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{{Short description|Reich Health Leader and SS-Obergruppenführer in Nazi Germany}}
{{For|the German ice hockey goaltender|Leonardo Conti (ice hockey)}}
{{For|the German ice hockey goaltender|Leonardo Conti (ice hockey)}}
{{refimprove|date=January 2023}}
{{multiple issues|
{{Infobox officeholder
{{cleanup rewrite|date=October 2014}}
| name = Leonardo Conti
{{refimprove|date=April 2014}}
| image = Bundesarchiv Bild 183-1989-0309-501, Leonardo Conti.jpg
}}
| caption = Conti as an SS-''Gruppenführer''

| order =
{{Infobox military person
| name = Leonardo Conti
| office = [[Reich Health Leader]]
| term_start = 20 April 1939
| image = Bundesarchiv Bild 183-1989-0309-501, Leonardo Conti.jpg
| caption = SS-Gruppenführer Dr Conti
| term_end = August 1944
| deputy = [[Kurt Blome]]
| predecessor = [[Gerhard Wagner (physician)|Gerhard Wagner]]
| successor = ''Office abolished''
| birth_name =
| birth_date = {{Birth date|df=y|1900|8|24}}
| birth_date = {{Birth date|df=y|1900|8|24}}
| birth_place = [[Lugano, Switzerland]]
| death_date = {{Death date and age|df=y|1945|10|06|1900|8|24}}
| death_date = {{Death date and age|df=y|1945|10|06|1900|8|24}}
| death_place = [[Nuremberg|Nuremberg Prison]], [[Bavaria]], [[Allied-occupied Germany]]
| placeofburial_label =
| death_cause = [[Suicide by hanging]]
| placeofburial =
| resting_place =
| birth_place = [[Lugano]], Switzerland
| resting_place_coordinates =
| death_place = [[Nuremberg]], Germany
| citizenship =
| placeofburial_coordinates = <!-- {{Coord|LAT|LONG|display=inline,title}} -->
| nickname =
| nationality =
| party = [[Nazi Party]]
| birth_name =
| spouse =
| allegiance = {{flag|Nazi Germany}}
| partner = <!--For those with a domestic partner and not married-->
| branch = [[File:Flag Schutzstaffel.svg|23px]] [[Schutzstaffel]]
| serviceyears =
| relations =
| children =
| rank = [[File:SS-Obergruppenführer Collar Rank.svg|40px]] SS-[[Obergruppenführer]]
| parents =
| servicenumber =
| unit =
| relatives =
| commands =
| residence =
| battles =
| education =
| alma_mater = [[University of Erlangen–Nuremberg]]
| battles_label =
| awards =
| occupation =
| relations =
| profession = [[Physician]]
| signature = Leonardo Conti signature.png
| laterwork =
| signature_alt =
| website = <!--Military service-->
| nickname =
| allegiance = {{flag|German Empire}}<br />{{flag|Nazi Germany}}
| branch = [[Imperial German Army]]<br />[[Schutzstaffel]]
| serviceyears = 1918–1919<br />1930–1945
| rank = SS-''[[Obergruppenführer]]''
| unit =
| commands =
| battles =
| mawards = <!-- for military awards - appears as "Awards" if |awards= is not set -->
| footnotes =
}}
}}
'''Leonardo Conti''', MD ({{IPA-de|ˈleonaɐ̯ˌdɔ ˈkɔnti:}}; 24 August 1900 in [[Lugano]] – 6 October 1945 in [[Nuremberg]]) was the Reich Health Leader ({{lang-de|Reichsgesundheitsführer}}) in [[Nazi Germany]]. The killing of a large number of Germans who were of "unsound mind" is attributed to his leadership.<ref name="Encyclopedia of the Third Reich">{{cite book |last=Snyder |first=Louis L. |date=1976 |title=Encyclopedia of the Third Reich |publisher=McGraw-Hill |isbn=9780709157175 }}</ref>


