Avsnitt

  • (00:00:00) 105 Days Underground: Hitler's Last Command in the Führerbunker
    (00:00:45) The Bunker Itself
    (00:02:00) The State of the War
    (00:03:22) Command from the Underground
    (00:04:49) The Inner Circle Underground
    (00:06:22) The Battle of Berlin Begins
    (00:07:33) The Decision to Stay
    (00:08:46) Marriage and Testament
    (00:10:05) April 30, 1945
    (00:10:57) What the Bunker Represents
    (00:12:08) Closing

    On January 16, 1945, with Soviet artillery closing on Germany and the western Allies pushing into the Reich, Adolf Hitler descended into the Führerbunker beneath the Reich Chancellery garden. He would never return to the world above. This episode enters the final chapter of his life — 105 days underground that ended with the fall of the Third Reich.

    The Führerbunker sat nearly 28 feet below ground, its concrete walls up to four metres thick, divided into roughly 18 rooms connected by narrow corridors reeking of diesel and damp. From this subterranean nerve centre, Hitler continued to hold daily military conferences, issuing orders to armies that barely existed, demanding counterattacks from divisions already overrun. Generals who delivered bad news were relieved, arrested, or executed. The atmosphere shifted from grim professionalism to something volatile.

    By January 1945 the strategic picture was irreversible. The Vistula-Oder Offensive had launched four days before Hitler went underground; within weeks Soviet forces would be within 40 miles of Berlin. Germany had no reserves, no fuel, no functioning Luftwaffe. Hitler's response was denial — he clung to the belief that miracle weapons or a fracture in the Allied coalition could still reverse the tide.

    Around him in the bunker: Eva Braun, who arrived in mid-April against his wishes and refused to leave; Joseph and Magda Goebbels, who brought their six children underground; Martin Bormann, ever-present gatekeeper. Absent were Himmler and Göring — both already manoeuvring for what came next. Albert Speer's visits documented a man physically diminished, left hand trembling, shuffling through corridors, yet still speaking in the language of historical destiny.

    This is the last chapter.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.

  • (00:00:00) Wannsee, the Five Killing Centers, and the Bureaucracy of Genocide
    (00:01:19) The Road to Industrial Murder
    (00:03:10) The Wannsee Decision
    (00:04:57) The Five Killing Centers
    (00:06:28) Auschwitz
    (00:08:08) The Machinery and the People Who Ran It
    (00:09:37) Resistance and the World's Response
    (00:10:57) The Camps in Context
    (00:12:18) What This Episode Leaves With

    At what point does genocide become a system? That question drives this chapter of Hitler's biography — the episode that examines how ideology was translated into the industrial machinery of the Holocaust.

    We begin with the path that led to mass murder: not a straight line, but a deliberate escalation. The Nuremberg Laws of 1935 stripped Jews of citizenship. Kristallnacht in November 1938 made state-directed violence undeniable. And the camp network — beginning with Dachau in March 1933 — expanded steadily across occupied Europe, eventually encompassing over 44,000 sites of detention.

    The pivot point came in January 1942, at a villa on Lake Wannsee near Berlin. Reinhard Heydrich chaired the meeting. Adolf Eichmann took the minutes. The Wannsee Conference was not a debate about whether to commit genocide — that decision had already been made. It was an administrative coordination session: how to organise the murder of every Jew in Europe across multiple agencies and occupied territories. The Protocol that survived reads like a bureaucratic planning document. Because that's exactly what it was.

    What followed was the construction of five dedicated killing centres in occupied Poland: Belzec, Sobibor, Treblinka, Chelmno, and Auschwitz-Birkenau. Unlike the earlier concentration camps, these sites were built for one purpose only — systematic mass murder. Victims were transported by rail from across the continent. The episode examines how each site operated, the role of Operation Reinhard, and the question of Hitler's personal culpability when no signed written order has ever been found.

    This is history at its most sombre and most essential.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.

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  • (00:00:00) Kristallnacht and the Architecture of Persecution: 1933–1938
    (00:01:01) The Legal Architecture of Persecution
    (00:02:29) Nuremberg and the Stripping of Citizenship
    (00:03:49) The Violence Beneath the Law
    (00:05:05) Kristallnacht
    (00:06:39) The World Watches, Mostly Silently
    (00:07:39) War Removes the Restraints
    (00:09:05) The Wannsee Decision
    (00:10:24) What the Escalation Reveals

    Between 1933 and 1938, Nazi persecution of Jews did not erupt fully formed — it was engineered in stages, each one normalised before the next began. This episode maps that architecture of exclusion in precise historical detail, showing how a democracy's legal machinery was turned into an instrument of systematic dehumanisation.

