The shadow of the Third Reich ended not on the streets of Berlin, but beneath them.
Discovering Hitler's Führerbunker unveils Adolf Hitler's final refuge, the Führerbunker, deep beneath Berlin. In the labyrinthine depths, Hitler and his inner circle spent the final months of the Second World War. It was here, on 30 April 1945, that Hitler and his new bride, Eva Braun, committed suicide as Soviet forces closed in just blocks away.
In 1943, as the war intensified, Hitler expanded the Berlin bunker complex beyond the original Vorbunker, an air raid shelter beneath the Old Chancellery ballroom, to include the deeper, heavily reinforced Führerbunker. The two structures were linked into a sprawling underground network, with additional tunnels and shelters throughout the Chancellery, creating a vast, fortified command centre built to withstand relentless Allied air raids and protect the leader of the Third Reich.
This detailed account chronicles the construction of the Führerbunker and its associated systems, as well as Soviet efforts to destroy the complex after the war. It recounts key events within the bunker during the war and dispels the enduring myth that Hitler survived by escaping Berlin.
Discovering Hitler's Führerbunker brings the Führerbunker to life, revealing its hidden architecture, the fateful decisions made within, and the dramatic collapse of a tyrannical regime in the war's final days.