Braemer was born at Königsberg, then an East Prussian port city on the Baltic Sea, on 7 January 1883.[5] His military career under the German Empire and the Weimar Republic bears the unmistakable hallmarks of patronage commonly accorded at the time to people of high birth.
Only subsequently, for two years between 1906 and 1908, did he study at the Military School of Equitation (Militärreitschule — see Militärreitinstitut) in Hanover.[8] This course was followed by 2 years 9 months and 3 weeks he spent at a military academy (sources speak of a Kriegsakademie: unclear whether the Prussian War Academy is meant, three other options being possible) where he was enrolled until 21 July 1911.[9]
In April 1912, was detached to the central military command known as the "Great General Staff", the governing body of the army. While there, he was given the higher rank of Rittmeister ("captain of the cavalry") on 17 February 1914, and five days later formally inducted into the Great General Staff at the age of 31.
After the War he served in the 20th Reichswehr Brigade based at Allenstein (now Olsztyn) in Ermland, 126 km south of his native Königsberg in East Prussia (1 May 1919–13 December 1919), before being delegated to a desk job at the Bendlerblock in Berlin — the Ministry of the Reichswehr — for a period of 2 years and 3+1⁄2 months between 13 December 1919 and 1 April 1922. While there he was again promoted to the rank of Major (roughly equivalent to major in Anglo-American taxonomies) on 1 January 1922. For 18 months between April 1922 to October 1923 he was squadron leader (Eskadronchef) in the 2nd (Prussian) Cavalry Regiment (2. (Preußisches) Reiter-Regiment (Reichswehr)) that garrisoned both Allenstein and Osterode (now Ostróda) in Ermland, then within the Province of East Prussia. Next, over the period of 3 years and 4 months from October 1923 to February 1927, Braemer served on the General Staff of the 6th Division at Münster in Westphalia: here he saw another advancement in rank to Oberstleutnant (lieutenant colonel) on 1 April 1926.[13] From 1 February 1927 to 1 January 1931 he held the command of the 6th (Prussian) Cavalry Regiment (6. (Preußisches) Reiter-Regiment) headquartered in the northern town of Pasewalk, about 40 km west of Stettin (now Szczecin) in Western Pomerania — a post in which he spent 3 years and 11 months (his longest tour of duty ever).[14] A promotion to the rank of Oberst (or colonel) was accorded him there on 1 October 1929. Lastly, Braemer held the military command of the city of Insterburg in East Prussia (now Chernyakhovsk in Russia), some 100 km east of his native Königsberg, during the nearly 22-month period from 1 January 1931 to 30 November 1932. Here he was elevated to the Generalmajorship (a rank roughly corresponding to that of brigadier general) on 1 October 1932, and two months later retired from the Reichswehr at the age of 49.[15]
Nazi period
The beginning
Two years and eight months after Hitler's rise to power and nearly three years after his leave-taking of the army, on 1 October 1935, Braemer — then aged 52 — joined the SS with the rank of Standartenführer (regiment leader),[16] and in this rank was posted as a "training consultant" to the General Staff of the SS circuit or Oberabschnitt known as command Nord (not an army post), where he stayed until 15 April 1936, to be transferred to the OberabschnittNordwest for one month, before being moved again to the Oberabschnitt Nordsee, where he stayed until 1 July 1938. All three SS districts in question were at the time headquartered at Altona in Hamburg. In the course of his SS service Braemer gained two promotions, ultimately to Brigadeführer, the fourth-highest rank in the SS, a remarkably quick climb accomplished in less than 2 years and 9 months since joining the ranks.[17] The latter rank of Brigadeführer was conferred on him only after he had become member of the Nazi party sometime in 1937 (the exact date of his joining the NSDAP has not been established) with the membership number 4012329.[16] At this time Braemer involved himself with Himmler's Lebensborn Society, an organization whose purpose was to devise ways and means of engineering the genetic makeup of the German nation by promoting Nazi eugenics and "breeding" pure "Aryans".[18]
On 1 July 1938 Braemer was appointed to the rank of Generalmajor of the Wehrmacht, the same rank he last held in the Reichswehr, and was placed by the SS once again at the disposal of the army. At the time of mobilization mounted in preparation for the Nazi attack on Poland Braemer was appointed as the Commander of the 580th Army Rear Area, a position abbreviated to "Korück 580". He received that command on 26 August 1939, six days before the invasion of Poland.[19]
Four days after becoming Korück 580, on 30 August 1939, Braemer gave the order for the formation of the concentration camp at Liepe, 8 kilometres west of the current German-Polish border, which camp was established on 1 September 1939, the first day of the Second World War.[20][21] As Korück 580 Braemer was also responsible for the creation of the camps located at Łopienek (Ruhental) and other localities.[22]
Criminal activities
Poland
Shortly after the strike on Poland Braemer found himself with the Nazi invasion force in the Polish region of Cuyavia, where according to latest scholarship he was appointed by the 4th German Army — in his capacity as Korück 580 — the commandant of the northern Polish city of Bydgoszcz, a position in which he formally styled himself in his written proclamations as the "chief in executive authority" (Inhaber der vollziehenden Gewalt in Bromberg).[23][24][25] His short stint as the supremo of Bydgoszcz lasted with effect from 5 September 1939 — some earlier published sources cite the date of 8 September 1939 for his assumption of this post.[26][27] The dates are significant, as his appearance on the Bydgoszcz stage is said in some sources to have lasted for a total of only six days (although the far limit of his "tour of duty" is in fact uncertain). Within just four days of Braemer's beginning to exercise his "executive authority" he became personally responsible for the murder of 370 Polish civilians in Bydgoszcz in the large-scale pacification operations he ordered (the so-called säuberungsaktionen or "cleanup operations").[28][29] These included the public execution by a firing squad in the city's historic Old Market Square on 9 September 1939 of a large group of civilians randomly rounded up in the streets a short while earlier in the day (see the historical photographs to the right), a crime which provoked in the ensuing months a protest from the Vatican (as the victims included Catholic priests: see Piotr Szarek).[30] By 8 September 1939 the total number of civilian victims of Bydgoszcz executions grew to 200–400 by various estimates; on 9 September 1939 another 120 were shot.[31][32][33] The next day, 10 September 1939, in a Braemer-ordered raid on the working-class Bydgoszcz neighbourhood of "Swedish Heights" (Szwederowo) between 120 and 200 civilians were killed,[34][35][36][37][38] while another public execution staged on that day in the centrally located Old Market Square claimed 20 victims.[39][40] It is said that the mass murders of civilians in Bydgoszcz went on at such a pace that Braemer, although a "competent commandant", eventually lost all count of how many had been killed — and he allowed the slaughter to continue.[41][42] Apparently the level of atrocities was such that on occasion it produced qualms of conscience in his own executioners, but never in Braemer himself (as evidenced by his entries in the personal diary he kept).[43] While carrying out his actions against the townsfolk of Bydgoszcz, in reprisal for the stiff resistance that the civilian population put up against the German invaders after the Polish armed forces withdrew from the city on 4 September 1939, Braemer instituted at the same time ethnic cleansing policies against the Jewish minority of the town (which numbered about 2,000 before the War), being able as a result to report on 14 November 1939, in the 11th week of the war, that "the Jewish question does not arise in Bydgoszcz... because during the säuberungsaktionen all the Jews who did not deem it advisable to flee from the city beforehand were eliminated".[44] The Bydgoszcz massacres are the primary reason for which some German historians have considered Braemer an "extremist" among the Nazi Wehrmacht's corps of generals.[45][46] Others have described him as a "fanatical Nazi" who resorted to (by then, i.e. in September 1939) "unheard-of brutality".[47]
Little is known of Braemer's activities immediately following his disappearance from the Bydgoszcz scene, a community on which he left an indelible mark, and there is no clear record of his departure as such. Historians (such as Stanisław Nawrocki) have merely noted that he did not play any role in the occupation of the historical region of Greater Poland (Wielkopolska), i.e. of the lands to the west of Cuyavia where Bydgoszcz is located, thereby suggesting that his activities were of interest to researchers in other areas.[48] It is on record, however, that Braemer continued as Korück 580 (a position which put him in charge of "law and order" in areas under Nazi occupation) for a total of nearly 21 months — until 19 May 1941.