    It began with the April 1933 boycott of Jewish businesses — a calibrated test of public compliance, not the most extreme measure the radicals wanted, but a deliberate gauge of domestic and international reaction. That same month, the Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service purged Jews and political opponents from government, closing off the professions that anchored Jewish Germans in civic life.

    By September 1935, the Nuremberg Laws had stripped Jews of citizenship and banned marriage between Jews and non-Jews — not panicked decrees, but carefully drafted statutes presented as regime achievements, complete with bureaucratic implementing regulations that classified people by racial category. Persecution was no longer just mob violence. It was administered. It came with paperwork.

    Running alongside the legal framework was unchecked physical terror: SA street violence, the opening of Dachau in March 1933, and a concentration camp network that steadily expanded its categories of victims. Then came the pivot point — November 9–10, 1938. Kristallnacht. Synagogues burned across Germany and Austria, Jewish businesses smashed, thousands arrested. State-sanctioned pogrom carried out in plain sight.

    This episode asks the question at the heart of the Holocaust's origins: how does a modern, literate, legally-governed society reach the edge of genocide? The answer, in every case, is one step at a time.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.

  • (00:00:00) Himmler, Heydrich, and Dachau: The Machinery of Terror Takes Shape
    (00:00:46) Himmler and the SS
    (00:02:05) The SD: Intelligence as a Weapon
    (00:03:37) Dachau: The Model Camp
    (00:05:34) The SA Problem and the Night of the Long Knives
    (00:07:12) The Gestapo and the Integration of Terror
    (00:08:24) The Camp System Expands
    (00:10:08) The State That Hitler Built

    Before the death camps, before the gas chambers, there was a moment when the apparatus of Nazi terror was still being assembled — and almost no one outside Germany grasped what they were watching. This episode examines that construction in forensic detail: the three interlocking instruments that transformed a parliamentary government into a terror state within a single year.

    Heinrich Himmler's transformation of the SS from a small personal bodyguard into a disciplined, racially selective enforcement organisation is the first pillar. By January 1933 it numbered 50,000 members — and Himmler understood something his rivals didn't: durable power required institutional control, not street violence.

    The second pillar was the SD — the Sicherheitsdienst — built by the cold-blooded Reinhard Heydrich from 1931 onward. Originally tasked with rooting out enemies inside the Nazi Party itself, the SD rapidly expanded after Hitler's appointment as chancellor into a surveillance apparatus of unprecedented scope, building detailed cross-referenced files on journalists, clergy, academics, and political opponents. Its greatest achievement was subtler than any file: it created a culture of self-censorship, where citizens policed themselves because they feared being watched.

    The third pillar was Dachau — opened on 22 March 1933, publicly announced by Himmler, deliberately advertised as a warning. The legal mechanism that filled it, Schutzhaft or 'protective custody', turned Weimar procedural law against itself. Under commandant Theodor Eicke, Dachau became not just a prison but a blueprint — its regulations, guard training, and punishment codes exported to every camp that followed.

    Together, these three instruments — the SS, the SD, and Dachau — are the architecture of fear that made everything else possible.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.

  • (00:00:00) The Enabling Act: How Germany's Parliament Voted Itself Out of Existence
    (00:01:03) The Appointment
    (00:02:25) The Burning Building
    (00:04:00) The Enabling Act
    (00:05:45) Legal Murder
    (00:07:35) The Night of the Long Knives
    (00:09:23) The Final Step
    (00:10:23) What Made It Possible
    (00:12:12) The Architecture of What Came Next

    The most chilling chapter in Hitler's rise to power wasn't a military coup or a street revolution — it was a vote. In March 1933, Germany's elected parliament passed the Enabling Act by 441 votes to 94, legally transferring all legislative authority to Hitler's cabinet and rendering the Weimar Constitution a dead letter. Democracy didn't collapse under Hitler. It was dissolved by its own institutions.

