All four witnesses to the political testament died shortly afterwards. Goebbels and his wife committed suicide. Burgdorf and Krebs committed suicide together on the night of 1/2 May in the bunker. Bormann's exact time and place of death remain uncertain; his remains were discovered near the site of the bunker in 1972 and identified by DNA analysis in 1998. He probably died the same night trying to escape from the . In the
Flensburg Government of Hitler's appointed successor as Dönitz, the depositions of
Albert Speer and
Franz Seldte were ignored (or the two ministers quickly reinstated). Neither former incumbent
Joachim von Ribbentrop nor Hitler's appointee, Seyß-Inquart, held the post of Foreign Minister. The post was given to Lutz Graf Schwerin von Krosigk, who after Goebbels' suicide temporarily became the Leading Minister of the German Reich (Head of Cabinet, post equivalent to Chancellor). He declined the position a day later. Only three of Hitler's known "brothers and sisters" survived infancy and were still living at the time of death, full-blooded sister
Paula Hitler and half-siblings
Alois Hitler Jr. and
Angela Hitler. Alois Hitler Jr.'s
only surviving son William, who was raised and supported by only his
mother and her family after Alois Jr. deserted them while fighting for Germany during
World War I, was also estranged from his uncle Adolf Hitler, who he publicly stated he "hated" by 1939. William defected to Britain where he had previously lived before taking up residency in Germany in 1933 and to the United States, where he served as a U.S. soldier during World War II. Despite being mentioned in the will, Alois Jr. had in fact only been a Nazi Party member prior to Hitler's rule from 1926 to 1927. Though they were also named in the will, Hitler was acknowledged to have had a low opinion of his sister Paula and his half-sister Angela, referring to them both as "stupid geese." In 1952, Paula tried to claim her inheritance under the will, but was unsuccessful because Hitler had yet to be legally declared dead. All three of Hitler's "
old secretaries", who were named in the will as being among the co-workers who could inherit some of his belongings, were caught and arrested.
Johanna Wolf and
Christa Schroeder would be arrested in May 1945 and
Gerda Christian in March 1946. Hitler's youngest secretary Traudl Junge, who typed Hitler's testaments, was arrested in June 1945. Numerous items which were in Hitler's possession at the time of his death were auctioned off in April 1971 by the estate of his housekeeper Anni Winter. In 1954, a court ruling resulted in Winter losing possession of numerous items to the state of
Bavaria. However, Winter was allowed to keep some of items, which she pledged to sell in order to acquire a cafe. By 1971, Winter was acknowledged to have had possession of at least five dozen items of Hitler's, including numerous personal photographs. According to
Time, Winter had an "ardor for collecting just about anything Hitler touched." ==Notes==