>>6660507
Angela Dorothea Kasner.
Daughter of a Pastor?
>yes - Protestant
Name of FATHER?
>Horst Kasner (Horst Kaźmierczak)
History of FATHER?
>Little is known about Horst Kasner's wartime service, and he was held as a prisoner of war at the age of 19. During his high school years he was a member of the Hitler Youth, with the last service position of a troop leader.[citation needed] From 1948 he studied theology, first in Heidelberg then in Hamburg. It was in Hamburg that he got to know and later married Herlinde Jentzsch,[4] an English and Latin teacher, born on 8 July 1928 in Danzig (now Gdańsk, Poland) as the daughter of Danzig politician Willi Jentzsch.
>Also Known as the “Red Kasner” due to his socialist support and his views against east/west berlin reunification.
Hitler youth (member).
>Yes, her father was a troop leader in the hitler youth
Haircut today vs THEN (A).
>Pictures show she had long hair until she joined the communist party as a member of the stasi
Symbolic.
US Intelligence post war controlled who?
The ‘Mission’
Who is Angela Hitler?
Relationship to Adolf?
How were children named in Germany during this period?
>As was common in many countries, Germans generally followed some basic naming patterns or customs when choosing names for their children. However, these patterns were not always adhered to, and as German emigrants began new lives in America, many anglicized their names and began to adopt American naming customs in the latter part of the 1800's. Thus, after about 1875, we see more "Henrys" than "Heinrichs", "Marys" than "Marias", etc.
Naming Patterns
>German families often used the following pattern for naming children. Again, though, there were several variations used, and often the pattern was disrupted by other circumstances. When a duplicate name occurred in these patterns, the next name in the pattern was usually used. Often when a child died in infancy, his/her name was reused for the next child of the same gender. Too, a child's name was sometimes repeated when a spouse died and the surviving spouse remarried and had more children. This would result in half-siblings with the same name.
SONS DAUGHTERS
1st father's father 1st mother's mother
2nd mother's father 2nd father's mother
3rd father 3rd mother
4th father's father's father 4th father's father's mother
5th mother's father's father 5th mother's father's mother
6th father's mother's father 6th father's mother's mother
7th mother's mother's father 7th mother's mother's mother
Birth/ Baptismal Names
>Two names were usually given to a child at birth or baptism. In Germany, the first name - what we often refer to as a given name - was a spiritual name, usually to honor a favorite saint. The spiritual name was often used repeatedly in families. The second name - what we now would refer to as a middle name - was a secular or call name, and was the name by which the person was known. One of the most common and heavily used saint's names for males was "Johann" (with no "s"), and for females, "Johanna" or "Anna". Thus, in a hypothetical German family, we might see the male children named:
Johann Heinrich Riepe
Johann Hermann Riepe
Johann Friedrich Riepe
>Respectively, these children would be known as Heinrich (Henry), Hermann, and Friedrich (Fred).
For girls, we may see:
Anna Maria Riepe
Anna Catherine Riepe
Anna Louise Riepe
>Respectively, these children would be known as Maria (Mary), Catherine, and Louise.
>Again, these patterns were not always carved in stone, but it is helpful to understand the basic custom when researching German families. You may know your ancestor was called Henry, and thus assume his name was Henry Something Riepe, when in fact, his name was Johann Heinrich Riepe. If his parents were called William and Catherine, their full names may have been Johann William and Anna Catherine
First or middle.
>middle
Family tree.
Anna.
Maria.
Alois.
Examples.
Risk of ‘conspiracy’ label the deeper we go.
Truth will shock the WORLD.
Q
Dorothea was no where in her family’s history. So where did her middle name come from?