After his appointment as Korück 580 came to an end on 19 May 1941, Braemer spent 35 days, until 24 June 1941, officially mothballed in the führerreserve or officers' reserve pool within the German Army High Command (Oberkommando des Heeres) as his new assignment was being prepared for him.
The Baltic and Byelorussia
Two days after the commencement of the Operation Barbarossa (the German attack on the Soviet Union), Braemer was appointed the Wehrmachtbefehlshaber or supreme military commander of the so-called Reichskommissariat Ostland, a Nazi régime established in the combined occupied territory of the Baltic states, parts of northeastern Poland and western Byelorussia, headquartered in Riga, the capital of Latvia (again in the general region of his birth, 380 km to the north-east of his native Königsberg). He was to hold this office during the period of about 2 years and 10 months between 24 June 1941[49] and 20 April 1944. In some reports his appointment to this post was already finalized in the planning stages on 27 May 1941.[50] In this capacity Braemer was heavily implicated in the mass murder of the Jewish population in the territories under his command.[4][51] He was responsible for, among other things, promulgating legislation that laid the legal and operational groundwork on the basis of which whole Jewish communities numbering thousands of people were exterminated in the Holocaust. Thus for example, on 25 September 1941 Braemer issued his "Guidelines for Military Security and Maintenance of Quiet and Order" which specifically stipulated the "imperative elimination" of, among others, "Jews and philosemitic elements (judenfreundliche Kreise)".[52][53][54] The pivotal role that Braemer played in the Holocaust of the Jewish populations in Byelorussia has been described by the German historian Hannes Heer.[55] Braemer has been shown to possess the notorious distinction of having originated the first annihilation operations against the Jewish ghettos in ByeloRussia: the Smilavichy ghetto, whose 1,338 inhabitants were murdered on 14 October 1941; the Koidanovo ghetto, with its 1,000 victims on 21 October 1941; followed by the murder of 5,900 people in the predominantly Jewish town of Slutsk on 27 and 28 October 1941 in a massacre sometimes euphemistically referred to as the "Slutsk Affair" — and that just to begin with.[56][57][58] Braemer's service in the Ostland was considered so meritorious by both the Wehrmacht and the SS that he was rewarded with two military promotions, viz., to Generalleutnant (a rank roughly corresponding to major-general) on 1 July 1941, just a week after arrival, and later, 14 months into his tour of duty, on 1 September 1942, as a reward for a job well done, to General der Kavallerie z.v. ("general of the cavalry", the second-highest general officer rank roughly equivalent to lieutenant general, a "prestigious" cachet within the echelons of the German military);[59] and then again on the last day of his assignment with an SS promotion to the rank of Gruppenführer, the third-highest SS rank overall. Goebbels went so far as to discuss Braemer's "political ideas" in his diaries (entry for 24 November 1941).[60]
Conflict with Lohse
Nazi approval of Braemer was not universal, however. During his tenure as the Wehrmachtbefehlshaber or territorial military commander of the Reichskommissariat Ostland, Braemer had (presumably) an immediate superior in the person of Reichskommissar (and Gauleiter) Hinrich Lohse, the overall governor of the Ostland who was likewise headquartered in Riga, Latvia. While Lohse's slapping of Braemer on the face — in public — at the Riga Opera House during the banquet celebrating Hitler's birthday on 20 April 1944 probably should not be made too much of, it is indicative nonetheless of the tensions simmering within the Nazi leadership in the Ostland and points at least to the possibility that even to high-ranking (but non-Wehrmacht and non-SS) Nazis like Lohse the methods used by Braemer in the implementation of the Holocaust might have seemed objectionable (if only on economic grounds, by depriving his administration of needed workforce),[61][62][63][64] even if the event has also been put down to the incipient panic in the face of looming defeat[65] or to personal rivalries between two Nazi apparatchiks vying for a position of pre-eminence within the Ostland bureaucracy.[66] In some reports the punch from Lohse (meted out in response to Braemer's applying to Lohse the unparliamentary epithet of dummes Luder — "silly rotter") is said literally to have knocked Braemer to the ground.[67][68][69][70] But the knockout blow appears to have been invested with figurative significance as well, as the incident marks Braemer's exit from the scene in Riga (on orders from the Wehrmacht which removed him that very day not only from the commandership of the Ostland but from active duty altogether[71]) and, conversely, his promotion by the SS to the aforementioned higher rank of gruppenführer on the same day.[72] Braemer was 61-years' old at the time.
The end game
After his retirement on 20 April 1944 from the position of Wehrmachtbefehlshaber in the Ostland — an office to which Braemer was first appointed on 24 June 1941 but which from 30 January 1942 onwards he had been holding concurrently with his (second) SS posting on the command of Oberabschnitt Nordsee, an SS beat headquartered at Altona near Hamburg — he continued on active duty in the latter (non-army) post for 6 months and 3 weeks longer, until 9 November 1944, even while being rusticated by the army to the Führerreserve or officers' reserve pool within the German Army High Command (Oberkommando des Heeres) with effect from 20 April 1944.
