Heinrich Belohlavek Explained

Heinrich Belohlavek
Birth Date:26 September 1889
Birth Place:Vienna, Austria
Death Place:Charlottenburg, Berlin, Germany
Position:Midfielder
Clubs1:SC Rudolfshügel
Nationalyears1:1910
Nationalteam1:Austria
Nationalcaps1:1
Nationalgoals1:0

Heinrich Belohlavek (26 September 1889  - 2 March 1943) was an Austrian amateur footballer who played as a midfielder.[1] He died as a political prisoner of Nazi Germany in the Second World War.[2]

Football career

He made one appearance for the Austria national team in 1910.[3]

Life outside football

Belohlavek was an industrial iron turner by trade, who served in the First World War in the depot of a railway regiment of the Austro-Hungarian Army. He was a member of the Austrian Social Democratic Party until its abolition in 1934. He was an opponent of the Austrofascist regime, under which he was detained on suspicion of 'Marxist activity' and later of the Nazi German authority following the Anschluss of 1938. In 1941 he was arrested for running a cell of the outlawed Austrian Communist Party in his factory workplace when caught collecting funds (which he protested were to aid prisoners' families) and was imprisoned ultimately at Plotzensee Prison in Berlin. He and six others arrested with him were executed by beheading at the prison after being sentenced to death.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Heinrich Belohlavek . worldfootball.net . 27 November 2021.
  2. Web site: Hotsch. Horst. National player in the resistance: That was Heinrich Belohlavek. 1 May 2021. 12 February 2022. Der Standard. German.
  3. Web site: Heinrich Belohlavek . EU Football . 27 November 2021.