Nazi Germany and the
Third Reich are the common
English names for Germany
between 1933
and 1945, while it was led by Adolf
Hitler and the National Socialist
German Worker's Party (NSDAP). The name Third Reich
(Drittes Reich, "Third Reich") refers to the state as the
successor to the Holy Roman Empire
of the Middle Ages and the German Empire
of 1871–1918. In
German, the state was known as
Deutsches Reich (
German Reich) until 1943, when its official
name became
Großdeutsches Reich (
Greater German Reich).
On 30 January 1933, Adolf Hitler was appointed
Chancellor of Germany. Although he
initially headed a
coalition
government, he quickly eliminated his government partners.
At this
time Germany's borders were still determined by the Treaty of Versailles, the peace treaty
between Germany and the allied powers of the United Kingdom
, France
, United States
, Italy
, and
Japan
at the end of the First
World War. To the north, Germany was bounded by the
North
Sea
, Denmark
, and the
Baltic
Sea
; to the east, it was divided into two and bordered
Lithuania
, The Free City of Danzig
, Poland
and Czechoslovakia
; to the south, it bordered Austria
and Switzerland
and to the west, it touched France, Luxembourg
, Belgium, the Netherlands
, the Rhineland and
Saarland. These
borders changed after Germany regained control of the Rhineland,
Saarland and the
Memelland and
annexed Austria, the
Sudetenland and
Bohemia and Moravia. Germany
expanded into Greater Germany during the
Second World War, which began in 1939 after
Germany invaded Poland, triggering the United Kingdom and France to
declare war on Germany.
Germany conquered and occupied most of
Europe
and
Northern Africa during the
Second World War. Millions of
Jews and other
minorities were persecuted and murdered, particularly during the
Second World War, amidst the
Holocaust.
Despite an
alliance with other nations, mainly Italy and Japan, that together
formed the Axis powers, Germany had by
1945 been defeated and subsequently was occupied by the victorious
allied powers, the Soviet
Union
, United Kingdom, United States, and
France.
History

Adolf Hitler was appointed Chancellor
of Germany in January 1933.
The Third Reich arose in the wake of the national
shame,
embarrassment,
anger and
resentment
which resulted from the
Treaty of
Versailles. Versailles, a harsh treaty essentially dictated to
the vanquished Germans after a brutal war, provided for:
- *Germany's acceptance of and admission to sole responsibility
for causing World War I
- *the permanent forfeiture of various German territories and the
demilitarization of other German territory
- *the payment by Germany of heavy reparations, in money and in
kind, such payments being justified in the Allied view by the War
Guilt clause
- *unilateral German disarmament and severe military
restrictions
Other
conditions fostering the rise of the Third Reich include
nationalism and Pan-Germanism, civil
unrest attributed to Marxist groups, the worldwide economic depression of the 1930s
(spurred by the Wall Street Crash
of 1929), the reaction against the counter-traditionalism and
liberalism of the Weimar
period, and
the rise of communism in Germany, as
reflected by the growth of the KPD, the Communist Party of
Germany. Many voters, seeking an outlet for their
frustrations and an expression for their repudiation of
parliamentary democracy which seemed incapable of keeping a
government in power for more than a few months, began turning their
support towards the far right and far left of the political
spectrum, opting for extremist political parties such as the
Nazi Party. The Nazis offered promises of
strong authoritarian government in lieu of effete parliamentary
republicanism, civil peace, radical changes to economic policy
(including elimination of unemployment), restored national pride
(principally through the repudiation of Versailles) and racial
cleansing, implemented in part by active suppression of
Jews and
Marxists, all under
the banner of national unity and solidarity in lieu of the partisan
divisiveness of democracy and the class divisiveness of Marxism.
The Nazis (
Nationalsozialistische Deutsche
Arbeiterpartei or NSDAP,
National Socialist
German Workers' Party) promised national and cultural renewal
based on
volkisch traditionalism, and it proposed military
rearmament, repudiation of reparations and reclamation of forfeited
territory in opposition to the Treaty of Versailles; the party
claimed that through Versailles and the
liberal democracy of the Weimar Republic,
Germany's national pride had, by the inspiration and conniving of
the
Jews, been deviously surrendered by the
wicked and traitorous "
November
criminals," whose goal was to subvert and poison the German
blood.
[5]. The Nazis also
endorsed the Dolchstoßlegende
("Stab in the back legend") which figured prominently in their
propaganda as it did in propaganda of most other
nationalist-leaning parties in
Germany.
From 1925
to the 1930s, the German government evolved from a democracy to a
de facto conservative-nationalist authoritarian state under President and war
hero Paul von Hindenburg, who
opposed the liberal democratic nature of the Weimar
Republic
and wanted
to find a way to make Germany into an authoritarian state.
The natural ally of the foundation of an authoritarian state had
been the
German National
People's Party (the
Deutschnationale Volkspartei, DNVP
or "the Nationalists"), but increasingly, after 1929, more radical
and younger-generation nationalists were attracted to the
revolutionary nature of the National Socialist party, to challenge
the rising support for communism as the German economy floundered.
In addition, the middle class parties lost support as the German
electorate polarized around the left and right wings, thus making
majority government in a parliamentary system even more
difficult.
In the
German federal
election, 1928, when economic conditions had improved following
the end of the hyperinflation of 1922–23, the Nazis gained a meager
12 seats. In
German
federal election, 1930, months after the US stock market crash,
they won an astonishing 107 seats, going from a splinter group that
ranked ninth in the Reichstag to the second-largest parliamentary
party. After the
German federal election, July
1932, the Nazis were the largest party in the
Reichstag, with 230 seats.
Hindenburg was reluctant to give any substantial power to Hitler,
but former chancellor
Franz von
Papen and Hitler worked out an alliance between the Nazis and
the DNVP which would allow Hitler to assume the chancellorship
subject to the control of the traditional conservatives and for
Hindenburg to accordingly develop an authoritarian state. Hitler
consistently demanded to be appointed chancellor in order for
Hindenburg to receive any Nazi Party support of the cabinets
appointed under his authority.
On 30 January 1933 Adolf Hitler was appointed
chancellor of Germany
by Hindenburg after attempts by General
Kurt von Schleicher to form a viable
government failed (the
Machtergreifung). Von Schleicher was hoping
he could control Hitler by becoming vice chancellor and also
keeping the Nazis a minority in the cabinet. Hindenburg was put
under pressure by Hitler through his son
Oskar von Hindenburg, as well as
intrigue from former Chancellor
Franz
von Papen, leader of the
Catholic Centre Party, whose politics
were dictated in part by his desire to combat communism. Even
though the Nazis had gained the largest share of the popular vote
in the two
Reichstag general
elections of 1932, they had no majority of their own, and just a
slim majority in parliament with their Papen-proposed Nationalist
DNVP-NSDAP coalition. This coalition ruled through accepted
continuance of the Presidential decree, issued under Article 48 of
the 1919 Weimar constitution.
