What you see on the table is not Adolf Hitler … But this table allegedly created him, or at least influenced him.

‘The wild hunt’ (“Die Wilde Jagd”) Created in 1889 by the great German painter and sculptor Franz von Stuke derived from German tradition and Wagner for his epic works. In the same year, his great admirer, Hitler, was born.

Various sources report that Hitler was fascinated by the table, which he saw when he was 13 years old. He was a great admirer of Franz von Stuk’s works and later, after climbing power, exposed the “wild hunt” to his personal gallery.

Hitler allegedly inspired God’s emblematic appearance (Odin) as depicted in the painting, including his mustache, even in his rhetorical style. The gloomy painting with its creepy forms is reminiscent of war, and perhaps a “prophecy” For the great destruction of the World War II caused by Hitler.

In Robert Wayth’s 1977 book entitled “The Psychopath God: Adolf Hitler” And in many other sources, it is reported that Franz von Stuck was Hitler’s favorite painter from his childhood.