Los

5011

Peter Martin Bleibtreu (1921-94)– 66 Fotos des Journalisten aus Umfeld Hitlers/Nürnberger Prozessen

In Internationale Militärgeschichte ab 1919

Diese Auktion ist eine LIVE Auktion! Sie müssen für diese Auktion registriert und als Bieter freigeschaltet sein, um bieten zu können.
Sie wurden überboten. Um die größte Chance zu haben zu gewinnen, erhöhen Sie bitte Ihr Maximal Gebot.
Ihre Registrierung wurde noch nicht durch das Auktionshaus genehmigt. Bitte, prüfen Sie Ihr E-Mail Konto für mehr Details.
Leider wurde Ihre Registrierung durch das Auktionshaus abgelehnt. Sie können das Auktionshaus direkt kontaktieren über +49 8954726490 um mehr Informationen zu erhalten.
Sie sind zurzeit Höchstbieter! Um sicher zustellen, dass Sie das Los ersteigern, melden Sie sich zum Live Bieten an unter , oder erhöhen Sie ihr Maximalgebot.
Geben Sie jetzt ein Gebot ab! Ihre Registrierung war erfolgreich.
Entschuldigung, die Gebotsabgabephase ist leider beendet. Es erscheinen täglich 1000 neue Lose auf lot-tissimo.com, bitte starten Sie eine neue Anfrage.
Das Bieten auf dieser Auktion hat noch nicht begonnen. Bitte, registrieren Sie sich jetzt, so dass Sie zugelassen werden bis die Auktion startet.
1/6
Peter Martin Bleibtreu (1921-94)– 66 Fotos des Journalisten aus Umfeld Hitlers/Nürnberger Prozessen - Bild 1 aus 6
Peter Martin Bleibtreu (1921-94)– 66 Fotos des Journalisten aus Umfeld Hitlers/Nürnberger Prozessen - Bild 2 aus 6
Peter Martin Bleibtreu (1921-94)– 66 Fotos des Journalisten aus Umfeld Hitlers/Nürnberger Prozessen - Bild 3 aus 6
Peter Martin Bleibtreu (1921-94)– 66 Fotos des Journalisten aus Umfeld Hitlers/Nürnberger Prozessen - Bild 4 aus 6
Peter Martin Bleibtreu (1921-94)– 66 Fotos des Journalisten aus Umfeld Hitlers/Nürnberger Prozessen - Bild 5 aus 6
Peter Martin Bleibtreu (1921-94)– 66 Fotos des Journalisten aus Umfeld Hitlers/Nürnberger Prozessen - Bild 6 aus 6
Peter Martin Bleibtreu (1921-94)– 66 Fotos des Journalisten aus Umfeld Hitlers/Nürnberger Prozessen - Bild 1 aus 6
Peter Martin Bleibtreu (1921-94)– 66 Fotos des Journalisten aus Umfeld Hitlers/Nürnberger Prozessen - Bild 2 aus 6
Peter Martin Bleibtreu (1921-94)– 66 Fotos des Journalisten aus Umfeld Hitlers/Nürnberger Prozessen - Bild 3 aus 6
Peter Martin Bleibtreu (1921-94)– 66 Fotos des Journalisten aus Umfeld Hitlers/Nürnberger Prozessen - Bild 4 aus 6
Peter Martin Bleibtreu (1921-94)– 66 Fotos des Journalisten aus Umfeld Hitlers/Nürnberger Prozessen - Bild 5 aus 6
Peter Martin Bleibtreu (1921-94)– 66 Fotos des Journalisten aus Umfeld Hitlers/Nürnberger Prozessen - Bild 6 aus 6
Sie interessieren sich für den Preis dieses Loses?
Preisdatenbank abonnieren
Munich

Peter Martin Bleibtreu (1921-94) – 66 Fotos des Journalisten aus dem Umfeld Hitlers bis zu den Nürnberger Prozessen

