Ernst Marlier

Ernst Ferdinand Emil Marlier (28 July 1875 – 1948)[1] was a German pharmaceutical manufacturer who built the Wannsee Villa, where the Wannsee Conference was held.

Ernst Marlier
Born28 July 1875
Coburg, Germany
Died1948
Lugano, Switzerland
NationalityGerman
OccupationBusinessman
Known forBuilding the Wannsee Villa
SpouseMargarete Marlier (née Wünsch) (1905-1922, divorced)

Early years

Ernst Marlier was the son of Philipp Marlier (died c. 1902), a postal official, and Mathilda Marlier (née Forkeln). After receiving commercial training in the Fuchs Book Factory, Marlier fulfilled his military service obligation in Infantry Regiment 22 in Kassel, after which he moved to Nuremberg. There, he was the proprietor of a shipping firm, Micado.

Drug maker

In 1903, Marlier settled in Berlin (Kurfürstenstrasse 173a, later Sternstrasse 22), where he founded multiple drug firms (Chemische Fabrik Dr. Schröder GmbH, Chemische Fabrik Dr. Hartmann GmbH, Chemische Fabrik Dr. Wagner und Marlier) and the coal wholesaler Julius Marlier.

In 1905, the Pharmaceutical Institute of the University of Berlin determined that Marlier's remedies consisted primarily of tartaric acid, citric acid, sodium chloride and egg yolk.[2]

By 1907, Marlier was already having problems with police headquarters, which warned that Marlier's preparations “did not have the properties ascribed to them in their sales information.”[3] Among the pharmaceuticals Marlier sold were Antipositin, Antineurasthin, Renascin, Slankal, Levathin, Visnervin, Vitalito and Hämasol.[4]

Assault charges

In 1904, Marlier was charged with battery and disturbance of the peace, and sentenced to six days in jail. In 1913, on the corner of Friedrichstraße and Jägerstraße, Marlier was arrested for assault and battery. According to the police, Marlier had slapped the face of a woman waiting at a cab stand. When two drivers intervened, Marlier beat them both. A policeman named Brandt saw the disturbance and approached, whereupon Marlier attacked him. According to the police report, Marlier was taken to the police precinct. A wild scene ensued, the furious Marlier accosting everyone in sight. Marlier was sentenced to pay a 600 mark fine. Marlier's wife divorced him in 1922 because he beat her.[5][6]

Wannsee Villa

The villa at 56–58 Am Großen Wannsee, where the Wannsee Conference was held, is now a memorial and museum

In 1914, Marlier engaged architect Paul Baumgarten (later a favorite architect of Adolf Hitler) to build a magnificent villa, overlooking the Großer Wannsee, in the Berlin suburb of Wannsee. However, Marlier was unable to retain the villa because of his business problems. In 1905, the Pharmaceutical Institute of Berlin determined that Marlier's medicines consisted of nothing more than tartaric acid, citric acid, sodium chloride, and egg yolk.[7] In 1907, the German government forbade the sale of Marlier's Antipositin and Antineurasthin. Marlier became involved in a tangle of legal troubles, and in 1921, he was forced to sell the Wannsee Villa to industrialist Friedrich Minoux for 2,300,000 reichsmarks.[8]

Wannsee Conference

On January 20, 1942, Reinhard Heydrich announced the Final Solution to the Jewish Question (the deportation and extermination of all Jews in German-occupied territory) at the Wannsee Conference, which took place in the Wannsee Villa.[9]

References

  1. Swiss Federal Archive Record for Ernst Marlier
  2. Apotheker-Zeitung, 1905, Nr. 20.
  3. Record 1520, Landesarchiv Berlin
  4. Michael Haupt Das Haus der Wannsee-Konferenz - Von der Industriellenvilla zur Gedenkstätte, Berlin, 2009
  5. Haus der Wannsee-Konferenz – Gedenk- und Bildungsstätte: Ernst Marlier. http://www.ghwk.de/deut/publikationen/leseprobe_seite_22-26.pdf Archived 2012-04-02 at the Wayback Machine
  6. Ernst Marlier (in German)
  7. Apotheker-Zeitung, Nr. 20/1905
  8. Lehrer, Steven (2000). Wannsee House and the Holocaust. McFarland. p. 196. ISBN 978-0-7864-0792-7.
  9. Lehrer, Steven (2002). Hitler Sites: A City-by-city Guidebook (Austria, Germany, France, United States). McFarland. p. 224. ISBN 0-7864-1045-0.

Bibliography

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