    This episode traces the rapid sequence of events between Hitler's constitutional appointment as Chancellor on January 30, 1933, and the passage of the Enabling Act less than two months later. President Paul von Hindenburg — who despised Hitler personally — handed him the chancellorship believing conservative cabinet members could keep him in check. Franz von Papen famously boasted they'd hired Hitler. Within weeks, that calculation had catastrophically unravelled.

    The pivot point was the Reichstag Fire of February 27, 1933. Within 24 hours, Hitler had persuaded Hindenburg to sign the Reichstag Fire Decree, suspending core civil liberties under Article 48 — an emergency provision already written into the constitution. It was legal. It was also devastating.

    The elections that followed were held under intimidation, with opposition newspapers shuttered and Communist deputies arrested. The Nazis won 43.9% — not a majority — but it was enough to engineer the supermajority needed for the Enabling Act. Only the Social Democrats voted against it, all 94 present, led by Otto Wels in a speech of extraordinary courage delivered in a chamber ringed by SS men.

    This episode examines how democratic systems can be destroyed from within — and why that lesson remains urgently relevant.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.

  • (00:00:00) Appointed by Men Who Thought They Could Control Him: January 1933
    (00:01:00) The Long Road to the Back Rooms
    (00:02:50) The Shock Election of September 1930
    (00:04:14) The Kingmakers
    (00:06:00) Papen's Gamble
    (00:07:32) The Fatal Miscalculation
    (00:08:55) What the Appointment Actually Was
    (00:10:16) The Weight of January 30th

    On the thirtieth of January 1933, President Paul von Hindenburg signed a single document that changed the course of the twentieth century. He despised the man he was appointing. He had refused twice before. Yet on that morning, Adolf Hitler became Chancellor of Germany — not through revolution, but through the fatal overconfidence of the men who thought they were using him.

    This episode traces the full arc of how that moment became possible. It begins with the economic catastrophe that followed the Wall Street Crash of 1929, which shattered Germany's fragile recovery and drove unemployment beyond six million. Into that desperation, the Nazi Party exploded from fringe curiosity to dominant political force — leaping from 2.5% of the vote in 1928 to 18% by September 1930, and to the largest party in the Reichstag by 1932.

    But electoral success alone did not deliver the chancellorship. What delivered it was a backroom calculation made by Franz von Papen, Alfred Hugenberg, and Kurt von Schleicher — experienced, aristocratic conservatives who believed Hitler could be appointed, surrounded, and controlled. They would supply the governing competence; he would supply the mass movement. It was, they assured themselves and each other, a manageable arrangement.

    They were catastrophically wrong. This episode examines how the Weimar Republic's parliamentary paralysis, the vanity of its conservative elite, and the structural vulnerabilities of coalition democracy converged to hand absolute power to a man none of them truly understood. The machinery of the Third Reich did not seize power. It was handed the keys.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.

  • (00:00:00) From 2.5% to 18%: How the Depression Handed Hitler His Opening
    (00:00:46) The Weimar Lull and the Nazi Problem
    (00:02:21) The Golden Years That Should Have Buried Them
    (00:03:35) The Crash and What It Unleashed
    (00:04:58) September 1930 — The Shock Election
    (00:06:52) Who Was Voting Nazi
    (00:07:59) The Party Machine Between 1930 and 1932
    (00:09:13) The Paradox at the Center
    (00:10:36) What the Crash Really Did
    (00:11:53) The Momentum Toward January 1933

    In the mid-1920s, the Nazi Party was dying. Hitler had been imprisoned after a failed coup, Weimar Germany was stabilising, and the anger that had briefly powered the movement was cooling. In the 1928 federal elections, the Nazis received a humiliating 2.5% of the vote — less than one in forty Germans. The trajectory pointed toward irrelevance.

    Then the American stock market collapsed on October 24, 1929.

    This episode examines the critical turning point in Adolf Hitler's rise to power: how the Great Depression shattered the psychological and political architecture of Weimar Germany, and how the Nazi Party weaponised that collapse with terrifying precision. Within twenty-four months of the crash, Hitler's movement surged from a fringe footnote to 18.3% in the September 1930 elections — the second-largest party in the Reichstag.

    We trace Hitler's strategic pivot after the Beer Hall Putsch: his decision to abandon violent revolution in favour of the 'legal path,' using the democratic machinery of the Weimar Republic to dismantle democracy from within. We explore how six million unemployed Germans, collapsing banks, and a paralysed political centre created the precise emotional conditions — desperation, humiliation, and wounded national pride — that Nazi propaganda was built to exploit.