After nearly nine months in reserve, on 17 January 1945 Braemer was suddenly recalled by the Wehrmacht to active duty as a so-called "general on special assignment" (General zur besonderen Verwendung) and in that capacity posted to the Military District Command I at Königsberg, his native place (Wehrkreis I (Königsberg); 17–22 January 1945), only to shift after just five days — doubtless in connection with the tightening vice grip by the Soviet forces investing the city — to the Military District Command II at Stettin in Western Pomerania (Wehrkreis II (Stettin)), some 480 kilometres (overland) away from Königsberg and its Eastern front, where he spent the following 19 days in a similar capacity (as a "general on special assignment") between 22 January and 10 February 1945. Finally, during the ensuing 22 days between 10 February and 4 March 1945 Braemer exercised (ersatz) "military authority" as a Korück (for definition, see above) or rear-army-area commander for the Wehrmacht's 11th Army — a largely fictitious formation contrived on paper by Himmler for the sake of providing employment to the rapidly increasing cadre of unemployed SS functionaries (see 11th SS Panzer Army) — before being relegated once more and for the last time to the Führerreserve of the German Army High Command on 4 March 1945, two months before the end of the War.[73]
Aftermath
Braemer surrendered to the British Second Army in the port city of Lübeck in Germany on 2 May 1945 and detained as a prisoner of war. Eight months later, on 9 January 1946 he was transferred to the prisoner-of-war camp in South Wales, the so-called Special Camp 11 (Island Farm), where high-value Nazi captives awaiting extradition to Nuremberg were imprisoned. Braemer was interned at Island Farm for 21 months as prisoner No. A451665. On 6 October 1947, Braemer was transferred from Island Farm — via Camp 43 — to the Civil Internment Camp No. 6 at Neuengamme near Hamburg, a post-Nazi concentration-camp facility used after the War specifically for detention of suspected German war criminals.[11] There he was apparently set free sometime later that October without extenuating circumstances (like ill health: the precise circumstances and date of release are not known), having spent less than 2+1⁄2 years in prisoner-of-war camps but without having been brought to trial for war crimes.[11] This outcome was apparently brought about by the deliberate shielding of Braemer by British authorities wilfully refusing to take cognizance of his past as a war criminal.[74]
On 30 August 1948, ten months after his release from British custody, the government of Poland requested the extradition of Braemer on the charge of murder of twenty hostages and hundreds of civilians in Poland in 1939. By the admission of BritishForeign Office personnel, the facts of the case were never in dispute, "not even by Braemer himself".[74] Nevertheless, after legal manoeuvrings and much prevarication intended to shield Braemer from responsibility for his crimes, the extradition request was refused in September 1950 by the Government of the United Kingdom.[75] According to some sources, the Polish request for Braemer's extradition was initially presented to (and denied by) the British authorities as early as 1945.[31] In a ruling by the British Extradition Court in Hamburg that has only recently — half a century after the fact — been called into question by some British historians such as Donald Bloxham, Braemer was in effect declared innocent of war crimes on the grounds that the execution ordered by him of the hostages in question "had been so ordered in accordance with the law of nations".[3][76]
Although Telford Taylor, the legendary American prosecutor at the Nuremberg Trials, takes note of Braemer in several of his books (for example, in The March of Conquest, 1958; see Bibliography), there is no record of Braemer's having ever been called to answer for his role in the Holocaust on the territory of the (former) Soviet Union.
Braemer died of natural causes in Hamburg on 13 June 1955, at the age of 72, a free man who has never been convicted of or charged in open court with any crime.[2]
Braemer's personal papers and personnel files ("Personalakte Walter Braemer"; including pages from his war diary which provide direct evidence of some of his crimes) are preserved at the German Federal Archives-Military Archives (BA-MA; see Bundesarchiv-Militärarchiv) located at Wiesentalstraße 10 in the city of Freiburg im Breisgau (shelf mark Pers. 6/2102), and at the Bundesarchiv Berlin (BAB).[77]
^Hans-Heinrich Wilhelm, "Personelle Kontinuitäten in baltischen Angelegenheiten auf deutscher Seite von 1917/19 bis zum Zweiten Weltkrieg"; in: The Baltic in International Relations between the Two World Wars: Symposium organized by the Centre for Baltic Studies, November 11–13, 1986, University of Stockholm, Frescati, ed. J. Hiden & A. Loit, Stockholm, Centre for Baltic Studies, University of Stockholm, 1988, pp. 165–169. ISBN9122011943.
^ abEdmund Pyszczyński, "'Akcja Tannenberg' w Bydgoszczy w okresie od 5 IX do 20 XI 1939 r."; in: Z okupacyjnych dziejów Bydgoszczy, ed. J. Wiśniowski & J. Sziling, (Bydgoskie Towarzystwo Naukowe: Prace Wydziału Nauk Humanistycznych series E, No. 10), Warsaw, Państwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe, 1977, p. 80.
^ abDieter Pohl (historian) [de], Die Herrschaft der Wehrmacht: Deutsche Militärbesatzung und einheimische Bevölkerung in der Sowjetunion, 1941–1944, Munich, Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag, 2009, p. 39. ISBN9783486591743.
^The entirety of this section, except as otherwise noted below, is based on the Lexikon der Wehrmacht(see online), supplemented by the prisoner information from the British prisoner-of-war camp — Island Farm — where Braemer was held between 9 January 1946 and 6 October 1947 (see online).Archived 10 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine
^Wolf Keilig, Das deutsche Heer, 1939–1945, vol. 3 (Gliederung; Einsatz, Stellenbesetzung), Bad Nauheim, Verlag Hans-Henning Podzun, 1956, p. 43.
^On the Military School of Equitation in Hanover, see United States; Adjutant-General's Office; Military Information Division [institutional author], Sources of Information on Military Professional Subjects: A Classified List of Books and Publications [Nov. 10, 1897], Washington, Government Printing Office, 1898, p. 110.
^Hans-Heinrich Wilhelm, "Motivation und 'Kriegsbild' deutscher Generale und Offiziere im Krieg gegen die Sowjetunion"; in: Erobern und Vernichten: der Krieg gegen die Sowjetunion 1941–1945, ed. P Jahn, et al., Berlin, Argon Verlag, 1991, p. 181. ISBN3870241896.
^Reichswehrministerium (Heeres-Personalamt),Rangliste des deutschen Reichsheeres: Nach dem Stande vom 1. Mai 1927, Berlin, Verlag von E. S. Mittler & Sohn, 1927, p. 56.
^Stellenbesetzung der deutschen Heere, 1815–1939, vol. 3 (Die Stellenbesetzung der aktiven Regimenter, Bataillone und Abteilungen von der Stiftung bzw. Aufstellung bis zum 26. August 1939...), Osnabrück, Biblio-Verlag, 1993, p. 477. ISBN3764824131.
