Hermann Göring has gone down in history as one of the world's absolute worst war criminals. Less well known is his marriage to the Swedish noblewoman Carin von Kantzow and his close relationship with her relatives. Leif GW Persson tells the story of a Swedish family that sits on the front row when German Nazism grows in the 1920s, when it takes over Germany in the 1930s and drives the world to disaster in the 1940s.
Emmy Johanna Henny Göring, born Sonnemann on 24 March 1893 in Hamburg, died 8 June 1973 in Munich, was a German actress. Emmy Sonnemann married the actor Karl Köstlin in 1916 and divorced him in 1926. In 1934 she met Hermann Göring, and she became his second wife in 1935. Adolf Hitler attended the wedding in the Berliner Dom and the subsequent wedding party at the Hotel Kaiserhof on 10 April 1935. In 1937 the couple received the luxury motor yacht Carin II as a belated wedding present from the German automobile industry organization. The couple had a daughter, Edda Göring, in 1938. After the end of World War II, Emmy Göring was sentenced to one year of penal servitude in a labor camp for her Nazi connections and was banned from theater and film for five years. In 1967, Emmy Göring published the memoir An der Seite meines Mannes: Begebenheiten und Bekenntnisse.
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