A mesmerising new book by Jonathan Mayo and Emma Craigie gives a minute-by-minute account of Hitler’s last day in his Berlin bunker exactly 70 years ago.

Yesterday we told how drunkenness and debauchery broke out among his henchmen as the Russians closed in. Today, in our final extract, we reveal how the newly married Fuhrer and his bride fulfilled their suicide pact.

Monday, April 30, 1945, 8.30am

As the Soviet bombardment of Berlin continues, the six children of propaganda chief Joseph Goebbels and his wife Magda are sitting around the table in the upper bunker, eating a breakfast of bread, butter and jam.

One thing they all appreciate is that they’re allowed as much food as they like. Their outfits, however, are getting grubby. When they arrived a week ago, it was without any changes of clothes — as their parents didn’t expect to be staying for long.

While they eat, Magda is lying on her bed. She can hear the chat and clatter of the children from her room, but she can’t face seeing them and has no appetite for breakfast.

Doomed: Joseph Goebbels, wife Magda and three of their six children - Hilde, Helmut and Helga - with Hitler in 1938

About 11.30am

Eva Braun — who married her lover Adolf Hitler only yesterday — has just finished applying her make-up. Now at a loose end, she asks Hitler’s secretary, Traudl Junge, to come into her room in the Führerbunker. [Hitler’s bunker is below the older ‘upper bunker’ and connected to it by a staircase. There’s also a passageway to the nearby Reich Chancellery cellar, where staff and doctors are still working.]

‘I can’t bear to be alone with my thoughts,’ Eva tells Junge.

It’s hard to know what to talk about. They try to remember happier times — like the spring in their home town of Munich. Eva suddenly leaps up, opens her wardrobe and pulls out a silver fox fur — one of her favourite coats. ‘Frau Junge,’ she says, holding it out, ‘I’d like to give you this coat as a goodbye present.’

She fondles the soft fur. ‘I always love seeing well-dressed women. I like the thought of you wearing it — I want you to have it now and enjoy it.’

Junge is very moved, though she can’t imagine where and when she might wear it.

11.45am

Hitler shuffles along the corridor to the telephone switchboard. He pauses in the doorway. Switchboard operator Rochus Misch stands up, awaiting orders, but there are none.Without saying anything, the Führer turns away and shuffles back to his room.

Midday

The Führer summons the military staff for the daily situation conference. General Weidling, commandant of Berlin, is very pessimistic.

‘Munitions are running out,’ he says. ‘Air supplies have become impossible. Morale is very low. Fighting only continues in the city centre. The battle of Berlin will be over by evening.’

Hitler is silent for a long time. Then, in a weary voice, he asks General Mohnke for his view. When Mohnke nods heavily, the Führer pushes himself slowly out of his chair.

A depiction of Hitler by actor Theodor Morell in Channel 4 programme Hitler's Hidden Drug Habit

About 12.30pm

Eva is in her bathroom with her maid Liesl, choosing her final outfit. The Goebbels children are playing in their bedroom. Magda Goebbels is still lying on her bed.

In his study, Hitler sends for Martin Bormann, his private secretary, who arrives in a sleep-crumpled suit. Hitler tells him: ‘The time has come. Fräulein Braun and I will end our lives this afternoon.’ (No one will ever hear him call her Frau Hitler.)

12.45pm

Now Hitler summons his adjutant Otto Günsche, a quiet six-footer with a long, serious face. ‘It’s time to get the petrol,’ says the Führer. ‘We need it now, urgently. I don’t want to end up in some Moscow waxwork display.’

In the kitchen in the upper bunker, Constanze Manziarly is supervising the cooking of Hitler’s last meal. There’s a big pan of water coming to the boil for spaghetti, and one of the orderlies is making a vinaigrette dressing for a salad.

Like Hitler, Manziarly is an Austrian — and she has been trained in Viennese/Bavarian cuisine. She’s a plump, self-effacing woman who takes great trouble to prepare vegetarian dishes that suit his delicate stomach.

1pm

Eva has no appetite for lunch so she has stayed in her room with her maid, Liesl. She has just chosen the dress she’ll die in: it’s black with white roses around the neck — one of her husband’s favourites. Liesl has pressed it and is now styling Eva’s hair. Meanwhile, Hitler sits down to eat with the cook and the two secretaries, Gerda Christian and Traudl Junge. As they twirl the plain spaghetti around their forks and prod the cabbage and raisin salad, everyone maintains an artificial composure.

No one talks except Hitler, who delivers a monologue on the future of Germany and the difficulties that lie ahead. As he drones on, the secretaries are desperate to get away.

Hitler’s monologues are dreaded by his entourage. Some of his generals have turned to drink to cope with the tedium of his all-night tirades about modern art, philosophy, race, technology. In the bunker, his favoured topics have narrowed further: dog training, diet and the stupidity of the world.

About 1.30pm

In the Führerbunker, switchboard operator Rochus Misch is sick with panic. He has just seen Gestapo chief Heinrich Müller in the corridor, flanked by two high-ranking SS men. What’s he doing here?