Peter Martin Bleibtreu (1921-94) – 66 Fotos des Journalisten aus dem Umfeld Hitlers bis zu den Nürnberger Prozessen
Die Fotos aus dem Umfeld Hitlers überwiegend auf alten, gelochten Papierseiten aufgeklebt, teils mit maschinen- oder handschriftlichen Beschriftungen.
"Hitler erfährt die Kapitulation Frankreichs": sieben Aufnahmen im Format 6,5 x 9,5/10 cm. Hitler im Führerhauptquartier "Wolfsschlucht" (6. bis 26. Juni 1940), am 17. Juni 1940 am Telefon die Nachricht von der Kapitulation Frankreichs durch Ministerpräsident Pétain erfahrend, vier zeigen ihn mit Schirmmütze, drei ohne.
Folgend zwei leicht unterschiedliche Aufnahmen Hitlers, Görings und Keitels über Kartentisch im "Führerzug" gebeugt, fotografiert durch das Zugfenster von außerhalb. Maße je ca. 10,5 x 13,5 cm. Außerdem eine Aufnahme Hitlers mit Alfred Jodl und Reichspressechef Dietrich vor dem "Führerzug", 15,5 x 11,5 cm. Möglicherweise von der Zugfahrt Frankurt a.M. nach München am 18. Juni 1940 anlässlich des Mussolini-Besuchs am gleichen Tag in München.
"In der Umgebung Hitlers": lose Aufnahme, Hitler in hellem Trenchcoat mit SS-Begleitschutz durch Menschenspalier schreitend (vermutlich von der Vogesenfahrt 1940), 13 x 18 cm. Sechs Aufnahmen von Mussolinis Besuch am Obersalzberg 1941, Hitler und Mussolini inner- und außerhalb des Berghofs sowie im Auto bzw. Zug. Maße ca. 16,5 x 11,5 cm (4x) bzw. 11,5 x 11 cm. Eine lose Außenaufnahme des FHQ "Felsennest" (10.5. - 5.6.1940), 17,5 x 24 cm. Drei Aufnahmen Hitlers bei Spaziergängen bzw. einer Besprechung außerhalb eines FHQ (wohl "Tannenberg" bzw. "Werwolf") sowie zwei Außenaufnahmen eines FHQ ("Werwolf"?), 16 x 12 bzw. 15 x 11 cm.
Lose Aufnahme, Hitler mit von Brauchitsch und von Bock im Frankreichfeldzug, im Hintergrund Soldat mit der Standarte des "Führers und Obersten Befehlshabers der Wehrmacht", 16 x 17 cm, rückseitig zwei Bildberichterstempel (Scher in Wien und Hilscher in Berlin) sowie Stempel der österreichischen Boulevardzeitung "Express" (1958-71) für eine Nachkriegsveröffentlichung mit handschriftlichem Zusatz "Express, Seite 8".
Drei rs. "Nur für private Zwecke" gestempelte Aufnahmen Hitlers mit Kindern, 8,5 x 11,5 cm.
Alle weiteren Aufnahmen sind lose. Empfang bulgarischer Offiziere durch Hitler im FHQ "Wolfsschanze", rückseitig gestempelt "Dem Führer vorgelegt und zur Veröffentlichung freigegeben" mit handschriftlichem Datum "10.5.42" sowie mehrfach überstempelt "Copyright Heinrich Hoffmann", 12 x 11,5 cm. Hitler und Göring vor dem Führerzug, 17 x 12 cm. Rudolf Hess in SS-Uniform in der Alten Reichskanzlei, rückseitig beschnittener Stempel mit Bleistiftbeschriftung "Berlin März 1933 - Reichskanzlei - Übernahme durch Hitler - (Poli)tischer Zentralkommissar d.NSDAP, Hess, Arbeitszimmer d. Reichskanzlers" sowie "Frei für historische Zwecke" und "Bleibtreu" (in Kugelschreiber), 14 x 10,5 cm. Aufnahme eines festgenommenen Widerstandskämpfers (?) vom 20. Juli 1944 mit Polizisten, rückseitig bezeichnet "20. Juli", 13 x 18 cm.  Aufnahme Gerd von Rundstedts in Uniform als GFM beim Bücherstudium, 21 x 16 cm.
Aus der Nachkriegszeit/von den Nürnberger Prozessen: "Field Marshal von Kleist captured", von Kleist in Mantel und mit Interimsstab mit zwei amerikanischen MP's, rückseitig englischer Text, 23 x 18 cm. Sechs großformatige Aufnahmen aus dem Verhandlungssaal der Nürnberger Prozesse: die Angeklagten aus dem Prozess gegen das Wirtschafts-Verwaltungshauptamt der SS auf der Anklagebank, rückseitig deutscher Text und Stempel der "Oberösterreichischen Nachrichten", 17,5 x 24 cm. Drei Aufnahmen der Angeklagten aus einem der zwölf Nachfolgeprozesse, rückseitig jeweils gestempelt "From Public Relations Photo Section - Office Chief of Counsel for War Crimes - Nürnberg, Germany, APO 696-A, US-Army" mit handschriftlicher Fotonummer, je 21 x 25 cm. Zwei Aufnahmen aus dem Ärzteprozess, die Angeklagten bzw. Karl Brandt auf der Anklagebank, rückseitig jeweils engl. Text, ein Foto bez. "by Fred Tonne", das andere bezeichnet "Bleibtreu", je 20,5 x 25 cm. Gerd von Rundstedt bei der Vereidigung vor Gericht, rückseitig gestempelt "Oberösterreichische Nachrichten" sowie bezeichnet "Bleibtreu", 14 x 11 cm. Alfred Jodl beim Briefeschreiben in seiner Zelle, rückseitig Klebespuren, 19,5 x 16 cm. Aufnahme eines Kriegsverbrechers in Handschellen mit US- und polnischen Soldaten, rückseitig gestempelt "Dana-Bilderdienst" und bez. "Bleibtreu", 18 x 12,5 cm.
Außerdem 19 Aufnahmen aus der Kriegszeit, überwiegend im Format 11 x 17 cm, teils mit rückseitigen Bilderdienststempeln oder Beschreibungen bzw. bezeichnet "Bleibtreu": gefangene US-Soldaten 1943, zerstörte Häuser/Brücke, erbeuteter Panzer in Brest Litowsk, Gefangene in Dünkirchen 1943, Hitler und GFM Keitel, Hitler mit Seyss-Inquart und Kaltenbrunner in Wien 1938, Hitler mit Generalen in einer Frontstadt (Frankreichfeldzug?), italienische Marschälle am Berghof, Hitler mit Göring, Raeder und Hess vor dem Waggon von Compiegne (8 x 11 cm), deutsche Kriegsgräber an der Maginot-Linie 1940, rückseitig mit Beschreibung und Freigabestempel "Ministerium für Volksaufklärung und Propaganda", Hitler mit Amann im Dom von Straßburg, frühe Portraitaufnahme Görings in Braunhemd mit PLM, rückseitige englische Beschreibung, Viktor Lutze in Frankreich 1941 sowie Hitler mit Frontsoldaten, rückseitig gestempelt "Dem Führer vorgelegt und freigegeben, den 24.6.". In altem kartonierten Einband.
Dazu der "Presse-Ausweis und Mitgliedskarte Nr. 30" des Verbands der Berufsjournalisten in Bayern vom 1. März 1948 (Lichtbild entfernt) mit Stempel der Stadt Nürnberg sowie Stempel und Unterschrift des Polizeipräsidiums Nürnberg, wodurch (in deutscher und englischer Sprache) das Mitführen und Benutzen von Fotoapparaten gestattet sind.
Ausgesprochen seltene Aufnahmen, die nicht nur aus dem Nachlass Peter Martin Bleibtreus stammen, sondern zum Großteil auch von ihm gemacht worden sein dürften. Über den 1921 als Sohn von Renato Attilio Bleibtreu (1893 - 1964) geborenen Journalisten und Fotografen ist wenig bekannt, die frühen Aufnahmen aus dem Frankreichfeldzug 1940 sprechen wohl für eine ursprüngliche Fotografenanstellung bei Heinrich Hoffmann und mit folgender Aufnahme als PK-Fotograf in die Wehrmacht zu Kriegsbeginn. Nach Kriegsende erhält er von den US-Behörden eine Journalistenstelle in Nürnberg, arbeitet in der Folge auch für die Nürnberger Nachrichten und geht wohl Ende der 1950er/Anfang der 1960er Jahre nach Wien. Für das dortige Journal für Gesellschaft und Prominenz arbeitet er 1966 als Chefredakteur und wohl auch für die Boulevardzeitung Express, die 1971 mit der Kronenzeitung fusioniert.
Die Peace Palace Library in Den Haag erwarb auf einer Auktion vor 2014 einen umfangreichen Teil des Nachlasses Bleibtreus mit zahlreichen Dokumenten über die Kriegsverbrecherprozesse sowie zahlreichen seltenen Aufnahmen und Zeichnungen von Günter Peis aus dem Verhandlungssaal. Hochinteressant, aber nicht belegbar und wohl auch nicht glaubwürdig ist die von Peter Martin Bleibtreu 1950 aufgestellte Behauptung, er sei derjenige gewesen, der Hermann Göring die Zyankali-Kapsel verschafft habe, indem er sie mit einem Kaugummi an Görings Platz auf der Anklagebank befestigt habe.<br /><br />Zustand: II -


Peter Martin Bleibtreu (1921-94) – 66 photographs taken by the journalist associated with Hitler, up to the Nuremberg Military Tribunals