'''Leonardo Conti''' ({{IPA|de|ˈleːonaʁdo ˈkɔnti}}; 24 August 1900 – 6 October 1945) was the [[Reich Health Leader]] and an SS-''[[Obergruppenführer]]'' in [[Nazi Germany]]. He was involved in the planning and execution of [[Action T4]] that murdered hundreds of thousands of adults and children with severe mental and physical handicaps. On 19 May 1945, after Germany's surrender, Conti was imprisoned and in October hanged himself to avoid trial.
==Biography==
Conti was born to a [[Swiss Italian]] father, Silvio, and a German mother, Nanna Pauli, in [[Lugano]], [[Ticino]], [[Switzerland]]; his mother later became the Reich [[Midwifery]] Leader in Nazi Germany.


==Early life==
Conti later studied medicine in Berlin (Friedrich Humboldt Universität, F.H.U) and Erlangen (Friedrich Alexander Universität, F.A.U). He became active in the ''[[Völkisch movement|völkisch]]'' movement, and co-founded an [[Antisemitism|antisemitic]] paper called ''Kampfbund'' ("Struggle league"). He took part in the [[Kapp Putsch]] in 1920. From 1923 he was a member of the ''[[Sturmabteilung]]'' (SA), becoming their first [[physician]]; one of his patients was [[Horst Wessel]], who eventually became a martyr of the [[Nazi Party]]. In 1925, he promoted ''"Über Weichteilplastik im Gesicht"'', a book about facial [[plastic surgery]]. In 1927 he left his usual activities and started organizing the National Socialist German Doctors' League (NSDÄB) ({{lang-de|Nationalsozialistischer Deutscher Ärztebund}}) in [[Berlin]].
Conti was born to a [[Swiss Italian]] father, Silvio, and a German mother, [[Nanna Conti|Nanna Pauli]]; his mother later became the Reich [[Midwifery]] Leader in [[Nazi Germany]]. He attended elementary school in Switzerland and the [[Friedrich Wilhelm Gymnasium]] in [[Berlin]]. In the summer of 1918, he volunteered for military service in the [[First World War]] with the [[Imperial German Army]]'s 54th Field Artillery Regiment in Küstrin (today, [[Kostrzyn nad Odrą]]). However, he did not see any combat before the war ended in November.{{sfn|Williams|2015|p=188}}
==Nazi doctor==
He joined the ''[[Schutzstaffel]]'' (SS) and, as an "old fighter" of the party, he was appointed by [[Hermann Göring]] to the [[Prussia]]n State Council. Conti held the posts and titles of Head of the Reich Physicians' Chamber ({{lang-de|Reichsärztekammer}}), Leader of the NSDÄB, and Leader of the Main Office for the People's Health. In 1937 he was elected to the presidency of the [[FIMS]], the International Federation of Sports Medicine.<ref>{{cite web |title=Our History |website=International Federation of Sports Medicine (FIMS) |url=http://www.fims.org/about/our-history/ }}</ref> The FIMS today considers this to have been "a black page' in their history. In 1939, Conti was appointed ''Reichsgesundheitsführer'' and State Secretary in the Interior Ministry. On the first of July 1941, as the Chief of Health in the Reich, he obtained the classification of Pervitin (see [[History and culture of substituted amphetamines]]) among the products defined by Reich law on opiates. It condemns the private use of Pervitin but does not call into question its use for military purposes.<ref>{{YouTube|fWsjkBGBYMg|La Pilule de Göring. La fabuleuse histoire de la pervitine}} (in French).</ref> In 1944, he was promoted to SS-''[[Obergruppenführer]]'' ({{lang-en|Lieutenant General}}).