Misch can think of only two possible answers —either he has come to shoot all the eyewitnesses to Hitler’s death, or he’s going to blow up the bunker with a time bomb.

About 2.45pm

Hitler is pictured celebrating with German soldiers after the occupation of Poland in September 1939

In the corridor of the upper bunker, Traudl Junge sits in an armchair, smoking a cigarette. Hitler’s SS adjutant, Otto Günsche, comes up the stairs from the Führerbunker to tell her: ‘Come on, the Führer wants to say goodbye.’

She quickly stubs out her cigarette and tries to waft away the smell. Hitler hates cigarettes and he’s always warning his staff that smoking causes cancer — a view that many of them regard as eccentric.

Junge walks down to the Führerbunker corridor, where the cook, the other secretary and a few other staff have gathered, together with Bormann and Magda and Joseph Goebbels.

After a few moments, Hitler emerges from his study with his wife. He walks very slowly, and Junge notices that he’s stooping more than ever. Then he shuffles from person to person, proffering a quivering hand. When it’s Junge’s turn, she feels the warmth of his right hand but realises that he’s looking right through her. He mutters something but she can’t take it in. She is numb, frozen.

Eva approaches Hitler’s valet, Heinz Linge, and says: ‘Thank you so much for everything you’ve done for the Führer.’ She leans in, lowering her voice. ‘Should you meet my sister Gretl, please don’t tell her how her husband met his death.’ She doesn’t want Gretl to know that Hermann Fegelein, a cavalry officer, was executed yesterday for desertion — on Hitler’s orders.

Then Eva goes over to Junge and hugs her. ‘Do your best to get out,’ Eva says. ‘It may still be possible. And give Bavaria my love.’ She’s smiling, but her voice catches.

Joseph Goebbels suddenly feels desperate. He has sworn loyalty unto death, and demonstrated it by bringing his wife and children into the bunker to die alongside their leader. But now the prospect seems unbearable.

‘Mein Führer, it’s still possible to escape. You can oversee the war from Obersalzberg... Mein Führer, I beg you to consider.’

Hitler replies: ‘You know my decision. I’m not going to change it. You and your family can of course leave Berlin.’

Hitler was found in his bunker sitting side by side with wife Eva after they had both killed themselves

Joseph Goebbels looks Hitler in the eyes. ‘We will stand by you and follow your example, mein Führer.’

The two men shake hands. Then, leaning on Linge, Hitler retreats slowly to his study.

At the study doorway, he turns to look at Linge. ‘I’m going to go now,’ he tells the valet. ‘You know what you have to do. Ensure my body is burned and my remaining possessions are destroyed.’

‘Jawohl, mein Führer.’ Hitler offers his hand. He looks exhausted, grey. Before turning into his study, he raises his right arm in a final salute.

Meanwhile, Traudl Junge is suddenly seized by a wild urge to get as far away as possible. She rushes towards the stairs to the upper bunker. Halfway up, sitting in silence, are the six Goebbels children. No one has remembered to give them lunch.

‘Come along,’ says Junge, trying to keep her voice calm and light. ‘I’ll get you something to eat.’

About 3.15pm

Heinz Linge closes the door behind Adolf and Eva Hitler. A few moments later there is a commotion in the corridor.

It’s Magda Goebbels, who is crying and begging to be allowed to see the Führer one last time. Like her husband, she is panicking as the reality of killing the children comes closer.

Her meeting with Hitler is brief. She begs him to leave the capital —because if he goes, then her husband will agree to go, too — and she and the children can leave.

His refusal is brusque. She emerges from the room weeping. Linge closes the heavy iron security door of the study behind Adolf and Eva Hitler for the final time.

In the Reich Chancellery canteen, someone puts on a record and a group of soldiers and nurses start to dance. There is no longer a sense of day or night in this underground world.

3.30pm

A mesmerising new book by Jonathan Mayo and Emma Craigie gives a minute-by-minute account of Hitler’s last day in his Berlin bunker exactly 70 years ago

Hitler’s adjutant, Otto Günsche, is standing guard outside the study. Goebbels, Bormann and several members of staff are hovering near by, waiting for the sound of a gunshot. There’s a lull in the shelling. The only sound is the loud drone of the diesel generator.

At the table in the upper bunker corridor, the Goebbels children are wolfing down their late lunch. Little Helmut is particularly cheery. He loves hearing all the explosions: ‘The bangs can’t hurt us in the bunker,’ he says.

Then there is the sound of a gunshot. For a moment they all fall silent. Then Helmut shouts: ‘Bullseye!’

Traudl Junge presumes that the Führer has just killed himself, but says nothing. After buttering another slice of bread, she asks the children what games they are planning to play after lunch.

3.40pm

Heinz Linge decides that they have waited long enough. He opens the door and enters the study. Martin Bormann is close behind him.

They find Hitler and his wife sitting side by side on the sofa. There are two pistols by Hitler’s feet, the one he fired and the one he kept as a reserve.

