The woman, named as "Aloisia V", was the great grandchild of
Hitler's great aunt - his second cousin, once removed.
She was gassed to death on 6 December 1940, at a mental institution in Austria,
historian Timothy Ryback said.
Medical files show she suffered from schizophrenia, depression, delusions and other
mental problems, he said.
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Aloisia V' came from a family with a history of mental illness |
Aged 49 when she died, she was one of thousands of mentally ill people - considered
sub-human by the Nazis - killed or sterilised in a euthanasia programme meant to
eliminate them..
But Mr Ryback, a US historian who heads Germany's Obersalzberg Institute, said he
and colleague Florian Beierl had come across several "cases of either physical
or mental disabilities" in Hitler's own family.
It is unclear whether Hitler knew about Aloisia's condition, and her fate, the researchers
said.
But the Gestapo had labelled Aloisia's line of the family "idiotic progeny"
in a secret 1944 report.
Close to Hitler
Aloisia was the great-grandchild of the sister of Hitler's paternal grandmother,
meaning she was part of the Schicklgruber side of the family, Mr Beierl said.
He said the Schicklgrubers were close to Hitler's family - and that Hitler's father
helped get Aloisia's father a job as a civil servant in Vienna.
Mr Beierl said many of the Schicklgruber family "crashed into suicide and mental
illness", until eventually "the entire line died out".
The historians say they have no conclusions on whether mental illness affected Hitler
himself, but said they would hand their findings to an expert on hereditary diseases
to see what his assessments were. |