Peter Martin Bleibtreu (1921-94) – 66 photographs taken by the journalist associated with Hitler, up to the Nuremberg Military Tribunals 
The photos of Hitler's inner circle predominantly pasted on old, perforated paper pages, some with typewritten or handwritten captions.
(Tr.) "Hitler learns of France's surrender": seven pictures measuring 6.5 x 9.5/10 cm. Hitler at the Führerhauptquartier "Wolfsschlucht" (6 to 26 June 1940), receiving a telephone call from Marshal Pétain, informing him of France's surrender on 17 June 1940, wearing a visor cap in four, without in three photos.
Followed by two slightly different photographs of Hitler, Göring and Keitel bending over a card table in the "Führerzug", taken from outside through the train window. Dimensions approx. 10.5 x 13.5 cm each. Moreover, a photograph of Hitler with Alfred Jodl and Reich Press Chief Dietrich in front of the "Führerzug", 15.5 x 11.5 cm. Possibly taken on the train journey from Frankfurt am Main to Munich on 18 June 1940 to meet with Mussolini on the same day in Munich.
"Hitler's milieu": loose photo, Hitler in a light trench coat, with an SS escort, walking through lines of waiting people (presumably taken during the Vosges trip, 1940), 13 x 18 cm. Six pictures of Mussolini visiting Obersalzberg in 1941, Hitler and Mussolini inside and outside the Berghof, in the car and in the train. Dimensions approx. 16.5 x 11.5 cm (4x) and 11.5 x 11 cm. Loose, an outdoor scene at the FHQ "Felsennest" (10 May - 5 June 1940), 17.5 x 24 cm. Three photos of Hitler taking strolls and at a meeting outside an FHQ (probably "Tannenberg" or "Werwolf"), plus two exterior shots of an FHQ ("Werwolf"?), 16 x 12 and 15 x 11 cm.
A loose photograph of Hitler with von Brauchitsch and von Bock during the French campaign, a soldier in the background holding the standard of the "Führer und Oberste Befehlshaber der Wehrmacht", 16 x 17 cm, two photojournalist stamps on the back (Scher in Vienna and Hilscher in Berlin) and the stamp of the Austrian newspaper "Express" (1958-71) for a post-war publication, with the handwritten note (tr.) "Express, page 8".
Three photographs of Hitler with children, stamped on the back (tr.) "For private use only", 8.5 x 11.5 cm.
All other photographs are loose. Hitler receiving Bulgarian officers in FHQ "Wolfsschanze", the back stamped (tr.) "Submitted to the Führer and approved for publication" with handwritten date "10.5.42" and several overlapping stamps "Copyright  Heinrich Hoffmann", 12 x 11.5 cm. Hitler and Göring in front of the Führerzug, 17 x 12 cm. Rudolf Heß in SS uniform in the Old Reich Chancellery, a cropped stamp on the back and pencilled notes "Berlin März 1933 - Reichskanzlei  - Übernahme durch Hitler - (Poli)tischer Zentralkommissar d.NSDAP, Hess, Arbeitszimmer d. Reichskanzlers" and "Frei für historische Zwecke" and "Bleibtreu" (in pen), 14 x 10.5 cm. Photograph of an arrested resistance fighter (?), dated 20 July 1944 with police officers, inscribed on the back "20. Juli", 13 x 18 cm. A photo of Gerd von Rundstedt in GFM uniform, reading a book, 21 x 16 cm.
Dating from the post-war era/Nuremberg Trials: "Field Marshal von Kleist captured", von Kleist in greatcoat, holding his interim baton, with two American MPs, text in English on the back, 23 x 18 cm. Six large-format photographs taken in the courtroom at the Nuremberg Trials: the accused in the dock during the WVHA Trial of the SS, German text and stamp of "Oberösterreichische Nachrichten" on the back, 17.5 x 24 cm. Three photographs of the accused from one of the twelve subsequent Nuremberg Trials, each stamped on the back "From Public Relations Photo Section - Office Chief of Counsel for War Crimes - Nürnberg, Germany, APO 696-A, US-Army" with a handwritten number, each 21 x 25 cm. Two photographs of the Doctors' trial, showing the accused and Karl Brandt in the dock, English text on the back of each, one labelled "by Fred Tonne", the other "Bleibtreu", each 20.5 x 25 cm. Gerd von Rundstedt taking an oath before the court, the back stamped "Oberösterreichische Nachrichten" and labelled "Bleibtreu", 14 x 11 cm. Alfred Jodl writing a letter in his cell, traces of glue on the back, 19.5 x 16 cm. A picture of a war criminal in handcuffs, escorted by U.S. and Polish soldiers, the back stamped "Dana-Bilderdienst" and labelled "Bleibtreu", 18 x 12.5 cm.
Moreover, 19 photos taken during the post-war era, mainly measuring 11 x 17 cm, some with photojournalists' stamps on the back, descriptions or labelled "Bleibtreu": captured U.S. soldiers in 1943, ruins of houses/bridges, seized tanks in Brest Litovsk, prisoners in Dunkirk in 1943, Hitler and GFM Keitel, Hitler with Seyss-Inquart and Kaltenbrunner in Vienna in 1938, Hitler with generals in a front line town (Battle of France?), Italian marshals at the Berghof, Hitler with Göring, Raeder and Hess in front of the Compiègne Wagon (8 x 11 cm), German war graves at the Maginot Line in 1940, description and stamp of approval on the back "Ministerium für Volksaufklärung und Propaganda", Hitler with Amann in Strasbourg Cathedral, an early portrait of Göring in a "brownshirt" with PLM, English description on the back, Viktor Lutze in France in 1941 and Hitler with soldiers at the front, the back stamped (tr.) "Submitted to the Führer and approved, 24 June".. With an old hard cover binding.
Also includes the (tr.) "Press pass and membership card no. 30" issued by the Professional Journalists Association in Bavaria on 1 March 1948 (photograph removed) with the stamp of the city of Nuremberg and the stamp and signature of Nuremberg Police Headquarters, permitting the carrying and use of cameras (issued in German and English).
Extremely rare photographs, not just from the estate of Peter Martin Bleibtreu, but probably actually taken by him in many cases. Very little is known about the journalist and photographer, born in 1921 to Renato Attilio Bleibtreu (1893 - 1964). Taken during the French campaign in 1940, the early photographs probably indicate his original engagement as a photographer by Heinrich Hoffmann and the subsequent shots as a postcard photographer in the Wehrmacht at the beginning of the war. After the war, he was assigned a position as journalist in Nuremberg by the U.S. authorities, subsequently working for the Nürnberger Nachrichten, and most likely moved to Vienna in the late 1950s/early 1960s. He was editor-in-chief of the Journal für Gesellschaft und Prominenz in 1966, presumably also working for the Express tabloid, which merged with the Kronenzeitung in 1971.
In an auction prior to 2014, the Peace Palace Library in The Hague acquired a significant portion of Bleibtreu's estate, with numerous documents relating to the trials of the war criminals, as well as scores of rare photographs and cartoons by Günter Peis from the courtroom. One extremely interesting fact, which cannot be verified, however, and is probably also implausible, is the claim made by Peter Martin Bleibtreu in 1950 that he was the accomplice who passed the cyanide capsule to Hermann Göring by sticking it with chewing gum at the defendant's place in the dock.
<br /><br />Condition: II -

