Wewelsburg is a Renaissance castle located in the northwest of North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. It is known for becoming the ritual headquarters of the SS in 1934 under Heinrich Himmler.
In 1802, the castle fell to the ownership of the Prussian state - and 13 years later fell victim to a fire that gutted the North Tower.
In 1925, the castle had been renovated into a museum, banquet hall and hostel - six years later the North Tower again proved to be the weak point of the architecture, and had to be supported by guy wires. In 1934, at the suggestion of Karl Maria Wiligut, Heinrich Himmler signed a 100-mark 100-year lease with the Paderborn district, initially intending to renovate and re-design the castle as a school for Nazi leadership (the so-called SS "Führerkorps").
In 1938, Siegfried Taubert was in charge of developing the castle, when Himmler enquired about the cost of installing a planetarium. The Ahnenerbe are also said to have had major input into the redevelopment.
Prisoners from the Saxonia and Niederhagen concentration camps were used as labourers to perform much of the construction work on Wewelsburg between 1939 and 1943, under the design of architect Hermann Bartels.
The design of floor mosaic laid in the Marble Hall during that time became known as the "Black Sun" (Schwarze Sonne) and is used as a symbol in Neo-Nazism. The castle contained a room dubbed the Himmler Crypt, dedicated to Heinrich I, of whom Himmler believed himself to be the reincarnation, and where he hoped to be interred after his death.
Himmler's plans included making it the centre of a new Germanocentric world following the "final victory." As such an installation of a 1-kilometer diameter in accordance with secular Nazi principles was planned, including a representational figure for the "Führerkorps."
Himmler reportedly imagined the castle as a rebirth of the Knights of the Round Table and appointed 12 SS officers as his followers, who would gather at various rooms throughout the castle and perform unknown rites. The only documented meeting was in June 1941, though they are assumed to have been held regularly. When one of the officers died, his ashes would be interred in the castle. Similarly, any recipient of one of Himmler's Totenkopfrings was to arrange to have the ring returned to the Castle upon his death.
When the final victory failed to materialize, Himmler ordered Heinz Macher, with 15 of his men, to destroy the Wewelsburg, only two days before the US Third Infantry Division seized the grounds. Reports vary from near-complete damage, to only the North Tower suffering great damage; either way the damage was soon repaired after Macher's company ran out of explosives.
It began with 480 prisoners from Sachsenhausen, and grew to 1200, comprised chiefly of Soviet POWs and captured foreign labourers shipped to Germany, although early in its life it was also a gathering point for Jehovah's Witness prisoners. During the SS's December 1942 Korherr report it was reported to have only housed 12 Jews all of whom had died*.
Of the 3900 prisoners held during the camp's existence, 1285 of them died and 56 were formally executed. In August 1942, the Allies began deciphering death tolls transmitted from the camps, Niederhagen had reported 21 deaths for that month. The camp was dissolved in 1943 with most of the prisoners resettled in Buchenwald, though several dozen prisoners remained behind, housed directly in Wewelsburg.[http://www.ns-gedenkstaetten.de/nrw/de/wewelsburg/thema_1/
Hauptsturmführer Adolf Haas, who had overseen the camp from its beginning, was transferred to a command position at Bergen-Belsen, while Schutzhaftlagerführer Wolfgang Plaul was transferred to Buchenwald. Untersturmführer Hermann Michl had last been recorded at the camp in 1942, and later appeared at the Riga ghetto.
In 1973, a two-year project was begun to restore the North Tower, and by 1977 it had been decided to restore the entire site as a war monument. It opened on March 20th 1982, with several survivors of the Niederhagen camp present. Karl Hueser of the University of Paderborn was considered influential in the reopening project, and Wulff Brebeck would become the curator through the 1990s.*
A memorial was built in honour of the deceased Niederhagen prisoners in 2000, four years later the Kreismuseum Wewelsburg was granted DM 29,400 for restoring and moving the remnants of the Niederhagen camp, as well as producing an educational film on the Ukrainian and Russian prisoners who were housed there.*
The castle seems to be one of the major sources of inspiration for the Wolfenstein games, such as Return to Castle Wolfenstein and Spear of Destiny.
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