    This is the episode that answers the question most histories gloss over: was Hitler's rise inevitable, or did it require a very specific piece of catastrophic bad luck to arrive at exactly the right moment? The answer is more unsettling than most people expect.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.

  • (00:00:00) Waiting for Crisis: Hitler's Lean Years and the Strategy of Patience
    (00:01:00) Weimar's Unlikely Recovery
    (00:01:58) A Party in Decline
    (00:03:29) Holding the Movement Together
    (00:04:52) The Strategy of Patience
    (00:06:04) The Cultural Distance
    (00:07:18) The Nazi Party as an Organism
    (00:08:24) The Clock Ticking Toward October 1929
    (00:09:50) What the Lean Years Tell Us

    Between 1924 and 1929, Adolf Hitler faced a problem no biographer should overlook: Germany was recovering. The Dawes Plan stabilised the currency, American capital flooded the economy, and the Weimar Republic — once seemingly doomed — began to function. For a movement built entirely on crisis, humiliation, and violent renewal, prosperity was an existential threat.

    This episode traces the Nazi Party's near-disappearance during the mid-Weimar years. In the Reichstag elections of May 1928, the party won just 2.5% of the national vote and twelve seats in a parliament of nearly five hundred. Serious political analysts had stopped watching. The radical fringe, the consensus held, had peaked and was fading.

    Yet inside that failure, Hitler was building. Legally banned from public speaking in Bavaria and several other states, he was forced to shift focus from charismatic rallying to organisational infrastructure — local party cells, propaganda networks, and paramilitary formations that would prove indispensable when the next crisis arrived. The speaking bans, intended to silence him, inadvertently professionalised his movement.

    The episode also examines the fierce internal battles of this period: Gregor Strasser's socialist-leaning northern wing, Ernst Röhm's insistence on violent direct action, and Hitler's methodical reassertion of personal authority over both. He had concluded after the Beer Hall Putsch that the state would shoot back — and that exploiting democracy to destroy democracy was the smarter path.

    Patience, in Hitler's hands, was not passivity. It was strategy. Understanding why the lean years didn't finish the Nazi movement is essential to understanding how the catastrophe that followed became possible.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.

  • (00:00:00) Mein Kampf: The Road Map Hitler Left in Plain Sight
    (00:01:11) The Lenient Verdict
    (00:01:58) Landsberg Prison
    (00:02:52) The Ideology Inside the Pages
    (00:04:08) Where the Ideology Came From
    (00:05:30) The Strategic Rethink
    (00:06:56) The Significance of the Shift
    (00:08:13) The Book Is Published
    (00:09:06) What the Book Reveals About Hitler the Man
    (00:10:22) The Prison Cell in Context

    In 1924, a failed coup leader sat in a comfortable prison cell and dictated the blueprint for one of history's worst catastrophes. Mein Kampf — Adolf Hitler's rambling, obsessive, and utterly unambiguous manifesto — was not a work of subtlety. It stated plainly what Hitler intended to do: establish a racial hierarchy, eliminate Jewish people from German life, and seize vast territories to the east. And yet the world largely looked away.

    This episode traces how Hitler used his nine months in Landsberg Prison not as punishment but as a retreat — receiving visitors, taking food packages, and pouring years of accumulated grievance and ideology onto the page with Rudolf Hess taking dictation. What emerged was less a coherent policy document than a psychological X-ray: every obsession Hitler had absorbed in Vienna's antisemitic pamphlet culture, every resentment from his years of failure, fused into a single worldview that blamed an identifiable enemy for every setback.

    We examine the three interlocking pillars at Mein Kampf's core — Aryan racial supremacy, violent antisemitism, and the doctrine of Lebensraum, or living space to the east — and show how almost nothing the Nazi regime later did was absent from those pages. The road map was there for anyone willing to read it.

    The episode also explores the lenient Weimar judiciary that gave Hitler a platform rather than a sentence, the tactical lessons he drew from Mussolini's March on Rome, and how Landsberg marked the moment Hitler pivoted from violent putsch to the long, patient seizure of power through democratic institutions. The most dangerous shift was not ideological. It was strategic.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.

