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Rudolf Dassler

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Nationality
  
German

Role
  
Adolf Dassler's brother

Nephews
  
Horst Dassler

Name
  
Rudolf Dassler

Children
  
Armin Dassler

Known for
  
Founder of Puma

Organizations founded
  
Puma SE

Occupation
  
Entrepreneur

Siblings
  
Adolf Dassler


Rudolf Dassler Rudolf Dassler Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Born
  
26 March 1898 (
1898-03-26
)
Herzogenaurach, Kingdom of Bavaria, German Empire

Died
  
October 27, 1974, Herzogenaurach, Germany

Similar People
  
Adolf Dassler, Horst Dassler, Armin Dassler, Francois‑Henri Pinault, Barbara Smit

Adidas And Puma Brand Success Story In Hindi | Adolf & Rudolf Dassler Biography | Motivational Video


Rudolf Dassler (26 March 1898 in Herzogenaurach, Germany – 27 October 1974 in Herzogenaurach) was the German founder of the sportswear company Puma and the older brother of Adidas founder, Adolf "Adi" Dassler. The brothers were partners in a shoe company Adi started, Gebrüder Dassler Schuhfabrik (Dassler Brothers Shoe Factory). Rudi joined in 1924, however the brothers became rivals following World War II and started their own companies in 1948.

Contents

Rudolf Dassler Happy Birthday Rudi Dassler Puma Founder

Initially calling the new company "Ruda" (Rudolf Dassler), it was soon changed to its present name of Puma. Puma is the native Quechua word for cougar, from there it went into German as well as other languages, such as Spanish, French, Russian, Romanian, Portuguese, Italian, Polish, Czech, Bulgarian, Swedish, Danish, Norwegian, Finnish, Croatian, Serbian, Slovene and Hungarian.

Rudolf Dassler Deutschland Der gesenkte Blick badischezeitungde

Life

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Adolf Dassler, Rudolf's younger brother, started to produce sports shoes in his mother's kitchen after his return from World War I. His father, Christoph, who worked in a shoe factory, and the brothers Zehlein, who produced the handmade spikes for track shoes in their blacksmith's shop, supported Adolf in starting his own business. In 1924, Rudolf joined the business, which became the Gebrüder Dassler Schuhfabrik (Dassler Brothers Shoe Factory). Rudolf was affectionately known as 'Bobby' because this was the only sound that he could make for the first three years of his life.

With the rise of Adolf Hitler in the 1930s, both Dassler brothers joined the Nazi Party, with Rudolf reputed as being the more ardent National Socialist.

Adolf served the Wehrmacht at the beginning of the war for one year on the west front. Rudolf was drafted in March 1943 fighting the Red Army in the east, and was captured April 1945 by the Gestapo for Absence Without Leave, on the way to Dachau concentration camp, so the legend goes, he was freed by US troops, only to be imprisoned again as a POW in Hammelburg. Adolf had stayed behind to produce boots for the Wehrmacht.

During the war, a growing rift between the pair reached a breaking point after an Allied bomb attack in 1943 when Adi and his wife climbed into a bomb shelter that Rudolf and his family were already in: "The dirty bastards are back again," Adi said, apparently referring to the Allied war planes, but Rudolf was convinced his brother meant him and his family. Rudolf, upon his capture by American troops, was suspected of being a member of the SS, information supposedly supplied by Adolf.

Under his direction, Puma remained a small provincial company. Only under the direction of his son, Armin Dassler, did it become the worldwide known company it remains today.

Death

Rudi Dassler died on 27 October 1974 of lung cancer at the age of 76.

References

Rudolf Dassler Wikipedia