The National Socialist treatment of the Jews in the early months of
1933 marked the first step in a longer-term process of removing
them from German society. This plan was at the core of
Adolf Hitler's "cultural revolution".
Consolidation of power
The new government installed a totalitarian
dictatorship in a series of measures in quick
succession (see the article on Nazi forced coordination or
Gleichschaltung for
details).
On the night of 27 February 1933 the
Reichstag building was set on fire and Dutch
council communist Marinus van der Lubbe was found inside
the building. He was arrested and charged with starting the blaze.
The event
had an immediate effect on thousands of anarchists, socialists and
communists throughout the Reich, many of whom were sent to the
Dachau
concentration camp
. The unnerved public worried that the fire
had been a signal meant to initiate the communist revolution, and
the Nazis found the event to be of immeasurable value in getting
rid of potential insurgents. The event was quickly followed by the
Reichstag Fire Decree,
rescinding
habeas corpus and other
civil liberties.
The
Enabling Act was passed in
March 1933, with 444 votes, to the 94 of the remaining Social
Democrats. The act gave the government (and thus effectively the
Nazi Party) legislative powers and also authorized it to deviate
from the provisions of the constitution for four years. In effect,
Hitler had seized dictatorial powers.
Over the next year, the National Socialist Party ruthlessly
eliminated all opposition. The Communists had already been banned
before the passage of the Enabling Act. The Social Democrats (SPD),
despite efforts to appease Hitler, were banned in June. In June and
July, the Nationalists (DNVP), People's Party (DVP) and State Party
(DStP) were forced to disband. The remaining Catholic Centre Party,
at Papen's urging, disbanded itself on 5 July 1933 after guarantees
over Catholic education and youth groups. On 14 July 1933 Germany
was officially declared a one-party state.

March at Reichsparteitag 1935.
Symbols of the Weimar Republic, including the black-red-gold flag
(now the present-day
flag of
Germany), were abolished by the new regime which adopted both
new and old imperial symbolism to represent the dual nature of the
imperialist-Nazi regime of 1933. The old imperial black-white-red
tricolour, almost completely abandoned during the Weimar Republic,
was restored as one of Germany's two officially legal national
flags. The other official national flag was the
swastika flag of the Nazi party. It became the
sole national flag in 1935. The national anthem continued to be
"
Deutschland über Alles"
(also known as the "
Deutschlandlied") except that the Nazis
customarily used just the first verse and appended to it the
"
Horst-Wessel-Lied" accompanied by
the so-called
Hitler salute.
Further consolidation of power was achieved on 30 January 1934 with
the
Gesetz über den Neuaufbau des Reichs (Act to rebuild
the Reich). The act changed the highly decentralized federal
Germany of the Weimar era into a centralized state. It disbanded
state parliaments, transferring sovereign rights of the states to
the Reich central government and put the state administrations
under the control of the Reich administration. This process had
actually begun soon after the passage of the Enabling Act, when all
state governments were thrown out of office and replaced by Reich
governors ( ). Further laws ended any autonomy in local government.
Mayors of cities and towns with less than 100,000 people were
appointed by the governors, while the Interior Minister appointed
the mayors of all cities with more than 100,000 people.
In the
case of Berlin and Hamburg
(and after
1938, Vienna
), Hitler
reserved the right to personally appoint the mayors.
In the spring of 1934, only the army remained independent from Nazi
control. The German Army had traditionally been separated from the
government and somewhat of an entity of its own.
The Nazi paramilitary
SA
expected top
positions in the new power structure. The Reichswehr feared
Röhm's ambition to absorb the army into the SA under his own
leadership. Röhm also aimed to launch the socialist "second
revolution" to complement the nationalist revolution which had
occurred with the ascendance of Hitler. Röhm and leaders of the SA
wanted the regime to follow through its promise of enacting
socialist legislation for Aryan Germans.
Wanting to preserve good relations with the army, certain
politicians and the major industries (who were weary of more
political violence erupting from the SA), Hitler initiated the
violent "
Night of the Long
Knives" on 30 June 1934.
This was a purge of the leadership ranks of
Röhm's SA as well as hard-left Nazis (Strasserists), and other political enemies,
carried out by the SS
and the
Gestapo.
At Hindenburg's death on 2 August 1934 the Nazi-controlled
Reichstag merged the offices of
Reichspräsident and
Reichskanzler and reinstalled Hitler with the new title
Führer und Reichskanzler.
Until the
death of Hindenburg, the army did not follow Hitler, partly because
the paramilitary SA
was much
larger than the German Army (limited to 100,000 by the Treaty of
Versailles) and because the leaders of the SA sought to merge the
army into itself and to launch the socialist "second
revolution." The murder of
Ernst
Röhm and the leadership of the SA, assured the army of its
position. Hitler further promised expansions of the German military
which brought friendlier relations between him and the Reichswehr.
The death of Hindenburg brought the requirement of all soldiers' to
take an oath of allegiance to obey Hitler alone and not the Reich
or constitution of Germany.
The Nazis thereafter proceeded to scrap their official alliance
with the conservative nationalists and began to introduce Nazi
ideology and Nazi symbolism into all major aspects of life in
Germany. Schoolbooks were either rewritten or replaced and
schoolteachers who did not support Nazification of the curriculum
were fired.
The
inception of the Gestapo
, police acting outside of any
civil authority, highlighted the Nazis' intention to use powerful,
coercive means to directly control German society. An army,
estimated to be of about 100,000, spies and informants operated
throughout Germany, reporting to Nazi officials the activities of
any critics or dissenters. Most ordinary Germans, happy with the
improving economy and better standard of living, remained obedient
and quiet, but many political opponents, especially communists and
Marxist or international
socialists, were
reported by omnipresent eavesdropping spies and put in prison camps
where many were tortured and killed. It is estimated that tens of
thousands of political victims died or disappeared in the first few
years of Nazi rule.
