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Amongst those often listed as ' members ' of a Hitlerian Bayreuth Circle are Cosima Wagner ( d. 1930 ), second wife of the composer, Winifred Wagner, wife of the composer's son Siegfried, and H. S. Chamberlain.
None of the Wagners, however, played any personally active role in the Nazi movement, although Hitler was undoubtedly influenced by Chamberlain's Foundations of the Nineteenth Century.
Chamberlain himself joined the Nazi Party and contributed to its publications.
The Nazi journal Völkischer Beobachter dedicated five columns to praising him on his 70th birthday, describing Foundations as the " gospel of the Nazi movement ".
Hitler later attended Chamberlain's funeral in January, 1927 along with several highly ranked members of the Nazi party.
Other members of the putative ' Circle ', such as Winifred Wagner, were sycophants of Hitler, partly from political sympathy, partly in the hopes of obtaining advantages ( including financial support ) for the Bayreuth Festival.
There is however no evidence that the actions of either Chamberlain or Winifred Wagner-or others associated with Bayreuth-led Hitler to power or had any influence over him once he obtained it.

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