Returning to school, Conti then studied medicine at the [[Humboldt University of Berlin]] and the [[University of Erlangen–Nuremberg]]. He was active in the national student movement and in right-wing politics. He became involved in the ''[[Völkisch movement|völkisch]]'' movement and co-founded the [[antisemitic]] combat association, ''Deutscher Volksbund''. He took part in the [[Kapp Putsch]] in 1920 as a member of the [[Marinebrigade Ehrhardt]]. After it was disbanded in May 1922, he followed its leader [[Hermann Ehrhardt]] into the ultra-nationalist and antisemitic terrorist organization [[Organisation Consul]]. After this organization was banned by the government in July 1922, Conti enrolled in the [[Viking League]], another right-wing group committed to the overthrow of the [[Weimar Republic]]. He was also involved with the ''[[Deutschvölkischer Schutz- und Trutzbund]]'', the largest and most active antisemitic organization in Germany. He passed his state medical examinations in November 1923 and joined the ''[[Sturmabteilung]]'' (SA) in Erlangen that year, becoming their first [[physician]] in Berlin. He obtained his license to practice medicine in 1925 and moved to [[Munich]] where he worked as a general practitioner and a paediatrician.{{sfn|Williams|2015|p=188}}
==Action T4==

[[File:Hadamar 012.JPG|thumb|left|200px|Gas chamber for disabled patients in [[Hadamar Euthanasia Centre]]]]
==Nazi career==
Leonardo Conti was a staunch promoter of a public medical administration strongly controlled by the [[Nazism|Nazi]] state. Under his leadership, local health offices were further expanded to allow for a genetic control and selection of the population in order to remove "weak" elements for the improvement of the German race, a doctrine known as [[eugenics]]. The various programmes were the basis for "[[racial hygiene]]" a lethal part of the nazi philosophy.
In 1927, Conti moved back to Berlin and joined the [[Nazi Party]] on 20 December (membership number 72,225). He was appointed the SA physician for ''[[Standarte]]'' V and was placed in charge of organizing the SA medical services in Berlin. From 1929 to 1930 he was the senior physician in SA-''Gruppe Ost''. He also founded the Berlin branch of the [[National Socialist German Doctors' League]], (NSDÄB).{{sfn|Snyder|1994|p=58}} In February 1930, he was called upon to treat [[Horst Wessel]], an SA member who was shot by members of the [[Communist Party of Germany]] and whose death was exploited by [[Joseph Goebbels]] in a propaganda campaign to elevate him into a martyr of the Nazi movement. However, in September 1930, Conti, who had reached the rank of SA-''[[Oberführer]]'', was expelled from the SA when he came into conflict with [[Walter Stennes]], at that time the commander of SA-''Gruppe Ost''.{{sfn|Williams|2015|p=189}}

Conti joined the [[Schutzstaffel|SS]] on 16 November 1930 (member number 3982) and became the senior doctor for SS-''Gruppe Ost''. In May 1932, Conti was elected as a Nazi deputy to the [[Landtag of Prussia]] where he served until it was dissolved on 14 October 1933. After the [[Nazi seizure of power]], Conti was given a number of official positions in the German government, mostly in the areas of medicine and health. On 12 April 1934, he was appointed by [[Hermann Göring]] to the [[Prussian State Council (Nazi Germany)|Prussian State Council]]. He was placed in charge of all medical arrangements for the [[1936 Summer Olympics|1936 Berlin Olympics]]. On 1 April 1936, he was assigned to the personal staff of ''[[Reichsführer-SS]]'' [[Heinrich Himmler]].{{sfn|Williams|2015|p=189}} In 1937 Conti was elected to the presidency of the [[FIMS]], the International Federation of Sports Medicine. The FIMS today considers this to have been "a black page" in their history.<ref>{{cite web |title=Our History |website=International Federation of Sports Medicine (FIMS) |url=http://www.fims.org/about/our-history/ }}</ref> Conti also played a role in the banning of [[Jew]]ish physicians from medical practice.{{sfn|Zentner|Bedürftig|1997|p=167}} In an interview in 1938, he declared: "It is only the elimination of the Jewish element which provides for the German doctor the living space due to him."<ref name="Wistrich2013">{{cite book |last=Wistrich |first=Robert S. |author-link=Robert S. Wistrich |date=4 July 2013 |title=Who's Who in Nazi Germany |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-136-41388-9 |pages=31–2 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7qlvzyEieyQC&pg=PA31 }}</ref>

