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List of speeches given by Adolf Hitler

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This list of Adolf Hitler speeches is an attempt to aggregate all of Adolf Hitler's speeches.

Speeches

Hitler declaring war against the United States in front of the Reichstag delegates on 11 December 1941
Date Place Speech
16 October 1919 Munich Hofbräukeller - Hitler's first pre-arranged public speech. He had joined the German Workers' Party party the previous month. 111 attended. [1]
13 November 1919 Munich Eberlbrau - Hitler's second public speech - hecklers were violently ejected. 130 attended. [2]
24 February 1920 Munich Hofbräuhaus. First speech at a larger venue. 2000 attended. The 25 article political programme founding the new Nazi Party was presented [3]
13 August 1920 Munich Hofbräuhaus. Speech title "Why are we Antisemites?". 2000 attended. 2 hour speech interrupted 58 times by cheering[4]
03 February 1921 Munich First speech at the Circus Krone, Munich's biggest venue. Speech title "Future or Ruin" - denouncing reparation payment to Allies. 6,000 attended. [5]
04 November 1921 Munich Hofbräuhaus. Meeting degenerated into a full scale brawl with political opponents while Hitler was speaking.[6]
9 November 1921 Munich ...
12 April 1922 Munich ...
18 September 1922 Munich ...
13 April 1923 Munich ...
24 April 1923 Munich ...
27 April 1923 Munich ...
1 May 1923 Munich ...
1 August 1923 Munich ...
12 September 1923 Munich ...
26 February 1924 Munich Trial ...
27 March 1924 Munich Trial ...
27 February 1925 Munich Bürgerbräukeller - Re-founding the Nazi Party. 3,000 attended. On 9 March 1925 Hitler was banned from public speaking by Bavarian government. Most other German states followed suit.[7]
4 July 1926 Weimar 2nd Nazi Party Congress. 6-7,000 attended. First public display of SS.[8]
23 November 1926 Essen ... (Party Convention)
6 March 1927 Vilsbiburg On 5 March 1927 the Bavarian government lifted the public speaking ban on Hitler, provided the initial speech was not in Munich. 1,000 attended.[9]
9 March 1927 Munich In the Circus Krone for the first time since 1923. 7,000 capacity audience[9]
30 March 1927 Munich In the Circus Krone. 5,000 attended[10]
6 April 1927 Munich In the Circus Krone. Only 1,500 attended. "Hitlers magic no longer working"[10]
01 May 1927 Berlin In the Clou concert hall - Hitlers first speech in Berlin.[11]
16 November 1928 Berlin At the end of September 1928, following the poor performance of the Nazis in the 1928 elections, the Prussian government lifted its speaking ban on Hitler. This was Hitlers first speech in the Sportpalast which was packed to capacity.[10]
02 May 1930 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
18 July 1930 Munich Opening speech of the 1930 election campaign. 8,000 audience.[13]
3 August 1930 Frankfurt 25,000 audience.[13]
5 August 1930 Wurzburg 8,000 audience.[13]
7 August 1930 Grafing 4,000 audience.[13]
10 August 1930 Kiel 4,000 audience.[13]
12 August 1930 Munich Circus Krone. 6,000 audience.[13]
15 August 1930 Essen 30,000 audience.[13]
18 August 1930 Cologne 20,000 audience.[13]
21 August 1930 Koblenz 12,000 audience.[13]
26 August 1930 Ludwigshafen 20,000 audience.[13]
29 August 1930 Munich Circus Krone. 6,000 audience.[13]
4 September 1930 Konigsberg 16,000 audience.[13]
6 September 1930 Hamburg 10,000 audience.[13]
7 September 1930 Nuremberg 15,000 audience.[13]
8 September 1930 Augsburg 10,000 audience.[13]
10 September 1930 Berlin Sportpalast - 16,000 audience.[14]
12 September 1930 Breslau Jahrhunderthalle - 20,000-25,000 audience.[14]
13 September 1930 Munich Circus Krone. 6,000 audience. Last speech of the 1930 election campaign. At the 14 September 1930 election the Nazi Party increased its seats in the Reichstag from 12 to 107, becoming the 2nd largest party. A political earthquake.
19 May 1931 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
1931 Berlin ... (Hasenheide Beer Hall)
27 January 1932 Düsseldorf ... (Industry Club)
09 February 1932 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
27 February 1932 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
04 April 1932 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
22 April 1932 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
27 July 1932 Berlin ... (Berlin Stadium)
01 September 1932 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
02 November 1932 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
20 January 1933 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
22 January 1933 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
1 February 1933 Berlin ... (Proclamation to the German Nation)
10 February 1933 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
15 February 1933 Stuttgart ...
02 March 1933 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
23 March 1933 Berlin ...
8 April 1933 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
1 May 1933 Berlin ... (At Tempelhof airfield)
24 October 1933 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
10 November 1933 Berlin ... (At Siemens Factory)
13 July 1934 Berlin ... (Justification of his actions against the SA leadership in the Night of the Long Knives)
8 November 1934 Munich ...
9 November 1934 Munich ...
12 September 1936 Nuremberg ... (Labour Front)
14 September 1936 Nuremberg ...
30 October 1936 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
30 January 1937 Reichstag ...
19 July 1937 Munich ... (On the Opening of the German House of Art)
5 November 1937 ... (given to Foreign Minister and military heads of the Reich)
28 March 1938 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
1 April 1938 Stuttgart ... (Schwaben Hall)
1 May 1938 Berlin ... (Olympic Stadium)
1 May 1938 Berlin ... (Lustgarden)
26 September 1938 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
5 October 1938 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
9 October 1938 Saarbrücken ...
6 November 1938 Weimar ...
9 January 1939 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
30 January 1939 Berlin ...("Prophecies" the "annihilation [of European Jewry]" to the Reichstag)
1 April 1939 Wilhelmshaven ...
28 April 1939 Berlin ...(Response to Franklin Roosevelt)
22 August 1939 Berchtesgaden ...Obersalzberg: speech to military leaders, Invasion of Poland will begin
1 September 1939 Danzig ...Germany Could No Longer Remain Idle (I WILL AGAIN PUT ON MY UNIFORM)
19 September 1939 Danzig ...
6 October 1939 Berlin ...
10 October 1939 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
24 January 1940 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
30 January 1940 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
03 May 1940 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
19 July 1940 Reichstag ...
04 September 1940 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
18 December 1940 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
10 December 1940 Berlin ... (Rheinmetall-Borsig Works)
30 January 1941 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
24 February 1941 Munich ...
16 March 1941 Berlin ...
6 April 1941 Berlin ... (Order of the Day)
4 May 1941 Reichstag, Berlin Address to the Reichstag
03 October 1941 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
11 December 1941 Krolloper Declaration of war against United States
30 January 1942 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
15 February 1942 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
30 May 1942 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
28 September 1942 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
30 September 1942 Berlin In the Sportpalast.[12]
9 November 1942 Löwenbräukeller (Stiglmaierplatz) Hitler Stalingrad Speech
23 March 1943 Berlin Zeughaus: Address to the Heldengedenktag
11 November 1943 Breslau Jahrhunderthalle: Address to 10'000 officer cadets
1 July 1944 Berlin Reichskanzlei: Act of state, funeral speech Generaloberst Dietl
4 July 1944 Berchtesgaden Platterhof, Obersalzberg: Speech to 200 senior manager of German industry
20 July 1944 Wolf's Lair Radio address following assassination attempt by Claus von Stauffenberg
1 January 1945 Adlerhorst Führerhauptquartier: Radio address: New year speech
30 January 1945 Reichskanzlei, Berlin Radio address: Anniversary of coming to power (Last Speech)

