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Adolphe Mahr


Dr
Adolphe Mahr
Mahr, Adolphe.jpg
Born 1887
Died 1951
Residence Vienna
National Museum of Ireland, Dublin [A63]
Keeper of Irish Antiquities National Museum of Ireland, Kildare Street, Dublin [1931]
Dept of Education, National Museum of Ireland, Kildare Street, Dublin [1937]
Occupation archaeologist
museum work
Society Membership
membership Local Correspondent 1922
Ordinary fellow 1929, 1931
left 1933 last listed
elected_AI

1922.11.21 1929.01.22

1931.06.09



Contents

Notes

Office Notes

House Notes

1922.11.21 nominated
1928.12.18 nominated
1931.05.19 proposed by J.L. Myres, seconded by H.J.E. Peake

not on 1935 list, but on 1937

Notes From Elsewhere

Adolf Mahr (7 May 1887 - 27 May 1951) was the best-known Nazi in Ireland in the 1930s and one of the most controversial figures in twentieth-century Irish history.[1]
Dr. Adolf Mahr was an Austrian archaeologist who was Gruppenleiter (group leader) of the Dublin branch of the Nazi Party Auslandsorganisation (NSDP-AO).[2] He arrived in Ireland in 1927 to work as keeper of antiquities in the National Museum of Ireland in Dublin.[3] In 1934 Éamon de Valera appointed Mahr Director of the Museum.
As the Nazi Party rose to power in Germany in the 1930s, Mahr joined in 1933 and became the Local Group Leader (Ortsgruppenleiter) in Ireland. During his spell as Nazi leader he recruited roughly 23 Germans. Mahr's children were raised in Dublin in the 1930s but ended up in post-war Germany.
Later Mahr was arrested and accused of being a Nazi spy and for using his position as Director of the National Museum to plan Hitler's invasion of Ireland. After his release Mahr tried to return to Ireland, but was not allowed to do so.

Publications

External Publications

House Publications

113. Prehistoric and Archaeological Congresses; by Adolf Mahr. Man Vol. 31 (Jun., 1931)

Related Material Details

RAI Material

see A62
Membership correspondence: Mahr, A.

Other Material