"Between 1933 and 1945 more than 3 million Germans had been in
concentration camps or prison for
political reasons" "Tens of thousands of Germans were killed for
one or another form of resistance. Between 1933 and 1945
Special Courts killed 12,000 Germans,
courts martial killed 25,000 German
soldiers, and 'regular' justice killed 40,000 Germans. Many of
these Germans were part of the government civil or military
service, a circumstance which enabled them to engage in subversion
and conspiracy while involved, marginally or significantly, in the
government's policies."
World War II

German and Axis allies' conquests (in
blue) in Europe during World War II
Conquest of Europe
The
"Danzig
crisis"
peaked in early 1939, around the time that reports of controversy
in the Free City of
Danzig
increased, the United Kingdom "guaranteed" to
defend Poland's territorial integrity and the Poles rejected a
series of offers by Nazi Germany regarding both the Free City of
Danzig
and the Polish
Corridor. Then, the Germans broke off diplomatic
relations. Hitler had learned that the Soviet Union was willing to
sign a
non-aggression pact
with Germany and would support an attack on Poland.
Germany invaded Poland on 1
September 1939 and two days later, the United Kingdom
and France
declared war
on Germany. World War II was
underway, but Poland fell quickly, especially after the Soviets
attacked Poland on 17 September.
The United Kingdom proceeded to bomb
Wilhelmshaven
, Cuxhaven
, Heligoland
and other areas. Still, aside from battles
at sea, no other activity occurred. Thus, the war became known as
"the
Phony War".
The year
1940 began with little more than the UK dropping propaganda
leaflets over Prague
and Vienna
but a
German attack on the British
High Seas fleet was followed by the British bombing the port
city of Sylt
.
After the
Altmark
Incident
off the coast of Norway and the discovery of the
United Kingdom's plans to encircle Germany, Hitler sent troops into
Denmark and
Norway
.
This
safeguarded iron ore supplies from Sweden
through
coastal waters. Shortly thereafter, the British and French
landed in
Mid- and
North Norway, but the Germans de facto defeated
these forces in the ensuing
Norwegian
campaign.
In May 1940, the Phony War ended. Against the will of his advisors,
Hitler ordered an attack on France through the
Low Countries. The
Battle of France ended with an overwhelming
German victory. However, with the British refusing Hitler's offer
of peace, the war continued on. Germany and Britain continued to
fight at sea and in the air. However, on August 24, two off-course
German bombers accidentally bombed London – against Hitler's
orders, changing the course of the war.
In response to the
attack, the British bombed Berlin
, which sent
Hitler in a rage. The German leader ordered attacks on
British cities, and the UK was bombed heavily during
The Blitz. This change in targeting priority
interfered with the
Luftwaffe's objective
of achieving the
air superiority
over Britain necessary for an
invasion and allowed British air defenses
to rebuild their strength and continue the fight.

A Frenchman weeps as French troops
evacuate Toulon.
Hitler hoped to break British morale and win peace. However, the
British refused to back down; eventually, Hitler called off the
Battle of Britain strategic bombing
campaign in favor of the long-planned invasion of the Soviet
Union:
Operation Barbarossa.
Germany and its allies invaded the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941. On
the eve of the invasion, Hitler's former deputy,
Rudolf Hess, attempted to negotiate terms of
peace with the United Kingdom in an unofficial private meeting
after crash-landing in Scotland. By contrast, Hitler had hoped that
rapid success in the Soviet Union would bring Britain to the
negotiating table.
Operation Barbarossa was supposed to begin earlier than it did;
however, failed Italian ventures in
North
Africa and the
Balkans concerned Hitler.
In February 1941, the German
Afrika
Korps was sent to Libya to aid the Italians and hold the
British Commonwealth forces
from British-held Egypt. As the
North African Campaign continued, in
spite of orders to remain on the defensive, the Afrika Korps
regained lost Italian territory, pushed the British back across the
desert and advanced into Egypt. In April, the Germans launched the
invasion of Yugoslavia to aid
friendly forces and restore order in the midst of what was believed
to be a British-supported coup. This was followed by the
Battle of Greece, again to bail out the
Italians, and the
Battle of Crete.
Because of the diversions in North Africa and the Balkans, the
Germans were not able to launch Barbarossa until late in June.
Moreover, men and material were diverted to create the "fortified
Europe" that Hitler wanted before Germany focused its attention on
the East.
Nevertheless, Barbarossa began with great success. Only Hitler
worried that the German Army and its allies were not advancing into
the Soviet Union fast enough.
By December 1941, the Germans and their
allies were at the gates of Moscow
; to the
north, troops had reached Leningrad and surrounded the city.
Meanwhile, Germany and her allies controlled
almost all of mainland Europe, with the exception of neutral
Switzerland
, Sweden
, Spain,
Portugal
, Liechtenstein
, Andorra
, Vatican
City
and Monaco
.
On 11
December 1941, four days after the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor
, Nazi Germany declared war on the United
States. Not only was this a chance for Germany to strengthen
its ties with Japan, but after months of anti-German hysteria in
the American media and
Lend-Lease aid to
Britain, the leaking of
Rainbow Five
and the foreboding content of
Franklin Delano Roosevelt's Pearl
Harbor speech made it clear to Hitler that the US could not be kept
neutral. Moreover, Germany's policy of
appeasement towards the US, designed to keep the
US out of the war, was a burden to Germany's war effort. Germany
had refrained from attacking American convoys, even if they were
bound for the United Kingdom or the Soviet Union. By contrast,
after Germany declared war on the US, the German navy began
unrestricted submarine
warfare, using
U-Boats to attack ships
without warning.
The goal of Germany's navy, the
Kriegsmarine, was to cut off Britain's
supply line.
Under these circumstances, one of the most
famous naval battles in history took place, with the German
battleship Bismarck
, Germany's largest and most powerful warship,
attempting to break out into the Atlantic and raid supply ships
heading for Britain. The
Bismarck was sunk – but
not before sending Britain's largest warship, the battlecruiser
Hood, to the depths of the
ocean. German U-Boats were more successful than surface raiders
like the
Bismarck. However, Germany failed to make
submarine production a top priority early on and by the time it
did, the British and their allies were developing the technology
and strategies to neutralize it. Furthermore, in spite of the
submarine's early success in 1941 and 1942, material shortages in
Britain failed to fall to their World War I levels. The Allied
victory in the
Battle of the
Atlantic was achieved at a huge cost: between 1939 and 1945,
3,500 Allied ships were sunk (gross tonnage 14.5 million) at a cost
of 783 German U-Boats.
Persecution and extermination campaigns
The persecution of minorities and "undesirables" continued both in
Germany and the occupied countries. From 1941 onward, Jews were
required to wear a
yellow badge in
public and most were transferred to
ghettos,
where they remained isolated from the rest of the population.
