Complete chronology
Full overview and deeper context for every journey step.
1904-1931
Failed naval career
Reinhard Tristan Eugen Heydrich was born on 7 March 1904 in Halle an der Saale, the son of a composer and music conservatory director. He grew up in a cultured, nationalist middle-class household and became a skilled violinist as well as a competitive athlete. In 1922 he entered the Reichsmarine, hoping for a disciplined officer's career. That path ended in 1931 when he was dismissed after a breach-of-promise scandal involving a woman he had been expected to marry. The dismissal humiliated him and left him searching for a new future during Germany's political crisis. Through his wife Lina, a committed Nazi, Heydrich entered the orbit of Heinrich Himmler. The SS gave him a second career and a field in which ambition, cold intelligence, and ruthlessness could flourish.
Heydrich's fall from the navy opened the door to a far more destructive career in Nazi security power.
1931-1939
Security architect
Himmler quickly recognised Heydrich's usefulness and placed him in charge of the SS intelligence service, the Sicherheitsdienst, or SD. Heydrich built files, networks, and methods for identifying enemies inside and outside the Nazi movement. After 1933, as Hitler's dictatorship destroyed democracy, Heydrich rose through the expanding police and security apparatus. He helped consolidate political policing, surveillance, and repression, working closely with Himmler as the SS absorbed more state power. In 1939 he became head of the Reich Security Main Office, the RSHA, which combined the Security Police, including the Gestapo and Criminal Police, with the SD. That structure made him one of the most powerful men in Nazi Germany. Heydrich's genius, if the word can be used for such purposes, lay in turning ideological paranoia into institutions.
Heydrich helped design the machinery through which Nazi fear became files, arrests, deportations, and murder.
1939-1941
Occupied Europe
War expanded Heydrich's authority from domestic repression to continental terror. His agencies targeted political opponents, Jews, Roma, Polish elites, Soviet officials, resistance networks, and many others marked as enemies. After the invasion of Poland in 1939, SS and police units carried out mass violence behind the front. After the invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941, Einsatzgruppen murdered Jews and others in mass shootings on an enormous scale. Heydrich was not a distant observer. His RSHA helped organise the security logic of occupation, in which conquest, racial ideology, and administrative coordination fused. In September 1941 he was also appointed acting Reich Protector of Bohemia and Moravia, where he combined repression with selective economic incentives to increase production while crushing resistance.
Heydrich's power shows how occupation regimes can make bureaucracy and terror mutually reinforcing.
1942
Wannsee
On 20 January 1942 Heydrich chaired the Wannsee Conference in a villa outside Berlin. The meeting did not invent the Holocaust; mass murder was already underway. Its significance lay in coordination. Heydrich gathered senior officials from ministries, party offices, and occupation administrations to align the machinery of the state behind the Final Solution of the Jewish question. Adolf Eichmann prepared the minutes. Heydrich used the meeting to assert RSHA leadership over deportation and extermination policy, translating genocidal intent into interdepartmental procedure. This is why Heydrich is central to Holocaust history. He stood at the point where ideology, police power, transport, law, and ministerial bureaucracy met. Wannsee was not a frenzy of violence. It was something colder: a planning meeting for continental genocide.
Heydrich's role at Wannsee reveals how genocide can be coordinated through ordinary-looking state procedure.
1942
Assassination and reprisals
On 27 May 1942, Czechoslovak agents trained in Britain, Jan Kubis and Jozef Gabcik, attacked Heydrich in Prague during Operation Anthropoid. Heydrich died from his wounds on 4 June 1942. Nazi reprisals were savage. The village of Lidice was destroyed, men were shot, women deported, and children murdered or dispersed; Lezaky suffered a similar fate. The terror was intended to punish and intimidate, but Heydrich's assassination also became a major act of resistance memory. His historical legacy remains that of a principal architect of Nazi security terror and the Holocaust. He was feared even by many within the regime because he combined ambition, intelligence, ideological commitment, and institutional power. His short life left an immense shadow because the systems he helped build continued killing long after his death.
Heydrich's death did not stop the machinery he built, which is part of why his legacy is so stark.