There's plenty of violence on the streets from 1933 onwards,
plenty of people disappearing persecution. Hoffman's studio is taking photographs of Jewish men being
held down and shaved. And we don't know which photographs she saw and which she didn't. She's taking
her own photographs, which are different, and she keeps photograph albums and the annotations under the
photos in their show that she has some level of interest. So she puts in photographs of the
preparations for the invasion of Poland and what the polls know, don't know, she says,
Poland still does not want to negotiate or, you know, rip and drop left for Moscow with a photograph.
So she's not completely ignorant.
No.
And I think if we say, oh, she's a woman.
She was taken out.
That's fear.
Then that's just ridiculous, sexist, apologist stuff.
It's, you know, she had, she wasn't there in the key meetings, absolutely.
But she was definitely aware of the basic things that are going on through the war.
And I think what we can't say is that she knew about.
the Holocaust. There's no evidence that she did. She could have been deliberately kept apart
from that. Although there are occasions where, there's a famous occasion when one of the wives
tackles Hitler and says, I've seen all these Dutch women being put on a train to go east,
where are they going, what's going on? This is bad. And he just screams at this woman and says,
what do you care? What do you care about Jewish women? What do you care? Shut your mouth.
And she's no longer welcome. And this stuff, all of this stuff would have been talked about.
There's no doubt that she'd have heard, you know, hints and gossip and some stories around it.
More than that, I think it's hard, hard to say.
I mean, they talked about the daily news.
It's what's going on.
But the extermination camps themselves were never discussed or mentioned in Hitler's presence,
and that's mainly where she is.
Could she have left if she wanted to?
She doesn't seem like she wanted to, to be completely honest.
But would this have been a situation that if, you know, in the theoretical world?
Yeah, left, I don't know.
I think it would have been quite tricky for to go across borders.
I mean, she never showed any signs of wanting to.
Quite the reverse, actually.
So she towards the end of the war.
I mean, she doesn't ever go to Hitler's frontier output.
She's never at the wolf's lair.
The only women that go to these places are the secretaries who are actually doing work.
And she doesn't ask to go there.
But she does insist on going to the bunker at the end.
And Hitler's kind of against this, actually, as a policy.
She insists on going.
And she's there for a while.
And she actually takes shooting lessons outside the bunker, among other things,
walks her little terrier dogs and all sorts.
But she doesn't leave, even as the Red Army are coming.
in and Hitler saying, right, you should hop it now, and she insists on remaining with him.
So quite the reverse, really. She wants to be at the heart of it. And I think, you know, I think
she has agency and I think it's really important. We're not talking about a child here. Yes,
she's younger and she meets him, but she's now a grown woman. She makes her decision.
She's aware of the political climate. She's aware of the anti-Semitism. It's not that she looks
the other way. She doesn't think it's a problem. She doesn't need to look the other way. You know,
she accepts this. And I think she's got this idea that she is the great leader. I mean,
she had hoped that after the war, after Germany's victory in the war, when the Third Reich has
influence across Europe and the world, that the truth will come out, they will be married,
she'll be recognised as this great force behind the scenes, and she'd even hope to play herself
in a film, a biopic of Hitler post-war. You know, she thought they would retire to Lince where he'd
have his art collection and it would just be this wonderful. So she doesn't want to leave him.
She thinks even if it goes wrong, I'd rather be with him right to the end to keep this fairy tale
fantasy going that she envisages her great role in. So I think we can absolutely put to one side
the idea that she was some kind of naive young moth drawn to the flame and all of this stuff.
I think it can be all of these things, can you? I think she started naive. She was certainly young
at the beginning. She was drawn to the flame. Absolutely. But
She wasn't without agency.
She wasn't outside of history.
She's not some pretty thing with no knowledge.
She may not have known about the Holocaust,
but she certainly knew the discrimination,
the anti-Semitism of Nazi racial policy and practice.
You know, from 33 onwards, then the Nuremberg laws.
There is children being taken out of schools,
the literature, the newspapers, you know,
she is not unaware of all of this.
And actually she is helping Hitler because she is a bomb.
When the war starts going badly, she is there to calm him down and look after him and show some care and show some love and let him relax.