^The entirety of this section, except as otherwise noted above, is based on the Lexikon der Wehrmacht(see online), supplemented by the prisoner information from the British prisoner-of-war camp — Island Farm — where Braemer was held between 9 January 1946 and 6 October 1947 (see online).Archived 10 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine
^ abPrisoner information from the British prisoner-of-war camp — Island Farm — where Braemer was held between 9 January 1946 and 6 October 1947 (see online).Archived 10 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine Cf. SS-Personalhauptamt [institutional author], Dienstaltersliste der Schutzstaffel der NSDAP... Stand vom 1. Dezember 1938..., ed. B. Meyer, Berlin, [Gedruckt in der Reichsdruckerei], 1938, p. 14.
^SS-Personalhauptamt [institutional author], Dienstaltersliste der Schutzstaffel der NSDAP... Stand vom 20. April 1942..., Berlin, [Gedruckt in der Reichsdruckerei], 1942, p. 142.
^The entirety of this section — insofar as it concerns the timeline of Braemer's military career — is based on the Lexikon der Wehrmacht(see online); supplemented by the prisoner information from the British prisoner-of-war camp — Island Farm — where Braemer was held between 9 January 1946 and 6 October 1947 (see online).Archived 10 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine Matters relating to Braemer's war crimes are referenced separately in the footnotes below.
^Stutthof: Das Konzentrationslager, ed. D. Steyer & F. Dwertmann, tr. (from the Polish into German) R. Malcher, Gdańsk, Wydawnictwo Marpress, 1996, p. 66. ISBN8385349537, ISBN9788385349532. The identification in this source of the locality of Liepe with the (now Polish) village of Lipka in Złotów County (Kreis Flatow) seems however to be erroneous (it is not supported by the standard gazetteer, the Słownik geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego i innych krajów słowiańskich, which assigns to the village of Lipka in Złotów County the German exonym of Linde, not Liepe: see vol. 5, p. 267, col. 1).
^Das nationalsozialistische Lagersystem (CCP), ed. M. Weinmann, et al., Frankfurt am Main, Zweitausendeins, 1990, pp. 265 & 964. (No ISBN.) This source identifies the camp's location as Liepe in Kreis Angermünde (that is, the Liepe in today's Landkreis Barnim).
^Biuletyn Głównej Komisji Badania Zbrodni Hitlerowskich Polsce, vol. 31, Warsaw, Wydawnictwo Prawnicze, 1982, pp. 25–26. ISBN8321901212.
^"Inhaber der vollziehenden Gewalt in Bromberg" ("holder of executive authority in Bydgoszcz"): this is how Braemer styled himself in his own written proclamations and official communications dated from Bydgoszcz. See Esman & Jastrzębski 1967, pp. 8–12. Cf. also Krausnick 1985, p. 49.
^Deutsche und Polen, 1.9.39: Abgründe und Hoffnungen, ed. B. Asmuss, et al., Dresden, Sandstein, 2009, p. 129. ISBN9783940319661. ("Als Generalmajor der Wehrmacht und Kommandant des rückwärtigen Armeegebietes 580 übernahm Braemer am 8. September 1939 die vollziehende Gewalt in Bydgoszcz. Er befahl groß angelegte "Säuberungsaktionen", bei denen innerhalb von vier Tagen mehrere hundert Zivilisten verhaftet und rund 370 Menschen erschossen wurden": p. 129.) Cf. Alexander B. Rossino, Hitler Strikes Poland: Blitzkrieg, Ideology, and Atrocity, Lawrence (Kansas), University Press of Kansas, 2003, p. 62. ISBN0700612343.
^Jochen Böhler, "'Tragische Verstrickung' oder Auftakt zum Vernichtungskrieg? Die Wehrmacht in Polen, 1939"; in: Genesis des Genozids: Polen, 1939–1941, ed. K.-M. Mallmann & B. Musial, (Forschungsstelle Ludwigsburg: Veröffentlichungen der Forschungsstelle Ludwigsburg der Universität Stuttgart series, vol. 3), Darmstadt, WBG: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft (Auftr. des Deutschen Historischen Instituts Warschau), 2004, p. 41. ISBN3534180968, ISBN9783534180967.
^Janusz Gumkowski and Rajmund Kuczma, Zbrodnie hitlerowskie: Bydgoszcz, 1939, Warsaw, Polonia, 1967, p. 18.
^Edmund Pyszczyński, "'Akcja Tannenberg' w Bydgoszczy w okresie od 5 IX do 20 XI 1939 r."; in: Z okupacyjnych dziejów Bydgoszczy, ed. J. Wiśniowski & J. Sziling, (Bydgoskie Towarzystwo Naukowe: Prace Wydziału Nauk Humanistycznych series E, No. 10), Warsaw, Państwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe, 1977, p. 64.
^Dieter Pohl (historian) [de], Die Herrschaft der Wehrmacht: Deutsche Militärbesatzung und einheimische Bevölkerung in der Sowjetunion, 1941–1944, Munich, Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag, 2009, p. 54. ISBN9783486591743.
^The revulsion at the atrocities privately expressed by a Wehrmacht soldier to one of Braemer's victims in Bydgoszcz (Es ist doch eine Gemeinheit, was die Hunde mit euch machen; Eng., "it's really vile what these dogs are doing to you") is reported — and contrasted with Braemer's own diary entries — in: Franciszek Bernaś and Julitta Mikulska-Bernaś, Bydgoski wrzesień, Warsaw, Książka i Wiedza (Rada Ochrony Pomników Walki i Męczeństwa), 1968, p. 61.
^"Eksterminacja ludności polskiej w Bydgoszczy w początkowym okresie okupacji" (The Extermination of the Polish Population of Bydgoszcz in the Initial Period of the [Nazi] Occupation), p. 3, on the official website of the Voivodeship Marshal's Office (Urząd Marszałkowski) of the Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship, Department of Education, Sports, and Tourism (see online).Archived 4 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine
^Dieter Pohl (historian) [de], Die Herrschaft der Wehrmacht: Deutsche Militärbesatzung und einheimische Bevölkerung in der Sowjetunion, 1941–1944, Munich, Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag, 2009, pp. 39 and 54. ISBN9783486591743.
^Stanisław Nawrocki, Hitlerowska okupacja Wielkopolski w okresie zarządu wojskowego: wrzesień–październik 1939 r., (Badania nad Okupacją Niemiecką w Polsce series, vol. 8), Poznań, Instytut Zachodni, 1966, p. 81.
^This date, like the other dates cited in the present article, is based on sources mentioned in Bibliography. The date of 25 June 1941 for this appointment is given in a Hitler-signed document reproduced in: "Führer-Erlasse" 1939–1945: Edition sämtlicher überlieferter, nicht im Reichsgesetzblatt abgedruckter, von Hitler während des Zweiten Weltkrieges schriftlich erteilter Direktiven aus den Bereichen Staat, Partei, Wirtschaft, Besatzungspolitik und Militärverwaltung, ed. M. Moll, et al., Stuttgart, Franz Steiner Verlag, 1997, pp. 196–197 & 205. ISBN3515068732.