  • Failed revolutions usually end in graves or exile. Hitler's ended in a courtroom — and he used every minute of it. Episode 5 of this Adolf Hitler biography picks up in the wreckage of the November 1923 Beer Hall Putsch, tracing how a disastrous night in Munich became the unlikely launchpad for Hitler's eventual seizure of power.

    This episode examines the full context of the putsch: the catastrophic hyperinflation that had hollowed out Germany's middle class, the political chaos of the Weimar Republic's most fragile year, and Hitler's fateful miscalculation that Bavaria's conservative establishment — Kahr, Lossow, and Seisser — would fall in behind a paramilitary march on Berlin. They didn't. Once free of the Bürgerbräukeller, they folded the putsch within hours.

    But the story doesn't end there. It begins there. Hitler's trial became a spectacle he scripted himself, transforming a criminal proceeding into a nationalist manifesto broadcast to a national audience. His lenient sentence — five years, of which he served less than nine months — gave him the isolation he needed to dictate Mein Kampf and develop the ideological framework that would define the Third Reich.

    This episode is essential for understanding the Nazi movement not as an inevitable force but as a project rebuilt from rubble by a man who understood, perhaps better than anyone, how to convert humiliation into political capital. The putsch didn't make Hitler. What he chose to do with its failure did.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.

  • (00:00:00) The Beer Hall Putsch: How a Failed Coup Built the Nazi Movement
    (00:00:53) The Man Who Arrived in Munich
    (00:02:22) The Orator and the Ideology
    (00:03:42) Hyperinflation and the Collapse of Order
    (00:05:05) The Beer Hall Putsch
    (00:06:32) Trial and the Power of the Platform
    (00:07:58) The Strategic Rethink
    (00:09:42) The Long March Through Lean Years
    (00:10:28) October 1929 and the Opening
    (00:11:32) The Machinery of the Rise
    (00:13:08) The Appointment

    In November 1923, Adolf Hitler fired a pistol into the ceiling of a Munich beer hall and announced that the national revolution had begun. It hadn't. The Beer Hall Putsch collapsed within hours, ending in gunfire, arrests, and humiliation. Yet that single chaotic night would prove to be the defining moment in the early rise of the Nazi movement.

    This episode traces how Hitler arrived in post-war Munich — a city shattered by defeat, gripped by hyperinflation, and seething with nationalist rage — and transformed a tiny fringe group called the German Workers' Party into the National Socialist German Workers' Party: the Nazis. Working as an army intelligence agent assigned to monitor political groups, Hitler discovered his extraordinary gift for oratory and quickly seized control of the movement.

    We examine the conditions that made his rise possible: the humiliation of the Treaty of Versailles, the fragility of the Weimar Republic, the psychological catastrophe of hyperinflation that wiped out middle-class savings overnight, and the presence of thousands of hardened, angry veterans with nowhere to direct their fury. Hitler weaponised existing myths — the stab-in-the-back legend, deep-rooted anti-Semitism — and delivered them with a ferocious, calculated performance that left crowds convinced or at least swept along.

    The episode also covers the Sturmabteilung (the SA Brownshirts), Hitler's admiration for Mussolini's March on Rome, and the planning behind the putsch itself. The coup failed — but the story of why it failed, and what Hitler did next, is where the real turning point begins.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.

  • (00:00:00) Identity in the Trenches: What WWI Made Adolf Hitler
    (00:01:01) The Man Who Volunteered
    (00:02:18) What the Record Shows
    (00:04:08) The Gas Attack and the End
    (00:05:39) The Stab-in-the-Back Myth
    (00:07:12) What the War Made
    (00:08:48) The Return to Munich
    (00:10:30) Purpose Found, Purpose Weaponized

    Adolf Hitler arrived at the Western Front in 1914 with nothing — no career, no friends, no future. What he found in the trenches was something far more dangerous than military skill: an identity. This episode examines his four years of service with the List Regiment, his role as a dispatch runner on some of the war's bloodiest fronts, and the genuine — if deeply isolated — courage his comrades recorded.

    Hitler was wounded twice, decorated twice, and present at Ypres, the Somme, and Arras. His Iron Cross First Class was recommended by a Jewish regimental adjutant — one of the sharpest ironies in his entire biography, given what came next. Yet even among the men beside him, he remained remote, solitary, a figure more absorbed in his own inner world than in the bonds that war typically forges.

