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I’ve spent 50 years hunting for Hitler’s treasure hoard – I know where his SS thugs hid it & I can prove it

Published on April 20, 2025 at 08:52 AM

STASHED away in an uncharted bunker sealed off by the Nazis lays an elusive art collection potentially worth billions.

And one hopeful writer has now told Flying Eze that he could unearth the stolen masterpieces by the end of this year.

Man sitting on a tree stump in a forest.
German treasure hunter Burkhart List believes he could unearth a sought-after collection Nazi loot by the end of 2025
People clearing brush in a forest.
He has spent decades attempting to unearth the treasure
Oil painting of a still life with apples, a pitcher, and a glass of wine.
It is speculated that the coveted hoard could include works by Pisarro

Map showing the location of Nazi-looted art in Deutschkatharinenberg, Germany.

German author Burkhart List has dedicated decades of his life to recovering the missing art collection of Baron Ferenc Hatvany.

The Hungarian's treasures were plundered during after he was persecuted by the – but they have never been found.

Theories speculate that either ‘s notorious SS or ‘s brutal Red looted the Hungarian collector's fortune.

After fleeing , losing his collection and surviving the war, Hatvany died in in 1958.

Treasure hunter List believes there are up to 800 of Hatvany's collected paintings buried away in a depot near the – border – which could be worth of dollars today.

And although List, 75, is dead set on recovering the valuable hoard – authorities have stepped in his way at a crucial moment under what he calls “ridiculous circumstances”.

The determined German said that a groundbreaking geographical pointed to a man-made bunker which contained objects around 40 metres underground.

List claims to know the co-ordinates of this mysterious cache – which he believes is where the SS hid Hatvany's stolen paintings in 1944.

He told : “This is the greatest collection of French Impressionists outside – including fascinating paintings by Monet, Pissarro, Degas, Renoir, Manet, Cezanne and more.”

He added that the renowned Hatvany family was “the most artistically outstanding family in Budapest”, and that Ferenc Hatvany himself was also a gifted painter.

List explained that the hidden collection would be valued at billions of .

“In 1963, the collection was valued at around 400 million Deutsche Marks – today, it is at least €4billion (£3.4billion),” the expert said.

On top of the incredible Hatvany collection, the writer believes that the site conceals further art, gold and stolen from Jews who were persecuted during ‘s occupation of Hungary in March 1944.

These were to be stored to build the wealth of ‘s regime, had he won the war.

List explained: “The cache was presumably the central storage of the SS and Gestapo. So it's not just about the Hatvany collection.

“The contents of this storage unit were to be used to build up the Fourth Reich.”

Illustration of two men playing cards at a table.
Two card players, 1892-1895, by Paul Cezanne was also lost during the Nazi occupation
Illustration of a wanted poster about the search for Nazi loot hidden in a mine in Saxony.
Burkhart List's website states that Saxon authorities are ‘wilfully obstructing' him, and this poster shows a map of an unexplained ‘gigantic magnetic field' by the depot
Adolf Hitler giving the Nazi salute from a car.
Adolf Hitler's brutal SS plundered Hatvany's art collection before stashing it away

The mystifying depot is located near the small village of Deutschkatharinenberg in the Ore Mountains.

This region is known for its sprawling mines and tunnels – many of which have been rumoured to harbour treasure over the decades.

These legends circulated through local gossip of SS lorries coming and going in the dead of night to offload the riches.

The survey which List is looking into was carried out by Professor Wolfgang Neubauer, director of Austria’s Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Virtual .

The researcher was part of a team that made a game-changing discovery at Stonehenge using cutting-edge geophysical imaging in 2010.

His findings around Deutschkatharinenberg suggest that the entrance to the mysterious mine was sealed by an explosion.

List says it will be difficult but possible to unearth the sought-after loot by the end of this year.

He said his permit would need to be greenlit again but also needed extra funds.

The hunter said: “We need investors who don't put their into defence companies, but instead donate it to this peace project.”

He said that €200,000 (£170,000) would be the minimum sum required to carry out the ambitious project.

Man clearing brush in a forest.
The author says he has the co-ordinates for the cache of secreted goods
Photo of a dark, earthy cavity in the ground.
Site of List's research, which he says requires more funding

According to List's rigorous research, the SS took their pillaged loot from Budapest to Rosenheim by lorry, and then to by train.

But the story isn't as simple as that – List says there were actually two carriages that decoupled from the train from Rosenheim to Berlin.

And these two separated carriages which held the stolen masterpieces were instead directed to Deutschkatharinenberg.

Despite List believing that the valuable collection is still down there – he can't specify exactly which paintings might be found.

Unfortunately for List – his search was recently stopped at the last moment.

revoked his exploration permit in January 2024 after a Stone Age tool was found just over half a mile away.

The irritated treasure hunter is appealing against the decision to revoke his digging permit.

He complained: “My discovery is something completely different from the discovery of a stone club from the Neolithic period around 1,000 metres away.”

The furious expert blasted: “These circumstances are so ridiculous that it is impossible to understand how grown-up people could seriously use this as an argument to revoke my excavation licence – and they did.”

List said that the Saxon authorities were working against him to prevent the hidden loot from being brought to light.

He said: “The intention to prevent access was and still seems to be the declared aim of the Saxon authorities.”

Person reviewing Nazi loot on a laptop outdoors.
He says that the authorities are working against him
Man in hat gesturing.
List, 75, says the collection would be worth billions today

The writer believes the “stubbornness of authorities and politicians” and more dubious forces are working against him.

“Obviously, it is part of the German ‘s policy to prevent the hidden Nazi looted treasures from being brought to light.

“The German authorities have done nothing to find it. But they are doing everything they can to prevent it from being recovered,” he added.

List’s ambitions for the enigmatic Hatvany collection are the latest in a long line of mostly fruitless Nazi treasure hunts.

Since the end of the Second World War, numerous have attempted to find a splurge of hidden riches.

Since the end of WWII, various explorers and researchers have been on the lookout for Nazi art that was taken from Jewish or looted during the war.

Although some pieces have been recovered through extensive efforts – the whereabouts of several paintings by artists like , Monet, and Cézanne still remain unknown.

Among these lost masterpieces is the fabled Amber Room.

It was chamber of baroque antiques given to Peter the Great in 1716 by the first king of Prussia, Friedrich I.

The collection was stolen from a palace in in 1941 by German soldiers and has been secreted in an Ore Mountains mine.

The Amber Room is the most iconic prize waiting to be found.

And a search for it has been ongoing since the 1990s near the village of Deutschneudorf – extremely nearby to List’s digging site.

List says he also has at least a hundred theories of where the Amber Room may be.

Last year, a mass hunt was sparked after a map resurfaced showing where a £15million stash of gold coins and jewels had been buried during World War Two.

A mad hunt for the goods started in an obscure Dutch village named Ommeren, around 80 kilometres south-east of , after a hand drawn map was unearthed in 2023.

Photo of the Amber Room in Catherine Palace.
The Amber Room, was taken from Leningrad, now St Petersburg
Interior of the Amber Room at Catherine Palace.
A reconstruction of the Amber Room at the Catherine Palace near St Petersburg, Russia, which treasure hunters have been trying to track down the original contents of
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