^So Kriegstagebuch: Tägliche Aufzeichnungen des Chefs des Generalstabes d. Heeres, 1939–1942, vol. 2 (Von der geplanten Landung in England bis zum Beginn des Ostfeldzuges (1.7.1940–21.6.1941)), ed. H.-A. Jacobsen, Stuttgart, Kohlhammer, 1963, p. 431. Cited in: Christian Möller, Massensterben und Massenvernichtung: Das Stalag 305 in der Ukraine, 1941–1944, Munich, GRIN Verlag, 2007, p. 7. ISBN978-3-638-68773-7. Google Books
^Hannes Heer, "Killing Fields: Die Wehrmacht und der Holocaust"; in: Vernichtungskrieg: Verbrechen der Wehrmacht 1941 bis 1944, ed. H. Heer & K. Naumann, Hamburg, Hamburger Edition: Hamburger Institut für Sozialforschung (HIS), 1995, pp. 57–77. ISBN3930908042. Cf. Donald Bloxham, Genocide on Trial: War Crimes Trials and the Formation of Holocaust History and Memory, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2001, p. 199. ISBN0198208723.
^Jürgen Förster, "The Relation between Operation Barbarossa as an Ideological War of Extermination and the Final Solution"; in: The Final Solution: Origins and Implementation, ed. D. Cesarani, London, Routledge, 1994, p. 95. ISBN0415099544.
^Jürgen Förster, "Complicity or Entanglement? Wehrmacht, War, and Holocaust"; in: The Holocaust and History: The Known, the Unknown, the Disputed, and the Reexamined, ed. M. Berenbaum & A. J. Peck, Bloomington (Indiana), Indiana University Press (published in association with theUnited States Holocaust Memorial Museum), 1998, p. 277. ISBN0253215293. Cf. Timm C. Richter, "Die Wehrmacht und der Partisanenkrieg in den besetzten Gebieten der Sowjetunion"; in: Die Wehrmacht: Mythos und Realität, ed. R.-D. Müller & H.-E. Volkmann, Munich, R. Oldenbourg Verlag, 1999, p. 847. ISBN3486563831.
^Hannes Heer, "Nicht Planer, aber Vollstrecker: Die Mitwirkung der Wehrmacht beim Holocaust"; in: Genozid in der modernen Geschichte, ed. S. Förster, et al., Münster, Lit, 1999, p. 75. ISBN3825840182.
^Hannes Heer, "Killing Fields: The Wehrmacht and the Holocaust in Belorussia, 1941–1942"; in: Holocaust: Critical Concepts in Historical Studies, ed. D. Cesarani, vol. 3 (The "Final Solution"), London, Routledge, 2004, pp. 195–198. ISBN0415275121.
^Christian Gerlach, Kalkulierte Morde: Die deutsche Wirtschafts- und Vernichtungspolitik in Weißrußland 1941 bis 1944, Hamburg, Hamburger Edition: Hamburger Institut für Sozialforschung (HIS), 1999, pp. 612–614. ISBN3930908549.
^Dieter Kusenberg, Lucian (Lutz) Damianus Wysocki: Der ungesühnte Aufstieg vom Polizeipräsidenten zum SS-General im Osten, (Schriftenreihe der Gedenkhalle Schloß Oberhausen series, vol. 2), Oberhausen, Laufen, 1999, pp. 63–64. ISBN3874681637.
^Z.v. (in the German language conventionally capitalized "z.V."), short for zur Verfügung, lit., "at the disposal" — a type of promotion in rank that makes the recipient subject to recall to active duty after retirement.
^Joseph Goebbels, Die Tagebücher, pt. 2 (Diktate 1941–1945), vol. 2 (Oktober–Dezember 1941), ed. E. Fröhlich, Munich, Saur, 1996, p. 357. ISBN3598219229.
^Die Generale der Waffen-SS und der Polizei: Die militärischen Werdegänge der Generale, sowie der Ärzte, Veterinäre, Intendanten, Richter und Ministerialbeamten im Generalsrang: 1933–1945, ed. A. Schulz, et al., vol. 3 (Lammerding–Plesch), Bissendorf, Biblio-Verlag, 2008, p. 282. ISBN3764823755, ISBN9783764823757. See also Hinrich Lohse on German Wikipedia.
^Gertrude Schneider, Journey into Terror: Story of the Riga Ghetto, 2nd ed., enl., Westport (Connecticut), Praeger Publishers, 2001, pp. 10 & 192. ISBN0275970507. (Lohse is reported here to have written in December 1941 to the SS and police leaders in Reval, Riga, Kovno and Minsk asking them to prevent the killing of skilled workers even if they were Jewish.) Cf. Valdis O. Lumans, Latvia in World War II, New York, Fordham University Press, 2006, p. 175; cf. p. 232. ISBN0823226271, ISBN9780823226276. (Alfred Valdmanis, 1908–1970, is reported here to have described Lohse as having purportedly obstructed the Nazi murder of Jews.)
^Andreas Zellhuber, "Unsere Verwaltung treibt einer Katastrophe zu...": das Reichsministerium für die besetzten Ostgebiete und die deutsche Besatzungsherrschaft in der Sowjetunion 1941–1945, Munich, Verlag Ernst Vögel, 2006, pp. 132–133 & 354. ISBN3896502131, ISBN9783896502131.
^Beatrice Heiber & Helmut Heiber, eds., Die Rückseite des Hakenkreuzes: Absonderliches aus den Akten des Dritten Reiches, Munich, Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag, 1993, pp. 382–383. ISBN3423029676.
^Christian Gerlach, Kalkulierte Morde: Die deutsche Wirtschafts- und Vernichtungspolitik in Weißrußland 1941 bis 1944, Hamburg, Hamburger Edition: Hamburger Institut für Sozialforschung (HIS), 1999, p. 174. ISBN3930908549.
^In one source Braemer is said to have exercised the command of the Panzer Division Kempf "for a short time" beginning on 10 June 1944, i.e. after his removal from the military commandership of the Ostland: see Norbert Müller, Wehrmacht und Okkupation, 1941–1944: Zur Rolle der Wehrmacht und ihrer Führungsorgane im Okkupationsregime des faschistischen deutschen Imperialismus auf sowjetischem Territorium, Berlin, Deutscher Militärverlag, 1971, p. 79 n. 84. This information is unsourced here, but is not otherwise inconceivable (Werner Kempf succeeded Braemer as the Wehrmachtbefehlshaber or military supremo of the Ostland).
