Edda Göring (2 June 1938 – 21 December 2018) was the only child of German politician, military leader, and leading member of the Nazi Party Hermann Göring, by his second marriage to the German actress Emmy Sonnemann.
In English-language sources the name is often spelled Goering.
Born a year before the outbreak of the Second World War, Edda spent most of her childhood years with her mother at the Göring family estate at Carinhall.
As a child she received many historical works of art as gifts, including a painting of the Madonna and Child by Lucas Cranach the Elder.
In the final stages of the war, she and her mother moved to their mountain home at Obersalzberg, near Berchtesgaden.
After the war, she went to a girls-only school, studied at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, and became a law clerk.
In the 1950s and 1960s many of the valuable gifts she received as a child, including the Madonna and Child painting, became the subject of long legal battles, most of which she eventually lost in 1968.
Unlike the children of other high-ranking Nazis, such as Gudrun Himmler and Albert Speer, Jr., Göring did not speak in public about her father's career.
However, in 1986 she was interviewed for Swedish television and spoke lovingly of both her parents.