On 20 April 1939, Conti was appointed [[Reich Health Leader]], President of the NSDÄB and head of the Main Office of Public Health; he was granted the Party rank of ''[[Hauptdienstleiter]]''. This was followed on 28 August by [[Adolf Hitler]] appointing him [[State Secretary]] for Public Health and Nursing in the [[Federal Ministry of the Interior (Germany)#History|Reich and Prussian Ministry of the Interior]].{{sfn|Williams|2015|p=189}} Conti attempted to have the use of the methamphetamine Pervitin (see [[History and culture of substituted amphetamines]]) restricted by the ''[[Wehrmacht]]'', which had been issuing millions of tablets to their soldiers and airmen. In July 1941 Conti succeeded in having Pervitin added to the list of restricted substances but only a warning was issued to the military.{{sfn|Roland|2017|pp=35–36}} In August 1941, Conti was elected to the ''[[Reichstag (Nazi Germany)|Reichstag]]''.<ref name="Wistrich2013">{{cite book |last=Wistrich |first=Robert S. |author-link=Robert S. Wistrich |date=4 July 2013 |title=Who's Who in Nazi Germany |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-136-41388-9 |pages=31–2 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7qlvzyEieyQC&pg=PA31 }}</ref> On 1 October 1941 he was promoted to SS-''[[Gruppenführer]]'' and attained the rank of SS-''[[Obergruppenführer]]'' on 20 April 1944.{{sfn|Williams|2015|p=189}}

===Action T4===
{{ref section|date=November 2022}}
[[File:The Katyn Massacre, 1940 HU106226.jpg|thumb|right|300px| Conti being presented with a report on the [[Katyn massacre]] discovered by the Germans in 1943]]
Conti was a staunch promoter of a public medical administration strongly controlled by the [[Nazism|Nazi]] state. Under his leadership, local health offices were further expanded to allow for genetic control and selection of the population in order to remove "weak" elements for the improvement of the German race, a doctrine known as [[eugenics]]. The various programmes were the basis for "[[racial hygiene]]" a lethal part of the Nazi philosophy. Conti worked with Dr. [[Karl Brandt]] to draft plans for the extermination of all Germany's mental patients along with those suffering from severe physical handicaps. This program, known euphemistically as [[Action T4]], is estimated to have killed over 200,000 adults and children between 1939 and 1945.{{sfn|Childers|2017|p=346}} Conti was initially placed in charge of this initiative but soon was replaced by [[Philip Bouhler]].<ref name="Wistrich2013">{{cite book |last=Wistrich |first=Robert S. |author-link=Robert S. Wistrich |date=4 July 2013 |title=Who's Who in Nazi Germany |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-136-41388-9 |pages=31–2 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7qlvzyEieyQC&pg=PA31 }}</ref>
Accordingly, he was co-responsible for the [[Nazi eugenics|forced sterilization]] program, the racially motivated forced pregnancy interruptions, and ultimately the [[Action T4]] program.<ref name=Leyh2002>Leyh, Ernst-Alfred (2002) [http://www.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/archiv/3669 ''Leonardo Conti and the "ideologization of medicine during the Nazi dictatorship"'' (abstract)]. Universitätsbibliothek Heidelberg (in German).</ref> It is also undisputed Conti's participation in [[human experiments]].{{r|Leyh2002}}
Accordingly, he was co-responsible for the [[Nazi eugenics|forced sterilization]] program, the racially motivated forced pregnancy interruptions, and ultimately the Action T4 [[Euthanasia#Nazi Euthanasia Program|euthanasia program]].<ref name=Leyh2002>Leyh, Ernst-Alfred (2002) [http://www.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/archiv/3669 ''Leonardo Conti and the "ideologization of medicine during the Nazi dictatorship"'' (abstract)]. Universitätsbibliothek Heidelberg (in German).</ref> It is also undisputed that Conti participated in [[human experiments]].{{r|Leyh2002}} Conti was also involved in the forensic investigation into the [[Katyn massacre]], and received a detailed report, known as the [[Katyn Commission]] on the discovery from an international team of experts.
The Nazi involuntary [[euthanasia]] program involved the planned murder of mentally and physically impaired patients and started on September 1939 when the policy was personally approved by Hitler in a personal decree. The killings were conducted in many hospitals and asylums such as [[Hadamar Euthanasia Centre]] by a variety of methods, including enforced [[starvation]], injection of lethal drugs, and gassing using [[carbon monoxide]]. The program constituted the basis for the later programme of mass murder known as the [[Holocaust]] of [[Jews]], [[Poles]], [[Gypsies]] as well as other [[Slavs]], and Russian [[Prisoner of war|POW]]s in camps such as [[Treblinka]], [[Sobibor]], [[Belzec]], [[Chelmno]], [[Auschwitz-Birkenau]], and [[Majdanek]]. Gassing with [[Zyklon B]] was used mainly at Auschwitz and Majdanek with over 1 million victims, and [[Carbon monoxide]] at Treblinka, Sobibor and Chelmno. Such mass murder followed the earlier murders by gunfire used by the [[Einsatzgruppen]]. Many of the SS staff involved in the later murders developed their lethal methods during the Aktion T4 programme, overseen by Conti.


