1 Hitler arrives at the Krolloper, the substitute Reichstag, Berlin, in Mercedes 1Av 148697, 19 July 1940. This is the car currently on display at the Canadian War Museum.
Adolf Hitler's limousine at the Canadian War Museum in Ottawa, Ontario. He entered Vienna and Prague in this car, and attended many rallies while standing in the back. It was strafed by a British fighter late in the war (hence the bullet holes in the windows).
Yes, Adolf Hitler has living relatives, primarily the descendants of his half-brother Alois Hitler Jr., including his great-nephews Alexander, Louis, and Brian Stuart-Houston, who live quietly on Long Island, New York, and have reportedly made a pact to remain childless to end Hitler's bloodline, along with other cousins in Austria and Germany.
The Nazi dictator's Mercedes-Benz 770 Grosser Offener Tourenwagen, which the U.S. Army seized after the war, is one of just three in private hands. Only five models remain in existence.
An unnamed Russian billionaire reportedly has sold Adolf Hitler's limousine to Clive Palmer, an Australian mining magnate and Senate candidate who routinely courts controversy.
Yes, scientists have successfully analyzed Adolf Hitler's DNA from a blood-stained piece of fabric taken from the sofa where he died in 1945, allowing for the first identification and sequencing of his genome, which revealed genetic predispositions for certain conditions and debunked myths about his ancestry, as detailed in the 2025 documentary Hitler's DNA: Blueprint of a Dictator.
Though he esteemed Jesus as an Aryan fighter against Jewish materialism who was martyred for his anti-Jewish stance, he did not ascribe to Jesus's death any significance in human salvation. Indeed, he did not believe in salvation at all in the Christian sense of the term, because he denied a personal afterlife.
A number of the paintings were recovered after World War II and sold at auctions. Others were seized by the United States Army and are still in U.S. government possession.
Yes, Adolf Hitler's body was found by Soviet troops in Berlin in May 1945, confirmed by dental records and a skull fragment showing a bullet wound, though his remains were largely incinerated, leading to decades of secrecy and conspiracy theories, with the final confirmation resting on DNA analysis of teeth and jaw fragments held by Russia.
Yes, Adolf Hitler's bloodline continues through his half-nieces and half-nephew's children, with several descendants living quietly, mostly in the U.S., who are believed to have made a pact to remain childless to end the line, though no new children have been born to the main branch in decades. The most prominent are the sons of William Patrick Hitler (his nephew), who changed their name to Stuart-Houston and have not had children, alongside great-nephews from his half-sister Angela's family, meaning the lineage is effectively ending.
Unloaded, parked on the street, with no special security, worth at least $7 million, was one of the mammoth, armor-plated Mercedes-Benz 770K Grosser parade cars used by Adolf Hitler.
Although Einstein was of Jewish heritage, he did not adhere to religious beliefs. Instead, he embraced a broader humanist outlook that transcended religious, racial, and sectarian divisions.
Hitler pledged to restore prosperity, create civil order (by crushing industrial strikes and street demonstrations by communists and socialists), eliminate the influence of Jewish financiers, and make the fatherland once again a world power.
The Battle of the Bulge was Hitler's final throw of the dice. With Germany in retreat across all fronts and a worsening situation at home, Hitler hoped to force the Western Allies out of the war before turning his full attention to the Soviet Union.
💀 Did you know Hitler has no grave? After his suicide in 1945, Adolf Hitler's body was burned and later seized by Soviet troops. His remains were hidden, reburied, then allegedly destroyed. There is no official cemetery or gravestone.
After Janis' death in October 1970, the car remained for several years with her manager Albert Grossman in Bearsville, New York. Eventually, it was returned to Janis' siblings, Laura and Michael Joplin.
The "Gmünd Roadster" was powered by a 1.1-litre, air-cooled, four-cylinder boxer engine from Volkswagen. The engine's power had been increased to 35 PS for the 356, which enabled the 585-kg roadster to reach speeds of up to 135 km/h (83 mph).
A: The lowest recorded sale price was $195,000 for a 1956 Porsche 356A Speedster on Dec 5 2024. Q: What is the average sale price of a Porsche 356 A Speedster? A: The average price of a Porsche 356 A Speedster is $344,719.