Carin Axelina Hulda G̮'̦ring (October 21, 1888 - October 17, 1931) was Sweden's first wife Hermann G̮'̦ring.
Video Carin Göring
Biography
She was born to Carin Axelina Hulda Fock in Stockholm in 1888. Her father, Baron Carl Alexander Fock, was a Swedish Army colonel, from a family who emigrated to Sweden from Westphalia. His mother, whose maiden name is Huldine Beamish, was born in 1860 to an Irish family famous for brewing Beamish and fat Crawford in Cork. His great-grandfather, William Beamish, was one of the founders of Beamish and Crawford, and his grandfather had served in British Coldstream Guard. The grandmother of Carin's mother has founded a private religious brotherhood, the Edelweiss Society. She is the fourth of five daughters; His sisters were Fanny von Wilamowitz-Moellendorff (1882-1956), Mary von Rosen (1886-1967), Elsa, and Lily. Mary married Count Eric von Rosen (1879-1948), one of the founding members of the Nationalsocialistiska Blocket ("National Socialist Block"), a Swedish National Socialist political party.
He became Carin von Kantzow at his marriage in 1910 to a Swedish army officer, Nils von Kantzow. Their only child, Thomas von Kantzow, was born in 1913.
In 1920, when he was separated from his first husband, Carin met Hermann G̮'̦ring at Rockelstad Castle when he visited his sister Mary. Four years younger than he, he worked in Sweden as a commercial pilot for a short flight airline Svensk Lufttrafik and was in the castle because he had flown Count Eric von Rosen, the husband of his sister Mary, there. G̮'̦ring fell in love with Carin and immediately started to meet him in Stockholm, though, scandal at the time, he was a married woman separated from a young man. He divorced from von Kantzow in December 1922 and married G̮'̦ring on January 3, 1923.
After their marriage, the G̮'̦ring family first settled in a house on the outskirts of Munich. Carin followed her husband and became a member of the Nazi Party. When G̮'̦ring was severely injured in the groin while lining up beside Hitler at Beer Hall Putsch which failed in November 1923, Carin took him to Austria, then to Italy, and took care of him back to health, Carin and G̮'̦ring romantic love- stories used by machines propaganda Goebbels and the couple toured the country to increase the popularity of the Nazi Party.
Carin suffered from tuberculosis in his early forties. When his mother, Huldine Fock, died unexpectedly on September 25, 1931, it was a big surprise for 42-year-old Carin. Although his health was still fragile, he went to Sweden for his mother's funeral. The next day, he suffered a heart attack in Stockholm. On the news that reached G̮'̦ring, he joined him there and stayed with him until he died of heart failure on October 17, 1931, four days before his 43rd birthday.
After his death, Carin's sister, Fanny, wrote a biography about her who quickly became the bestseller in Germany. In 1943, it sold 900,000 copies.
Carin's death came as a great blow to G̮'̦ring. In 1933 he began building a hunting lodge, which became his main house, and named it Carinhall in his honor. It was there that he asked his body to be buried again from its original tomb in Sweden, in a cemetery attended by Adolf Hitler. G̮'̦ring meets Carinhall with Carin's drawings, as he did in his flat in Berlin, where he created an altar to reminisce that remained even after he remarried in 1935. Carinhall was destroyed on the orders of G̮'̦ring as Soviet troops advanced in 1945..
After the war, it remained believed to be the Carin people discovered by the Fock family, cremated, and re-buried in Sweden. In 1991, remnants were found which could also be Carin G̮'̦ring and shipped to Sweden for identification. The evidence shows that this new remnant belongs to him, and is buried again.
Maps Carin Göring
References
External links
- Carin G̮'̦ring in the Search of the Mausoleum
Source of the article : Wikipedia