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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Alfred_RedlAlfred Redl - Wikipedia

    Redl's successor, Ronge, also appears as himself – chief of Austro-Hungarian Intelligence. He is trying to foil the attempts of British Intelligence to find out what Austria intends for Serbia in 1914. Films. Colonel Redl (dir. Hans Otto, 1925) The Affair of Colonel Redl (dir. Karl Anton, 1931) Espionage (dir. Franz Antel, 1955)

    • Colonel
  2. 13. Okt. 1985 · The Redl Affair had everything: sex, espionage, betrayal, a fall from greatness and a sensational climax in which Redl, repentant, with nobility now, went to his death like a figure of high...

  3. The Affair of Colonel Redl (Czech: Aféra plukovníka Redla) is a Czech drama film directed by Karel Anton. German version of the movie The Case of Colonel Redl was released in 1931. The film is considered lost.

    • Willy Engel-Berger
    • Elektafilm
  4. 9. Sept. 2016 · Redl excelled. He became keen on Russian internal affairs and was soon directed to the Intelligence Bureau of the Austro-Hungarian General Staff, where he became in charge of the Russian sector in 1900. It wasn’t much later that he was on the Russian payroll. The Tsarist Intelligence Service found out that Redl was a homosexual ...

  5. On 25 May 1913 Colonel Alfred Redl, the former head of Austria-Hungary’s military espionage, committed suicide in Vienna. As it turned out, Redl had betrayed Austria-Hungary’s spy-network in Russia and had sold sensitive information on war preparations to the Czar’s military intelligence.

  6. 25. Mai 2017 · politics 25. May 2017 2 Harald Sack. Alfred Redl (1864-1913) On May 25, 1913, officer of the Imperial Austrian army Alfred Redl committed suicide. Redl, who rose to head the counter-intelligence efforts of Austria-Hungary, was one of the leading figures of pre-World War I espionage.

  7. 3. Apr. 2024 · March 14, 1864, Lemberg, Austria. Died: May 25, 1913, Vienna (aged 49) Alfred Redl (born March 14, 1864, Lemberg, Austria—died May 25, 1913, Vienna) was the chief of intelligence for the Austrian army from 1907 to 1912 and at the same time the chief spy for tsarist Russia in Austria.