In
January 1942, at the Wannsee Conference
and under the supervision of Reinhard Heydrich, who himself was
commanded by Heinrich Himmler, a
plan for the "Final Solution of the
Jewish Question" (Endlösung der Judenfrage) in Europe was
designed. From then until the end of the war some six
million Jews and many others, including
homosexuals, Slavs, and political prisoners,
were systematically killed. In addition, more than ten million
people were put into forced labour. This
genocide is called
the
Holocaust in English and the
Shoah in
Hebrew. Thousands were shipped daily to
extermination camps and
concentration camps.
Parallel
to the Holocaust, the Nazis conducted a ruthless program of
conquest and exploitation in the captured Soviet
and Polish
territories
and their populations as part of their Generalplan Ost. According to
estimates, 20 million Soviet civilians, three million non-Jewish
Poles, and seven million
Red Army soldiers
died because of the Nazis. The Nazis' plan was to extend German
Lebensraum ("living space")
eastward, a foreseen consequence of the war in Eastern Europe and
the Soviet Union, said by the Nazis to have been waged in order "to
defend Western Civilization against
Bolshevism of subhumans". It is estimated that at
least 51 million Slavic people were to be removed from Central and
Eastern Europe in the event of Nazi victory. Because of the many
atrocities suffered under
Stalin, many
Ukrainians,
Balts, and other
nationalities fought on the side of the Germans. People in the
occupied territories of the Soviet Union who fulfilled the basic
racial classifications of the Aryan race or had no immediate Jewish
ancestry avoided persecution and were allowed to enlist in the
Waffen Schutzstaffel
(
Waffen-SS) divisions. The Nazi regime intended to
eventually "Germanize" the racially-acceptable peoples of the
occupied east.
Allied victory
In early 1942, the Soviet
Red Army
counterattacked and by the end of the winter, the Germans were no
longer outside of Moscow. However, the Germans and their allies
held a strong line and in the spring, they launched a new major
offensive, driving towards the oil-rich Caucasus and the Volga
River in Southern Russia.
This set the stage for the showdown at
Stalingrad
, where Germany and its allies eventually suffered a
major defeat. After winning a major tank battle at
Kursk
-Orel in July 1943, the Soviets began a long push
west, and the Germans and their allies never regained the
initiative.
In
Africa, the Afrika Korps failed to break through the line at
El
Alamein
. This affected – and was affected by – the
events in Stalingrad. In November 1942, the Germans and the
Italians had to retreat back to Tunisia, where they
engaged American and British forces that
had landed in French North Africa. After initial victories, the
German and Italian forces were overcome by man and material
shortages.
The Allies invaded Sicily and Italy next,
but met fierce resistance, particularly at Anzio and Cassino
, and the campaign continued from mid-1943 to nearly
the end of the war.

180px-Bundesarchiv_Bild_183-J16796,_Rommel_mit_Soldaten_der_Legion_"Freies_Indien".jpg"
style='width:180px' alt="" />
By February 1944, with the success of
Operation Bagration, the Soviet Red Army
had crossed into Poland. As the Red Army neared
East Prussia, German civilians began to flee
from East Prussia,
West Prussia and
Silesia en masse, fearing
persecution and atrocities by Soviet soldiers, which many were
unable to escape from. Then, in June 1944, the American and British
forces opened up another front with the
D-Day landings in France.
From 1942 onward, Western Allied bombing raids over Germany
increased. There is a great deal of controversy over Allied tactics
late in the war, resulting in the complete destruction of the
cities of
Cologne and
Dresden, as well as
others. More bombs were dropped on one day in each of these cities
than the Germans dropped on Britain throughout the entire war,
resulting in hundreds of thousands of civilian dead and severe
hardship and shortages for the survivors living amid the destroyed
infrastructure.
Millions of German soldiers died over the course of World War II,
with current highest estimates at 5.5 million. The corpses of
German soldiers became so commonplace that they stopped generating
any emotion whatsoever and became an inextricable part of the
European landscape, where they were often improperly buried or not
at all.
German prisoners being searched by Red Army soldiers
By 1945, Soviet forces were approaching Berlin. American and
British forces had taken most of western Germany and met their
Soviet allies at Torgau on the Elbe on 26 April 1945 (Cohen).
With
Berlin under siege, Hitler and other key members of the Nazi regime
were forced to live in the armoured underground Führerbunker
while the upper terrain of Berlin was
constantly shelled by the Red Army.
In the underground bunker Hitler grew increasingly isolated and
detached from reality. Increasingly, he exhibited signs of
mental illness. It was claimed that, at a
meeting with military commanders, Hitler began to consider
committing suicide should Germany fail to win the war. Berlin was
eventually surrounded and outward communications between Berlin and
the rest of Germany were cut off. Despite evident total defeat,
Hitler refused to relinquish his power or surrender.
With no communications coming out of Berlin,
Hermann Göring sent an ultimatum to
Berlin that he would take over the Nazi regime in April if his
ultimatum was not responded to, in which case Hitler would have
been deemed to be incapacitated as leader.
Upon receiving the
message, Hitler angrily ordered Göring's immediate arrest, and had
a plane deliver the message to Göring in Bavaria
. Later, in northern Germany,
Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler began communicating with
the western Allies about negotiating peace. Hitler once again
reacted violently to Himmler's attempts to seek peace and ordered
both his arrest and execution.
With no intent by Hitler to surrender, intense street fighting
continued in the war-torn ruins of Berlin between remnant German
army forces,
Hitler Youth, and the
Waffen-SS against the Red Army.
This battle was known as the
Battle of
Berlin. The German forces by this time were severely depleted,
large numbers of German children and the elderly were forced into
conscription by the Nazis to fight against the Red Army in the
remaining pockets of territory not controlled by the Red Army in
Berlin.
Capitulation of German forces
On 30
April 1945, as the Battle for Berlin raged and the city was being
overrun by Soviet forces, Hitler committed suicide in his underground
bunker
. Two days later, on 2 May 1945, German
General
Helmuth Weidling
unconditionally surrendered Berlin to Soviet General
Vasily Chuikov.
Hitler was succeeded by Grand Admiral
Karl Dönitz as Reich's President and Dr.
Joseph Goebbels as Reich Chancellor.
No one was to replace Hitler as the Führer, which Hitler abolished
in his
will.
