Table of Contents

Red Skull

Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary

Part 2: Origin and Evolution

Publication History and Creation

The Red Skull's first appearance is a subject of some debate among comic historians due to retroactive continuity changes. The character concept was created by writer and artist Joe Simon and legendary artist Jack Kirby. A version of the Red Skull first appeared in Captain America Comics #1 (March 1941), published by Timely Comics, the predecessor to Marvel. However, this version was later revealed to be an industrialist named George Maxon, an agent of the true Red Skull. The definitive Red Skull, Johann Shmidt, was introduced by writer France Herron and artist Jack Kirby in Captain America Comics #7 (October 1941). Created during the height of World War II, the Red Skull was designed to be the ultimate villain for the ultimate patriotic hero. He was a direct, terrifying representation of the Nazi threat, giving Captain America and Bucky a tangible, recurring nemesis who embodied the very evil they fought against. His grotesque red skull mask was a masterstroke of design, creating an instantly recognizable and horrifying symbol of death and fascism that has endured for over eighty years. After the Golden Age, Shmidt was brought back into modern continuity by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby in Tales of Suspense #66 (June 1965), establishing his survival via suspended animation, mirroring Captain America's own return and cementing their eternal rivalry.

In-Universe Origin Story

The origin of the Red Skull is a chilling tale of a man who was not born a monster, but who chose to embrace evil at every turn.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

Johann Shmidt was born in a small village in Germany to Hermann and Martha Shmidt. His childhood was a litany of horror. His mother died in childbirth, a tragedy that drove his abusive, alcoholic father to attempt to drown the infant Johann. The doctor who delivered him intervened, saving Johann, only for his father to commit suicide later that night. This left the young Shmidt in an orphanage, where he lived a lonely and embittered existence. He ran away as a boy, living on the streets as a beggar and a thief, his heart hardening with a deep-seated hatred for all humanity. His life changed forever as a young man working as a bellhop in a prestigious hotel. By chance, he was serving Adolf Hitler himself when the Führer, in a fit of rage, began berating one of his Gestapo officers. Hitler proclaimed that he could train anyone, even the insignificant bellhop, to be a better National Socialist. Seeing the deep, simmering hatred in Shmidt's eyes, Hitler saw a kindred spirit—a vessel for his own dark ideology. He took Shmidt under his wing, personally training him to be his ultimate agent of terror. Hitler gave Shmidt a unique uniform and a horrifying, blood-red skull mask, and the legend of the Red Skull was born. Shmidt became the embodiment of Nazi intimidation, a master of espionage, sabotage, and mass destruction. He was second only to Hitler in power and terror within the Third Reich. During the war, he first clashed with Captain America, and an obsessive, eternal rivalry was born. Near the end of the war, as the Allies closed in, Shmidt was caught in a cave-in during a final battle with Captain America. He was exposed to an experimental gas that placed him in suspended animation, preserving him for decades until he was discovered in the modern era by the terrorist organization, HYDRA. Upon his revival, he resumed his quest for world domination and his vendetta against a similarly revived Steve Rogers. He has orchestrated countless world-threatening schemes, often utilizing the power of the Cosmic Cube, and his evil has evolved from pure Nazism to a broader, more nihilistic philosophy dedicated to proving that chaos is humanity's natural state.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

The MCU origin of Johann Shmidt, depicted in Captain America: The First Avenger, shares the same core identity but differs significantly in the details. In this continuity, Shmidt was the ambitious and brilliant head of HYDRA, the deep science division of the Nazi party. He was not merely a political operative but a scientist obsessed with mythology and occult power, believing the tales of the Norse gods to be rooted in history. His obsession led him to locate the Tesseract, a cube of immense cosmic power (later revealed to be the Space Stone). However, his ambition predated his discovery. Shmidt had a burning desire for power, viewing himself as superior to all others. He forced Dr. Abraham Erskine, the creator of the Super-Soldier Serum, to administer an early, unstable version of the formula to him. The serum succeeded in granting him peak human strength, speed, and durability, but its imperfections horribly disfigured him, burning away his skin and leaving him with a grotesque red, skull-like visage—a physical manifestation of the monster he was within. Embracing this new identity, the Red Skull splintered HYDRA away from the Nazis, believing their ambitions were too small. He harnessed the Tesseract's power to create advanced weaponry, intending to conquer the entire world for himself. His plans were consistently thwarted by Captain America, who became his personal obsession. In their final confrontation aboard the Skull's bomber, the Valkyrie, he foolishly held the Tesseract in his bare hand. The raw cosmic energy overwhelmed him, burning a portal in space and teleporting him across the universe. For over 70 years, he was presumed dead. However, as revealed in Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame, he was not killed but cursed. The Tesseract transported him to the planet Vormir, transforming him into a spectral, immortal being known as the Stonekeeper, bound to guard the Soul Stone and guide those who seek it. This was a fate worse than death: the man who craved ultimate power was reduced to a gatekeeper, forever knowledgeable of a prize he could never possess.

