Heinrich Fraenkel
Heinrich Fraenkel | |
---|---|
Born | Lissa, Poland | 28 September 1897
Died | 1 May 1986 Ealing, London, United Kingdom | (aged 88)
Occupation |
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Genre | Film, Nazi war crime, anti-Nazi, essays |
Heinrich Fraenkel (28 September 1897 – May 1986) was an author and Hollywood writer best known for his biographies of Nazi war criminals published in the 1960s and 1970s.
Biography[]
Fraenkel was born in Lissa, Poland (then Province of Posen, Germany), into a Jewish family.[1] He emigrated from Nazi Germany and lived in Britain.
His works include:
- Göring (1962, with Roger Manvell).
- Hess: A Biography (1971, with Roger Manvell).
- The Canaris Conspiracy: The Secret Resistance to Hitler in the German Army, by Roger Manvell, Heinrich Fraenkel, 1st Edition (1972).
Under the pseudonym "Assiac", Fraenkel edited a chess column in the New Statesman and published several chess books, among them Adventures in Chess (1951, the American edition was published as The Pleasures of Chess, and on pp. 183–184 of that book, Fraenkel explained that "Assiac" is "Caïssa", the goddess of chess, spelled backwards).
He died in Ealing, England.
Selected filmography[]
- The Dance Goes On (1930)
- The Sacred Flame (1931)
- Menace (1934)
- Youthful Folly (1934)
References[]
- ^ William D. Rubinstein, Michael Jolles, Hilary L. Rubinstein, The Palgrave Dictionary of Anglo-Jewish History, Palgrave Macmillan (2011), p. 288
- [1] University of New Mexico, "Inventory of the Heinrich Fraenkel Papers, 1915–1973", Rocky Mountain Online Archive, 2000, Accessed 20 August 2009
External links[]
Categories:
- 1897 births
- 1986 deaths
- Jewish emigrants from Nazi Germany to the United Kingdom
- German biographers
- Male biographers
- British chess writers
- Officers Crosses of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany
- German male non-fiction writers
- People from Leszno
- British Jewish writers
- Historians of World War II
- British biographers
- British male screenwriters
- 20th-century biographers
- 20th-century British screenwriters
- German screenwriters