<P> Later research by historians has shown that in addition to those listed by the Gestapo a number of others also had been killed . Heinrich Bennecke complemented the names of the city clerk Kuno Kamphausen from Waldenburg and the music critic Willi Schmid to his reprint of the official Gestapo list, whereupon he concluded that at least 85 people were killed during the purge . Later, Hans Günther Richardi, in his study on the Dachau concentration camp, added the names of four inmates of Dachau (lawyer Julius Adler (1882--1934), worker Erich Gans (1908 - 1934), Walter Häbich and worker Adam Hereth (1897 - 1934)), claiming they were murdered by the SS during the purge . In 1993 Otto Gritschneder published a book on the post--World War II prosecution of those involved in the killings which lists 90 names of people killed (adding the doctor and Röhm associate Karl Günther Heimsoth to the list). </P> <P> Richard J. Evans states that at least 85 people were killed and more than 1,000 were arrested . Ian Kershaw also cites the number of deaths at 85 . Kershaw notes that "some estimates...put the total number killed at between 150 and 200 ." William L. Shirer writes in his Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, that "The White Book of the Purge, published by émigrés in Paris claims 401 deaths, but lists only 116 of them . At the 1957 trial in Munich the figure' more than 1,000' was used ." Both of those figures are much higher than the ones most historians of the period rely on, and that Shirer himself was not necessarily citing the figures as accurate, but was simply relaying them in his book . The most recent study on the matter lists by name 89 people who were definitely killed, as well as two other cases of whom it is unclear whether they were murdered during the events or slightly earlier or later . </P> <Ul> <Li> Otto Ballerstedt, former Chief of the "Bayernbund", a secessionist political group in Bavaria, responsible for putting Hitler in prison for a month in 1922 after he had physically attacked Ballerstedt during a rally </Li> <Li> Fritz Beck, director of the Munich Students' Welfare Fund </Li> <Li> Herbert von Bose, associate of Franz von Papen </Li> <Li> Ferdinand von Bredow, close associate of Kurt von Schleicher </Li> <Li> Georg von Detten, member of the Reichstag, department chief of the highest SA - leadership </Li> <Li> Karl Ernst, member of the Reichstag, leader of the SA - lower group East </Li> <Li> Hans Joachim von Falkenhausen, chief of staff of Georg von Detten </Li> <Li> Fritz Gerlich, newspaper journalist, editor of Munich's Catholic weekly (Der Gerade Weg) and publisher, Catholic Action </Li> <Li> Alexander Glaser, lawyer </Li> <Li> Hans Hayn, member of the Reichstag, SA - group leader of Sachsen </Li> <Li> Karl - Günther Heimsoth, physician, publicist, politician </Li> <Li> Edmund Heines, SA - senior group leader in Breslau </Li> <Li> Oskar Heines, younger brother of Edmund Heines </Li> <Li> Peter von Heydebreck, member of the Reichstag, SA - group leader </Li> <Li> Anton von Hohberg und Buchwald, SS Obergruppenführer, the only SS victim, killed on the orders of Obergruppenführer von dem Bach Zelewski </Li> <Li> Edgar Julius Jung, lawyer, author of the "Marburg speech" of Franz von Papen, Catholic Action worker </Li> <Li> Gustav Ritter von Kahr, former prime minister of Bavaria, Member of Triumvirate who ruled Bavaria during the Beer Hall Putsch </Li> <Li> Dr. Kuno Kamphausen, architect, member of the Zentrum political party </Li> <Li> Eugen von Kessel, former officer and police captain </Li> <Li> Erich Klausener, leader of the police department in the Prussian ministry of internal affairs, president of Berlin's Catholic Action group . </Li> <Li> Hans - Karl Koch, member of the Reichstag, SA - general in the group of Westmark </Li> <Li> Fritz von Krausser, member of the Reichstag, chief the leading office of the OSAF </Li> <Li> Adalbert Probst, the national director of the Catholic Youth Sports Association (German: Deutsche Jugendkraft - Sportverbands) </Li> <Li> Hans Ramshorn, member of the Reichstag, SA - general in Oberschlesien and chief of police of Gleiwitz </Li> <Li> Ernst Röhm, SA - chief of staff </Li> <Li> Paul Röhrbein, SA - captain, leader of the first SA of Berlin </Li> <Li> Erich Schiewek, SA - man from Breslau, accompanied Heines to Bad Wiessee as substitute adjutant </Li> <Li> Kurt von Schleicher, former Chancellor of Germany </Li> <Li> Elisabeth von Schleicher, wife of Kurt von Schleicher </Li> <Li> Willi Schmid, the music critic of the Münchener Neueste Nachrichten, a Munich newspaper (killed in a case of mistaken identity) </Li> <Li> August Schneidhuber, member of the Reichstag, chief of police of Munich </Li> <Li> Johann Konrad Schragmüller, member of the Reichstag, chief of police of Magdeburg </Li> <Li> Emil Sembach, member of the Reichstag, ex-SS - general </Li> <Li> Father Bernhard Stempfle, defrocked priest, former co-prisoner in Landsberg, Bavaria, and by few sources considered to have been one of the editors of Mein Kampf </Li> <Li> Gregor Strasser, former high - ranking Nazi party member, father of Hitler's godchildren </Li> <Li> Vogel, chauffeur of Ernst Röhm </Li> <Li> Gerd Voß, lawyer </Li> <Li> Jeanette Zweig, a Jewish woman from Hirschberg </Li> <Li> Ernestine Zoref, Housewife and mistress to SA supporter Baron Paul Edmund von Hahn </Li> <Li> The proprietor and head - waiter of the Bratwurst - Gloeckle in Munich, Röhm's favourite tavern, where Goebbels had met secretly with Röhm prior to the purge . Although the two men were not involved politically, it was deemed that they' knew too much' . </Li> </Ul> <Li> Otto Ballerstedt, former Chief of the "Bayernbund", a secessionist political group in Bavaria, responsible for putting Hitler in prison for a month in 1922 after he had physically attacked Ballerstedt during a rally </Li>

Who died in the night of the long knives
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