Fritz Gause

Fritz Gause (4 August 1893 24 December 1973) was a German historian, archivist, and curator described as the last great historian of his native city, Königsberg (now Kaliningrad), East Prussia.[1] Gause's most important work was his three-volume history of Königsberg, Die Geschichte der Stadt Königsberg in Preußen (1965, 1968, and 1971).[2] He was connected to nationalist historic movement called Ostforschung[3]

Life

Haus Königsberg in Duisburg, established by Gause

After attending Königsberg's Collegium Fridericianum, Gause studied history and German philology at the Albertina, the University of Königsberg under nationalist historian Albert Brackmann. During World War I he volunteered for service in the front-line artillery. After receiving his doctorate in 1921, he began lecturing at the Goethe-Oberlyzeum in Königsberg.

In 1938 Gause became head of the Königsberg City Museum in the former Kneiphof Town Hall, as well as the City Archive and Public Library in the original campus of the Albertina in Kneiphof. In 1939 the library contained 106,000 volumes.[4]

When the Eastern Front of World War II grew closer to the city, Gauleiter Erich Koch prevented[5] Gause from transferring the works under his responsibility to a safer location. The archive, museum, and library were subsequently destroyed during the 1944 Bombing of Königsberg and 1945 Battle of Königsberg. After the end of the war, Gause was held as a prisoner-of-war by Poland until 1947.

After his release from imprisonment, Gause taught at a girls school in Essen. He was pensioned in 1959 as senior lecturer. Gause was also a member of the Stadtgemeinschaft Königsberg (Pr), a cultural organization for expelled former residents of Königsberg. While serving as chairman, he established the Haus Königsberg, a historical and cultural museum which opened on 20 October 1968 in Duisburg. The Haus Königsberg was replaced with Duisburg's modern Museum Stadt Königsberg on 5 December 1992. After the war Gause claimed Adolf Hitler was morally justified in his territorial claims against Poland[6] and published studies that were aimed at defending aggressive policies of Nazi Germany.[7] In the same publication-'Deutsch-slawische Schicksalsgemeinschaft'- he ignored all objective German historians as well as Polish ones and used as sources known supporters of Nazi Germany and Hitler, while defending Prussia's actions against Poland and showing as the main villain USA's president Wilson.[8] While objecting to Hitler's policies, he showed Nazi demands as morally justified; his efforts to paint Nazism as just another form of "Prussian militarism" were described as "amusing denial", but understandable in view of the author's open admiration of "Prussian spirit"[9] In one of his books he went as far as describing Nazi invasion of Poland and takeover of the town of Dzialdowo (Soldau) as "liberation from Polish rule",[10] while keeping silent about the actions by Nazis in the town and their atrocities.[11] In his work on history of Konigsberg (Królewiec), Gause tried to show Polish minority living in the city as mostly temporary merchants arriving for brief visits, the Polish church as German and avoided mentioning the Polish name even once throughout the three volumes of the book he published.[12] The existence of camps for non-German forced labor during Second World War as well as sub-camp of the Stutthof concentration camp in the city was concealed by Gause as well, with only one footnote mentioning the topic of slave labor.[13]

In his other works he praised Partitions of Poland as progressive act[14] and claimed that Germany brought the "Slavic East" into European civilization.[15]

The state government of North Rhine-Westphalia granted Gause the title of professor in 1972. He died of a heart attack in Essen in 1973.

Selected works

Notes

  1. Glinski, p. 57
  2. Albinus, p. 96
  3. Hans Rothfels: eine intellektuelle Biographie im 20. Jahrhundert - page 314 Jan Eckel - 2005
  4. Albinus, p. 297
  5. Albinus, p. 296
  6. Winni szukają winnych - Page 180 Eugeniusz Guz - 1984 - Fritz Gause (Deutsch-slawische Schicksalsgemeitischaft — Niemiecko- słowiańska wspólnota losu) uznaje żądania terytorialne Hitlera wobec Polski za moralnie uzasadnione
  7. Przegląd zachodni, Tom 27, page 400 Instytut Zachodni., 1971
  8. The American Slavic and East European Review 1955 Volume XIV page 286 1963 Fritz Gause, Deutsch-Slavische Schicksalsgemeinschaft. Abriss einer Geschichte Ostdeutschlands und seiner Nachbarlander (Matthew M. Fryde) ... the German authors Gause refers to are chosen mostly from the rank of Hitler's admirers and supporters of his regime, while serious and objective German scholars like Kehr, Hauck, H. F. Schmid, Volker and so many others are omitted.
  9. The American Slavic and East European Review 1955 Volume XIV 1963 Fritz Gause, Deutsch-Slavische Schicksalsgemeinschaft. Abriss einer Geschichte Ostdeutschlands und seiner Nachbarlander (Matthew M. Fryde) page 287
  10. GAUSE, FRITZ: Geschichte des Amtes und der Stadt Soldau, Marburg 1959, page 364
  11. Komunikaty Mazursko-Warminskie, Wydania 67-70 Milczy jednak Gause o tym, jak zachowali się „kameradzi" hitlerowscy po „oswobodzeniu" przez nich Działdowa „spod jarzma polskiego". Nic nie wie o słynnym „obozie przejściowym", który ciągnął się od koszar aż do mostu pod Burkatem. page 596 1960
  12. Wybitni Polacy w Królewcu: XVI-XX wiek,page 33, 43 Sławomir Augusiewicz, Janusz Jasiński, Tadeusz Oracki Wydawnictwo "Littera", 2005
  13. Zagraniczni robotnicy przymusowi w Prusach Wschodnich w latach II wojny światowej Bohdan Koziełło-Poklewski Państwowe Wyd-wo Naukowe, 1977, page 142
  14. Modern Prussian history, 1830-1947 Philip G. Dwyer Longman, 2001 - page 35
  15. The Unquiet Germans - page 184 Charles Wheeler Thayer - 1957 - One revealing volume written in 1952 by Dr. Fritz Gause, called The German- Slav Partnership of Destiny, develops the thesis that Germany brought the Slavic East into the civilized European community

References

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