==Death==
===SS ranks===
{| class="wikitable float-right"
On 19 May 1945, after Germany's surrender, Conti was imprisoned and would have been brought to the [[Doctors' Trial]] for his involvement in Action T4. However, on 6 October 1945, over a year before the trial began, he hanged himself in his [[Nuremberg]] cell.<ref name="Wistrich2013">{{cite book |last=Wistrich |first=Robert S. |author-link=Robert S. Wistrich |date=4 July 2013 |title=Who's Who in Nazi Germany |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-136-41388-9 |pp=31–2 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7qlvzyEieyQC&pg=PA31 }}</ref>
|-
! colspan="2"|SS ranks<ref>[https://www.dws-xip.com/reich/biografie/1937/1937.html SS Seniority List, 1 December 1937, pp.16-17, #92] Retrieved 12 May 2023.</ref>{{sfn|Williams|2015|p=189}}
|-
! Date
! Rank
|-
| 12 June 1933
| SS-''[[Standartenführer]]''
|-
| 20 April 1935
| SS-''[[Oberführer]]''
|-
| 30 January 1938
| SS-''[[Brigadeführer]]''
|-
| 1 October 1941
| SS-''[[Gruppenführer]]''
|-
| 20 April 1944
| SS-''[[Obergruppenführer]]''
|-
|}

==Post-war imprisonment and suicide==

[[file:Leonardo Conti in U.S. custody.jpg|thumb|right|Conti's mugshot, after arrested by U.S. Army]]
On 19 May 1945, after Germany's surrender, Conti was arrested by the British in [[Flensburg]] and was imprisoned and held as a witness for the [[Nuremberg trials]]. He would have been brought to the [[Doctors' Trial]] for his involvement in Action T4. However, on 6 October 1945, Conti hanged himself in his [[Nuremberg]] cell.<ref name="Wistrich2013">{{cite book |last=Wistrich |first=Robert S. |author-link=Robert S. Wistrich |date=4 July 2013 |title=Who's Who in Nazi Germany |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-136-41388-9 |pages=31–2 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7qlvzyEieyQC&pg=PA31 }}</ref> On 1 May 1959, his estate was fined 3000 [[Deutsche Marks]] by the Berlin [[denazification]] tribunal.{{sfn|Snyder|1994|p=58}}

==See also==
*[[Register of SS leaders in general's rank]]


