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  1. Wilhelm Keitel

    Wilhelm Keitel

    German field marshal

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  1. The Nuremberg executions took place on 16 October 1946, shortly after the conclusion of the Nuremberg trials. Ten prominent members of the political and military leadership of Nazi Germany were executed by hanging: Hans Frank, Wilhelm Frick, Alfred Jodl, Ernst Kaltenbrunner, Wilhelm Keitel, Joachim von Ribbentrop, Alfred Rosenberg, Fritz ...

  2. The rope was allegedly too short and the trapdoors too narrow, so that some of the hanged men suffered bloody wounds when they were dropped. Keitel's death was allegedly the longest – it supposedly took as long as 28 minutes. On this day the Nazi leaders were sentenced to death at the famous Nuremberg Trials.

  3. He was sentenced to death and executed by hanging in 1946. [1] Early life and career. Wilhelm Keitel was born in the village of Helmscherode near Gandersheim in the Duchy of Brunswick, Germany. He was the eldest son of Carl Keitel (1854–1934), a middle-class landowner, and his wife Apollonia Vissering (1855–1888).

  4. Apr 23, 2014 · Wilhelm Keitel had been general field marshal, second only to Adolf Hitler in Germany’s military hierarchy. Now, on a cold, rainy October morning, at 1:00 a.m. in 1946, he stood shackled to a guard outside cell 8 of Nuremberg’s Palace of Justice. In half an hour, Keitel would be hanging by his neck from a.

  5. On October 16, 1946, Wilhelm Keitel was executed by hanging along with other high-ranking Nazi officials who had been sentenced to death. Wilhelm Keitels life and career serve as a chilling reminder of the extent to which individuals can become entangled in the machinery of tyranny and brutality.

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  7. Jul 4, 2016 · Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel and his deputy general, Alfred Jodl, also pleaded to be spared the noose. They asked for a firing squad instead, which, in Keitels words, would offer them, “a death which is granted to a soldier in all armies of the world should he incur the supreme penalty.”

  8. Keitel was found guilty on all four counts (conspiracy, crimes against peace, war crimes, and crimes against humanity) and sentenced to death. He was hanged on October 16, 1946. National Archives and Records Administration, College Park, MD. Author (s): United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington, DC.

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