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| Julius Caesar |
If we succumb to folklore, bad things are supposed to happen on 15 March, the day that Emperor Julius Caesar succumbed to 23 stab wounds at the Curia de Pompeyo in Rome in 44 BC. The culprits were for the most part Roman senators in open rebellion with Caesar. Brutus administered the fatal blow which produced the timeless retort from a dying Caesar: “Et tu, Brute?” (loosely translated as “you too, Brutus?).
Fast forward several millenia.
I picked 15 March as a random, yet symbolic, date as a pretext to take a (micro?) historical look at what unfolded on that day during and after the Nazi era. The following selection is mostly centered on France with snippets on Czechoslovakia and Belgium.
15 March 1939
France’s abandonment of the Sudetenland to the Third Reich gave the Nazis a green light to invade and occupy Czechoslovakia.
60,000 Spanish Republican refugees—children, women, soldiers and militiamen—fled to France to escape from Generalissimo Francisco Franco’s counteroffensive at the close of the Spanish Civil War. They were placed in several “concentration camps” established by the French authorities at Rivesaltes and Barcarès near Perpignan.
15 March 1941
Jean Seligmann, Jewish art dealer and collector, son and heir of the famous antiquarian Jacques Seligmann, underwent a second day of interrogation at the hands of agents of Gruppe 603 of the Geheime Feld Polizei (GFP) who had arrested him the day before on grounds of acts of sabotage for the Allies and financing Allied propaganda efforts. Dr. Karl Epting, an eminent figure in Franco-German intellectual collaboration during the war, also accused Seligmann of acquiring works of art from suspected Spanish “Red [Communist]” agents and colluding with the British and the Americans. Labeled a “terrorist,” Seligmann was executed by a German firing squad in mid-December 1941 at Mont-Valérien.
On the same day, a train with 25 cars lumbered from Paris to an imposing castle in Bavaria, Neuschwanstein, the main depot used by the ERR to store and inventory confiscated Jewish-owned art objects from Western Europe. The objects on the train were from the following owners: Rothschild family, Seligmann, Alphonse Kann, Halphen, Weil-Picard, Wildenstein and David-Weill. The Nazis had hastily packed the train and failed to register and inventory its contents before departure. A special team from the Paris ERR headed to the Bavarian castle for the sole purpose of inventorying the train’s contents.
While the loot train made its way to Bavaria, a Jewish art dealer, Paul Graupe, reached New York where he registered as a political refugee. He had to abandon many of his precious cultural belongings in a warehouse in Paris where they were later confiscated by German agents.
During a brief visit in Paris, Marshal Hermann Goering, who had a first right of refusal on all confiscated Jewish-owned collections, selected a number of objects for his private enjoyment which belonged to James and Alexandrine de Rothschild.
The ERR in Paris gave Josef Angerer, one of Hermann Goering’s agents in France during WWII, a wooden statuette of a seated woman which came from a crate numbered 686 that had been stored at the German Embassy in Paris and been transferred to the Jeu de Paume in late Fall 1940.
15 March 1942
Charles Laville, deputy secretary of the anti-Jewish “Institut d’Etudes des Questions Juives”, sold a vast quantity of photographs that were the property of Jewish art dealer Paul Rosenberg. He sold 4500 photos to Mr. Borelly, the owner of a journal called “L’Atalanque” for 10,000 francs and 1200 photos to a Parisian art dealer, Louise Leiris who managed the interests of Daniel Kahnweiler.
Rose Valland, curator and spy extraordinaire stationed at the Jeu de Paume, noted in her journals that the personnel of the Jeu de Paume were working overtime to make room for additional shipments of confiscated objects to the museum. Little did she know that these measures presaged the onset of the so-called “M-Aktion or Möbel Aktion”, a sweeping wholesale gutting of the contents of Jewish residences in the Paris region which lasted until June 1944. The overseer of this massive cleansing operation was SS Colonel Kurt von Behr, of the ERR in Paris.
The administration of the French concentration camp at Rivesaltes mobilized labor battalions comprised exclusively of Jewish male prisoners. They were referred to as “Palestinian groups.”
15 March 1945
The French Assembly passed a law declaring claimants responsible for presenting all material evidence in support of a claim of forced transfer of their property (duress) so that some form of indemnification could be provided to them in lieu of restitution. This law did not extend to financial instruments sold on the Paris stock market (Bourse). [Caffery to State, March 21, 1945, no. 1342, Secret, RG 84, Paris Embassy Confidential Files, 1945, Box 4, NARA.]
The Secret Intelligence Branch of the OSS in Paris launched an investigation into the wartime activities of Michel Skolnikoff who had acted as the main go-between for the Germans to corner the French and Monegascan hotel market through a network of agencies that cloaked the identity of the beneficial owner behind the purchases of these hotel properties, namely Skolnikoff. The previous day, Allied representatives had met at the US Embassy in Paris and decided to place Skolnikoff on the British “Black List” and the US “Proclaimed List.” Skolnikoff had already fled to Spain where he resided at the Hotel Palace in Madrid. [From Saint, BB/036 [London] to Saint/BD001 [Lisbon], Subject : Michel Skolnikoff, Secret, 11 April 1945, RG 226, Entry 109, Box 14, NARA.]
15 March 1961
Mr. Rossignol, an advisor to the ORE, a Belgian agency responsible for war reparations and economic relief, ordered Louis Cahen, the chief curator of the Royal Museum of Central Africa in Tervuren, to take custody of objects from Congo and Angola which Allied officials had repatriated from Germany after 1945. These objects had a total market value of 15000 francs. Cahen objected because the provenance of these objects was suspicious. Rossignol insisted that he serve as their “custodian until further notice.”
Selected sources:
Czechoslovakia
Dr. Karl Epting
https://www.ifz-muenchen.de/en/vierteljahrshefte/vfz-archive/issue-index/2023/issue-july-2023
Charles Laville
Index cards on art looting suspects, RG239 E34 b1 NARA, available on fold3.com.
Mr. Rossignol
A. Rossignol, ORE to L. Cahen, Musée royal de l’Afrique centrale, 6 September 1961, AR 2/AGR 2-Dépôt Joseph Cuvelier, 020/510, Archives du Royaume, Brussels, Belgium.
Index cards on art looting suspects, RG239 E34 b1 NARA, available on fold3.com.
Mr. Rossignol
A. Rossignol, ORE to L. Cahen, Musée royal de l’Afrique centrale, 6 September 1961, AR 2/AGR 2-Dépôt Joseph Cuvelier, 020/510, Archives du Royaume, Brussels, Belgium.
Jean Seligmann
Erste bericht, Kommissariat 1, GFP 603, 15 mars 1941, B323/287, Bundesarchiv Koblenz, Germany
Erste bericht, Kommissariat 1, GFP 603, 15 mars 1941, B323/287, Bundesarchiv Koblenz, Germany
Acronyms:
ERR: Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg
ORE: Office de Récupération Economique
Archives:
Archives du Royaume, Brussels, Belgium
Bundesarchiv Koblenz, Germany
fold3.com
NARA: National Archives and Records Administration, College Park, MD
Photo credits:
Julius Caesar, courtesy of Wikipedia.
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