And we know he didn't want to talk politics all the time.
He wanted to relax in that kind of happy family loving environment.
And so she probably sustained him and thereby the war.
So yeah, she played a role.
They didn't get married for ages.
And before we get to the bunker and we will get there, this might be another speculative question, but I'll just see what you think of it.
Do you think they were having sex if they weren't married?
Oh, I knew this was going to come up.
I mean, people have been speculating then, and they're still speculating.
I don't think it's the most important question here,
but I think that their sex life was probably quite normal.
And there's, you know, there's lots of chat about it from the time.
So the head of the Nazi main publication, Max Adman,
and he said that they occasionally had intimate relations.
But one of the sexes, Christa Schroeder, who survived the war,
thought the relationship was just a pretense.
I mean, you can go either way.
The valet, Heinz-Linz, he recognised that they had connecting rooms at the Berghoff,
so they could go separately because she's kept secret theoretically.
And those rooms did connect.
And Hoffman, the photographer that she worked for, he said that the relationship started platonic when he first introduced them,
but took her definite shape many years later when Hitler indulged her in the usual way, he said.
So Hitler's maid said the man was not strongly sex.
So there's all sorts.
Braun herself, there's this one occasion where she's giggling with her girlfriends over in 1930.
photograph of Chamberlain, when Chamberlain came to meet Hitler for discussions pre-war,
and he's sitting on the sofa in Hitler's Munich flat, and she said to her friends,
oh, if only he knew the going-ons that that sofa has seen.
So that suggests something.
But I think probably they just had a fairly normal physical relationship.
And certainly Dr. Thea Morel, who was his last personal doctor,
who was known for sort of, it was like the Harley Street doctor for STDs of Germany, you know.
And at the end, among the drugs he's giving him are Aphrodisiate drugs
and they tend to be before we spend a night with Eva.
So, yeah, I suspect they were having sex.
He was taking a lot of drugs, wasn't he, Hitler, especially towards the end.
It's a miracle he could have had sex with anyone at all, really.
Well, yeah, he did have a large number.
I mean, he was being injected with vitamins, all sorts of things, actually.
And, you know, he was obviously ill and shaking.
So there was real medications in that bundle as well.
I'll be back with Claire and Eva after.
for this short break.
So we need to kind of take this.
I guess we've got to take it to it.
It's inevitable place, which is the bunker.
Like, how did they end up there?
And you've already said that Eva had the opportunity to leave and didn't.
But just talk us through.
And when did they get married in amongst all this?
Okay, so they get married really at the very end.
It's his throwing her a bone for her loyalty sort of thing.
Sorry, not literally.
So they get married just after midnight, 28th, 29th of April in the bunker.
So the year before, June before, in 44, her sister Gretel, her younger sister, who she was
particularly close to, had got married to Fagelin, who was, you know, lower level in a group.
And they had had this incredibly flamboyant wedding with, you know, fields, cut of their flowers to bring in,
and so much rivers of champagne.
and dancing. And Eva was very keen. She saw it as a test run for her own wedding. She wanted this big,
you know, all across the papers and everything. And this was her younger sister. She was given it
a bit of a organisational go, actually roughly the same time as D-Day, so it all didn't go too well.
But it was this huge event. And she wanted that for her own. And of course, her wedding was very
different because it's in the bunker. So that is under the ground, deep down there, 50 foot below
ground and it's in this encased in concrete in the earth. It's dank. They're under bombardment.
So these thick walls, 18 inch thick walls are shaking and the plaster is falling off them. And there's
problems with the latrines being blocked. So the whole place stinks. And it's got the general B.O.
anyhow, of about 20 staff down there. So it's a pretty grim atmosphere. And they've got problems with
the damp and with diesel fuels to keep the generator going. And essentially, it's incredibly intolerant.
tolerably claustrophobic. Hannah Wright pilot that I wrote about, she went down there just before
they got married and remembers the building shaking and she heard deep sobbing coming down the corridor.
So this is not a joyous event. And it's only when Hitler absolutely knows he's got nothing
left to lose. I mean, God knows had he have won the war, I don't know if he'd have married her or not.
