Klaus Barbie

@Nazi Leader, Life Achievements and Childhood

Klaus Barbie was a Nazi leader infamous for his crimes against French prisoners during World War II

Oct 25, 1913

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: October 25, 1913
  • Died on: January 1, 1991
  • Nationality: German
  • Famous: Nazi Leader, Criminals, War Criminals
  • Siblings: Kurt Barbie
  • Known as: Nikolaus Barbie
  • Childrens: Ute Regine Barbie

Klaus Barbie born at

Bad Godesberg

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Birth Place

Klaus Barbie married Regina Margaretta Willms, who was the daughter of a postal clerk. They had two children, a son Klaus-Georg Altmann and a daughter Ute Messner.

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Personal Life

Nikolaus ‘Klaus’ Barbie was born in Godesberg, Germany, on 25th October 1913. His family came from a district named Merzig, which was situated near the French border.

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Childhood & Early Life

His father, whose name was Nikolaus as well, fought in the First World War, in which he was captured by the French. He also suffered a severe injury in the neck. Even though he came back home alive, the events of the war had left a negative impact on him. Thus he remained angry and bitter for the rest of his life. He became an alcoholic, and abused his children as well.

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Childhood & Early Life

Till the age of ten Klaus attended the local school where his father was a teacher. Later he left for Trier to attend a boarding school. The entire family moved to Trier in 1925.

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Childhood & Early Life

A few years later, his younger brother died due to a chronic illness in 1933. The same year, his father also passed away.

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Childhood & Early Life

The death of his father derailed young Klaus Barbie’s academic plans. Thus he decided to join the Nazi labor service ‘Reichsarbeitsdienst’. Soon he developed a liking for the Nazi ideology, and at the age of 22, he joined the Sicherheitsdienst, which was the intelligence agency of the Nazi army.

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Tenure as a Nazi Leader

After the conquest of Western Europe by German forces during the Second World War, he served for some time in Netherlands. Soon he was transferred to Lyon, in France, where he was also promoted to Chief of Gestapo.

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Tenure as a Nazi Leader

During this time, he actively promoted the torture and killing of French prisoners. The charges against Klaus Barbie also include ordering the execution of Jean Moulin, a well-known French resistance leader, and deporting 44 Jewish children, along with their teachers to the Auschwitz extermination camp. Soon he came to be known as the "Butcher of Lyon.”

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Tenure as a Nazi Leader

It is estimated that he was directly responsible for as many as 14,000 deaths. In 1943, he was awarded the Iron Cross First Class by the leader of the Nazi party, Adolf Hitler, in recognition of his successful campaign against the French Resistance, as well as the capture of Jean Moulin.

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Tenure as a Nazi Leader

After the end of the World War II, and the death of Adolf Hitler, Klaus Barbie was captured by the American authorities. However, they saw him useful for their anti-Communist efforts, and therefore, he was recruited by the Counterintelligence Corps of the US Army.

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After World War II

He proved to be a very useful asset to the US Army, and he is also credited for having helped the CIA capture the famous Marxist leader and revolutionary Che Guevara, in 1967.

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After World War II

However, the French soon came to known that he was in hands of the US. They made a plea to John J McCloy, who was then the US High Commissioner for Germany, to hand Klaus Barbie over to the French. McCloy, however, refused and instead helped Barbie escape to Bolivia.

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After World War II

In Bolivia, Barbie became a successful businessman under the name “Klaus Altmann.” He lived peacefully for several years, until he was tracked down by the Nazi hunters in 1972.

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After World War II