However, Goebbels committed suicide in the Fuhrerbunker a day after
assuming office. The
caretaker
government Dönitz established near the Danish border
unsuccessfully sought a separate peace with the Western Allies. On
4–8 May 1945 most of the remaining German armed forces throughout
Europe surrendered unconditionally (
German Instrument of
Surrender, 1945). This was the
end of World War II in
Europe.
The war was the largest and most destructive in human history, with
60 million dead across the
world, including between 9 and 11 million people who perished
during
the Holocaust.
The Soviet Union
lost around 27 million people during the war, about
half of all World War II casualties. Towards the end of the
war, Europe had more than 40 million
refugees.
With the creation of the
Allied
Control Council on 5 July 1945, the four Allied powers
"assume[d] supreme authority with respect to Germany" (
Declaration
Regarding the Defeat of Germany, U.S. Department of State,
Treaties and Other International Acts Series, No. 1520).
The end of the Third Reich
The
Potsdam Conference in August
1945 created arrangements and outline for new government for the
post-war Germany as well as
war
reparations and resettlement. All German annexations in Europe
after 1937, such as the
Sudetenland,
were reversed, and in addition subject to a peace settlement
Germany's eastern border was shifted westwards to the
Oder-Neisse line, effectively reducing
Germany in size by approximately 25% compared to its 1937 border.
The
territories east of the new border comprised East Prussia, Silesia,
West Prussia, two-thirds of Pomerania and parts of Brandenburg
. Much of these areas were agricultural, with
the exception of
Upper Silesia, which
was the second-largest center of German
heavy industry.
Many smaller and
large cities such as Stettin
, Königsberg
, Breslau
, Elbing
, Danzig
were
cleansed of their population and taken from Germany as
well.
France took control of a large part of Germany's remaining
coal deposits. Virtually all Germans in
Central Europe outside of the new
eastern borders of Germany and Austria were subsequently, over a
period of several years, expelled, affecting about 17 million
ethnic Germans. Most casualty estimates of this expulsion range
between one to two million dead.
The French, US and British occupation
zones later became West
Germany
(the Federal Republic of Germany), while the Soviet
zone became the communist East Germany
(the German Democratic Republic, excluding sections
of Berlin).
The initial repressive
occupation policy in Germany by the
Western
Allies was reversed
after a few years when the
Cold War made
the Germans important as allies against communism. West Germany
recovered economically by the 1960s, being called the
economic miracle (German term
Wirtschaftswunder), mainly due to the
currency reform of 1948 which
replaced the
Reichsmark with the
Deutsche Mark as legal tender, halting
rampant inflation, but also to a minor degree helped by economic
aid (in the form of loans) through the
Marshall Plan which was extended to also
include West Germany. West German recovery was upheld thanks to
fiscal policy and intense labour, eventually leading to
labour shortages.
Allied dismantling
of West German industry was finally halted in 1951, and in 1952
West Germany joined the
European Coal and Steel
Community. In 1955 the military
occupation of West Germany was ended.
East Germany recovered at a slower pace under communism until 1990,
due to reparations paid to the Soviet Union and the effects of the
centrally planned economy. Germany
regained
full sovereignty in 1991.
After the
war, surviving Nazi leaders were put on trial by an Allied tribunal
at Nuremberg
for crimes against humanity. A minority were
sentenced to death and executed, but a number were jailed and then
released by the mid-1950s due to poor health and old age, with the
notable exception of Rudolf Hess, who
died in Spandau
Prison
in 1987 while in permanent solitary
confinement. In the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, some renewed
efforts were made in West Germany to take those who were directly
responsible for "crimes against humanity" to court (e.g.,
Auschwitz trials). However, many of the
less prominent leaders continued to live well into the 1980s and
1990s.
The victorious Allies outlawed the Nazi Party, its subsidiary
organizations, and most symbols and emblems (including the swastika
in most manifestations) throughout Germany and Austria; this
prohibition remains in force to the present day. The end of Nazi
Germany also saw the rise in unpopularity of related aggressive
nationalism in Germany such as
Pan-Germanism and the
Völkisch movement which had
previously been significant political ideas in Germany and in
Europe prior to the Second World War, those that remain are largely
at present, fringe movements. In all non-fascist European countries
legal purges were established to punish the members of the former
Nazi and Fascist parties. Even there, however, some of the former
leaders found ways to accommodate themselves under the new
circumstances.
- Nuremberg Trials
The numerous crimes committed by Nazi Germany fostered a revival of
internationalism in the
western and eastern blocs, resulting in the creation of the
United Nations.
One of the UN's first
objectives was establishing a series of war crimes tribunals to try
Nazi officials, called the Nuremberg Trials
, in the Nazis' former political stronghold of
Nuremberg
, Bavaria
. The first major and most well-known
Nuremberg trial was officially called the
Trial of the Major
War Criminals Before the International Military Tribunal
(IMT). This trial involved twenty-four key Nazi officials
including
Hermann Göring,
Ernst Kaltenbrunner,
Rudolf Hess,
Albert
Speer,
Karl Dönitz,
Hans Frank and
Julius
Streicher. The trial found many of the accused to be guilty and
twelve were sentenced to death by hanging. Many people that were
hanged praised Hitler in their last seconds of life before being
executed and a few officials evaded execution, amongst them being
Göring, who committed suicide by ingesting
cyanide; Hess, a formerly close confidant to
Hitler, was sentenced to life in prison and
stayed in Spandau prison until his death in 1987; Speer, the state
architect and later armaments minister, served twenty years despite
his use of slave labour in projects;
Konstantin von Neurath, a Third Reich
cabinet minister who was in office prior to the Nazi regime; and
another minister who also served in the pre-Nazi government,
economist
Hjalmar Schacht.
Some accused the Nuremberg Trials to be a form of "
victor's justice", in that no similar
action was taken to punish the war crimes and
crimes against humanity of the
victors.
Geography
Administrative regions
Administrative regions of Greater German Reich in 1943.
Under the Nazi regime, administrative powers were significantly
altered. The German
constituent
states were replaced in 1935 by local "
gaus" (regional districts) led
by Nazi officials who obeyed the central government's orders. This
change consolidated Hitler's control over Germany and weakened the
political weight of Prussia, which in the past dominated German
political affairs. The central government and the gaus took over
the states' powers, however Nazi officials still held leadership
titles over the non-existent states, such as
Hermann Göring, who was remained the
Reichsstatthalter and
Minister-President of Prussia
until 1945, and
Ludwig
Siebert as
Minister-President of
Bavaria.
In
addition to Weimar-era
Germany proper
, the
Reich came to include, in the years leading up
to the war, areas with ethnic German
populations such as Austria
, the Sudetenland, and
the territory of Memel.