But he knows. I don't think he would. Here he knows the end is coming. And so he, she has been
completely loyal and stayed there to the end. So he says,
it is my wish that she goes with me into death as my wife to avoid the shame of flight or surrender.
What a joyful thing for your future husband to say.
Wow.
So that's the deal.
And that's what she chose.
So then they have this civil ceremony, of course.
He has to certify that he's an Aryan under his own laws.
So that's what it does first.
Then they have the ceremony.
She writes her name.
She has to sign her new name, Eva Hitler.
But she starts writing brawn.
So in the document, you can see the bee crossed out.
and then Hitler, she hadn't quite got her head around it.
And then they have gerbils and bollman, they witness it,
and then they have a small champagne reception
because they're well stocked down there,
so they have some drinks.
But do they all know they're going to die at this point?
The weirdest wedding ceremony ever.
They don't all die.
There are survivors.
It is grim as.
So, yeah, one of them says it was a rather ghostly experience.
So, you know, ghostly, of course,
hints of the death that they must have all felt all around them.
So, yeah, I mean, pretty grim, actually.
but I guess, she was saying, thinking at still my self-sacrifice to such a level.
I'm still with a great man.
I guess.
And they kill themselves the next day.
How did they do it?
I'm being very morbid now, but like how did they, what was the...
Well, I mean, it was in the afternoon.
They had their own private quarters in there with a sofa.
They sat on the sofa next to each other.
Hitler shot himself in the head and she bit onto a cyanide tablet.
I mean, she'd told a friend that she wanted to be a beautiful corpse,
so she didn't want to shoot herself and create some mess.
She'd put on her favourite dress, or at least Hitler's favourite dress,
at the ones she had down there.
And then she sat on the sofa and she took this.
And then she was worried about it.
So they'd tested the cyanide on Blondie, Hitler's dog, Alsacian dog, just before.
Wow.
So they knew it was going to work.
So then she could, you know, I mean, she wasn't beautiful for a second or two, I suppose.
They then they dragged the bodies upstairs.
They doused them with petrol in the garden around the back of the bunker
as the Red Army's approaching
and they tried to cremate them there and then.
And it's pretty gruesome.
Do you want the gruesome?
I'm afraid I do, yes.
Yeah, well, the chauffeur left an account.
He survived.
He got out then and he survived.
He said that Hitler's untidy hair
fluttered in the wind
and Eva's bronze, dark blue dress with white frills,
moved in the wind until finally drenched by the fuel.
And other eyewitnesses said that as Hitler shriveled up and burnt,
her corpse slowly moved into a sitting position in the heat of the flames.
Pretty disgusting.
Anyhow, there, yes.
So could you say she's a victim then?
Possibly.
But if she is, she's a willing victim.
She's not like one of the victims of the real victims of Nazism.
She chose death on her own terms in her pretty dress,
having drunk champagne and married the man she'd loved.
You know, other people are dying very slowly during appalling, degrading,
labour, knowing that their families have been murdered.
You know, she's a willing victim at the very most.
But I think she's on that scale somewhere, you know, victim perpetrated, collaborator,
certainly she's on that, she's on the wrong side of that axis.
God, that's just, and I know that I would just speculate now,
but it doesn't sound to me like he would have married her if the war had gone through.
Because, you know, there's an old expression within dating, and if they wanted to,
they would.
And it's sort of, like, if the only way that he's married her is with this suicide pact,
that's just...
Well, it's hard to know, isn't it?
I mean, did he love her?
Was Hitler capable of love?
I was going to ask you that.
I think we do need to remember he is a human being.
And evil is not innate.
It doesn't help us in any way to say to other him from us.
This is something we have to think about what motivated him.
If we're going to think lessons from history and learning them, let's say he is a human
being.
So I think he certainly cared about her in the way that he could.
So there are reports of when she's bored and tetching.
he's talking about something else, he'll pat her hand to comfort her.
Certainly when she would be late back, if she'd gone out for some sporting thing
or if she'd gone out and there'd been a raid, he would be very concerned and make sure that
they were in touch with each other.
He'd be very concerned until he heard from her.
So he was agitated.
He wanted to know she was okay.
He left quite early on.
He wrote his first will and he made sure that she was left a significant pension so that
she'd be all right if anything happened to him.
