Hugo Eberlein

Hugo Eberlein
Eberlein c. 1921
Member of the Landtag of Prussia
for Berlin
In office
10 March 1921 – 31 March 1933
Preceded byConstituency established
Succeeded byConstituency abolished
Personal details
Born(1887-05-04)4 May 1887
Died16 October 1941(1941-10-16) (aged 54)
Cause of deathFiring squad
Resting placeZentralfriedhof Friedrichsfelde
PartySPD (1906–1917)
USPD (1917–1919)
KPD (1919–1941)
Other political
affiliations
Spartacus League (1914–1918)
Spouse(s)
Luise Harms
(m. 1913)

Inna Armand
RelationsInessa Armand (mother-in-law)
Children
OccupationPolitician
Central institution membership

Other offices held
Preview warning: Page using Template:Infobox officeholder with deprecated parameter "otherparty". Replace with "other_party".

Max Albert Hugo Eberlein (4 May 1887 – 16 October 1941) was a German communist politician. He took part of the founding congress of the Communist Party of Germany ("KPD") in December 1918 and January 1919, and then in the First Congress of the Comintern (2–6 March 1919), where he held important posts until 1928, the result of his involvement with the Conciliator faction. When the Nazis took power in Germany in 1933, Eberlein fled to the Soviet Union, where he found refuge at the Hotel Lux.

In July 1937 he fell under the Great Purge. In January 1938 he was interrogated and tortured for ten days and nights. In April 1938 he was taken to Lefortovo Prison, where he was tortured for weeks at a time; then in 1939 he was sentenced to 15 years in the Vorkuta Gulag. He was returned to Moscow in 1941, when he was tried and sentenced again, and was shot on 16 October 1941. Hugo Eberlein was later rehabilitated and became a national hero in East Germany; his name was even borne by a guard regiment of the National People's Army.