Peter Martin Bleibtreu (1921-94) – 66 Fotos des Journalisten aus dem Umfeld Hitlers bis zu den Nürnberger Prozessen

Peter Martin Bleibtreu (1921-94) – 66 Fotos des Journalisten aus dem Umfeld Hitlers bis zu den Nürnberger Prozessen
Die Fotos aus dem Umfeld Hitlers überwiegend auf alten, gelochten Papierseiten aufgeklebt, teils mit maschinen- oder handschriftlichen Beschriftungen.
"Hitler erfährt die Kapitulation Frankreichs": sieben Aufnahmen im Format 6,5 x 9,5/10 cm. Hitler im Führerhauptquartier "Wolfsschlucht" (6. bis 26. Juni 1940), am 17. Juni 1940 am Telefon die Nachricht von der Kapitulation Frankreichs durch Ministerpräsident Pétain erfahrend, vier zeigen ihn mit Schirmmütze, drei ohne.
Folgend zwei leicht unterschiedliche Aufnahmen Hitlers, Görings und Keitels über Kartentisch im "Führerzug" gebeugt, fotografiert durch das Zugfenster von außerhalb. Maße je ca. 10,5 x 13,5 cm. Außerdem eine Aufnahme Hitlers mit Alfred Jodl und Reichspressechef Dietrich vor dem "Führerzug", 15,5 x 11,5 cm. Möglicherweise von der Zugfahrt Frankurt a.M. nach München am 18. Juni 1940 anlässlich des Mussolini-Besuchs am gleichen Tag in München.
"In der Umgebung Hitlers": lose Aufnahme, Hitler in hellem Trenchcoat mit SS-Begleitschutz durch Menschenspalier schreitend (vermutlich von der Vogesenfahrt 1940), 13 x 18 cm. Sechs Aufnahmen von Mussolinis Besuch am Obersalzberg 1941, Hitler und Mussolini inner- und außerhalb des Berghofs sowie im Auto bzw. Zug. Maße ca. 16,5 x 11,5 cm (4x) bzw. 11,5 x 11 cm. Eine lose Außenaufnahme des FHQ "Felsennest" (10.5. - 5.6.1940), 17,5 x 24 cm. Drei Aufnahmen Hitlers bei Spaziergängen bzw. einer Besprechung außerhalb eines FHQ (wohl "Tannenberg" bzw. "Werwolf") sowie zwei Außenaufnahmen eines FHQ ("Werwolf"?), 16 x 12 bzw. 15 x 11 cm.
Lose Aufnahme, Hitler mit von Brauchitsch und von Bock im Frankreichfeldzug, im Hintergrund Soldat mit der Standarte des "Führers und Obersten Befehlshabers der Wehrmacht", 16 x 17 cm, rückseitig zwei Bildberichterstempel (Scher in Wien und Hilscher in Berlin) sowie Stempel der österreichischen Boulevardzeitung "Express" (1958-71) für eine Nachkriegsveröffentlichung mit handschriftlichem Zusatz "Express, Seite 8".
Drei rs. "Nur für private Zwecke" gestempelte Aufnahmen Hitlers mit Kindern, 8,5 x 11,5 cm.
Alle weiteren Aufnahmen sind lose. Empfang bulgarischer Offiziere durch Hitler im FHQ "Wolfsschanze", rückseitig gestempelt "Dem Führer vorgelegt und zur Veröffentlichung freigegeben" mit handschriftlichem Datum "10.5.42" sowie mehrfach überstempelt "Copyright Heinrich Hoffmann", 12 x 11,5 cm. Hitler und Göring vor dem Führerzug, 17 x 12 cm. Rudolf Hess in SS-Uniform in der Alten Reichskanzlei, rückseitig beschnittener Stempel mit Bleistiftbeschriftung "Berlin März 1933 - Reichskanzlei - Übernahme durch Hitler - (Poli)tischer Zentralkommissar d.NSDAP, Hess, Arbeitszimmer d. Reichskanzlers" sowie "Frei für historische Zwecke" und "Bleibtreu" (in Kugelschreiber), 14 x 10,5 cm. Aufnahme eines festgenommenen Widerstandskämpfers (?) vom 20. Juli 1944 mit Polizisten, rückseitig bezeichnet "20. Juli", 13 x 18 cm.  Aufnahme Gerd von Rundstedts in Uniform als GFM beim Bücherstudium, 21 x 16 cm.
Aus der Nachkriegszeit/von den Nürnberger Prozessen: "Field Marshal von Kleist captured", von Kleist in Mantel und mit Interimsstab mit zwei amerikanischen MP's, rückseitig englischer Text, 23 x 18 cm. Sechs großformatige Aufnahmen aus dem Verhandlungssaal der Nürnberger Prozesse: die Angeklagten aus dem Prozess gegen das Wirtschafts-Verwaltungshauptamt der SS auf der Anklagebank, rückseitig deutscher Text und Stempel der "Oberösterreichischen Nachrichten", 17,5 x 24 cm. Drei Aufnahmen der Angeklagten aus einem der zwölf Nachfolgeprozesse, rückseitig jeweils gestempelt "From Public Relations Photo Section - Office Chief of Counsel for War Crimes - Nürnberg, Germany, APO 696-A, US-Army" mit handschriftlicher Fotonummer, je 21 x 25 cm. Zwei Aufnahmen aus dem Ärzteprozess, die Angeklagten bzw. Karl Brandt auf der Anklagebank, rückseitig jeweils engl. Text, ein Foto bez. "by Fred Tonne", das andere bezeichnet "Bleibtreu", je 20,5 x 25 cm. Gerd von Rundstedt bei der Vereidigung vor Gericht, rückseitig gestempelt "Oberösterreichische Nachrichten" sowie bezeichnet "Bleibtreu", 14 x 11 cm. Alfred Jodl beim Briefeschreiben in seiner Zelle, rückseitig Klebespuren, 19,5 x 16 cm. Aufnahme eines Kriegsverbrechers in Handschellen mit US- und polnischen Soldaten, rückseitig gestempelt "Dana-Bilderdienst" und bez. "Bleibtreu", 18 x 12,5 cm.
Außerdem 19 Aufnahmen aus der Kriegszeit, überwiegend im Format 11 x 17 cm, teils mit rückseitigen Bilderdienststempeln oder Beschreibungen bzw. bezeichnet "Bleibtreu": gefangene US-Soldaten 1943, zerstörte Häuser/Brücke, erbeuteter Panzer in Brest Litowsk, Gefangene in Dünkirchen 1943, Hitler und GFM Keitel, Hitler mit Seyss-Inquart und Kaltenbrunner in Wien 1938, Hitler mit Generalen in einer Frontstadt (Frankreichfeldzug?), italienische Marschälle am Berghof, Hitler mit Göring, Raeder und Hess vor dem Waggon von Compiegne (8 x 11 cm), deutsche Kriegsgräber an der Maginot-Linie 1940, rückseitig mit Beschreibung und Freigabestempel "Ministerium für Volksaufklärung und Propaganda", Hitler mit Amann im Dom von Straßburg, frühe Portraitaufnahme Görings in Braunhemd mit PLM, rückseitige englische Beschreibung, Viktor Lutze in Frankreich 1941 sowie Hitler mit Frontsoldaten, rückseitig gestempelt "Dem Führer vorgelegt und freigegeben, den 24.6.". In altem kartonierten Einband.
Dazu der "Presse-Ausweis und Mitgliedskarte Nr. 30" des Verbands der Berufsjournalisten in Bayern vom 1. März 1948 (Lichtbild entfernt) mit Stempel der Stadt Nürnberg sowie Stempel und Unterschrift des Polizeipräsidiums Nürnberg, wodurch (in deutscher und englischer Sprache) das Mitführen und Benutzen von Fotoapparaten gestattet sind.
Ausgesprochen seltene Aufnahmen, die nicht nur aus dem Nachlass Peter Martin Bleibtreus stammen, sondern zum Großteil auch von ihm gemacht worden sein dürften. Über den 1921 als Sohn von Renato Attilio Bleibtreu (1893 - 1964) geborenen Journalisten und Fotografen ist wenig bekannt, die frühen Aufnahmen aus dem Frankreichfeldzug 1940 sprechen wohl für eine ursprüngliche Fotografenanstellung bei Heinrich Hoffmann und mit folgender Aufnahme als PK-Fotograf in die Wehrmacht zu Kriegsbeginn. Nach Kriegsende erhält er von den US-Behörden eine Journalistenstelle in Nürnberg, arbeitet in der Folge auch für die Nürnberger Nachrichten und geht wohl Ende der 1950er/Anfang der 1960er Jahre nach Wien. Für das dortige Journal für Gesellschaft und Prominenz arbeitet er 1966 als Chefredakteur und wohl auch für die Boulevardzeitung Express, die 1971 mit der Kronenzeitung fusioniert.
Die Peace Palace Library in Den Haag erwarb auf einer Auktion vor 2014 einen umfangreichen Teil des Nachlasses Bleibtreus mit zahlreichen Dokumenten über die Kriegsverbrecherprozesse sowie zahlreichen seltenen Aufnahmen und Zeichnungen von Günter Peis aus dem Verhandlungssaal. Hochinteressant, aber nicht belegbar und wohl auch nicht glaubwürdig ist die von Peter Martin Bleibtreu 1950 aufgestellte Behauptung, er sei derjenige gewesen, der Hermann Göring die Zyankali-Kapsel verschafft habe, indem er sie mit einem Kaugummi an Görings Platz auf der Anklagebank befestigt habe.<br /><br />Zustand: II -