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist|30em}}

===Bibliography===
* {{cite book |last=Childers |first=Thomas |author-link= Thomas Childers |year=2017 |title=The Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany |place=New York |publisher=Simon & Schuster |isbn= 978-1-45165-113-3}}
* {{cite book |last=Roland |first=Paul |year=2017 |title=The Secret Lives of the Nazis: The Hidden History of the Third Reich |place= |publisher=Sirius |isbn= 978-1-784-28896-9}}
*{{cite book |last= Snyder |first= Louis |author-link= Louis Leo Snyder |year= 1994 |orig-year= 1976 |title= Encyclopedia of the Third Reich |publisher= Da Capo Press |isbn= 978-1-56924-917-8 }}
*{{cite book |last= Williams |first= Max |title= SS Elite: The Senior Leaders of Hitler's Praetorian Guard |volume=1 |publisher= Fonthill Media LLC |year= 2015 |isbn= 978-1-781-55433-3}}
*{{cite book |editor-last1 = Zentner |editor-first1= Christian |editor-last2 = Bedürftig |editor-first2= Friedemann |year = 1997 |origyear = 1991 |title= [[The Encyclopedia of the Third Reich]] |publisher = Da Capo Press |location = New York |isbn = 978-0-306-80793-0}}


== External links ==
== External links ==
* {{commons category-inline|Leonardo Conti}}
* {{commons category-inline|Leonardo Conti}}
* [http://www.janssen-militaria.com/Biography_Leonardo_Conti.html Biography of Leonardo Conti]
* [http://www.janssen-militaria.com/Biography_Leonardo_Conti.html Biography of Leonardo Conti] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210516063449/https://www.janssen-militaria.com/Biography_Leonardo_Conti.html |date=2021-05-16 }}
* {{DNB portal|122087976|TYP=}} (in German).
* {{DNB portal|122087976|TYP=}} (in German).
* {{PM20|FID=pe/003437}}


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[[Category:1900 births]]
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[[Category:1945 suicides]]
[[Category:1945 deaths]]
[[Category:1945 deaths]]
[[Category:People from Lugano]]
[[Category:20th-century Freikorps personnel]]
[[Category:Aktion T4 personnel]]
[[Category:German eugenicists]]
[[Category:German people of Swiss descent]]
[[Category:German Völkisch Freedom Party politicians]]
[[Category:German Völkisch Freedom Party politicians]]
[[Category:German Nazi politicians]]
[[Category:Holocaust perpetrators in Germany]]
[[Category:Members of the Reichstag of Nazi Germany]]
[[Category:Humboldt University of Berlin alumni]]
[[Category:Nazi leaders]]
[[Category:Kapp Putsch participants]]
[[Category:Members of the Landtag of Prussia]]
[[Category:Members of the Prussian State Council (Nazi Germany)]]
[[Category:Members of the Reichstag 1938–1945]]
[[Category:Nazi human subject research]]
[[Category:Nazi Party officials]]
[[Category:Nazi Party politicians]]
[[Category:Nazis who died by suicide in Germany]]
[[Category:Nazis who died by suicide in prison custody]]
[[Category:Organisation Consul members]]
[[Category:Organisation Consul members]]
[[Category:Action T4 personnel]]
[[Category:People from Lugano]]
[[Category:Doctors who committed suicide]]
[[Category:Physicians in the Nazi Party]]
[[Category:Nazi physicians]]
[[Category:Prisoners who died in United States military detention]]
[[Category:Swiss Nazis]]
[[Category:Nazis who committed suicide in prison custody]]
[[Category:SS-Obergruppenführer]]
[[Category:SS-Obergruppenführer]]
[[Category:Sturmabteilung personnel]]
[[Category:Sturmabteilung officers]]
[[Category:Nazis who committed suicide by hanging in Germany]]
[[Category:Suicides by hanging in Germany]]
[[Category:Nazis who committed suicide in Nuremberg]]
[[Category:University of Erlangen-Nuremberg alumni]]
[[Category:Kapp Putsch participants]]
[[Category:20th-century physicians]]
[[Category:20th-century Freikorps personnel]]

