Andreas Winkelmann1. 1. Institute of Anatomy, Medical School Brandenburg, Neuruppin, Germany. Electronic address: andreas.winkelmann@mhb-fontane.de.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: During the times of National Socialism, Berlin anatomist Hermann Stieve had access to many bodies of executed women for his histological research on reproductive organs. Newly emerged sources add to our knowledge of this research and allow a critical examination of some of Stieve's post-war claims. SOURCES: Descendants of Stieve have preserved more than 200 dissection protocols in Stieve's own hand, which are now held at the archive of Humboldt University in Berlin. In addition, a list of names of execution victims related to this research has been newly identified at the Federal Archive in Berlin. RESULTS: The 207 protocols mostly relate to women executed in Berlin Plötzensee from March 1942 onwards and include two women executed after the war in January 1947. Other sources show that bodies of executed men were delivered to the institute of anatomy until November 1950. The documents confirm that Stieve did not use only the bodies of "Schwerverbrecher [felons]" as he had asserted in 1952. They do verify some of Stieve's post war claims, like that he had access to court records of the victims and likely also to information from attending doctors and family members, if only in rare cases. DISCUSSION: The anatomists' access to bodies of the executed continued after 1945 as this practice was not seen as something Nazi-typical by the allied authorities. Hermann Stieve's post-war defence strategy can be characterised by an "economic" handling of the truth, avoiding outright lies by making true statements on rare cases which, however, were not representative of his general course of actions.
INTRODUCTION: During the times of National Socialism, Berlin anatomist Hermann Stieve had access to many bodies of executed women for his histological research on reproductive organs. Newly emerged sources add to our knowledge of this research and allow a critical examination of some of Stieve's post-war claims. SOURCES: Descendants of Stieve have preserved more than 200 dissection protocols in Stieve's own hand, which are now held at the archive of Humboldt University in Berlin. In addition, a list of names of execution victims related to this research has been newly identified at the Federal Archive in Berlin. RESULTS: The 207 protocols mostly relate to women executed in Berlin Plötzensee from March 1942 onwards and include two women executed after the war in January 1947. Other sources show that bodies of executed men were delivered to the institute of anatomy until November 1950. The documents confirm that Stieve did not use only the bodies of "Schwerverbrecher [felons]" as he had asserted in 1952. They do verify some of Stieve's post war claims, like that he had access to court records of the victims and likely also to information from attending doctors and family members, if only in rare cases. DISCUSSION: The anatomists' access to bodies of the executed continued after 1945 as this practice was not seen as something Nazi-typical by the allied authorities. Hermann Stieve's post-war defence strategy can be characterised by an "economic" handling of the truth, avoiding outright lies by making true statements on rare cases which, however, were not representative of his general course of actions.