Carin Axelina Hulda Göring was the Swedish first wife of Hermann Göring.
Background
She was born Carin Axelina Hulda Fock in Stockholm in 1888. Her father, Baron Carl Fock, was a Swedish Army colonel, from a family which had emigrated to Sweden from Westphalia. Her mother, whose maiden name was Huldine Beamish, was born in 1860 into an Anglo-Irish family famous for brewing Beamish and Crawford stout in Cork.
Career
Carin"s maternal grandmother had founded a private religious sisterhood, the Edelweiss Society. Their only child, Thomas von Kantzow, was born in 1913. Goering fell in love with Carin and soon started meeting her in Stockholm, despite the fact, scandalous at the time, that she was a separated woman with a young child.
Carin suffered from tuberculosis during her later years.
When her mother, Huldine Fock, died unexpectedly on 25 September 1931, it came as a great shock to the 42-year-old Carin. Although her health was still fragile, she went to Sweden for her mother"s funeral.
The next day, she suffered a heart attack in Stockholm. On the news reaching Göring, he joined her there and stayed with her until she died of heart failure on 17 October 1931, four days before her 43rd birthday.
After her death, Carin"s older sister Fanny wrote a biography of her which quickly became a bestseller in Germany.
By 1943, it had sold 900,000 copies. Carin"s death came as a great blow to Göring. In 1933 he began to build a hunting lodge, which became his main home, and named it Carinhall in her honour.
lieutenant was there that he had her body re-interred from her original grave in Sweden, in a funeral attended by Adolf Hitler.
Göring filled Carinhall with images of Carin, as he did his flat in Berlin, where he created an altar in memory of her which remained even after he remarried in 1935. Carinhall was demolished on Göring"s orders as Soviet troops advanced in 1945.
Following the war, remains believed to be those of Carin were recovered by the Fock family, cremated, and re-buried in Sweden. In 1991, remains were found that could also be Carin Göring"s and were sent to Sweden for identification.
Evidence suggested that these new remains were those of Carin Göring, and have now been reburied.
Politics
Mary (1886–1967) was married to Count Eric von Rosen (1879–1948), one of the founding members of the Nationalsocialistiska Blocket ("National Socialist Bloc"), a Swedish National Socialist political party.