Peter Martin Bleibtreu (1921-94) – 66 photographs taken by the journalist associated with Hitler, up to the Nuremberg Military Tribunals

Peter Martin Bleibtreu (1921-94) – 66 photographs taken by the journalist associated with Hitler, up to the Nuremberg Military Tribunals 
The photos of Hitler's inner circle predominantly pasted on old, perforated paper pages, some with typewritten or handwritten captions.
(Tr.) "Hitler learns of France's surrender": seven pictures measuring 6.5 x 9.5/10 cm. Hitler at the Führerhauptquartier "Wolfsschlucht" (6 to 26 June 1940), receiving a telephone call from Marshal Pétain, informing him of France's surrender on 17 June 1940, wearing a visor cap in four, without in three photos.
Followed by two slightly different photographs of Hitler, Göring and Keitel bending over a card table in the "Führerzug", taken from outside through the train window. Dimensions approx. 10.5 x 13.5 cm each. Moreover, a photograph of Hitler with Alfred Jodl and Reich Press Chief Dietrich in front of the "Führerzug", 15.5 x 11.5 cm. Possibly taken on the train journey from Frankfurt am Main to Munich on 18 June 1940 to meet with Mussolini on the same day in Munich.
"Hitler's milieu": loose photo, Hitler in a light trench coat, with an SS escort, walking through lines of waiting people (presumably taken during the Vosges trip, 1940), 13 x 18 cm. Six pictures of Mussolini visiting Obersalzberg in 1941, Hitler and Mussolini inside and outside the Berghof, in the car and in the train. Dimensions approx. 16.5 x 11.5 cm (4x) and 11.5 x 11 cm. Loose, an outdoor scene at the FHQ "Felsennest" (10 May - 5 June 1940), 17.5 x 24 cm. Three photos of Hitler taking strolls and at a meeting outside an FHQ (probably "Tannenberg" or "Werwolf"), plus two exterior shots of an FHQ ("Werwolf"?), 16 x 12 and 15 x 11 cm.
A loose photograph of Hitler with von Brauchitsch and von Bock during the French campaign, a soldier in the background holding the standard of the "Führer und Oberste Befehlshaber der Wehrmacht", 16 x 17 cm, two photojournalist stamps on the back (Scher in Vienna and Hilscher in Berlin) and the stamp of the Austrian newspaper "Express" (1958-71) for a post-war publication, with the handwritten note (tr.) "Express, page 8".
Three photographs of Hitler with children, stamped on the back (tr.) "For private use only", 8.5 x 11.5 cm.
All other photographs are loose. Hitler receiving Bulgarian officers in FHQ "Wolfsschanze", the back stamped (tr.) "Submitted to the Führer and approved for publication" with handwritten date "10.5.42" and several overlapping stamps "Copyright  Heinrich Hoffmann", 12 x 11.5 cm. Hitler and Göring in front of the Führerzug, 17 x 12 cm. Rudolf Heß in SS uniform in the Old Reich Chancellery, a cropped stamp on the back and pencilled notes "Berlin März 1933 - Reichskanzlei  - Übernahme durch Hitler - (Poli)tischer Zentralkommissar d.NSDAP, Hess, Arbeitszimmer d. Reichskanzlers" and "Frei für historische Zwecke" and "Bleibtreu" (in pen), 14 x 10.5 cm. Photograph of an arrested resistance fighter (?), dated 20 July 1944 with police officers, inscribed on the back "20. Juli", 13 x 18 cm. A photo of Gerd von Rundstedt in GFM uniform, reading a book, 21 x 16 cm.
Dating from the post-war era/Nuremberg Trials: "Field Marshal von Kleist captured", von Kleist in greatcoat, holding his interim baton, with two American MPs, text in English on the back, 23 x 18 cm. Six large-format photographs taken in the courtroom at the Nuremberg Trials: the accused in the dock during the WVHA Trial of the SS, German text and stamp of "Oberösterreichische Nachrichten" on the back, 17.5 x 24 cm. Three photographs of the accused from one of the twelve subsequent Nuremberg Trials, each stamped on the back "From Public Relations Photo Section - Office Chief of Counsel for War Crimes - Nürnberg, Germany, APO 696-A, US-Army" with a handwritten number, each 21 x 25 cm. Two photographs of the Doctors' trial, showing the accused and Karl Brandt in the dock, English text on the back of each, one labelled "by Fred Tonne", the other "Bleibtreu", each 20.5 x 25 cm. Gerd von Rundstedt taking an oath before the court, the back stamped "Oberösterreichische Nachrichten" and labelled "Bleibtreu", 14 x 11 cm. Alfred Jodl writing a letter in his cell, traces of glue on the back, 19.5 x 16 cm. A picture of a war criminal in handcuffs, escorted by U.S. and Polish soldiers, the back stamped "Dana-Bilderdienst" and labelled "Bleibtreu", 18 x 12.5 cm.
Moreover, 19 photos taken during the post-war era, mainly measuring 11 x 17 cm, some with photojournalists' stamps on the back, descriptions or labelled "Bleibtreu": captured U.S. soldiers in 1943, ruins of houses/bridges, seized tanks in Brest Litovsk, prisoners in Dunkirk in 1943, Hitler and GFM Keitel, Hitler with Seyss-Inquart and Kaltenbrunner in Vienna in 1938, Hitler with generals in a front line town (Battle of France?), Italian marshals at the Berghof, Hitler with Göring, Raeder and Hess in front of the Compiègne Wagon (8 x 11 cm), German war graves at the Maginot Line in 1940, description and stamp of approval on the back "Ministerium für Volksaufklärung und Propaganda", Hitler with Amann in Strasbourg Cathedral, an early portrait of Göring in a "brownshirt" with PLM, English description on the back, Viktor Lutze in France in 1941 and Hitler with soldiers at the front, the back stamped (tr.) "Submitted to the Führer and approved, 24 June".. With an old hard cover binding.
