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Rudolf Berthold

German flying ace

Died when: 28 years 357 days (347 months)
Star Sign: Aries

 

Rudolf Berthold

Oskar Gustav Rudolf Berthold (24 March 1891 – 15 March 1920) was a German flying ace of World War I.Between 1916 and 1918, he shot down 44 enemy planes—16 of them while flying one-handed.

Berthold's perseverance, bravery, and willingness to return to combat while still wounded made him one of the most famous German pilots of World War I.

Berthold joined the German Imperial Army in 1909, and paid for his own piloting lessons, qualifying in September 1913.He was one of the pioneer aviators of World War I, flying crucial reconnaissance missions during his nation's 1914 invasion of France.

His reported observations affected the German troop dispositions at the First Battle of the Aisne.During 1915, he became one of the first flying aces.

He rose to command one of the first dedicated fighter units in August 1916; he scored five victories before suffering severe injuries in a crash and being dosed with narcotics while hospitalized for four months.

Decamping from hospital, he returned to duty while still unwell to successively command two of Germany's original fighter squadrons.By 24 April 1917, when he was wounded again, he had brought his tally to 12 and won Germany's greatest honor, the Pour le Merite.

On 18 August, he once again bolted from medical care to return to battle.Over the next few weeks, he scored 16 more victories before being crippled by a British bullet on 10 October 1917.

With an arm at hazard of amputation, Berthold was rescued by his sister Franziska, who had the medical connections to place him under the care of a specialist.

Bedridden until February 1918, Berthold returned to duty to command one of the world's first fighter wings.On 28 May, he began once again to fly combat, though flying one-handed and under the influence of narcotics; he shot down 14 more enemy airplanes by 8 August 1918.

On 10 August, he shot down his final two victims on his final flight before being downed himself.After two days in the hospital, he once again fled treatment and return to combat.

Only a direct order from Kaiser Wilhelm II returned him to medical care for the rest of the war.In postwar Germany, Rudolf Berthold organized a Freikorps and fought the Bolsheviks in Latvia.

He died of gunshot wounds during political street fighting in Harburg on 15 March 1920.


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