@article{Steger2021, author = {Steger, Sascha}, title = {Kurt Daluege, die Stennes-Revolten 1930/31 und der Aufstieg der SS}, series = {Vierteljahrshefte f{\"u}r Zeitgeschichte / im Auftr. des Instituts f{\"u}r Zeitgeschichte, M{\"u}nchen-Berlin herausgegeben}, volume = {69}, journal = {Vierteljahrshefte f{\"u}r Zeitgeschichte / im Auftr. des Instituts f{\"u}r Zeitgeschichte, M{\"u}nchen-Berlin herausgegeben}, number = {4}, publisher = {De Gruyter}, address = {Berlin}, issn = {0042-5702}, doi = {10.1515/vfzg-2021-0041}, pages = {607 -- 632}, year = {2021}, abstract = {In 1930 and 1931, two revolts by SA Leader Walter Stennes shook the Nazi Movement as it was in permanent campaign mode. The East German SS under Kurt Daluege claimed the quick suppression of both party crises for itself and disseminated the tale, that Hitler had awarded the rising SS with the motto "Meine Ehre heisst Treue" (My Honour is Called Loyalty) in order to thank it for its sacrificial deployment against the rebels. Sascha Steger puts this narrative, which is efficacious to date, to the test, analyses the actual course of the Stennes revolts and comes to the conclusion that, while the SS under Daluege was loyal to the Fuhrer, it played no decisive role in ending the confrontation.}, language = {de} }