Lina Mathilde Manninen (née von Osten, formerly Heydrich; 14 June 1911 – 14 August 1985) was the wife of Reinhard Heydrich, head of the Reich Security Main Office and a central figure in Nazi Germany. The daughter of a minor German aristocrat (he worked as a village schoolteacher), she joined the Nazi Party in 1929 and met Reinhard Heydrich in December 1930. The two wed on 26 December 1931 and had four children. She published a memoir in 1976. She defended the reputation of her first husband (Heydrich) until her death at age 74 in August 1985 in Fehmarn.
On 6 December 1930, aged 19, she attended a rowing-club ball in Kiel and met then Naval Lieutenant Heydrich there. They became romantically involved and soon announced their engagement on 18 December 1930.
In 1931, he was charged with "conduct unbecoming to an officer and gentleman" for breaking an engagement promise to a woman he had known for six months before the engagement to Lina. Admiral Erich Raeder dismissed Heydrich from the navy that April. The dismissal devastated Heydrich, who found himself without career prospects.
Lina persuaded Heydrich to look into the recently formed Schutzstaffel (SS) as a career option. During 1931, SS Leader Heinrich Himmler began setting up a counterintelligence division of the SS. Acting on the advice of his associate Karl von Eberstein, a friend of the Heydrich family, Himmler agreed to interview Heydrich, but cancelled their appointment at the last minute. Lina ignored this message, packed Reinhard's suitcase, and sent him to Munich.
Eberstein met Heydrich at the train station and took him to see Himmler. Himmler asked Heydrich to convey his ideas for developing an SS intelligence service. Himmler was so impressed that he hired Heydrich immediately as the chief of the new SS 'Ic Service' or Intelligence Service (which later became known as the Sicherheitsdienst; SD). He returned to Hamburg with the good news. Heydrich entered into the Hamburg SS on 14 July. In August, he was transferred to Munich where he lived alone in a boarding house, which rented rooms to unmarried SS men. Lina later stated that Reinhard Heydrich never read Hitler's book, Mein Kampf. He and Lina wed at a small church in Großenbrode on 26 December 1931.
In 1941 the family moved to the Lower Castle of Panenské Břežany (Czech: Dolní zámek v Panenských Břežanech) which was originally owned by Ferdinand Bloch-Bauer, a Jewish magnate in the European sugar industry. Following the Nazi occupation of Czechoslovakia in 1939, his property was confiscated by the Nazis after he fled to Switzerland. From 1939 to 1942 the Lower Castle was the official residence of the Reichsprotektor of Bohemia and Moravia and their families. Konstantin von Neurath lived there until 1941 before Heydrich took over. Their neighbor in the Upper Castle (Horní zámek) was Karl Hermann Frank, the Higher SS and police leader and Minister of State for Bohemia and Moravia.
Following the assassination of her husband in Operation Anthropoid in May-June 1942, Hitler gave Lina the country estate in recognition of his service. It was given the German name of Jungfern-Breschan. Himmler arranged for approximately 30 Jewish forced labourers to work at the estate. According to post-war Jewish survivors, she physically abused them. The Heydrich's fourth child, a daughter named Marte, was born on 23 July 1942. Lina sold the other family properties, including the home in Berlin and the hunting lodge near Nauen in the autumn of 1942.
On 24 October 1943, Heydrich's elder son Klaus died as a result of a traffic accident outside Jungfern-Breschan. On that day, he and his brother were cycling around the estate's grounds. On seeing the driveway gates were open, Klaus rode out into the road where he was struck by a small truck. Klaus died from his injuries later that afternoon and his body was buried in the garden of the estate. Lina wanted to have the driver and passengers shot but the investigation found the driver not guilty.
The Heydrich family lived at Jungfern-Breschan until April 1945 when they, along with many other Germans, fled the area before the arrival of the advancing Soviet Red Army. The family made it to Bavaria and then moved back to the island of Fehmarn where they were allowed to live in their house after the British Army moved out that same year.
In 1965, she met Finnish theatre director Mauno Manninen while she was on a holiday trip to Finland. Eventually, they married for the purpose of changing her last name. She ran the Heydrichs' former summer house on Fehmarn as a restaurant and inn until it burned down in February 1969, during welding work within the roofspace that caught the thatched roof alight. Manninen died in September 1969.
In 1976, she published a memoir, Leben mit einem Kriegsverbrecher ( Life with a War Criminal). Throughout her later years, Lina Heydrich defended the reputation of her first husband until her own death at the age of 74 on 14 August 1985 in Fehmarn. She vehemently denies that her husband was involved in the Holocaust, and tries to redefine the 1942 Wannsee Conference, where the "Endlösung" (final solution) was decided, merely as resettling the Jews in the East:
" One day he Heydrich told me that a decision had been made in Hitlers Headquarters, to create a big reservation for the Jews in Russia, which could be developed into a Jewish State. Considered the great advances of the German troops in Russia, everything looked very positive. A resettlement of such a magnitude appeared possible." (translated from the original German)
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