American and allied forces in Europe discovered hidden caches of priceless treasures. While many were the product of looting by
Adolf Hitler and the Nazis, others had been legitimately evacuated from museums, churches, public buildings, and elsewhere for safekeeping. Monuments Men oversaw the safeguarding, cataloguing, removal and packing of all works from all these repositories. In Italy, museum officials had sent their holdings to various countryside locations such as the
Tuscan villa of
Montegufoni, which housed some of the Florentine collections. As Allied forces advanced through Italy, the German army retreated north, stealing paintings and sculptures from these repositories as they fled. As German forces neared the Austrian border, they were forced to store most of their loot in various hiding places, such as a castle at
Sand in Taufers and a jail cell in
San Leonardo. Beginning in late March 1945, Allied forces began discovering these hidden repositories in what became the "greatest treasure hunt in history". In Germany alone, U.S. forces found about 1,500 repositories of art and cultural objects looted from institutions and individuals across Europe, as well as German and Austrian museum collections that had been evacuated for safekeeping. Soviet forces also made discoveries, such as treasures from the extraordinary
Dresden Transport Museum. Hundreds of the artifacts were surrendered by, or had their locations reported by,
SS General
Karl Wolff as part of
Operation Sunrise, his secret negotiation with the
Office of Strategic Services. These included the contents of the
Uffizi and
Pitti palaces, and paintings by Titian and Botticelli. Some of the repositories discovered by Monuments Men in Germany, Austria, and Italy were: •
Berchtesgaden, Germany: The
101st Airborne Division, known as the "Screaming Eagles", found more than 1,000 paintings and sculptures stolen by German
Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring. The cache had been transferred from his country estate,
Carinhall, and moved to Berchtesgaden in April 1945. •
Bernterode, Germany: Americans found four coffins containing the remains of Germany’s greatest leaders, including those of Frederick the Great (
Frederick II of Prussia) and
field marshal Paul von Hindenburg. Also found in the mine were 271 paintings, including court portraits from the
Prussian
Sanssouci palace in
Potsdam, Germany, which had been hidden behind a locked door and a brick wall nearly five feet thick. The site was originally used as an ammunition and military supply complex manned by hundreds of slave laborers. •
Merkers, Germany: The Kaiserode mine at Merkers was discovered by the U.S. 3rd Army under General
George S. Patton in April 1945.
Reichsbank gold, along with 400 paintings from the Berlin museums and numerous other crates of treasures were also discovered. Discoveries also included gold and personal belongings from
Nazi concentration camp victims. •
Neuschwanstein Castle, Germany: Over 6,000 items stolen by the ERR (
Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg,
Alfred Rosenberg’s task force that handled the "legalized" looting of Jews) from private collectors in
France were found here, including furniture, jewelry (see
Nazi gold), paintings and other belongings. Monuments Man
Capt. James Rorimer oversaw the evacuation of the repository, which also held ERR documents. •
Altaussee, Austria: This extensive complex of salt mines served as a huge repository for art stolen by the Nazis, but it also contained holdings from Austrian collections. More than 6,500 paintings alone were discovered at Altaussee. The contents included:
Belgian-owned treasures such as
Michelangelo’s
Madonna of Bruges stolen from the
Church of Our Lady in
Bruges, and
Jan van Eyck’s
Ghent Altarpiece stolen from
Saint Bavo Cathedral in
Ghent;
Vermeer’s
The Astronomer and
The Art of Painting which were to be focal points of Hitler’s
Führermuseum in
Linz, Austria; and paintings from the
Capodimonte Museum in
Naples, Italy that had been stolen by the Hermann Göring Tank Division (
Fallschirm-Panzer Division 1 Hermann Göring) at
Monte Cassino in Italy. •
San Leonardo, Italy: In the jail cell of this far northern town, Allied officials discovered paintings from the
Uffizi that had been hurriedly unloaded by retreating German troops. Among the masterpieces were paintings by
Sandro Botticelli,
Filippo Lippi and
Giovanni Bellini. == Restitution ==