Latest revision as of 21:24, 25 October 2024

Leonardo Conti
Conti as an SS-Gruppenführer
Reich Health Leader
In office
20 April 1939 – August 1944
DeputyKurt Blome
Preceded byGerhard Wagner
Succeeded byOffice abolished
Personal details
Born(1900-08-24)24 August 1900
Lugano, Switzerland
Died6 October 1945(1945-10-06) (aged 45)
Nuremberg Prison, Bavaria, Allied-occupied Germany
Cause of deathSuicide by hanging
Political partyNazi Party
Alma materUniversity of Erlangen–Nuremberg
ProfessionPhysician
Signature
Military service
Allegiance German Empire
 Nazi Germany
Branch/serviceImperial German Army
Schutzstaffel
Years of service1918–1919
1930–1945
RankSS-Obergruppenführer

Leonardo Conti (German pronunciation: [ˈleːonaʁdo ˈkɔnti]; 24 August 1900 – 6 October 1945) was the Reich Health Leader and an SS-Obergruppenführer in Nazi Germany. He was involved in the planning and execution of Action T4 that murdered hundreds of thousands of adults and children with severe mental and physical handicaps. On 19 May 1945, after Germany's surrender, Conti was imprisoned and in October hanged himself to avoid trial.

Early life

[edit]

Conti was born to a Swiss Italian father, Silvio, and a German mother, Nanna Pauli; his mother later became the Reich Midwifery Leader in Nazi Germany. He attended elementary school in Switzerland and the Friedrich Wilhelm Gymnasium in Berlin. In the summer of 1918, he volunteered for military service in the First World War with the Imperial German Army's 54th Field Artillery Regiment in Küstrin (today, Kostrzyn nad Odrą). However, he did not see any combat before the war ended in November.[1]

Returning to school, Conti then studied medicine at the Humboldt University of Berlin and the University of Erlangen–Nuremberg. He was active in the national student movement and in right-wing politics. He became involved in the völkisch movement and co-founded the antisemitic combat association, Deutscher Volksbund. He took part in the Kapp Putsch in 1920 as a member of the Marinebrigade Ehrhardt. After it was disbanded in May 1922, he followed its leader Hermann Ehrhardt into the ultra-nationalist and antisemitic terrorist organization Organisation Consul. After this organization was banned by the government in July 1922, Conti enrolled in the Viking League, another right-wing group committed to the overthrow of the Weimar Republic. He was also involved with the Deutschvölkischer Schutz- und Trutzbund, the largest and most active antisemitic organization in Germany. He passed his state medical examinations in November 1923 and joined the Sturmabteilung (SA) in Erlangen that year, becoming their first physician in Berlin. He obtained his license to practice medicine in 1925 and moved to Munich where he worked as a general practitioner and a paediatrician.[1]

Nazi career

[edit]

In 1927, Conti moved back to Berlin and joined the Nazi Party on 20 December (membership number 72,225). He was appointed the SA physician for Standarte V and was placed in charge of organizing the SA medical services in Berlin. From 1929 to 1930 he was the senior physician in SA-Gruppe Ost. He also founded the Berlin branch of the National Socialist German Doctors' League, (NSDÄB).[2] In February 1930, he was called upon to treat Horst Wessel, an SA member who was shot by members of the Communist Party of Germany and whose death was exploited by Joseph Goebbels in a propaganda campaign to elevate him into a martyr of the Nazi movement. However, in September 1930, Conti, who had reached the rank of SA-Oberführer, was expelled from the SA when he came into conflict with Walter Stennes, at that time the commander of SA-Gruppe Ost.[3]

Conti joined the SS on 16 November 1930 (member number 3982) and became the senior doctor for SS-Gruppe Ost. In May 1932, Conti was elected as a Nazi deputy to the Landtag of Prussia where he served until it was dissolved on 14 October 1933. After the Nazi seizure of power, Conti was given a number of official positions in the German government, mostly in the areas of medicine and health. On 12 April 1934, he was appointed by Hermann Göring to the Prussian State Council. He was placed in charge of all medical arrangements for the 1936 Berlin Olympics. On 1 April 1936, he was assigned to the personal staff of Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler.[3] In 1937 Conti was elected to the presidency of the FIMS, the International Federation of Sports Medicine. The FIMS today considers this to have been "a black page" in their history.[4] Conti also played a role in the banning of Jewish physicians from medical practice.[5] In an interview in 1938, he declared: "It is only the elimination of the Jewish element which provides for the German doctor the living space due to him."[6]

