Hugo Sperrle

Sperrle, HugoHugo Sperrle, c. 1935–36.

Hugo Sperrle (born February 7, 1885, Ludwigsburg, Germany—died April 2, 1953, near Landsberg am Lech, West Germany) was a field marshal of the Luftwaffe (German air force) during World War II.

Sperrle joined the German army in 1903 and flew combat aircraft in World War I. After holding various commands in the Reichswehr (postwar German armed forces), he was transferred in 1933 back to the air force, which he helped to expand in the years that followed. He became a brigadier general of the Luftwaffe about 1934. In 1936–37 Sperrle led the Condor Legion—i.e., the German air force unit that fought on the side of the Nationalists in the Spanish Civil War. There his forces were responsible for the bombing of Guernica and other Spanish towns.

Sperrle was promoted to the rank of general of fliers in 1937, and the following year he was made commander of one of the Luftwaffe’s four air fleets, Air Fleet 3 (based in Munich). He led this fleet in the campaign against France (May–June 1940), and that July he was made a general field marshal of the Luftwaffe. Before operations began against Great Britain, Sperrle advised that Britain’s Royal Air Force had to be destroyed to ensure successful bombing campaigns against that country. Air Fleet 3, stationed in northern France, played a major role in the Battle of Britain (June 1940–April 1941).

Sperrle went on to command all air forces in North Africa during General Erwin Rommel’s operations with the Afrika Korps there. In 1944 Sperrle was appointed to command Germany’s air forces in western Europe in expectation of an Allied invasion of northern France. By the time of the D-Day landings (June 6, 1944), the Luftwaffe could muster only some 200 operational aircraft over the landing beaches to hold back an invading air armada of almost 10,000 planes of all types. Unable to counter such air superiority, Sperrle was dismissed from his post in August 1944. Sperrle was acquitted of all charges of war crimes by an Allied court in 1948.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.