Wilhelm Faupel
(29.10.1873 - 01.05.1945)
place of birth: Lindenbusch, Niederschlesien (Lipce, Poland)
Königreich
Preußen: AOK-Stabschef,
Oberstleutnant
Prussian
operations officer and future diplomat, Wilhelm Faupel also
served during the Great War as a corps-level and field army chief of
staff. After the War, Colonel Faupel continued his military service by
founding the Freikorps Faupel - Görlitz, which he
commanded until his retirement in March 1921 as the Freikorps
transitioned into the Reichswehrkorps. He
retired at the rank of Generalmajor, but was later awarded the brevet
rank of Generalleutnant (Charakter) on 27 August
1939 for Tannenberg Remembrance Day.
For
the next ten years, Faupel functioned as a military advisor
in Argentina and Peru. He joined the German Reich's diplomatic corps in
1936 as charge-de-affaires in Salamanca, Spain. The following year he
served as Germany's Ambassador in Madrid. Returning to Argentina as a
brevetted Generalleutnant, he was supposedly involved in Juan
Peron's successful coup which deposed the Castillo
government in May of 1943. Faupel went missing after May 1945, possibly
committing suicide in Berlin, or living out a life incognito in the
Hesse. His whereabouts thus remains the subject of numerous rumors.
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Oberstleutnant |
18.04.1918 |
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Pour
le Mérite |
18.06.1918
(Eichenlaub: 04.08.1918) |
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