Max Luyken Explained

Max Luyken
Office:Commander, SA-Obergruppe II
Term Start:1 July 1933
Term End:31 January 1934
Leader:Ernst Röhm
Office2:SA Inspector-West
Term Start2:1 February 1934
Term End2:30 June 1934
Leader2:Ernst Röhm
Office3:Chief, SA Education Main Office
Term Start3:1 November 1937
Term End3:31 January 1942
Leader3:Viktor Lutze
Office4:Inspector for SA Education and Leadership Training
Term Start4:1 February 1942
Term End4:30 April 1945
Leader4:Viktor Lutze
Wilhelm Schepmann
Title5:Additional positions
Suboffice5:Commander, SA-Gruppe Kurpfalz
Subterm5:1934 – 1936
Suboffice6:Commandant, SA Reich Leadership School
Subterm6:1937
Birth Date:16 October 1885
Birth Place:Wesel, Rhine Province, Kingdom of Prussia, German Empire
Death Place:Steinhagen, Province of Pomerania, Free State of Prussia, Nazi Germany
Death Cause:Killed in action
Nationality:German
Party:Nazi Party
Profession:Military officer
Allegiance:
Branch:Imperial German Army
German: [[Reichswehr]]
Serviceyears:1906–1920
Rank:German: [[Hauptmann]]
Battles:World War I
Silesian Uprising
Mawards:Iron Cross, 1st and 2nd class

Max Otto Luyken (16 October 1885 – 30 April 1945) was a German military officer, Nazi Party politician and Obergruppenfuhrer in the Sturmabteilung (SA). He was killed in action during the closing days of the Second World War in Europe.

Early life

Luyken, a merchant's son, was born in Wesel in 1885 and attended Volksschule and Gymnasium there and in Moers. In February 1906, he entered military service as an active duty Leutnant in the 31st (1st Lower Alsatian) Field Artillery Regiment. During the First World War he served as an officer on the General Staff from 1916, earning the Iron Cross, 1st and 2nd class and attaining the rank of Hauptmann.[1] After the end of the war, he was involved with the Freikorps in the Silesian uprisings. After being discharged from the army in 1920, he joined the antisemitic paramilitary Organization Escherich, headed by Georg Escherich, where he became the regional leader in Saxony from 1920 to 1921. He also trained to become a merchant and subsequently earned his living as a trader before settling down as a farmer and landowner in the Wesel area.[2]

Nazi Party and SA career

Luyken joined the Nazi Party in the late 1920s and served as a Kreisleiter (County Leader). He was elected as a member of the Reichstag at the September 1930 election and served without interruption until 1945. He initially represented electoral constituency 23 (Düsseldorf-West) until November 1933, then constituency 6 (Pomerania) until March 1936, then constituency 27 (Rheinpfalz-Saar) until April 1938 and, finally, constituency 34 (Hamburg) until April 1945.[3] After the Nazi seizure of power, Luyken was made chairman of the Rhineland Chamber of Agriculture, a member of the Reich Farmers' Council and a Provincial Councilor of the Prussian Rhine Province.[1] On 11 July 1933, he was named to the Prussian State Council by Prussian Minister president Hermann Göring.

Luyken was also a member of the Party's paramilitary branch, the Sturmabteilung (SA). As an SA-Oberführer, he headed the SA-Untergruppe in Essen from January 1931 to mid-April 1932 and then SA-Gruppe Niederrhein in Düsseldorf until the end of June 1933. He was promoted to SA-Gruppenführer on 15 October 1932 and, from 1 July 1933 to 31 January 1934, he was the commander of SA-Obergruppe II in Stettin, one of eight (later expanded to ten) such large regional commands. In that post he oversaw three SA-Gruppe: Hansa, Nordmark and Pomerania. From February until the end of June 1934, he was a member of the Supreme SA Leadership (Oberste SA-Führung, OSAF) as Inspector-West with his headquarters in Koblenz.

Luyken survived the Night of the Long Knives purge of the SA, but was removed from the central command structure. From July 1934 through December 1936 he headed the SA-Gruppe Kurpfalz, based in Mannheim and then became commandant of the SA-Reichsführerschule (Reich Leadership School) in Munich. On 9 November 1937, he was promoted to SA-Obergruppenführer. From 1 November 1937 to 31 January 1942, Luyken returned to the OSAF as chief of the Education Main Office and, from 1 February 1942 until his death, he was the inspector for SA Education and Leadership Training. He was also, from the beginning of September 1941, the OSAF liaison officer to the Reichsminister of Food and Agriculture (Walther Darré, followed by Herbert Backe). Luyken died on 30 April 1945, in a battle at Steinhagen in the last days of the war in Europe.

Sources

Notes and References

  1. https://verwaltungshandbuch.bavarikon.de/VWH/Luyken,_Max#lang-de Max Luyken biography with photo
  2. https://rpb.lbz-rlp.de/cgi-bin/wwwalleg/srchrnam.pl?db=rnam&recnums=0007779 Max Luyken biography
  3. https://www.reichstag-abgeordnetendatenbank.de/selectmaske.html?name=Luyken&geschlecht=&ort=&beruforg=&BERUF=&BERUFSFELDER%5B%5D=&KONFESSION%5B%5D=&WP%5B%5D=&PARTEI%5B%5D=&schlu=reichstag24&recherche=ja Max Luyken entry