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Stefanie Rabatsch (née Isak; born 26 December 1887 [1] – died 22 December 1975 [2]) was an Austrian woman who was allegedly an unrequited love of then-teenage Adolf Hitler, a claim made by Hitler's childhood friend August Kubizek. Her Jewish-sounding maiden name, Isak, has been subject to speculation in this context.
Contact with Hitler Relationship, Reference(s) Stefanie Rabatsch: 1887–1975: 87 Natural causes 1905–09: Rabatsch was an Austrian woman who, according to Hitler's childhood friend August Kubizek, was an unrequited love of the teenage Hitler. [53] Kubizek's memoir is the only source for this story. [54] Charlotte Lobjoie 1898–1951: 53 ...
Again, the article could be renamed something like "Hitler's alleged infatuation with Stefanie Rabatsch", but a change of title should not change the quality assessment. The present short title, "Stefanie Rabatsch", is the most natural. Aymatth2 13:31, 15 February 2017 (UTC)
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Fighting Hitler's Jets: The Extraordinary Story of the American Airmen Who Beat the Luftwaffe and Defeated Nazi Germany. Zenith Press. ISBN 978-0-7603-4398-2. Deutsch, Harold (1968). The Conspiracy Against Hitler in the Twilight War. University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 978-0-8166-5743-8. Fellgiebel, Walther-Peer (2003).
Anton Joachimsthaler (born 1930 in Hohenelbe) is a German historian.He is particularly noted for his research on the early life of the German dictator Adolf Hitler, in his book Korrektur einer Biografie ("Correction of a Biography") and his last days in the book Hitlers Ende ("Hitler's End"), published in English as The Last Days of Hitler.
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According to consequentialism, the morality of any given action is judged solely by its consequences. [1] Consequentialist ethics raises the dichotomy of immediate foreseeable consequences versus unforeseeable potential consequences; for example, in the story of Johann Kühberger saving a young Hitler from drowning, the immediate positive consequences of saving a person's life was the ...