The execution of Dutch exotic dancer and spy Mata Hari.
Movie scene depicting the execution of Dutch exotic dancer and spy Mata Hari by a French firing squad on October 15, 1917.Today 105 years ago, on October 15, 1917, the Dutch exotic dancer Margaretha Zelle, better known as Mata Hari, was executed by the French for espionage.
Margaretha
Geertruida Zelle was born on August 7, 1876 in Leeuwarden, the
Netherlands, to an entrepreneurial father who was able to give her a
lavish childhood with a good education. As a girl, she was known for
being flamboyant and often appearing in flashy dresses.
Though
in 1889 her life changed dramatically, as her father went bankrupt, and
in 1891 her mother passed away. In 1895, at the age of 18, Margaretha
married a 38-year-old Dutch officer, and went to live with him in Dutch
Indonesia. Their marriage was plagued by the age gap and financial
struggles, but they had 2 children, one of which passed away at the age
of 2. The couple was divorced in 1902.
Margaretha
went to Paris for a new start. Without money, career or a husband, she
became an exotic dancer, dancing seductively in a salon, and almost
instantly became a success. In order to sound more exotic, she adopted
the stage name "Mata Hari", which is "Sun" in Malay.
In
1916, during the First World War, Mata Hari developed a passionate
relationship with a Russian pilot from the Russian Expeditionary Force,
Captain Vadim Maslov. He was shot down and badly wounded in the summer
of 1916, and Mata Hari requested to visit him at the front.
As
an exotic dancer from the neutral Netherlands, the French saw a special
use for her. She was allowed to visit Maslov if she agreed to spy for
France and attempt to seduce the German Crown Prince Wilhelm, whom she
had danced for several times before the war, so the French could expose
the German heir as a womanizer to the public.
Mata
Hari was offered 1 million French Francs if she could seduce him and
provide intelligence of German war plans. She agreed and traveled to
Madrid, Spain in late 1916 to meet with a German Major Kalle, in order
to set up a meeting with the Crown Prince.

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