Other

Only one known recording exists of Hitler's voice when not giving a speech. An engineer for Finnish state broadcaster YLE secretly recorded 11 minutes of Hitler's 1942 meeting with Finnish leader Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim (see Hitler and Mannerheim recording).

Bibliography

  • Baynes, Norman H. Ed. (1942). The Speeches of Adolf Hitler, April 1922 – August 1939 V1. London, Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-598-75893-3
  • Baynes, Norman H. Ed. (1942). The Speeches of Adolf Hitler, April 1922 – August 1939 V2. London, Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-598-75894-1
  • Hitler, Adolf (1973) [1941]. Roussy de Sales, Raoul de (ed.). My New Order. New York: Octagon Books. ISBN 0-374-93918-7.

References

  1. ^ Ian Kershaw Hitler:1889-1936 Hubris. Penguin, 1998. page 140
  2. ^ http://www.markedbyteachers.com/university-degree/historical-and-philosophical-studies/adolf-hitler-and-wwii.html
  3. ^ Ian Kershaw Hitler:1889-1936 Hubris. Penguin, 1998. page 141
  4. ^ Ian Kershaw Hitler:1889-1936 Hubris. Penguin, 1998. page 152
  5. ^ Ian Kershaw Hitler:1889-1936 Hubris. Penguin, 1998. page 156
  6. ^ Ian Kershaw Hitler:1889-1936 Hubris. Penguin, 1998. page 176
  7. ^ Ian Kershaw Hitler:1889-1936 Hubris. Penguin, 1998. page 266
  8. ^ Ian Kershaw Hitler:1889-1936 Hubris. Penguin, 1998. page 278
  9. ^ a b Ian Kershaw Hitler:1889-1936 Hubris. Penguin, 1998. page 292
  10. ^ a b c Ian Kershaw Hitler:1889-1936 Hubris. Penguin, 1998. page 293
  11. ^ SPIEGEL ONLINE, Hamburg, Germany (29 November 2012). "Conquering the Capital".
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af "BERLIN WEST AND SOUTH".
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Hitler's Voice: Organisation & development of the Nazi Party".
  14. ^ a b Ian Kershaw Hitler:1889-1936 Hubris. Penguin, 1998. page 330

External links