He has shot himself through the right temple and his head is leaning towards the wall. There is blood on the carpet, blood on the blue and white sofa.

Eva is sitting on Hitler’s right. Her legs are drawn up on the sofa; her shoes are on the floor. On the low table in front of them is the little brass box in which she kept her cyanide phial. The poison has contorted her face.

3.45pm

The children go back to their bedroom to read and play. Traudl Junge helps herself to a glass of Steinhäger gin. She knows that it’s all over.

3.50pm

With the help of three SS guards, Linge carries Hitler’s body up the steps to the Reich Chancellery garden. The Führer’s head is covered by the blanket but his legs are sticking out. Hitler’s adjutant Otto Günsche lays Eva’s body beside Hitler’s in a spot about three metres from the bunker door.

Soviet shells are falling all around as Günsche and Linge pour petrol over the bodies. Goebbels has brought matches, which Linge uses to light some paper.

Then he hurls the burning paper towards the bodies and races back to the bunker entrance. A fireball engulfs the bodies as he pulls the door shut behind him. The funeral party raise their arms and shout ‘Heil Hitler’ from the safety of the staircase.

Hitler is pictured with Eva Braun, above. The couple kept to their suicide pact with Braun using cyanide to kill herself

4.15pm

Otto Günsche drops on to a bench beside Traudl Junge in the upper bunker. He takes a bottle of schnapps from her and lifts it to his lips. His large hands are shaking and he stinks of petrol.

‘I’ve carried out the Führer’s last order,’ he says softly. ‘His body has been burned.’ Junge doesn’t reply. Günsche leaves to give orders to two SS officers to bury the remains.

Downstairs, Linge is in Hitler’s study, disposing of the bloodstained carpet, medicines, documents and clothes.

6pm

Russian soldiers are charging the front of the Reichstag and blasting through bricked-up doors and windows.

SS officer Ewald Lindloff climbs the steps from the Führerbunker to the Reich Chancellery garden, carrying a spade. The bodies of Hitler and his wife are not only burned, he finds, but ‘torn open’ by recent shelling. He buries their remains in a fresh shell crater.

About 6.30pm

The first Russian soldiers to force their way into the Reichstag are met with a storm of grenades and gunfire. As reinforcements flow into the building, climbing over the dead and injured, the Russians gradually make their way up the stairs, firing from sub-machine guns and lobbing grenades.

7.30pm

In the upper bunker, Magda Goebbels is putting her children to bed. The youngest, Heide, has a sore throat. Her mother finds her a red scarf. This is their last night’s sleep.

The next morning their mother will tell them that they must have a vaccination that all the soldiers are getting to protect them against disease. In fact, it will be morphine.

Once the children are dozing, Ludwig Stumpfegger, one of the Reich Chancellery doctors, will crush a cyanide capsule between each child’s teeth.

Immediately afterwards, Joseph and Magda Goebbels will go up to the Reich Chancellery garden and commit suicide together. It is presumed that they also take cyanide.

The couple are pictured in the teahouse on the 'Eagle's Nest' in Berchtesgaden, southeast Germany

8pm

Hitler’s death is being kept secret from staff in the Reich Chancellery. Even the kitchen orderlies have no idea that the meal Constanze Manziarly is preparing for the Führer — mashed potato and fried eggs — is a charade.

Two Russian soldiers, bearing a red flag and heading for the Reichstag roof, are mown down as they reach the second floor.

10pm

Traudl Junge is sitting with her fellow secretary Gerda Christian in the Führerbunker corridor with other staff, drinking coffee and schnapps. The cook, Constanze Manziarly, is sitting in a corner, her eyes red from weeping.

Otto Günsche and General Mohnke are talking about breaking out of the bunker. Junge’s ears prick up. In one voice, she and Gerda say: ‘Take us, too!’ The two men nod.

Junge doesn’t think she’ll survive, but it seems better to do something active rather than ‘wait for the Russians to come and find my corpse in the mousetrap’.

Next morning she will successfully break out of the bunker, dressed as a male soldier and carrying a pistol. In early July she is captured by the Russians, who interrogate her thoroughly before handing her over to the British. She is released in 1946 and continues to work as a secretary in postwar Germany, not dying until 2002.

Aftermath

Hitler’s death is announced on Hamburg radio at 10.30pm on May 1. Listeners are told that the Führer has ‘fallen at his command post, fighting to the last breath against Bolshevism and for Germany’.

In Moscow, Stalin’s response is blunt: ‘So — that’s the end of the bastard.’

The first Russian soldiers do not in fact enter the Reich Chancellery complex until the following day, quickly discovering the charred remains of Joseph and Magda Goebbels in the garden, and the bodies of their six children on the bunk beds.

It takes another week for Hitler and Eva’s remains to be found. The Führer is identified from a well-preserved jawbone.

On July 16, 1945, Winston Churchill visits the Reich Chancellery. He stares at the spot where Hitler’s body has been burned, then gives a swift V for victory sign.

‘This is what would have happened to us if they’d won the war,’ he said. ‘We would have been in the bunker.’