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・ Max Planck Institute for the History of Science
・ Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems
・ Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History
・ Max Planck Institute for the Science of Light
・ Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity
・ Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies
・ Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry
・ Max Planck Institute of Biophysics
・ Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces
・ Max Planck Institute of Experimental Endocrinology
・ Max Planck Institute of Immunobiology and Epigenetics
・ Max Oates
・ Max Obal
・ Max Oberrauch
・ Max Ochs
Max Oehler
・ Max Oelschlaeger
・ Max Oertli
・ Max Olding and Pamela Page
・ Max Oldmeadow
・ Max Olivier
・ Max Olivier-Lacamp
・ Max on the Rox
・ Max Ophüls
・ Max Oppy
・ MAX Orange Line
・ Max Orr
・ Max Orrin
・ Max Ortmann
・ Max Osborne


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Max Oehler : ウィキペディア英語版
Max Oehler
Max Oehler (; December 29, 1875 – March 1946) was a German army officer and archivist for the "Nietzsche-Archiv." Oehler pursued his career in the German Empire's military until the end of World War I and the German November Revolution. Under the Weimar Republic, which he opposed, he served as an archivist in his cousin Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche's "Nietzsche-Archiv" in Weimar. After Förster-Nietzsche's death in 1935, he succeeded her as ''de facto'' leader of the Archiv. A devoted Nazi since the early 1930s, Oehler tried to popularize his national socialist view of Nietzsche. After the German defeat in World War II, Oehler was imprisoned by Soviet occupation forces and died c. March 1946 in an improvised prison in Weimar.
==Family==
Max Oehler was born in Blessenbach im Taunus (today part of Weinbach). His father, Oskar Ulrich Oehler (1838–1901), was a Lutheran minister and the brother of Franziska Nietzsche, Friedrich and Elisabeth Nietzsche's mother. Max Oehler's mother was Auguste Oehler (née Forst) (1847–1920). Like his brother Richard Oehler, a librarian, and his cousin Adalbert Oehler, a low-ranking government official, Max Oehler became involved in Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche's "Nietzsche-Archiv," which thus became sort of a family business.
Oehler married then 18-year-old Annemarie Lemelson in 1911, with whom he had several children.

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