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It seems inconceivable but on 10 May 1941, at the height of the Second World War, deputy Führer Rudolf Hess parachuted into Scotland to allegedly meet the Duke of Hamilton to negotiate a peace settlement.
His proposal was that if Britain let the Nazis take control of Europe then Germany would leave the UK alone.
Hess was branded a madman and thrown into prison. He was tried at Nuremberg in 1945 and sentenced to life in Spandau Prison for war crimes.
Theories have arisen that the Royal House of Windsor was involved in Hess’s plan. Others believe that it wasn’t Hess at all – but a body double. This was supported by a doctor in Spandau who claimed the man calling himself Hess was missing scars on his body that should have been there.
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