In July 1939, Hanke was called up for military service, having previously obtained a reserve officer's commission in 1937. From September to October 1939, he served with the
3rd Panzer Division in Poland. In May 1940, sensing a good opportunity to further his career, Hanke served under General
Erwin Rommel in France with the
7th Panzer Division, 25th Panzer Regiment through June of that year. He "got along" well with Rommel who appreciated good "public relations". Hanke was removed from Rommel's staff by Rommel after an incident in the officer's mess in which Hanke suggested that he had the power to remove Rommel from his command, Hanke was already well known and disliked on Rommel's staff on account of his high handed attitude. Along with his removal Rommel made a long report about Hanke to Hitler's adjutant. Hanke was awarded the
Iron Cross in Second and First Class. He was discharged from the German Army in 1941 with the rank of 1st lieutenant (
Oberleutnant). He left active military service and in
Breslau, Hitler appointed Hanke to the position of
Gauleiter of the newly formed
Gau Lower Silesia on 27 January 1941. On 1 February, he was appointed
Oberpräsident of the Prussian
Province of Lower Silesia, thus uniting under his control the highest party and governmental offices in the province. Finally, on 9 February Hanke was named
Reich Defense Commissioner for
Wehrkreis (Military District) VIII, which included his Gau as well as
Gau Upper Silesia and the eastern sections of
Reichsgau Sudetenland. On 20 April 1941, Himmler promoted him to the rank of SS general (SS-
Gruppenführer). Hanke was a fanatical enforcer of Nazi policy: during his rule in Breslau more than 1,000 people were executed on his orders, earning him the nickname "Hangman of Breslau". On 16 November 1942, the jurisdiction of the Reich Defense Commissioners was changed from the
Wehrkreis to the Gau level, and Hanke remained Commissioner only for his Gau. On 30 January 1944, Hanke was promoted to SS-
Obergruppenführer. Hanke had a long affair with
Baroness Freda von Fircks in Breslau, the daughter of a wealthy landowner and
University of Berlin lecturer. They were finally married on 25 November 1944, after she gave birth to their daughter in December 1943.
The 1945 fall of Breslau '' in
Breslau, February 1945 During the waning months of World War II, as the Soviet
Red Army advanced into Silesia and encircled Fortress Breslau (
Festung Breslau), Hanke was named by Hitler to be the city's "Battle Commander" (
Kampfkommandant). Hanke oversaw, with fanaticism, the defense of the city during the
Siege of Breslau. Goebbels, dictating for his diary, repeatedly expressed his admiration of Hanke during the spring of 1945. During the 82-day siege, Soviet forces inflicted approximately 30,000 civilian and military casualties and took more than 40,000 prisoners, while suffering 60,000 total casualties. However, somewhat quirkily, throughout the siege, the Aviatik tobacco factory produced 500,000 cigarettes a day. Occasionally, concerts were held during lulls in the bombardment. On 6 May, the day before Germany's surrender, General
Hermann Niehoff surrendered the besieged Breslau, the Soviet army already having reached Berlin. Hanke had flown out the previous day in a small
Fieseler Storch plane kept in reserve for him. Breslau was the last major city in Germany to surrender. Destruction by Soviet aerial and artillery bombardment, along with acts of destruction committed by the SS and Nazi Party members, brought "80 to 90 percent" of Breslau to a state of ruin. Hanke's fanaticism and
unconditional obedience to Hitler's orders impressed Hitler, who in his
political testament appointed him to be the last
Reichsführer-SS and Chief of the German Police, replacing
Heinrich Himmler on 29 April 1945. Eight days beforehand, Hanke had been honored with the Nazi Party's highest decoration, the
German Order, a reward for his defence of Breslau against the advancing Soviet Red Army. Hanke's ascendancy to the rank of
Reichsführer-SS was a result of Hitler proclaiming Himmler a traitor for his secretly-attempted surrender negotiations with the Western Allies. Hitler stripped Himmler of all his offices and ranks and ordered his arrest. == Death ==