Gottbegnadeten list
The Gottbegnadeten-Liste was a 36-page list of artists considered crucial to National Socialist culture. The list was assembled in September 1944 by Joseph Goebbels, the head of the Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda, and Germany's supreme leader Adolf Hitler.
History
The list exempted the designated artists from military mobilisation during the final stages of World War II. Each listed artist received a letter from the German Propaganda Ministry which certified his or her status. A total of 1,041 names of artists, architects, music conductors, singers, writers and filmmakers appeared on the list. Of that number, 24 were named as especially indispensable; they thus became the equivalent of National Socialism's "national treasures".Goebbels included about 640 motion picture actors, writers and directors on an extended version of the list. They were to be protected as part of his propaganda film efforts, which persisted through the end of the war.
Many of the cultural figures appearing on the list are no longer widely remembered but there are exceptions, including a number of renowned classical musicians such as the composers Richard Strauss, Hans Pfitzner, and Carl Orff, the orchestral conductors Wilhelm Furtwängler and Herbert von Karajan, and the Wagnerian baritone Rudolf Bockelmann. The only foreigner on the list was Dutch actor Johannes Heesters.
Special listed artists
Architects
- architect Leonhard Gall, "Reichskultursenator"
- architect Hermann Giesler, "Reichskultursenator"
- architect Wilhelm Kreis
- architect and critic Paul Schultze-Naumburg
Visual artists
- sculptor Arno Breker, named as "Reichskultursenator"
- sculptor Fritz Klimsch
- sculptor Georg Kolbe
- sculptor Josef Thorak
- history painter Arthur Kampf
- painter Werner Peiner
Authors
- Gerhart Hauptmann
- Hans Carossa
- Hanns Johst, "Reichskultursenator"
- Erwin Guido Kolbenheyer
- Agnes Miegel
- Ina Seidel
Musicians
Actors
- Otto Falckenberg
- Gustaf Gründgens
- Johannes Heesters
- Friedrich Kayßler
- Eugen Klöpfer
- Karl Kneidinger
- Hermine Körner
- Heinz Rühmann
- Heinrich Schroth
Singers
Further listed artists on the "Führerliste"
There was also an extended list, the so-called "Führerliste" that included "God-gifted artists" who were not to be drafted but worked as "Künstler im Kriegseinsatz".Authors
- Hans Friedrich Blunck
- Friedrich Griese
- Josef Weinheber
- Gustav Frenssen
- Hans Grimm
- Max Halbe
- Heinrich Lilienfein
- Börries Freiherr von Münchhausen
- Wilhelm Schäfer
- Helene Voigt-Diederichs
Composers
- Johann Nepomuk David
- Werner Egk
- Harald Genzmer
- Ottmar Gerster
- Kurt Hessenberg
- Paul Höffer
- Karl Höller
- Mark Lothar
- Joseph Marx
- Gottfried Müller
- Carl Orff
- Ernst Pepping
- Max Trapp
- Fried Walter
- Hermann Zilcher
Conductors
- Hermann Abendroth
- Karl Elmendorff
- Robert Heger
- Oswald Kabasta
- Herbert von Karajan
- Johannes Schüler
- Karl Böhm
- Eugen Jochum
- Hans Knappertsbusch
- Joseph Keilberth
- Rudolf Krasselt
- Clemens Krauss
- Hans Schmidt-Isserstedt
- Carl Schuricht
Instrumentalists
- Ludwig Hoelscher, cellist
- Elly Ney, pianist
- Walter Morse Rummel, pianist
- Günther Ramin, organist and choirmaster
- Walter Gieseking, pianist
- Wilhelm Stross, violinist
- Gerhard Taschner, violinist
Theater and opera
- Raoul Aslan, director and actor
- Heinrich George, actor
- Werner Krauß, actor
- Karl-Heinz Stroux, actor and director
- Heinrich Schlusnus, singer
- Wilhelm Strienz, singer
- Paula Wessely, actress
Fine Arts
- Claus Bergen, marine painter
- Ludwig Dettmann, war painter
- Fritz Mackensen, painter
- Franz Stassen, painter
- Clemens Klotz, architect
- Alfred Mahlau, painter
- Ernst Neufert, architect
- Bruno Paul, architect
- Richard Scheibe, sculptor
- Joseph Wackerle, sculptor