Bernhard von Hülsen

Bernhard Franz Karl Adolf Gottvertrau von Hülsen (b. 20 April 1865 in Cosel, Province of Silesia, Kingdom of Prussia, German Confederation; d. 21 April 1950 in Potsdam, State of Brandenburg, East Germany) was a German Generalleutnant.

Life

Bernhard was the son of Prussian Lieutenant Colonel Karl Theodor Julius Ehregott Hermann von Hülsen (1816–1867) and his second wife (∞ Guhlen 13 July 1858) Helene Friederike Charlotte, née von Clausewitz.[1] Walter von Hülsen (1863–1947), later General of the Infantry and Pour le Mérite knight, was his older brother, Heinrich-Hermann von Hülsen his nephew.

On 31 July 1896 in Berlin, 1st Lieutenant von Hülsen married his fiancée Magdalene Emilie Auguste Emma von Schaper (1866–1945) .[2] They would have one son: Wolf Hermann Otto Jobbe Ehregott von Hülsen (1899–1973),[3] who would also become an officer, finally Colonel of the Wehrmacht in WWII.

On 26 December 1918 after World War I, Hülsen formed the Freikorps (von) Hülsen, a paramilitary unit that participated in the suppression of the Spartacist League in Berlin. In 1921, Generalleutnant von Hülsen commanded units in the Battle of Annaberg in Upper Silesia. In 1922, he published Der Kampf um Oberschlesien.

Awards and decorations

References

  1. ^ Gothaisches Genealogisches Taschenbuch der Adeligen Häuser, 1901, p. 439
  2. ^ Freiherr von Bock: Stammliste des Offizierkorps des 2. Garde-Regiments zu Fuß 19.6.1813–15.5.1913. Verlag R. Eisenschmidt. Berlin 1913. S. 215.
  3. ^ Bernhard Franz Karl Adolf Gottvertau VON HÜLSEN
  • Freikorps Hülsen
  • Bernhard von Hülsen (1922). Der Kampf um Oberschlesien. Berger.