On 20 April 1939, Conti was appointed Reich Health Leader, President of the NSDÄB and head of the Main Office of Public Health; he was granted the Party rank of Hauptdienstleiter. This was followed on 28 August by Adolf Hitler appointing him State Secretary for Public Health and Nursing in the Reich and Prussian Ministry of the Interior.[3] Conti attempted to have the use of the methamphetamine Pervitin (see History and culture of substituted amphetamines) restricted by the Wehrmacht, which had been issuing millions of tablets to their soldiers and airmen. In July 1941 Conti succeeded in having Pervitin added to the list of restricted substances but only a warning was issued to the military.[7] In August 1941, Conti was elected to the Reichstag.[6] On 1 October 1941 he was promoted to SS-Gruppenführer and attained the rank of SS-Obergruppenführer on 20 April 1944.[3]

Action T4

[edit]
Conti being presented with a report on the Katyn massacre discovered by the Germans in 1943

Conti was a staunch promoter of a public medical administration strongly controlled by the Nazi state. Under his leadership, local health offices were further expanded to allow for genetic control and selection of the population in order to remove "weak" elements for the improvement of the German race, a doctrine known as eugenics. The various programmes were the basis for "racial hygiene" a lethal part of the Nazi philosophy. Conti worked with Dr. Karl Brandt to draft plans for the extermination of all Germany's mental patients along with those suffering from severe physical handicaps. This program, known euphemistically as Action T4, is estimated to have killed over 200,000 adults and children between 1939 and 1945.[8] Conti was initially placed in charge of this initiative but soon was replaced by Philip Bouhler.[6]

Accordingly, he was co-responsible for the forced sterilization program, the racially motivated forced pregnancy interruptions, and ultimately the Action T4 euthanasia program.[9] It is also undisputed that Conti participated in human experiments.[9] Conti was also involved in the forensic investigation into the Katyn massacre, and received a detailed report, known as the Katyn Commission on the discovery from an international team of experts.

SS ranks

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SS ranks[10][3]
Date Rank
12 June 1933 SS-Standartenführer
20 April 1935 SS-Oberführer
30 January 1938 SS-Brigadeführer
1 October 1941 SS-Gruppenführer
20 April 1944 SS-Obergruppenführer

Post-war imprisonment and suicide

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Conti's mugshot, after arrested by U.S. Army

On 19 May 1945, after Germany's surrender, Conti was arrested by the British in Flensburg and was imprisoned and held as a witness for the Nuremberg trials. He would have been brought to the Doctors' Trial for his involvement in Action T4. However, on 6 October 1945, Conti hanged himself in his Nuremberg cell.[6] On 1 May 1959, his estate was fined 3000 Deutsche Marks by the Berlin denazification tribunal.[2]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Williams 2015, p. 188.
  2. ^ a b Snyder 1994, p. 58.
  3. ^ a b c d e Williams 2015, p. 189.
  4. ^ "Our History". International Federation of Sports Medicine (FIMS).
  5. ^ Zentner & Bedürftig 1997, p. 167.
  6. ^ a b c d Wistrich, Robert S. (4 July 2013). Who's Who in Nazi Germany. Routledge. pp. 31–2. ISBN 978-1-136-41388-9.
  7. ^ Roland 2017, pp. 35–36.
  8. ^ Childers 2017, p. 346.
  9. ^ a b Leyh, Ernst-Alfred (2002) Leonardo Conti and the "ideologization of medicine during the Nazi dictatorship" (abstract). Universitätsbibliothek Heidelberg (in German).
  10. ^ SS Seniority List, 1 December 1937, pp.16-17, #92 Retrieved 12 May 2023.

Bibliography

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