Hanover (dpa/tmn)
Criminal cases are the subject of many city tours. In Hanover there are three – of course also to Fritz Haarmann. One of the leaders says he doesn’t want to cater to voyeurism. But then what is it?

Knickerbockers, knee-high socks, wide suspenders, small-check peaked cap – this is how Hendrik Seiffert greets the guests on his city tour. It’s the 1920s look. Seiffert follows in the footsteps of Fritz Haarmann, one of the most famous serial killers in German criminal history.

Haarmann committed at least 24 murders, mostly in 1923 and 1924. In principle, he was “the German Jack the Ripper,” according to Seiffert.

Last but not least, the memory of Haarmann is kept alive by a modified, macabre operetta chorus that says: “Wait, just wait a while, Haarmann will come to you soon, with the little cleaver, he’ll make minced meat out of you.”

Criminal hotspots

“We’re going to go to all the criminal hotspots of the 1920s,” says Seiffert. This includes the main train station, where the tour starts. Haarmann had worked here as a “police informer” and “met most of his victims,” ​​as Seiffert says. Without exception, these were male and between 10 and 22 years old.

These were often outliers whose disappearance hardly surprised anyone. Haarmann invited her to his home, promising lodging and food.

The second station, the Kröpcke, a central point in the middle of Hanover, was also considered a criminal hotspot. In the years after the First World War, male minors also prostituted themselves here. “Kriminal-Haarmann”, as he was called there because of his work as a spy, stopped by frequently. You knew each other.

Photos that Seiffert brought with him show just how much Hanover has changed since then. The Ballhof, today a cozy place with a theatre, tea room, beer bar and restaurant, used to be a small alley and meeting place for the homosexual scene. The flourishing life of liberal Hanover pulsated here, and Hans Grans, Haarmann’s assistant and temporary lover, also lived here.

Scary effect at the crime scene

From the Ballhof it is only a few steps to the leash. At that time the river still had two branches. These surrounded “Little Venice”, an island densely built up with half-timbered houses in which poor people lived, as Seiffert says: “Housing space was scarce.”

In the spring of 1924, the series of murders became known for the first time on the banks of the Leine – children found bones and skulls. Before that there were only rumours.

Seiffert leads his guests over a river bridge to the Rote Reihe, a street in Calenberger Neustadt. Haarmann moved into an attic room here in 1923.

The house is no longer there, but Seiffert holds up a photo. It shows a room with a bed, chair, table and washbasin, little more. It was in this apartment that Haarmann killed most of his victims, saying he bit their throats. Then Haarmann went to sleep. He later dismembered the body and brought the bones in a suitcase on a leash.

Do not serve voyeurism

Seiffert, who studies politics and geography and offers the tours as a part-time job, describes all of this rather soberly. He doesn’t want to cater to the voyeurism that he observes in connection with crime city tours, says Seiffert. “I’m too scientific, it’s more my nature.”

Haarmann was arrested in June 1924. At first only because he had gotten into an argument with a young man. When police searched his home, they found evidence of the crime. The more than rude interrogation methods finally led to a confession. The court found him guilty of 24 counts of murder and imposed the death penalty.

The executioner’s meal is said to have consisted of ham sandwiches and Harz cheese – a wish from Haarmann. And another “wish” was fulfilled: “I want to be beheaded. That’s a moment, then I’ll have peace.” On April 15, 1925 he died under the ax.

On the way with the detective man

Fritz Haarmann is the best known, but not the only serial killer in Hanover’s history. Jasper Hanebuth was hardly inferior to him. Towards the end of the Thirty Years’ War (1618 to 1648) he was up to mischief in the city forest of Eilenriede, a highwayman and rather rough fellow. After his arrest, he confessed to 19 murders and was publicly bullied.

You can find out more about Hanebuth on the city tours “… from time to time someone was dead…” and “On the trail of crime – Hanover crime thriller tour”.

Jürgen Veith is one of five city guides who developed the “Krimi Tour”. “I used to be in jail more often,” is how the man, in his mid-70s, greets his guests. At first, however, he left her in the dark about why.

Only towards the end of his almost two-hour tour does he reveal that he worked as a detective on “death investigation cases” for a good ten years and then taught criminology and criminology at the Saarland University of Applied Sciences for Administration.

Insights into motives, perpetrator profiles and securing of evidence

On the way, Veith describes criminal cases from the past centuries, as close as possible to the scene of the crime. He casually chats about motives for murder, criminal profiles and securing evidence. His guests get an insight into the work of the police, which was used by the French in Hanover around 1809. Today, an average of around 65,000 criminal offenses are recorded in the state capital every year.

A city like Hanover is a good place for offers like the “Krimi Tour”. Not that murder and manslaughter play a greater role here than elsewhere. Rather, big cities are generally “crime-prone,” says the detective.

There is only one thing Veith can’t really explain: why women in particular book his tour. “They’re probably more inquisitive.”

Murderous tours through Hanover

  • “Fritz-Haarmann-Tour”: Hendrik Seiffert usually offers his tour on Fridays at 8 p.m. – after a short winter break, it starts again at the beginning of February. It costs 30 euros per person, there is a discount for four or more people. (www.fritz-haarmann-tour.de)
  • “On the trail of crime – Hannover’s crime tour”: It runs all year round on Saturdays (March to October also on Fridays) in the afternoon through the inner and old town of Hanover. 16 euros per person, reduced 10 euros. Minimum age 16 years. Info and booking at www.visit-hannover.com.
  • “… from time to time someone was dead…”: That is the title of a tour through “500 Years of Hanoverian Criminal History”. Appointments are available again from the beginning of March. 12 euros per person, reduced 9 euros. She can under www.stattreisen-hannover.de get booked.
  • Information: Hanover Tourist Information, Ernst-August-Platz 8 30159 Hanover (Tel.: 0511 12345 111; Website: www.visit-hannover.com)


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