    The episode turns on the moment everything collapsed. Blinded by British mustard gas at Werwick in October 1918, Hitler was hospitalised at Pasewalk when Germany surrendered. He emerged not merely defeated, but convinced of a grand betrayal — the stab-in-the-back myth that would become the engine of his political rise. This episode unpacks where that idea came from, why it found such fertile ground in postwar Germany, and why Hitler, above almost anyone else, needed it to be true.

    Understanding the psychological transformation the war worked on Hitler is essential to understanding everything that followed — the Munich beer halls, the Nazi Party, and ultimately the catastrophe he unleashed on the world.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.

  • (00:00:00) Rejection, Resentment, and War: Hitler's Vienna and the Western Front
    (00:00:51) Vienna and the Dream of the Academy
    (00:02:08) The Homeless Years
    (00:03:45) The Architecture of Resentment
    (00:04:52) The First World War as Salvation
    (00:06:49) Munich and the Discovery of a Gift
    (00:08:13) From the Margins to the Beer Hall Putsch
    (00:09:51) The Strategic Shift
    (00:11:43) What Vienna Made
    (00:12:48) Setting Up What Comes Next

    Before the rallies and the uniforms, there was a teenager in Vienna with a sketchbook and a dream of becoming a painter. This episode explores the formative years that shaped Adolf Hitler's worldview — the rejections, the resentments, and the war that gave him his first taste of purpose and belonging.

    In 1907, an eighteen-year-old Hitler arrived in Vienna and failed the entrance exam to the Academy of Fine Arts — twice. Rather than accept the honest assessment of his abilities, he constructed a narrative of conspiracy and betrayal that would define his thinking for decades. Living in men's hostels on the margins of imperial Vienna, he absorbed the city's virulent antisemitism, pan-German nationalism, and racial ideology with the hunger of a man looking for enemies to blame.

    Vienna's political atmosphere — shaped by antisemitic mayor Karl Lueger and pamphlets promoting racial hierarchy — provided Hitler with the core ideology he would never abandon: a belief in racial struggle, contempt for parliamentary democracy, and a conviction that Jewish influence stood behind every obstacle in his path.

    Then came the First World War. When Germany declared war in August 1914, Hitler described it as one of the happiest moments of his life. Serving as a dispatch runner on the Western Front, he found purpose, belonging, and a clear enemy. He was wounded twice, awarded the Iron Cross First Class, and placed in Munich among soldiers who would soon share his fury at Germany's defeat.

    This episode charts the making of a fanatic — not through myth, but through the specific texture of his failures, his reading habits, and the dangerous ideas of a collapsing empire.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.

  • (00:00:00) Watercolors and Wounds: Hitler's Origins and the Making of a Worldview
    (00:00:56) Braunau am Inn
    (00:02:23) The Family's Uncertain Past
    (00:03:18) School, Drift, and Early Obsession
    (00:04:13) Vienna and Rejection
    (00:05:37) The Architecture of Resentment
    (00:06:54) Munich and the Outbreak of War
    (00:08:36) Defeat and Its Distortion
    (00:09:54) The Man at the Starting Point
    (00:10:45) What This Episode Establishes

    Before Adolf Hitler became the most destructive political figure of the twentieth century, he was a young man who wanted to paint. That failure — quiet, personal, and twice repeated — is the starting point for this comprehensive biography, and it is anything but trivial.

    Episode 1 opens in Braunau am Inn, the small Austrian border town where Hitler was born on 20 April 1889. We meet his father Alois, a rigid customs official whose death in 1903 removed discipline from the household, and his mother Klara, whose death from cancer in 1907 shattered the one attachment that grounded him. That asymmetry — a cold father and a devoted mother, both gone before he turned twenty — shaped the emotional architecture of the man who would follow.

    The episode then follows Hitler to Vienna, where he sat the entrance examination for the Academy of Fine Arts and failed. Then failed again. Rather than recalibrate, he spent years in deliberate poverty — selling postcard watercolors, devouring pan-German nationalist pamphlets, and absorbing the open anti-Semitism of a city whose popular mayor Karl Lueger had made ethnic hostility mainstream politics.

    This is the episode that asks the foundational question of the entire series: how does grievance become ideology? How does a young man's refusal to accept personal failure transform into a political worldview capable of mobilising a nation toward genocide?

    No sensationalism. No myth-making. Just the precise, unflinching historical record — because understanding how this happened is one of the most serious obligations history places on us.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.