^The entirety of this section is based on the Lexikon der Wehrmacht(see online), supplemented by (1) the prisoner information from the British prisoner-of-war camp — Island Farm — where Braemer was held between 9 January 1946 and 6 October 1947 (see online)Archived 10 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine, and by (2) Die Generale der Waffen-SS und der Polizei: Die militärischen Werdegänge der Generale, sowie der Ärzte, Veterinäre, Intendanten, Richter und Ministerialbeamten im Generalsrang: 1933–1945, ed. A. Schulz, et al., vol. 3 (Lammerding–Plesch), Bissendorf, Biblio-Verlag, 2008, p. 282. ISBN3764823755, ISBN9783764823757.
The Lexikon der Wehrmacht(See online.) (Braemer's military-career timeline in the present article, including dates of appointments and promotions (but excluding military decorations, which have been for the most part omitted altogether as substantively irrelevant), is based primarily on this source, with the sources listed below serving a supplementary role.)
Prisoner information on inmate No. A451665 from the British prisoner-of-war camp — Island Farm — where Braemer was held between 9 January 1946 and 6 October 1947 (See online.)Archived 10 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine (In addition to a detailed career timeline, includes dates and places of detention as a POW, and a prison mugshot of Braemer.)
Reichswehrministerium (Heeres-Personalamt) [institutional author], Rangliste des deutschen Reichsheeres: Nach dem Stande vom 1. Mai 1927, Berlin, Verlag von E. S. Mittler & Sohn, 1927, page 56. Google Books
SS-Personalhauptamt [institutional author], Dienstaltersliste der Schutzstaffel der NSDAP... Stand vom 1. Dezember 1938..., ed. B. Meyer, Berlin, [Gedruckt in der Reichsdruckerei], 1938, page 14. Google Books
SS-Personalhauptamt [institutional author], Dienstaltersliste der Schutzstaffel der NSDAP... Stand vom 20. April 1942..., Berlin, [Gedruckt in der Reichsdruckerei], 1942, page 142. Google Books
Wolf Keilig, Das deutsche Heer, 1939–1945, vol. 3 (Gliederung; Einsatz, Stellenbesetzung), Bad Nauheim, Verlag Hans-Henning Podzun, 1956, page 43. Google Books[permanent dead link]
German Order of Battle, 1944: The Regiments, Formations and Units of the German Ground Forces, London, Arms & Armour Press, 1975, pages B-40 & K-9. ISBN0882543555.
Alexander Dallin, German Rule in Russia, 1941–1945: A Study of Occupation Policies, 2nd ed., rev., Boulder (Colorado), Westview Press, 1981, page 196. ISBN0865311021. (1st ed., 1957. For Braemer's spat with Hinrich Lohse. Dallin refers to Braemer as "Friedrich Braemer", with doubtful accuracy, a practice which is repeated in the works of others. However, Walter Braemer is also called "Friedrich Braemer" in: NS-Gewaltherrschaft: Beiträge zur historischen Forschung und juristischen Aufarbeitung, ed. A. Gottwaldt, (Haus der Wannsee-Konferenz: Publikationen der Gedenk- und Bildungsstätte Haus der Wannsee-Konferenz series, vol. 11), Berlin, Edition Hentrich, 2005, p. 226. ISBN3894682787.)
Otto Bräutigam, "Aus dem Kriegstagebuch des Diplomaten Otto Bräutigam", ed. H. D. Heilmann; in: Götz Aly, Biedermann und Schreibtischtäter: Materialien zur deutschen Täter-Biographie, (Beiträge zur nationalsozialistischen Gesundheits- und Sozialpolitik series, vol. 4), Berlin, Rotbuch-Verlag, 1987, page 148. ISBN3880229538, ISBN9783880229532. (For Braemer's spat with Hinrich Lohse.)
Hans-Heinrich Wilhelm, "Motivation und 'Kriegsbild' deutscher Generale und Offiziere im Krieg gegen die Sowjetunion"; in: Erobern und Vernichten: der Krieg gegen die Sowjetunion 1941–1945, ed. P Jahn, et al., Berlin, Argon Verlag, 1991, pages 173 & 181. ISBN3870241896. Google Books
Stellenbesetzung der deutschen Heere, 1815–1939, vol. 3 (Die Stellenbesetzung der aktiven Regimenter, Bataillone und Abteilungen von der Stiftung bzw. Aufstellung bis zum 26. August 1939...), Osnabrück, Biblio-Verlag, 1993, page 477. ISBN3764824131. Google Books
"Führer-Erlasse" 1939–1945: Edition sämtlicher überlieferter, nicht im Reichsgesetzblatt abgedruckter, von Hitler während des Zweiten Weltkrieges schriftlich erteilter Direktiven aus den Bereichen Staat, Partei, Wirtschaft, Besatzungspolitik und Militärverwaltung, ed. M. Moll, et al., Stuttgart, Franz Steiner Verlag, 1997, pages 191–192, 196–197, 204–205 & 314–315. ISBN3515068732. (Supplementary information for the dates of Braemer's appointments in the Ostland.)
Werner Haupt, Army Group North: The Wehrmacht in Russia, 1941–1945, tr. J. G. Welsh, Atglen (Pennsylvania), Schiffer Publishing, 1997, pages 188, 306, 386. ISBN0764301829. (Originally published as Heeresgruppe Nord, 1941–1945, Bad Nauheim, Verlag Hans-Henning Podzun, 1966.)
Die geheimen Tagesberichte der Deutschen Wehrmachtführung im Zweiten Weltkrieg: 1939–1945, ed. K. Mehner, vol. 8 (1. September 1943–30. November 1943), Osnabrück, Biblio-Verlag, 1998, page 554. ISBN3764817356.
Umbreit, Hans (2003). "German Rule in the Occupied Territories, 1942-1945". In Kroener, Bernhard R.; Müller, Rolf-Dieter; Umbreit, Hans (eds.). Germany and the Second World War. Vol. 5/2 (Organization and Mobilization of the German Sphere of Power: Wartime Administration, Economy, and Manpower Resources, 1942-1944/45). Tr. D. Cook-Radmore. Oxford University Press. ISBN0198208731. (For Braemer's spat with Hinrich Lohse).
Braemer's war crimes
Die Verfolgung und Ermordung der europäischen Juden durch das nationalsozialistische Deutschland, 1933–1945, vol. 7 (Sowjetunion mit annektierten Gebieten; pt. 1, Besetzte sowjetische Gebiete unter deutscher Militärverwaltung, Baltikum und Transnistrien), ed. B. Hoppe, Munich, Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag, 2011, pages 552, 567–570, 583, 668 n. 13. ISBN9783486589115.