Also includes the (tr.) "Press pass and membership card no. 30" issued by the Professional Journalists Association in Bavaria on 1 March 1948 (photograph removed) with the stamp of the city of Nuremberg and the stamp and signature of Nuremberg Police Headquarters, permitting the carrying and use of cameras (issued in German and English).
Extremely rare photographs, not just from the estate of Peter Martin Bleibtreu, but probably actually taken by him in many cases. Very little is known about the journalist and photographer, born in 1921 to Renato Attilio Bleibtreu (1893 - 1964). Taken during the French campaign in 1940, the early photographs probably indicate his original engagement as a photographer by Heinrich Hoffmann and the subsequent shots as a postcard photographer in the Wehrmacht at the beginning of the war. After the war, he was assigned a position as journalist in Nuremberg by the U.S. authorities, subsequently working for the Nürnberger Nachrichten, and most likely moved to Vienna in the late 1950s/early 1960s. He was editor-in-chief of the Journal für Gesellschaft und Prominenz in 1966, presumably also working for the Express tabloid, which merged with the Kronenzeitung in 1971.
In an auction prior to 2014, the Peace Palace Library in The Hague acquired a significant portion of Bleibtreu's estate, with numerous documents relating to the trials of the war criminals, as well as scores of rare photographs and cartoons by Günter Peis from the courtroom. One extremely interesting fact, which cannot be verified, however, and is probably also implausible, is the claim made by Peter Martin Bleibtreu in 1950 that he was the accomplice who passed the cyanide capsule to Hermann Göring by sticking it with chewing gum at the defendant's place in the dock.
<br /><br />Condition: II -

Internationale Militärgeschichte ab 1919

Auktionsdatum
Lose: 904
Ort der Versteigerung
Bretonischer Ring 3
Grasbrunn
Munich
85630
Germany

All lots can be shipped against shipping costs.

Wichtige Informationen

Aufgeld / Premium: 25 %
Live: 3 %
jeweils inkl. USt. / both incl. VAT

AGB

Terms & Conditions

The auction process shall be subject to our General Auction Terms and Conditions. These terms form an integral part of the resulting contracts. The General Auction Terms and Conditions are listed hereinafter and displayed in the auction room. Both by taking part in the auction and by submitting bids, you agree to accept the General Auction Terms and Conditions.

General Auction Terms and Conditions

  1. Hermann Historica GmbH (hereinafter referred to as the Auctioneer) shall carry out the auction as an intermediary in the name of and for the account of third parties, as a commission agent in its own name and on behalf of consignors, or in its own name and for its own account. The auctions may be conducted on or outside the business premises of Hermann Historica, with physical participation of bidders, by phone, online or by using any other digital or electronic media, in particular dedicated electronic auctioning platforms, and also limited to such platforms (“online-only”).

  2. The catalogue descriptions and any verbal statements neither constitute nor contain guarantees of any specific characteristics. All objects coming up for auction are offered as used. The lots may be viewed and examined prior to the auction. All lots are sold “as seen”, without any guarantee or liability in respect of visible or hidden defects. Once the bid has been accepted, no complaints of any kind may be taken into account. 

  3. The Auctioneer undertakes to carry out all purchase orders, whether submitted in writing, by phone, email, fax or via an electronic auctioning platform, conscientiously but without assuming liability. The Auctioneer reserves the right to decline or disregard order bids, without giving a reason. A maximum bid must be indicated when submitting an offer in writing; however, the Auctioneer will only draw on this in the amount required to outbid other prospective buyers by one increment (approximately 5%). In case of identical bids a draw will  decide. Phone bidders will be contacted before their requested lot is called if a written order corresponding to at least the starting price of the object has been received in good time. Phone bidding will only be permitted in exceptional cases for objects with a reserve of less than €1,000. No liability may be accepted for transmission errors or for difficulties with the phone connection. On electronic auctioning platforms bids are submitted by clicking the platform’s “Bid” button, thus submitting the suggested amount required to outbid the previous high bid. In all cases (classic and online-only) it is the auctioneer who assigns the knock-down. The Auctioneer rules out any liability for consequential damage or loss of profit in the event the purchase order is not concluded, provided this was not caused by wilful misconduct on the part of an employee of the Auctioneer. The Auctioneer may refuse to accept any bids in which neither the object nor the amount of the bid can be clearly identified beyond doubt.

