Hugo Johannes Blaschke (1881–1959), Adolf Hitler’s personal dentist and a senior SS dental official, occupied a unique position within the medical and political machinery of the Third Reich. Although often relegated to a footnote in histories of National Socialism, Blaschke’s career provides a revealing case study of the relationship between professional medicine, political loyalty, and authoritarian power. This paper examines Blaschke’s life and career, from his early education and rise within elite Berlin dentistry to his intimate role within Hitler’s inner circle and the broader SS medical apparatus. Particular attention is paid to the forensic importance of Blaschke’s dental work in the postwar identification of Adolf Hitler’s remains, as well as the ethical implications of medical collaboration with totalitarian regimes. Through an analysis of archival testimony, postwar interrogations, forensic studies, and modern historiography, the paper argues that Blaschke exemplifies the transformation of professional expertise into a tool of ideological legitimacy and bureaucratic complicity under National Socialism.
Jerry Asquith (Sat,) studied this question.