"Recenzje i omówienia", Wojskowy Przegląd Historyczny (Warsaw), vol. 7, No. 3, July–September 1962, pages 376–377, note 78. Google Books
Franciszek Bernaś and Julitta Mikulska-Bernaś, Najazd, Warsaw, Ludowa Spółdzielnia Wydawnicza, 1964. Google Books (The title translates as "The Invasion".)
Marian Biskup, ed., Historia Bydgoszczy, vol. 2, pt. 2 (1939–1945), Bydgoszcz, Bydgoskie Towarzystwo Naukowe, 2004. ISBN8392145402.
Krzysztof Błażejewski, "Oto są oprawcy Bydgoszczy: Pierwszy raz pokazujemy twarze Niemców odpowiedzialnych za egzekucje 9 i 10 września 1939 roku", Express Bydgoski, 9 September 2010. (Article published in a local daily on the 71st anniversary of two of the Bydgoszcz massacres mentioned above.)
Jochen Böhler, "'Tragische Verstrickung' oder Auftakt zum Vernichtungskrieg? Die Wehrmacht in Polen, 1939"; in: Genesis des Genozids: Polen, 1939–1941, ed. K.-M. Mallmann & B. Musial, (Forschungsstelle Ludwigsburg: Veröffentlichungen der Forschungsstelle Ludwigsburg der Universität Stuttgart series, vol. 3), Darmstadt, WBG: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft (Auftr. des Deutschen Historischen Instituts Warschau), 2004, pages 36–56. ISBN3534180968, ISBN9783534180967.
Martin Cüppers, Wegbereiter der Shoah: Die Waffen-SS, der Kommandostab Reichsführer-SS und die Judenvernichtung, 1939–1945, Darmstadt, WBG: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 2005, page 405. ISBN3534160223.
Jürgen Förster, "The Relation between Operation Barbarossa as an Ideological War of Extermination and the Final Solution"; in: The Final Solution: Origins and Implementation, ed. D. Cesarani, London, Routledge, 1994. ISBN0415099544.
Jürgen Förster, "Wehrmacht, Krieg und Holocaust"; in: Die Wehrmacht: Mythos und Realität, ed. R.-D. Müller & H.-E. Volkmann, Munich, R. Oldenbourg Verlag, 1999, page 959. ISBN3486563831.
Ryszard Frelek and Włodzimierz T. Kowalski, Polska: czas burzy i przełomu, 1939–1945, vol. 1, Warsaw, Wydawnictwa Radia i Telewizji, 1980, page 343. ISBN8321201164. Google Books ((in English) "Poland in Time of Storm and Transition, 1939–1945".)
Christian Gerlach, Kalkulierte Morde: Die deutsche Wirtschafts- und Vernichtungspolitik in Weißrußland 1941 bis 1944, Hamburg, Hamburger Edition: Hamburger Institut für Sozialforschung (HIS), 1999, pages 173–174, 183, 611–614, 619–620, 733, 752, 1000, 1014. ISBN3930908549.
Janusz Gumkowski and Rajmund Kuczma, Zbrodnie hitlerowskie: Bydgoszcz, 1939, Warsaw, Polonia, 1967. Google Books ((in English) "The Nazi Crimes: Bydgoszcz, 1939".)
Hartmann, Christian (2010). Wehrmacht im Ostkrieg: Front und militärisches Hinterland, 1941/42. Quellen und Darstellungen zur Zeitgeschichte series. Vol. 75 (2nd ed.). Munich: Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag. ISBN978-348670225-5.
Hannes Heer, "Nicht Planer, aber Vollstrecker: Die Mitwirkung der Wehrmacht beim Holocaust"; in: Genozid in der modernen Geschichte, ed. S. Förster, et al., Münster, Lit, 1999, passim. ISBN3825840182.
Hannes Heer, Tote Zonen: Die deutsche Wehrmacht an der Ostfront, Hamburg, Hamburger Edition: Hamburger Institut für Sozialforschung (HIS), 1999. ISBN3930908514.
Hannes Heer, "Killing Fields: The Wehrmacht and the Holocaust in Belorussia, 1941-42", tr. C. Scherer; in: War of Extermination: the German Military in World War II, 1941-1944, ed. H. Heer & K. Naumann, New York, Berghahn Books, 2000, pp. 55–79. ISBN1571812326, ISBN1571814930. (First published as "Killing Fields: Die Wehrmacht und der Holocaust"; in: Vernichtungskrieg: Verbrechen der Wehrmacht 1941 bis 1944, ed. H. Heer & K. Naumann, Hamburg, Hamburger Edition: Hamburger Institut für Sozialforschung (HIS), 1995. ISBN3930908042.)
Hannes Heer, "Killing Fields: The Wehrmacht and the Holocaust in Belorussia, 1941–1942"; in: Holocaust: Critical Concepts in Historical Studies, ed. D. Cesarani, vol. 3 (The "Final Solution"), London, Routledge, 2004, pages 183–205. ISBN0415275121. Google Books
Raul Hilberg, Perpetrators, Victims, Bystanders: The Jewish Catastrophe, 1933–1945, New York, Aaron Asher Books, 1992, page 62. ISBN0060190353.
Jastrzębski, Włodzimierz (1974). Terror i zbrodnia: eksterminacja ludności polskiej i żydowskiej w rejencji bydgoskiej w latach 1939-1945 [The Terror and the Crime: The Extermination of the Polish and Jewish Populations in the Bromberg administrative district during the years 1939-1945]. Warsaw: Polska Agencja Interpress. Google Books.
Jastrzębski, Włodzimierz (1977). Polityka narodowściowa w okręgu Rzeszy Gdańsk-Prusy Zachodnie (1939-1945) [Ethnic Policies in the Third Reich's Region of Danzig-West Prussia, 1939-1945]. Bydgoszcz: Wyższa Szkoła Pedagogiczna. Google Books.
Jastrzębski, Włodzimierz; Sziling, Jan (1979). Okupacja hitlerowska na Pomorzu Gdańskim w latach 1939-1945 [The Nazi Occupation of Pomerelia, 1939-1945]. Gdańsk: Wydawnictwo Morskie. pp. 78, 88. ISBN8321571840. Google Books.
Ryszard Kabaciński, Wojciech Kotowski, Jerzy Wojciak, Bydgoszcz: zarys dziejów, ed. R. Kabaciński, Bydgoszcz, Bydgoskie Towarzystwo Naukowe (Regionalna Pracownia Naukowo-Badawcza), 1980, pages 206ff. Google Books ((in English) "Bydgoszcz in a Historical Outline".)
Kārlis Kangeris, "Latviešu policijas bataljonu izveidošanas otrā fāze — "lielvervēšanas" akcija. 1942.gada februāris–septembris"; in: Okupācijas režīmi Latvijā 1940.–1959. gadā: Latvijas Vēsturnieku komisijas 2002.gada pētījumi — Occupation Regimes in Latvia in 1940–1959: Research of the Commission of the Historians of Latvia (2002), ed. A. Caune, Riga, Latvijas vēstures institūta apgāds, 2004. ISBN9984601196.