Regions
acquired after the outbreak of conflict include Eupen
-et-Malmédy
, Alsace-Lorraine
, Danzig
and territories of Poland
. In addition, from 1939 to 1945, the Reich
ruled Bohemia and
Moravia
as a protectorate, subjugated
and annexed prior to the start of the world war. Although
under German control and administration, the protectorate had its
own currency.
Regions and protectorates
Czech Silesia was incorporated into the
province of
Silesia
during the same period. In 1942 Luxembourg
was directly annexed into Germany.
Central
Poland
and Polish Galicia were run by a protectorate
government, called the General
Government. Eventually, the
Polish
people were supposed to be "removed" and Poland itself
populated with 5 million Germans.
By late 1943, Germany not only seized
Bolzano-Bozen (South
Tyrol) and Istria
, which had
been part of Austria-Hungary before
1919, but also seized Trieste
from its erstwhile ally Italy after it capitulated
to the Allies.
Idea of the Greater Germany
Outside of what was directly annexed into Germany were the regional
territories created in occupied lands. In many areas, occupied
territories called
Reichskommissariat were set up. In the
occupied Soviet Union territories, these included the
Reichskommissariat Ostland
and
Reichskommissariat
Ukraine. In northern Europe, there was the
Reichskommissariat
Niederlande (Netherlands) and
Reichskommissariat Norwegen
(Norway) which were designed to foster German colonization. In
1944, a Reichskommissariat was founded in Belgium and northern
France, previously known as the
Military
Administration of Belgium and North France, where travel
restrictions were enforced in order to foster German
colonization.
The Reich's borders had changed
de facto well before its
military defeat in May 1945, as parts of the German population fled
westward from the advancing
Red Army and
the
Western Allies pressed eastward
from France. By the end of the war, a small strip of land
stretching from Austria to Bohemia and Moravia—as well as a few
other isolated regions—was the only area not under Allied control.
Upon its defeat, some have claimed that the Reich was in a state of
debellation. Occupation zones were set
up and administrated by France, the Soviet Union, the United
Kingdom and the United States.
The prewar German lands east of the Oder-Neisse line and Stettin
and its surrounding area – nearly 25% of pre-war
Germany – were set under Polish and Soviet
administration but factually sundered from Germany for
annexation by Poland and the Soviet Union. The millions of
Germans remaining in the areas were
expelled by the
Allies. In Law #46 of 20 May 1947 the Allied Control Council
formally proclaimed the dissolution of Prussia.
Those parts of
Prussia which were to the east of the Oder-Neisse Line were divided
and placed under Soviet (Kaliningrad Oblast
) and Polish administration by the 16 Jul to 2 Aug
1945 Potsdam Conference, pending the final Peace Treaty. By
signing the
Treaty of Warsaw
and the
Treaty on
the Final Settlement with Respect to Germany (1990), Germany
finally renounced any claims to territories lost during the Second
World War.
Economy
When the Nazis came to power the most pressing issue was an
unemployment rate of close to 30%. The economic policies of the
Third Reich were in the beginning the brainchildren of
Hjalmar Schacht, who assumed office as
president of the central bank under Hitler in 1933, and became
finance minister in the following year. Schacht was one of the few
finance ministers to take advantage of the freedom provided by the
end of the
gold standard to keep
interest rates low and government budget deficits high, with
massive public works funded by large budget deficits. The
consequence was an extremely rapid decline in unemployment--the
most rapid decline in unemployment in any country during the Great
Depression. Eventually this
Keynesian
economic policy was supplemented by the boost to demand provided by
rearmament and swelling military spending.
Hjalmar Schacht was finally replaced
in 1937 by Hitler's lieutenant Hermann Goering when he resigned.
Goering introduced the four year plan whose main aim was to make
Germany self-sufficient to fight a war within four years. Under
Goering imports were slashed. Wages and prices were
controlled--under penalty of being sent to a concentration camp.
Dividends were restricted to six percent on book capital. And
strategic goals to be reached at all costs (much like Soviet
planning) were declared: the construction of synthetic rubber
plants, more steel plants, automatic textile factories.
While the strict state intervention into the economy, and the
massive rearmament policy, almost led to full employment during the
1930s (statistics didn't include non-citizens or women), real wages
in Germany dropped by roughly 25% between 1933 and 1938. Trade
unions were abolished, as well as collective bargaining and the
right to strike. The right to quit also disappeared: Labour books
were introduced in 1935, and required the consent of the previous
employer in order to be hired for another job. In place of ordinary
profit incentive to guide investment, investment was guided through
regulation to accord with needs of the State. Government financing
eventually came to dominate the investment process, which the
proportion of private securities issued falling from over half of
the total in 1933 and 1934 to approximately 10 percent in
1935–1938. Heavy taxes on profits limited self-financing of firms.
The largest firms were mostly exempt from taxes on profits, however
government control of these were extensive enough to leave "only
the shell of private ownership."
Another part of the new German economy was massive rearmament, with
the goal being to expand the 100,000-strong German Army into a
force of millions. The
Four-Year Plan
was discussed in the controversial
Hossbach Memorandum, which provides the
"minutes" from one of Hitler's briefings.
Nevertheless, the war came and although the Four-Year Plan
technically expired in 1940, Hermann Göring had built up a power
base in the "Office of the Four-Year Plan" that effectively
controlled all German economic and production matters by this point
in time. In 1942 the growing burdens of the war and the death of
Fritz Todt saw the economy move to a full
war economy under
Albert Speer.
The war time economy of Nazi Germany can effectively neither be
described as a
free market economy nor as
centrally
planned. In the words of
Richard
Overy:
"The Germany economy fell between two stools.
It was not enough of a command economy to do what the Soviet
system could do; yet it was not capitalist enough to rely, as
America did, on the recruitment of private enterprise." Use of
forced
labour in Nazi Germany during World War II occurred on a large
scale. The Germans abducted about 12 million people from
almost twenty European countries; about two thirds of whom came
from Eastern Europe.
Politics
Through staffing of most government positions with Nazi Party
members, by 1935 the German national government and the Nazi Party
had become virtually one and the same. By 1938, through the policy
of
Gleichschaltung, local
and state governments lost all legislative power and answered
administratively to Nazi Party leaders, known as
Gauleiters, who governed
Gau and
Reichsgaue.
