The rank of was created in 1932 by
Ernst Röhm and was intended as a seniormost rank of the Nazi
stormtroopers for use by Röhm and his top SA generals. In its initial concept, the rank was intended to be held by members of the
Oberste SA-Führung (Supreme SA Command) and also by veteran commanders of certain
SA-Gruppen (SA groups). Some of the early promotions to the rank included
Ernst Röhm,
Viktor Lutze,
Edmund Heines,
August Schneidhuber, and
Fritz Ritter von Kraußer. The rank of SA- was the most senior rank of the until the spring of 1933, when Röhm made the title position of (SA Chief of Staff) into a rank and promoted himself accordingly. Also in the summer of 1933,
Heinrich Himmler was promoted by
Adolf Hitler to the newly created rank of SS- with the intent being to make Himmler the equivalent of the senior commanders of the SA, to which the SS was still subordinated. Although Himmler usually referred to himself as , before the summer of 1934, this was simply a title for the SS commander, and not yet an actual rank. Shortly after Himmler's promotion, Hitler further promoted
Franz Xaver Schwarz, with Himmler's date of rank backdated to 1 January 1933 in order to confirm his seniority as the top officer within the SS. Shortly after
Rudolf Hess was appointed as his deputy in April 1933, Hitler promoted him to SS-. However, in September, Hitler decreed that Hess should no longer use the title of but only use the title of Deputy Führer. A number of men were promoted to SS- in 1934, these being
Fritz Weitzel,
Richard Walther Darré and
Walter Buch. After the
Night of the Long Knives in July 1934,
Sepp Dietrich was promoted to the rank. On 9 September 1934, so as to prevent a power struggle within the SS, Hitler further promoted
Kurt Daluege who commanded most of the SS in the
Berlin region. Daluege's promotion was to avoid the SS splitting into two separate entities, one based in Northern Germany under Daluege and the other in
Bavaria under Himmler. This early SS disunity became a non-issue after a common ground was found amongst SS leaders in their general hatred of the SA.
Udo von Woyrsch and
Friedrich-Wilhelm Krüger were promoted to SS- in 1935 while
Josias, Hereditary Prince of Waldeck and Pyrmont, and
Max Amann received the rank a year later along with
Karl von Eberstein and
Philipp Bouhler. The year 1936 saw several promotions to the rank, including
Friedrich Jeckeln who would become one of the most infamous
SS and police leaders on the
Eastern Front during
World War II. The last pre-war promotion to the rank of SS- was in April 1939 for
Friedrich Graf von der Schulenburg who died the following month. Upon the outbreak of World War II, there were seventeen men who held the rank of SS-. ==Promotion history==