And of course, after the most famous plot on him, the 20th of July 19th,
44 bomb plot, the Valkyrie operation, Klaus von Stathenberg and the gang.
He sends her his trousers, which are all shredded from the force of the explosion.
And apparently she nearly fainted.
So they do have this bond.
I mean, he sent them to her because he wanted her to keep them for posterity to show how brave he was and all the rest of it.
But there is a real bond between them.
I think, did he love her?
Depends how he defined love.
I mean, for me personally, if someone's going to love me, they need to respect me.
That is a fundamental part of it.
I don't think he respected her.
He didn't love her in that way.
He loved it in the way of which he was capable, I think.
I mean, he would constantly be saying,
a woman gets absolutely nothing from me.
I can't pay attention to any of that.
He's using her, but he doesn't see women as equals, obviously.
So he's not expecting that.
He loves her like a pretty dull, like a support,
like a soothing balm at the end of the day, like a family atmosphere.
She affirms to him his sense that he is a decent, good person.
And he loves that, which is part of her package.
an important part of it.
And, you know, Speer said she was infinitely thoughtful of Hitler
and a restful sort of girl.
And he loves all of that.
That's what he wants in a woman.
So I think he did love her in that sense.
But he would also tell people,
he told Speer that a highly intelligent man
should always choose a primitive and stupid woman.
And he said that in front of her.
Wow.
So is it love?
Well, you know, it's as much love as I think he could show
or was possible of showing
within his mindset.
So as a final question then, does either have any kind of legacy?
Is she just like a weird, sad story that happened?
Did she have any kind of impact on Germany going forward?
Or is it just something everyone would rather forget?
Not going forward, no.
I think she is significant.
It is worth our looking at her.
I think she had minimal political impact.
She had no military influence at all.
But she did have,
a role of significance of value to Hitler and therefore of value to the Third Reich.
Partly early on she is helping Hoffman to form his public persona with her photography.
And that is something.
But most significantly, I think it's her greatest influence was serving as a barn for Hitler,
particularly when the war turned the worst for him.
And he was deeply agitated.
She's another drug, if you like.
One of the cocktail, she calms him, helps him to rest.
and relax and recuperate his energies and therefore keeps him going. And I think she did play a role
in that. Beyond that, not much. Speer said Eva Brown will prove a great disappointment to historians.
I mean, of course, they're all sexist anyhow. But I think that's because she wasn't particularly
political and she probably wasn't even that bright, not that that's the most important thing.
And I think her story does tell us that. I think what it says is that it reminds us that often in
history, women are said. And we do it. We do it about Trump's wife as well. Is she kidnapped? Let's rescue her.
Like these women had no agency, no authority of themselves. And they did. This is an adult woman who made
choices. She chose to remain with Hitler. She chose to be with him. She knew what his worldview was.
She knew about his discrimination, his anti-Semitism. She knew about the violence on the streets on his
watch. She knew about the war. She might not have known about the Holocaust. And she
She probably didn't know all the finer details, but basically she shared his worldview.
She was a part of that. And I think, you know, obedience, support like that is an enabling
requirement for dictators. And she therefore played a role in sustaining and supporting the Third Reich.
And that is significant. Claire, you have been fascinating to talk to. Thank you so much.
you've really fleshed out this woman and where she fitted into Hitler and the Third Reich.
And if people want to know more about you and your work, where can they find you?
I have a website, www.claremully.com, no eye in Claire.
So yeah, please come and say hello on all the socials people.
Fabulous. Thank you so much. You've been fascinating.
It's been great, Kate. Really enjoyed talking with you.
Thank you for listening and thank you so much to Claire for joining me.
And if you like what you heard, don't forget to like review and follow along whatever it is that you get your podcast.
If you'd like us to explore a subject or maybe you just wanted to say hello,
then you can email us at betwixt at history hit.com.
We've got episodes on the private life of Lewis Carroll
and the third episode in our limited series about Stalin's wife,
all coming your way.
This podcast was edited and produced by Stuart Beckwith,
the senior producer was Charlotte Long.
Join me again, Betwixt the Sheets,
The History of Sex, Scandal and Society,
a podcast by History Hit.
This podcast contains music from Epidemic Sound.