Bastian Keller, Der Ostfeldzug: Die Wehrmacht im Vernichtungskrieg: Planung, Kooperation, Verantwortung, Hamburg, Diplomica-Verlag, 2012, page 83. ISBN9783842882676.
Czesław Madajczyk, Die Okkupationspolitik Nazideutschlands in Polen, 1939–1945, ed. B. Puchert, Berlin, Akademie-Verlag, 1987. ISBN3050003022. (An author-abbreviated edition of the book originally published in two volumes as Polityka III Rzeszy w okupowanej Polsce, Warsaw, Państwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe, 1970. Braemer's name is here rendered "Walther Brämer", a common misspelling.)
Klaus-Michael Mallmann, "'... Mißgeburten, die nicht auf diese Welt gehören': Die deutsche Ordnungspolizei in Polen, 1939–1941"; in: Genesis des Genozids: Polen, 1939-1941, ed. K.-M. Mallmann & B. Musial, (Forschungsstelle Ludwigsburg: Veröffentlichungen der Forschungsstelle Ludwigsburg der Universität Stuttgart series, vol. 3), Darmstadt, WBG: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft (Auftr. des Deutschen Historischen Instituts Warschau), 2004, pp. 71–89. ISBN3534180968, ISBN9783534180967.
Norbert Müller, Wehrmacht und Okkupation, 1941–1944: Zur Rolle der Wehrmacht und ihrer Führungsorgane im Okkupationsregime des faschistischen deutschen Imperialismus auf sowjetischem Territorium, Berlin, Deutscher Militärverlag, 1971. Google Books
Norbert Müller, et al. ed., Die faschistische Okkupationspolitik in den zeitweilig besetzten Gebieten der Sowjetunion: 1941–1944, (Europa unterm Hakenkreuz series, vol. 5), Berlin, Deutscher Verlag der Wissenschaften, 1991. ISBN3326003005. Google Books (On Braemer's crimes in the Holocaust in the Ostland.)
Dieter Pohl, Die Herrschaft der Wehrmacht: Deutsche Militärbesatzung und einheimische Bevölkerung in der Sowjetunion, 1941–1944, Munich, Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag, 2009, pages 39 & 54. ISBN9783486591743.
Kim C. Priemel, "Sommer 1941: Die Wehrmacht in Litauen"; in: Holocaust in Litauen: Krieg, Judenmorde und Kollaboration im Jahre 1941, ed. V. Bartusevičius, et al., Cologne, Böhlau Verlag, 2003, pp. 34–35. ISBN3412139025.
Edmund Pyszczyński, "'Akcja Tannenberg' w Bydgoszczy w okresie od 5 IX do 20 XI 1939 r."; in: Z okupacyjnych dziejów Bydgoszczy, ed. J. Wiśniowski & J. Sziling, (Bydgoskie Towarzystwo Naukowe: Prace Wydziału Nauk Humanistycznych series E, No. 10), Warsaw, Państwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe, 1977, pages 51–80. Google Books (Essay title (in English) "Operation Tannenberg in Bydgoszcz between 5 September and 20 November 1939"; book title (in English) "From the History of the City of Bydgoszcz under Nazi Occupation".)
Gerald Reitlinger, The House Built on Sand: The Conflicts of German Policy in Russia, 1939–1945, London, Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1960, pages 150–151, 433. (Reitlinger refers to Braemer as "Friedrich Braemer", apparently following Dallin, German Rule in Russia, 1941–1945, see above. Dates for Braemer's service in the Ostland given on p. 433 are incorrect.)
Timm C. Richter, "Herrenmensch" und "Bandit": Deutsche Kriegsführung und Besatzungspolitik als Kontext des sowjetischen Partisanenkrieges, 1941–44, Münster, Lit, 1998, pages 44–45. ISBN3825836800.
Timm C. Richter, "Die Wehrmacht und der Partisanenkrieg in den besetzten Gebieten der Sowjetunion"; in: Die Wehrmacht: Mythos und Realität, ed. R.-D. Müller & H.-E. Volkmann, Munich, R. Oldenbourg Verlag, 1999, pages 847–848. ISBN3486563831.
W. Röhr, et al. ed.,Die faschistische Okkupationspolitik in Polen: 1939–1945, (Nacht über Europa: Die Okkupationspolitik des deutschen Faschismus, 1938–1945 series, vol. 2), Cologne, Pahl-Rugenstein Verlag, 1989, pages 95, 113–114. ISBN3760912605, ISBN9783760912608.
Günter Schubert, Das Unternehmen "Bromberger Blutsonntag": Tod einer Legende, Cologne, Bund-Verlag, 1989, page 76. ISBN3766321013.
Andreas Schulz, Günter Wegmann, Die Generale der Waffen-SS und der Polizei, vol. 3 (Lammerding–Plesch), Bissendorf, Biblio-Verlag, 2008, page 282. ISBN3764823755, ISBN9783764823757. Google Books (On the Braemer-ordered massacre of "Swedish Heights".)
Edward Serwański, Dywersja niemiecka i zbrodnie hitlerowskie w Bydgoszczy na tle wydarzeń w dniu 3 IX 1939, 2nd ed., corr. & enl., Poznań, Wydawnictwo Poznańskie, 1984. ISBN8321004601. Google Books ((in English) "The German Subversives and the Nazi War Crimes in Bydgoszcz in the light of the Events of 3 September 1939".)
Jan Sziling ed.,Jesień 1939: dokumentacja pierwszych miesięcy okupacji niemieckiej na Pomorzu Gdańskim, Toruń, Toruńskie Towarzystwo Kultury, 1989, pages 71–72. Google Books ((in English) "The Autumn of 1939: Documents Relating to the First Months of the Nazi Occupation of Pomerelia".)
Umbreit, Hans (1977). Deutsche Militärverwaltungen, 1938/39: Die militärische Besetzung der Tschechoslowakei und Polens. Beiträge zur Militär- und Kriegsgeschichte (in German). Vol. 18. Stuttgart: Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt. pp. 70, 143. ISBN3421017948.
Hans-Heinrich Wilhelm, "Personelle Kontinuitäten in baltischen Angelegenheiten auf deutscher Seite von 1917/19 bis zum Zweiten Weltkrieg"; in: The Baltic in International Relations between the Two World Wars: Symposium organized by the Centre for Baltic Studies, November 11–13, 1986, University of Stockholm, Frescati, ed. J. Hiden & A. Loit, Stockholm, Centre for Baltic Studies, University of Stockholm, 1988, pages 157–170. ISBN9122011943. Google Books