  4. The Auctioneer reserves the right to combine, separate, exclude, withdraw or rearrange any lot without giving a reason. The sale is concluded if no higher bid is submitted after a bid has been announced three times. The Auctioneer is entitled to accept the sale under reserve. If a bid is accepted conditionally, the bidder shall be bound by his bid for four weeks. If the bidder is not awarded the sale without reserve within this period, the bid expires. A written invoice sent to the address provided by the buyer shall be regarded as confirmation of the acceptance of the bid. Conditionally accepted bids expire without notification or further consultation with the reserve bidder. Without giving any reason, the Auctioneer may refuse any bid submitted either in person or in writing, if said bidder is unknown to him, has not provided a sufficient deposit or satisfactory references prior to the auction. Likewise, the aforementioned right of refusal also applies to customers whose accounts have not been settled in full at the time of the auction. In the event a bid is refused, the second highest bid shall be binding. If several people offer identical bids and, after the third time of asking, no higher bid is forthcoming, a draw shall decide the successful bidder. The Auctioneer is authorised to retract his acceptance of the bid and award the lot immediately in favour of a particular bidder at his discretion or to offer the object again if a higher bid made at the right time was erroneously overlooked or if any doubts arise regarding the sale. If the highest bidder wishes to withdraw his bid, the Auctioneer is entitled to accept his bid nevertheless with all consequent rights; however, he may also accept the second highest bid offered or repeat the whole call. At the bidders’ request, any lot that initially remained unsold may be offered again and sold during the day of the auction, or may be transferred into a subsequent online-only auction.

  5. The successful bidder is obligated to pay the purchase price to the Auctioneer. The Auctioneer is authorised by the consignor to assert his rights arising from the sale. Prospective buyers submit bids in their own name and for their own account. The purchase price comprises the bid amount, a 25% premium thereof, when bidding through a third-party auction platform their commission, and the costs of insurance, packaging and shipping, if the Auctioneer is commissioned to ship the lots. If the Auctioneer is acting as an intermediary, both the premium and the fees for insurance, packaging and shipping include statutory VAT. The amount of the hammer price shall be determined on the basis of the auction record. The purchase price is due as soon as the bid is accepted and is payable in cash and in Euros. The Auctioneer expressly refers to his duty to verify customer’s ID according to the German Money Laundering Act. For credit transfers or payment by cheque on account of performance, the debt shall only be deemed to be settled when the purchase price has been credited irrevocably and in full to the Auctioneer’s account. Moreover, foreign notes and coins or currencies will only be accepted according to the respective value amount that is finally cred¬ited to the Auctioneer’s account by the bank. Shortfalls will be payable, including any fees for cheques or banking charges incurred. Please check our respective fees for payments by credit card. If a bidder acts as an agent for a third party, both may be held personally liable for obligations arising from the contract. This also applies if the invoice is issued in the name of another customer. The Auctioneer shall be exempt therefrom. Invoices issued during or immediately after the auction are subject to confirmation and may subsequently require correction. Any discrepancies in the amount shall be payable.

  6. Should the buyer fail to fulfil his payment obligations within the specified time limit, he is automatically in default. As a consequence, a minimum charge of €25 will be added to the invoice amount, along with any payment reminder and/or collection fees incurred. At the same time, interest shall accrue at 5% above the base rate p.a. Should the buyer fail to meet his payment obligations, despite receiving a reminder, he shall be liable for the damage caused by his default. If the Auctioneer asserts his right to compensation for non-perfor-mance under section 326 BGB (German Civil Code), he is entitled to offer the item for auction again at a later date. Once another buyer is found, all rights granted to the previous buyer shall expire. If the lot is resold, the previous buyer shall be regarded as the consignor and is therefore liable to recompense the Auctioneer’s services; fees to the amount of 20% (incl. VAT) for lots with a hammer price of €300 and above, or 30% (incl. VAT) for lots with a hammer price under €300, as well as all additional costs incurred by the renewed sale of the item thus become payable. He shall have no claim to the excess proceeds. The proceeds from the new auction are to be offset against the debt of compensation on receipt of the payment or the credit by the Auctioneer in accordance with section 367 BGB. Moreover, the Auctioneer reserves the right to rescind the contract if the buyer fails to pay the purchase price in full and/or collect his purchases within a reasonable time period set by the Auctioneer. In the event of rescission, the Auctioneer is entitled to demand compensation from the buyer for non-performance. In particular, the claim for compensation includes the commission charges incurred. The Auctioneer is entitled to claim 45% of the hammer price as flat-rate compensation without further verification. Furthermore, the Auctioneer shall be permitted to provide proof of additional damages, particularly where these are higher than the flat-rate compensation.

  7. All lots sold must be collected on the same day. Lots purchased through the electronic auctioning platform will be shipped once payment (incl. shipping charges, fees and insurance) has been received in full; upon request and agreement items can be collected from our warehouse. All risks pertaining to the item (e.g. damage) are transferred to the buyer on acceptance of his bid. As a matter of principle, the auctioned goods may only be delivered on payment of the purchase price. Nevertheless, should an item be released prior to payment of the purchase price, the transfer of ownership shall be subject to the condition precedent of payment of the purchase price in full to the Auctioneer. Under no circumstances is the buyer entitled to resell or alter the objects in any way. If the purchased items are not collected, the Auctioneer is entitled at his discretion to store the auctioned objects at his business premises or at the premises of a third party or to ship them to the buyer, including by cash on delivery. In case of storage at the Auctioneer’s premises, the items shall be stored at the buyer’s own expense and risk from the time his bid is accepted. Storage fees are charged at 0.7% of the total purchase price incl. VAT per calendar month or part thereof. Any third-party storage shall be in the name, at the expense and risk of the buyer. Storage of firearms requiring official authorisation, which are subject to a special duty of safekeeping, is charged as a lump sum of €10 per weapon per month. In cases where the buyer is located abroad and import/export permits are required, storage fees will only be charged from the end of the third month after completion of the sale. If sold lots are not collected within a period of 12 months, two collection reminders notwithstanding, the Auctioneer reserves the right to offer these objects for auction once again at the expense and risk of the buyer. In this case, the buyer is regarded as a consignor. Consignment fees, interest, storage costs and other expenses shall be deducted from the proceeds of the auction. Shipping shall be effected at the buyer’s risk and expense. At the buyer’s expense, the Auctioneer shall insure the objects for shipment against the usual transport risks. The buyer undertakes to report any discernible damage to the packaging to both the forwarding agent and the Auctioneer without delay. Defects that only become apparent on unpacking the goods must also be reported to the forwarding agent and the Auctioneer without delay, but no later than one week after delivery. No liability will be accepted for defects in case of non-compliance with this requirement.

  8. The bidder shall bear any loss or damage resulting from transmission failures, misunderstandings or errors in telephone, telegraphic, wireless, fax and electronic communications with buyers, provided said damage was not caused by wilful or gross negligence on the part of the Auctioneer or his agents.

  9. The Auctioneer reserves the right to exclude any person from the auction without explanation, particularly those who engage in dealing or exchange during the auction, disturb the proceedings or whose accounts have not been settled in full. This is also applicable to the registration required for participation in online auctions.

  10. The above conditions also apply mutatis mutandis to public sales or subsequent private sales. The post-auction sale only commences at the end of the day on which the lot in question was first offered for sale.

