Badge – the red eagle falling – symbolizes the fall of the Red Baron. Richthofen received a fatal wound just after 11:00 am on 21 April 1918 while flying over
Morlancourt Ridge near the
Somme River, . At the time, he had been pursuing, at very low altitude, a
Sopwith Camel piloted by Canadian novice
Wilfrid Reid "Wop" May of
No. 209 Squadron, Royal Air Force. May had just fired on the Red Baron's cousin, Lieutenant
Wolfram von Richthofen. On seeing his cousin being attacked, Richthofen flew to his rescue and fired on May, causing him to pull away. Richthofen pursued May across the Somme. The Baron was spotted and briefly attacked by a Camel piloted by May's school friend and flight commander, Canadian Captain
Arthur "Roy" Brown. Brown had to dive steeply at very high speed to intervene, and then had to climb steeply to avoid hitting the ground. Richthofen turned to avoid this attack, and then resumed his pursuit of May. His aircraft stalled and went into a steep dive, hitting the ground at in a field on a hill near the Bray-Corbie road, just north of the village of
Vaux-sur-Somme, in a sector defended by the
Australian Imperial Force (AIF). Several witnesses, including Gunner George Ridgway, reached the crashed plane and found Richthofen already dead. His face had slammed into the butts of his machine guns, breaking his nose, fracturing his jaw, and creating contusions on his face.
Debate over who fired the shot that killed Richthofen Controversy and contradictory
hypotheses continue to surround who actually fired the shot that killed Richthofen. The
RAF credited Brown with shooting down the Red Baron, but it is now generally agreed by historians, doctors, and ballistics experts that Richthofen was actually killed by an
anti-aircraft (AA) machine gunner firing from the ground. A post mortem examination of the body showed the bullet that killed Richthofen penetrated from the right underarm and exited next to the left nipple. Brown's attack was probably from behind and above Richthofen's left. Even more conclusively, Richthofen could not have continued his pursuit of May for as long as he did (up to two minutes) had his wound come from Brown. Buie died in 1964.
Theories about last combat Richthofen was a highly experienced and skilled fighter pilot—fully aware of the risk from ground fire. Further, he concurred with the rules of air fighting created by his late mentor Boelcke, who specifically advised pilots not to take unnecessary risks. In this context, Richthofen's judgment during his last combat was clearly unsound in several respects. Several theories have been proposed to account for his behaviour. In 1999, a German medical researcher, Henning Allmers, published an article in the British medical journal
The Lancet, suggesting it was likely that brain damage from
the head wound Richthofen suffered in July 1917 played a part in his death. This was supported by a 2004 paper by researchers at the
University of Texas. Richthofen's behaviour after his injury was noted as consistent with
brain-injured patients, and such an injury could account for his perceived lack of judgment on his final flight - flying too low over enemy territory and suffering
target fixation. Richthofen may have been suffering from
cumulative combat stress, which made him fail to observe some of his usual precautions. One of the leading British air aces, Major
Edward "Mick" Mannock, was killed by ground fire on 26 July 1918 while crossing the lines at low level, an action against which he had always cautioned his younger pilots. One of the most popular of the French air aces,
Georges Guynemer, went missing on 11 September 1917, probably while attacking a two-seater without realizing several Fokkers were escorting it. One suggestion has that on the day of Richthofen's death, the prevailing wind was about easterly, rather than the usual westerly. This meant that Richthofen, heading generally westward at an airspeed of about , was travelling over the ground at up to rather than the more typical ground speed of . This was considerably faster than normal, and he could easily have strayed over enemy lines without realizing it. The body was buried in the cemetery at the village of
Bertangles, near
Amiens, on 22 April 1918. Six of No. 3 Squadron's officers served as
pallbearers, and a guard of honour from the squadron's
other ranks fired a salute. Entente squadrons stationed nearby presented memorial wreaths, one of which was inscribed with the words, "To Our Gallant and Worthy Foe". In the early 1920s, the French authorities created
a military cemetery at
Fricourt, in which a large number of German war dead, including Richthofen, were reinterred. In 1925, von Richthofen's youngest brother, Bolko, recovered the body from Fricourt and took it to Germany. The family's intention was for it to be buried in the Schweidnitz cemetery next to the graves of his father and his brother Lothar von Richthofen, who had been killed in a postwar air crash in 1922. The German Government requested that the body should instead be interred at the
Invalidenfriedhof Cemetery in Berlin, where many German military heroes and past leaders were buried, and the family agreed. Richthofen's body received a
state funeral. Later, the
Third Reich held a further grandiose memorial ceremony at the site of the grave, erecting a massive new tombstone engraved with the single word: Richthofen. During the
Cold War, the
Invalidenfriedhof was on the
boundary of the Soviet zone in Berlin, and the tombstone became damaged by bullets fired at attempted escapees from
East Germany. In 1975, the body was moved to a Richthofen family grave plot at the
Südfriedhof in
Wiesbaden. File:Fricourt Richthofen grave.JPG|Richthofen's former grave at Fricourt, later Sebastian Paustian, section 4, row 7, grave 1177 Familiengrab von Richthofen - geo.hlipp.de - 35630.jpg|Richthofen family grave at the
Südfriedhof in
Wiesbaden ==Number of victories==