[Below: Adolf Hitler/Eva Braun marriage certificate from April 29, 1945. The marriage was witnessed by Joseph Goebbels and Martin Bormann and performed by Walter Wagner, a municipal councilor whom Goebbels had recruited for the task. The document was seized by the Allies after the war and it now resides in the United States National Archives in College Park, Maryland, USA.]

[Below: At the bottom of the document Eva started to write 'B' for Braun and crossed it out and wrote 'Hitler'.]

[Below: English translation of the marriage certificate seen above.]


[Below: Herta Schneider reading Eva's last letter years after the war.]


[Below: Eva's last letter and her wedding ring. Click to enlarge.]


[Below: Part of Eva's will.]


[Below: Postcard from Eva to her father.]


[Below: Postcard from Eva (who was in Italy) to her family.]


[Below: Postcard from Eva to her family.]


[Below: Circa 1939, signed Eva.]


[Below: Christmas postcard from Eva in Hungary.]


[Below: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year card, signed Eva.]


[Below: ...]


[Below: ...]


[Below: Eva Braun to Herta Schneider, on Eva's personal stationary.]


[Below: Note the yellow wax stamp on the back of the letter - it bears Eva's personal butterfly symbol.]


[Below: A typed letter to Herta Schneider from Eva (while in the bunker) written on April 19, 1945.]

[Below: Page two of letter with photo of dog and puppies.]

[Below: A better shot.]


[Below: A typed letter to Herta Schneider from Eva (while in the bunker) written on April 22, 1945.]


[Below: A letter from Eva from October 4, 1936.]


[Below: Eva's signature.]


[Below: Eva's signature, 1933.]


[Below: Card from Adolf Hitler to Eva!]


[Below: There are conflicting accounts of this house. Some say it was Eva's house, bought in 1936 by Heinrich Hoffmann on the request of Hitler. Other accounts says it is Eva Braun's parents home on Wasserburger Street in Munich's villa district Bogenhausen. Apparently in April 1945 the house was ransacked by American soldiers who stole everything they could get their 'hero' hands on. In 2015 the house was demolished to make room for new buildings...]


[Below: Of interest, here are two very frugal menus from the Berghof from 1937 and 1943.]


[Below: Here is a unique rarity... a book presented as a gift from Adolf Hitler's secretary Martin Bormann to Eva's sister Gretl. It is signed twice by Bormann and includes his inscription, which says:

'Dearest Gretl Braun
In remembrance of the
most remarkable week
of May 1949
5.5.1940
Bormann'

This speaks of a trip various people from Adolf Hitler's inner circle took to Norway. Note Gretl's personal bookplate. Only a few are known to have survived.]

[Below: Opening page showing bookplate.]

[Below: Close-up.]

[Below: Next page, signature of Martin Bormann.]

[Below: Inscription from Bormann to Gretl Braun.]

[Below: Title page.]

[Below: Random picture from the book, which is filled with many pictures.]

[Below: Here is an example of another of Gretl's bookplates, beside the design seen above.]


[Below: Postwar magazine.]


[Below: Postwar magazine.]


[Below: Postwar magazine.]


[Below: Newspaper article from Omaha, Nebraska, USA.]


[Below: Stormer, Vol. X, No. 7, July - August, 1981.]


[Below: These are modern fantasy stamps. They commemorate the wedding of Adolf Hitler and Eva Braun. These were released sometime between 2020 - 2022.]

[Below: Another fantasy sheetlet. This was released in 2023.]

[Below: A rather odd envelope for sale in 2024. The stamp is authentic but the cancel is not.]


[Below: This is a still from the 2015 German film 'Look Who's Back'.]