  11. The buyer may only offset claims against the Auctioneer with liabilities in the same currency and to the extent that his claims are undisputed or have been confirmed by a court of law.

  12. The business premises of the Auctioneer shall be the place of performance for both parties if the buyer is a registered trader or a legal entity under public law or a special fund under public law or he has his place of residence outside the Federal Republic of Germany. The auction contract and all rights and obligations arising from the business relationship between the Auctioneer and the buyer shall be exclusively governed by German law. The Uniform Law on the International Sale of Goods, the Uniform Law on the Formation of Contracts for the International Sale of Goods and the CISG – United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods shall be excluded.

  13. With regard to sales in his own name, the Auctioneer guarantees the accuracy of the information provided in terms of the object’s origin, age, epoch, manufacturer and materials. If, within three years from the day of the sale, this information proves to be materially incorrect, the buyer may rescind the transaction step by step, provided that the object is unaltered and still in the condition at the time of purchase. Any doubts regarding the information provided by the Auctioneer must be asserted without delay. The Auctioneer reserves the right to examine the buyer’s statement in both an internal and a third-party review, prior to acknowledging any such claims, and to reject the complaint, as appropriate. Expert’s reports commissioned by the buyer are at his own expense. Except for such claims regarding the nature of the object, for the purpose of consumer protection, the guarantee period vis-à-vis end customers shall be 1 year from the date of purchase.

  14. The exclusive place of jurisdiction for all present and future claims arising from the business relationship with registered traders and for claims asserted by the Auctioneer by way of a dunning procedure shall be the registered office of the Auctioneer. The same place of jurisdiction applies if the buyer does not have a place of general jurisdiction in Germany, or has transferred his place of residence or habitual abode to a country other than Germany after conclusion of the contract, or his place of residence or habitual abode is unknown at the time legal proceedings are instituted. In these cases, except for the dunning procedure, the plaintiff may choose whether he wishes to institute legal proceedings before Munich Local Court or Munich Regional Court I.

  15. As long as catalogue owners, participants of the auction and bidders do not state otherwise, they guarantee that they use the catalogue and the items dating from the time of the Third Reich depicted therein only for the purpose of civil education, to avert unconstitutional movements, to promote art or science, research or teaching, the reporting about current or historical events or similar purposes (§§ 86/86a Strafgesetzbuch (German Criminal Code)). The Auctioneer, his agents and consignors shall offer and/or deliver said items only under these conditions.

  16. The following applies to all objects sold by Hermann Historica that contain materials from protected and endangered species: the export of these goods – including ivory, tortoiseshell, crocodile skin, rhinoceros horn etc. – from the EU and their import into non-EU countries requires a permit from the regulatory authorities of both the exportation and the importation countries. Buyers intending to import any objects made of or incorporating materials from endangered species into a country that is not a member of the European Community must check their relevant customs laws and regulations prior to bidding. On request, Hermann Historica can apply for the export/re-export document from the Bundesamt für Naturschutz (Federal Agency for Nature Conservation) in Bonn for an administration fee of €150/lot. Import permits are the sole responsibility of the buyer. Hermann Historica cannot guarantee the issuance of an export licence, which may take up to six months. As a rule of thumb, here are some examples of recent licence applications: Rhino horn - no German export permits for non-EU countries; elephant ivory: German export permits on a case-by-case basis only. US import: no commercial imports! Some exceptions may apply to non-commercial imports. The inability to export or import collectibles containing material from endangered or protected animal and plant species shall not be considered sufficient reason for bidders to withdraw from the sale. 

  17. Objects that are classified as cultural goods under Council Regulation (EC) No. 116/2009 of December18, 2008, require a licence to be exported from Germany. This regulation refers to a multitude of items, depending on their age and value, for example archaeological objects over 100 years old, regardless of their value. Firearms, Antique Arms & Armour, historical and military artefacts over 50 years old usually only require an export permit if they are valued at more than €50,000, more recent objects are generally not subject to any export restrictions. On request, Hermann Historica GmbH can apply for any necessary export permits for a fee of €75 per group of objects; the approval process may take up to 6 months.

  18. Orders and medals of the Federal Republic of Germany and her federal states, as well as their Orders and medals of the Federal Republic of Germany and her federal states, as well as their miniatures, ribbons, buttonhole bows and ribbon clasps, may only be sold to authorised persons according to section 14 paragraph 3 of the “Gesetz über Titel, Orden und Ehrenzeichen” (Law of Titles, Orders and Honours). Authorised persons include the recipients of the awards or persons in possession of a collecting licence. The collecting licence is granted by the responsible authority upon request (responsibility is regulated differently in each federal state). According to the commentary of the law, approval of a licence may only be refused by the responsible authority if there are serious grounds for doing so. By purchasing orders and medals of the Federal Republic of Germany and her federal states, the client affirms that he has been granted a collecting licence. Bids will only be accepted under these conditions.

  19. Firearms requiring a German firearm certificate may only be supplied to German customers upon presentation of valid photo ID, corresponding possession and acquisition permit, and payment of a fee of €15 per purchase order for notification under the provisions of section 34 WaffG (Weapons Act). Modern firearms will only be shipped to foreign buyers on receipt of the necessary German and foreign permits. Upon request, the Auctioneer will apply for an export permit against a variable fixed fee.
    For exports to EU-Countries: €60 (1 - 5),   €90 (6 - 15), €120 (16 - 25), €200 (>25)
    For exports to Non-EU-Countries: €90 (1 - 5), €160 (6 - 15), €220 (16 - 25), €300 (>25)
    If any special conditions are imposed in obtaining a valid export permit, compliance with which involves additional fees and expenses, these shall be invoiced to and paid by the buyer. The sale remains legally binding, irrespective of whether the buyer holds a corresponding possession and acquisition permit. In the absence of a permit, the buyer shall be liable for his bid. Buyers domiciled abroad bear sole responsibility for observing the regulations in force at their place of residence on the acquisition and possession of weapons or war material. The Auctioneer cannot be held responsible in the event of loss. Firearms do not undergo functional testing but are sold as collector’s items in the condition described. Therefore, the Auctioneer cannot assume any liability whatsoever for their fitness for use, functional reliability or accuracy. A warranty is excluded in this respect. The Auctioneer is obligated to submit firearms without a valid proof mark to the responsible authority. For historically significant weapons the Auctioneer endeavours to avoid proofing and to obtain the issuance of a non-proof mark certificate. The consignor shall bear the cost hereof or for proofing. The Auctioneer assumes no liability for damage sustained as a result of the proofing process or on the way to and from the proof house.

  20. If one or more of the above provisions should become invalid, in full or in part, it shall be replaced by a valid provision that most closely approximates the purpose of the invalid provision. The other provisions shall remain unaffected.
Vollständige AGBs