Part 3: Abilities, Equipment & Personality

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

The Red Skull's threat comes not from superhuman power, but from his mind, his resources, and his absolute refusal to be constrained by morality.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

The MCU's Red Skull is more of a super-soldier and less of a political mastermind, with his powers and goals more directly tied to cosmic artifacts.

Part 4: Key Relationships & Network

Core Allies

The Red Skull does not have friends, only pawns and subordinates.

Arch-Enemies

Affiliations

Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines

The "Sleepers" Saga (Tales of Suspense #72-74, Captain America #101-104)

One of the Red Skull's first and most elaborate schemes after his modern-day revival. It was revealed that before the end of WWII, he had constructed three massive, incredibly powerful war machines called Sleepers and hidden them in secret locations. They were programmed to activate decades later and wreak havoc. Captain America, with the help of S.H.I.E.L.D., had to race against time to stop each devastating robot, culminating in a plan by the Skull to use a “Fourth Sleeper” to detonate them all and engulf the Earth in a nuclear holocaust. This storyline solidified the Skull's status as a master planner and a global-level threat in the Silver Age.

Acts of Vengeance (1989-1990 Crossover)

While not exclusively a Red Skull story, he was a key background manipulator. The premise involved a cabal of master villains (led by a disguised Loki) who orchestrated a massive swap of heroes' rogues' galleries, believing the heroes would be unprepared for unfamiliar foes. The Red Skull was a member of this cabal, using the opportunity to pit some of the world's most dangerous villains against his hated foe, Captain America. His most notable move was manipulating the android Magneto into fighting Cap, showcasing his strategic genius and willingness to use anyone as a pawn.

Captain America: The Death of the Dream (Captain America vol. 5 #25–42)

This is arguably the Red Skull's magnum opus and greatest victory. Following the superhero `Civil War`, the Skull orchestrated the perfect assassination of Steve Rogers. Using a combination of Crossbones as a sniper for distraction and a brainwashed Sharon Carter to fire the fatal shots at close range, he succeeded in killing his nemesis on the steps of a federal courthouse. His plan, however, was far more complex. The gun Sharon used didn't just kill Rogers; it “froze” his consciousness in time and space. The Skull's ultimate goal was to bring Rogers back and transfer his own mind into Captain America's body, forever seizing the ultimate symbol of freedom for himself. He nearly succeeded, only being foiled at the last moment by Bucky Barnes (then Captain America) and the other heroes.

Uncanny Avengers & AXIS (2012-2015)

This storyline represents one of the most significant changes to the character. Having stolen the brain of the deceased Charles Xavier, the Red Skull became the “Red Onslaught,” a telepathic monster with the power to broadcast pure hatred across the globe. During the AXIS event, a spell cast by the Scarlet Witch and Doctor Doom to defeat him backfired, causing a moral “inversion” in everyone present. The Red Skull's personality was flipped, and he became the “White Skull,” a purely heroic and noble figure who fought to undo his evil. The inversion was eventually reversed, returning him to his villainous self, but the event remains a bizarre and crucial chapter in his history.

Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions

See Also

Notes and Trivia

1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6)

1)
The creation of the Red Skull was a direct response to the rise of Nazism in Europe. Joe Simon noted, “The Red Skull was created… to be the ultimate Nazi… He was so evil that Hitler would have been afraid of him.”
2)
In the MCU, the Red Skull's line on Vormir, “I guide others to a treasure I cannot possess,” is a direct thematic parallel to his core motivation. He craves power (the Tesseract, the Infinity Stones) but his own flaws and ambition are what prevent him from ever truly wielding it.
3)
The storyline where Red Skull's consciousness was transferred into a clone of Steve Rogers' body occurred in Captain America #350 (1989) by Mark Gruenwald. For nearly two decades in publication history, the Skull possessed all of Captain America's physical abilities.
4)
In the comic event AXIS, when the Red Skull was “inverted” into a hero, he was still a telepath. He used his powers to try and force heroism and morality on the populace, proving that even as a “good” man, his core personality was still fundamentally fascist and controlling.
5)
There have been other minor characters who have used the Red Skull identity, but Shmidt, Malik, and the Ultimate version are the most significant.
6)
The Red Skull's “Dust of Death” was one of the first signature, recurring chemical weapons used by a comic book supervillain, predating even the Joker's iconic venom.