Government
Nazi Germany was made up of various competing power structures, all
trying to gain favor with the Führer, Adolf Hitler. Thus many
existing laws were stricken and replaced with interpretations of
what Hitler wanted. Any high party/government official could take
one of Hitler's comments and turn it into a new law, of which
Hitler would casually either approve or disapprove. This became
known as "working towards the
Führer",
as the government was not a coordinated, co-operating body, but a
collection of individuals each trying to gain more power and
influence through the Führer. This often made government very
convoluted and divided, especially with Hitler's vague policy of
creating similar posts with overlapping powers and authority. The
process allowed the more unscrupulous and ambitious Nazis to get
away with implementing the more radical and extreme elements of
Hitler's ideology, such as anti-Semitism, and in doing so win
political favor. Protected by Goebbels' extremely effective
propaganda machine, which portrayed the government as a dedicated,
dutiful and efficient outfit, the dog-eat-dog competition and
chaotic legislation was allowed to escalate. Historical opinion is
divided between "intentionalists", who believe that Hitler created
this system as the only means of ensuring both the total loyalty
and dedication of his supporters and the impossibility of a
conspiracy; and "structuralists", who believe that the system
evolved by itself and was a limitation on Hitler's supposedly
totalitarian power.
Cabinet and national authorities
Reich offices
Reich ministries
State ideology
National Socialism had some of the key ideological elements of
fascism which originally developed in Italy
under
Benito Mussolini; however,
the Nazis never officially declared themselves fascists. Both
ideologies involved the political use of
militarism,
nationalism,
anti-communism and paramilitary forces, and
both intended to create a
dictatorial
state.
The Nazis, however, were far more
racially-oriented than the fascists in Italy, Portugal
, and Spain. The Nazis were also intent on
creating a completely
totalitarian
state, unlike Italian fascists who while promoting a totalitarian
state, allowed a larger degree of private liberties for their
citizens. These differences allowed the
Italian monarchy to continue to exist and
have some official powers. However the Nazis copied much of their
symbolism from the Fascists in Italy, such as copying the
Roman salute as the Nazi salute, use of mass
rallies, both made use of uniformed paramilitaries devoted to the
party (the SA in Germany and the Blackshirts in Italy), both Hitler
and Mussolini were called the "Leader" (Führer in German, Duce in
Italian), both were anti-Communist, both wanted an
ideologically-driven state, and both advocated a middle-way between
capitalism and communism, commonly known as
corporatism. The party itself rejected the
fascist label, claiming National Socialism was an ideology unique
to Germany. Many analysts, however, classify National Socialism as
a racially-oriented version of fascism.
The totalitarian nature of the Nazi party was one of its principal
tenets. The Nazis contended that all the great achievements in the
past of the German nation and its people were associated with the
ideals of National Socialism, even before the ideology officially
existed.
Propaganda accredited the
consolidation of Nazi ideals and successes of the regime to the
regime's
Führer ("Leader"),
Adolf Hitler, who was portrayed as the genius behind the Nazi
party's success and Germany's saviour.
To secure
their ability to create a totalitarian state, the Nazi party's
paramilitary force, the Sturmabteilung
(SA) or "Storm Detachment" used acts of
violence against leftists, communist, democrats, Jews and other
opposition or minority groups. The SA "storm troopers"
violently clashed with the Communist Party of Germany (German
Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands – KPD) which created a climate
of lawlessness and fear. In the cities, people were anxious over
punishment or even death, if they displayed opposition to the
Nazis. Given the frustrations of the people (after World War I and
during the Great Depression) it was easy for the SA to attract
large numbers of alienated (and unemployed) youth and working class
people for the party.
The "German problem", as it is often referred to in English
scholarship, focuses on the issue of administration of Germanic
regions in Northern and Central Europe, an important theme
throughout German history. The "logic" of keeping Germany small
worked in the favor of its principal economic rivals, and had been
a driving force in the recreation of a Polish state. The goal was
to create numerous counterweights in order to "balance out
Germany's power".
The Nazis endorsed the concept of
Großdeutschland, or
Greater Germany, and believed
that the incorporation of the
Germanic
people into one nation was a vital step towards their national
success. It was the Nazis' passionate support of the
Volk concept of Greater Germany that led to Germany's
expansion, that gave legitimacy and the support needed for the
Third Reich to proceed to conquer long-lost territories with
overwhelmingly non-German population like former Prussian gains in
Poland that it lost to Russia in the 1800s, or to acquire
territories with German population like parts of Austria. The
German concept of
Lebensraum (living
space) or more specifically its need for an expanding German
population was also claimed by the Nazi regime for territorial
expansion.
Two
important issues were administration of the Polish corridor and Danzig
's
incorporation into the Reich. As a further extension of
racial policy, the Lebensraum program pertained to similar
interests; the Nazis determined that Eastern Europe would be
settled with ethnic Germans, and the
Slavic population who met the Nazi racial
standard would be absorbed into the Reich. Those not fitting the
racial standard were to be used as cheap labour force or deported
eastward.
Racialism and
racism
were important aspects of society within the Third Reich. The Nazis
combined
anti-Semitism with
anti-Communist ideology, regarding the
leftist-internationalist movement—as well as international market
capitalism—as the work of "Conspiratorial Jewry". They referred to
this so-called movement with terminology such as the
"Jewish-Bolshevistic revolution of subhumans". This platform
manifested itself in the displacement, internment, and systematic
extermination of an estimated 11 million to 12 million people in
the midst of World War II, roughly half of them being Jews targeted
in what is historically remembered as
the
Holocaust (Shoah), 3 million ethnic
Poles,and another 100,000–1,000,000 being
Roma, who were murdered in the
Porajmos. Other victims of Nazi persecution
included communists, various political opponents, social outcasts,
homosexuals,
freethinkers, religious dissidents such
as
Jehovah's
Witnesses,
Christadelphians, the
Confessing Church and
Freemasons.
Foreign relations
Foreign relations between Germany and the rest of Europe were
riddled with political manuevres and opportunistic decisions.
Fearing a second world war, Britain and France sought a policy of
appeasement towards Germany, and refused aggressive foreign
policies to satisfy the newly-powered Nazis. Hitler aims upon
coming to power was threefold; destroy Versailles, re-unite lost
German territories under the decrees of Versailles, and
‘Lebensraum’. It is said that Hitler eventually wanted Britain as
an ally with eventual wars with the USSR, and eventually the USA.
Hitler used the Appeasement policies of Britain and France to his
opportunistic advantage when he announced in March 1935 that he
would conscript men into his army and create the
Luftwaffe; both a direct violation of Versailles.
