Rudolf Lange

Officer

Birthday November 18, 1910

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Weißwasser, Silesia

DEATH DATE (1945-02-23) , (34 years old)

Nationality Latvia

#44758 Most Popular

1910

Rudolf Lange (18 April 1910 – disappeared c. 23 February 1945) was a German SS functionary and police official during the Nazi era.

With the invasion of the Soviet Union, he served in Einsatzgruppe A before becoming a commander in the Sicherheitsdienst (SD) and all RSHA personnel in Riga, Latvia.

1928

Lange finished high school in Staßfurt in 1928 and studied law in the University of Jena.

1933

He received a doctorate in law in 1933, and was recruited by the Gestapo office of Halle.

He joined the Sturmabteilung (SA) in November 1933, but soon felt that this had been a bad career move.

1936

In 1936, he joined the Schutzstaffel (SS) (member number 290,308).

As a mid-level Gestapo official, Lange rose rapidly.

From 1936, he worked in the Gestapo office in Berlin.

1937

He adopted the SS ideology wholeheartedly, and resigned from the church in 1937.

1938

In May 1938, Lange was transferred to Vienna to supervise the annexation of the Austrian police system.

There, he met and worked with Franz Walter Stahlecker, who later became his superior in Riga.

Lange became Untersturmführer on 6 July 1938, and later the same year he was promoted to Sturmführer.

1939

In June 1939, Lange was transferred to Stuttgart.

In September 1939, the security and police agencies of Nazi Germany (with the exception of the Orpo) were consolidated into the Reich Security Main Office (RSHA) of the SS, headed by Reinhard Heydrich.

The Gestapo became Amt IV (Department IV) of the RSHA and Heinrich Müller became the Gestapo Chief, with Heydrich as his immediate superior.

1940

From May to July 1940, Lange ran the Gestapo offices of Weimar and Erfurt, while working as the deputy head of the office of the Inspector of the SiPo in Kassel.

In September 1940, Lange was promoted as the deputy head of police for Berlin.

1941

On 20 April 1941, he was promoted to SS-Sturmbannführer (major).

On 5 June 1941 Lange was ordered to Pretzsch and the command staff of Einsatzgruppe A, headed by SS-Brigadeführer und Generalmajor der Polizei Dr. Franz Walter Stahlecker.

Lange was a Teilkommando (detachment) leader in Einsatzkommando 2, or EK2.

He was one of the few people aware of the Führerbefehl or "fundamental orders" for the so-called "Jewish problem" in Latvia.

According to Lange himself:"From the very beginning, the goal of EK2 was that radical solution of the Jewish problem by killing all Jews."

On 3 December 1941, he was promoted as commander of EK2, replacing Eduard Strauch.

Lange was also the area chief of the Sicherheitsdienst (SD), the Nazi Security Service, with the title Kommandant des Sicherheitsdienst.

He was in charge of Department IV of the SD in Latvia.

The department was the "hub of the whole SD organization in Latvia, the other departments served it."

Matters of formal rank and titles were never clear in the Nazi occupation regime for Latvia, as the lines of authority within agencies and the relationship between one agency and others were "ambiguous, overlapping, and unclear".

Nevertheless, Lange is widely recognized as one of the primary perpetrators of the Holocaust in Latvia.

His headquarters were in Riga, on Reimersa Street.

From the beginning of his involvement in Latvia, Lange gave orders to squads of Latvians, such as the Arajs Kommando, that the Germans had organised to carry out massacres in the smaller cities.

According to one historian, Viktors Arājs was "held on a short leash" by Lange.

Another local organisation receiving orders from Lange was the Vagulāns Kommando, which was responsible for the Jelgava massacres in July and August 1941.

Lange also personally supervised executions conducted by the Arājs commando.

He appears to have ordered that all the SD officers should personally participate in the killings.

Lange was responsible for the Latvian part of the decision by the Nazi regime to deport Jews from Germany, Austria and Czechoslovakia to Riga.

In this connection, on 8 November 1941, he issued detailed orders to Hinrich Lohse, who was Reichskommissar Ostland, regarding the transport of 50,000 Jews to the East, with 25,000 going to Riga and 25,000 to Belarus.

1942

He participated in the January 1942 Wannsee Conference, at which the genocidal Final Solution to the Jewish Question was planned, and was largely responsible for implementing the murder of Latvia's Jewish population during the Holocaust.

Lange was born in Weißwasser, Prussian Silesia, a town in present-day Saxony.

His father was a railway construction supervisor.

1943

For the appointment as SS-Obersturmbannführer, he had to wait until 1943.