Hans-Adolf von Moltke


Hans-Adolf Helmuth Ludwig Erdmann Waldemar von Moltke was a land owner in Silesia and German Ambassador in Poland during the Weimar Republic and under Hitler up to the fall of Poland.

Life

Moltke studied law and joined the Foreign Service in 1913. During the years of 1920 to 1922, Moltke represented the German Foreign Office at the Allied Commission of the Upper Silesia plebiscite in Oppeln and from 1922 to 1924 at the Joint Commission for Upper Silesia. From 1924 to 1928, he served as Counselor at the German Embassy in Ankara, Turkey. From 1931 to the German occupation of Poland in 1939 he was ambassador in Warsaw. He then returned to the Foreign Office in Berlin where he head the Archive Commission for the evaluation of captured files. On January 11, 1943, he was nominated ambassador in Madrid where he died two months later.
He was also a land owner of the estates of Wernersdorf and of Klein-Bresa in Silesia.
Since 1904 he had been a member of Corps Saxo-Borussia Heidelberg.
On 1 October 1937 he joined the NSDAP.

The White Book

In 1939, Molkte was appointed the editor of The White Book, a collection of German diplomatic documents intended to prove the "war guilt" of Poland, where Molkte selectively edited the documents such as excising his warning to Berlin in a cable he sent in March 1939 warning that Poland would go to war if the Reich sought to alter the status of the Free City of Danzig.
For his work in German foreign policy after the outbreak of war, the German Historical Institute has republished a press photo from 1939:

Genealogy

Descended from the old Mecklenburg noble family of Moltke, he was the grandson of the Prussian district administrator Adolph von Moltke, who was a brother of Field Marshal Helmuth von Moltke and the son of Royal Prussian Minister of State and Oberpräsident Friedrich von Moltke.
Moltke married Davida Yorck von Wartenberg on June 8, 1926.
The couple had eight children :