[custom_adv] The leader of Nazi Germany spent his last days cowering in his Berlin Bunker, before consuming a cyanide capsule and shooting himself with a pistol as the Red Army closed in. After storming central Berlin, they discovered his body, along with the lair 55 feet under the Chancellery, which contained 18 small rooms and was fully self-sufficient, with its own water and electrical supply. [custom_adv] After the war, Soviet premier Joseph Stalin ordered for the bunker to be destroyed along with both the old and new Chancellery buildings. [custom_adv] But Discovery Channel’s ‘Blowing Up History’ revealed how a photographer discovered that not all the orders were completed. [custom_adv] Narrator Steven Kearney said: “In the Fuhrerbunker, all communications ran through a central communications room, with an SS sergeant on duty at all times.“And a large antenna above the bunker connected to an army radio centre allows Hitler to monitor enemy radio broadcasts.” [custom_adv] The series went on to reveal how a photographer in East Berlin four decades later risked being arrested to get a glimpse of what was left of the bunker. [custom_adv] Mr Kearney added: “In May 1945, Hitler was found dead among the rubble of his Berlin bunker, and the Soviets discover his subterranean world that has been his stronghold for the last four months. [custom_adv] “In 1986, nearly 40 years after Stalin gave the order, Robert Conrad is driving past the site now in communist East Germany.“Workers unearth something strange. Intrigued, Robert wanted to get a closer look. [custom_adv] “He dressed up as a construction worker to sneak into the site and he discovered Hitler’s bunker, somehow it has defied Stalin’s orders.” [custom_adv] Mr Conrad, who visited the site more than 30 times, showed off some of the photos during the documentary. [custom_adv] He added: “Here in the photo you can see it’s full of water to the height of my shoulder.