His foreign policies were designed to test the nerve of Britain and
France so he could see what else he was able to get away with. His
other concern was Italy, whom under Mussolini had become a
similarly fascist country, but had so much internal civil
disruption Hitler wanted a more stable and powerful ally.
Although Germany's relations with Italy improved with creation of
the
Rome-Berlin Axis, tensions
remained high because the Nazis wanted Austria to be incorporated
into Germany. Italy was opposed to this, as were France and
Britain. In 1938, an Austrian-led Nazi coup took place in Austria
and Germany sent in its troops, annexing the country. Italy and
Britain no longer had common interests and, as Germany had stopped
supporting the German speaking population under Italy's control in
Bolzano-Bozen(South Tyrol), Italy began to gravitate towards
Germany.
Germany's
annexation of the Sudetenland from
Czechoslovakia
in September 1938 came about during talks with
British Prime Minister Neville
Chamberlain, in which Hitler, backed by Italian dictator
Benito Mussolini, demanded that the
German territories be ceded. Chamberlain and Hitler came to
an agreement when Hitler signed a piece of paper which said that
with the annexation of the Sudetenland, Germany would proceed with
no further territorial aims. Chamberlain took this to be a success
in that it avoided a potential war with Germany. However, the Nazis
helped to promote Slovakian dissention and declaring that the
country was no more, seized control of the Czech part.
For quite some time, Germany had engaged in informal negotiations
with Poland regarding the issue of territorial revision, but after
the Munich Agreement and the reacquisition of Memel, the Nazis
became increasingly vocal.
Poland refused to allow the annexation of
the Free City of
Danzig
.
Germany and the Soviet Union began talks over planning an invasion
of Poland. In August 1939, the
Molotov
Pact was signed and Germany and the Soviet Union agreed to
divide Poland along a mutually-agreed set boundary. The invasion
was put into effect on 1 September 1939. Last-minute Polish-German
diplomatic proceedings failed, and Germany invaded Poland as
scheduled. Germany alleged that Polish operatives had attacked
German positions, but the result was the outbreak of
World War II, as Allied forces refused to
accept Germany's claims on Poland and blamed Germany for the
conflict.
From 1939 to 1940, the so-called "
Phony
War" occurred, as German forces made no further advances but
instead, both the Axis and Allies engaged in a propaganda campaign.
However in early 1940, Germany began to concern that the British
intended to stop trade between Sweden and Germany by bringing
Norway into an alliance against Germany, with Norway in Allied
hands, the Allies would be dangerously close to German territory.
In response, Germany invaded Denmark and Norway ending the Phony
War (leapfrogging the British invasion troops bound towards Norway
by just 24 hours).
After sweeping through the Low Countries and
occupying northern France, Germany allowed French nationalist and
war hero Philippe Petain to form a
fascist regime in southern France known as the "French State" but
more commonly referred to as Vichy
France named after its capital in Vichy
.
In 1941 Germany's invasion of
Yugoslavia
resulted in that state's splintering.
In spite of Hitler's
earlier view of inferiority of all Slavs, he
supported Mussolini's agenda of creating a fascist puppet state of
Croatia
, called the Independent State of Croatia
. Croatia was led by the extreme nationalist
Ante Pavelić a long-time Croatian
exile in Rome, whose Ustashe movement formed
a government in modern-day Croatia
and Bosnia and Herzegovina
. The Ustashe were allowed to persecute
Serbs, while Germany contributed to that goal in German-occupied
Serbia.
From 1941 to the end of the war, Germany engaged in war with the
Soviet Union in its attempt to create the Nazi colonial goal of
Lebensraum "living space" for
German citizens. The German occupation authorities set up
occupation and colonial authorities called
Reichskommissariats such as
Reichskommissariat Ostland and
Reichskommissariat
Ukraine. The Slavic populations were to be destroyed along with
Jews there to make way for German colonists.
As the fortunes of war changed, Germany was forced to occupy Italy
when Mussolini was thrown out as Prime Minister by Italy's king in
1943. German forces rescued Mussolini and instructed him to
establish a fascist regime in Italy called the
Italian Social Republic. This was
the last major foreign policy delivered. The remainder of the war
saw the decline of German power and desperate attempts by Nazi
officials such as
Heinrich Himmler
to negotiate a peace with the western Allies against the wishes of
Hitler.
Law
Most of
the judicial structures and legal codes of the Weimar
Republic
remained in
use during the Third Reich, but significant changes within the
judicial codes occurred, as well as significant changes in court
rulings. The Nazi party was the only legal political party
in Germany; all other political parties were banned. Most
human rights of the constitution of the Weimar
Republic were disabled by several
Reichsgesetze (Reich's
laws). Several minorities such as the Jews, opposition politicians
and prisoners of war were deprived of most of their rights and
responsibilities. The Plan to pass a
Volksstrafgesetzbuch
(people's code of criminal justice) arose soon after 1933, but
didn't come into reality until the end of World War II.
As a new type of court, the
Volksgerichtshof (people's court) was
established in 1934, only dealing with cases of political
importance. From 1934 to September 1944, a total of 5,375 death
sentences were spoken by the court. Not included in this numbers
are the death sentences from 20 July 1944 until April 1945, which
are estimated at 2,000. Its most prominent jurist was
Roland Freisler, who headed the court from
August 1942 to February 1945.
Military
The military of the Third Reich – the Wehrmacht – was the name of
the unified
armed forces of Germany
from 1935 to 1945 with
Heer (Army),
Kriegsmarine (Navy),
Luftwaffe (Air Force) and a military organization
Waffen-SS (Military branch of the
Schutzstaffel, which was, de facto, a fourth branch of the
Wehrmacht.The
German
Army furthered concepts pioneered during the
First World War, combining Ground and Air
Force assets into combined arms teams. Coupled with traditional war
fighting methods such as encirclements and the "battle of
annihilation", the German military managed many lightning quick
victories in the first year of the
Second World War, prompting foreign
journalists to create a new word for what they witnessed:
Blitzkrieg. The total number of soldiers who
served in the
Wehrmacht during its existence from 1935
until 1945 is believed to approach 18.2 million.
Racial policy
The effects of Nazi social policy in Germany was divided between
those considered to be "Aryan" and those considered "non-Aryan",
Jewish, or part of other minority groups. For "Aryan" Germans, a
number of social policies put through by the regime to benefit them
were advanced for the time, including state opposition to the use
of tobacco, an end to official stigmatization toward Aryan children
who were born from parents outside of marriage, as well as giving
financial assistance to Aryan German families who bore
children.
The Nazi Party pursued its racial and social policies through
persecution and killing of those considered social undesirables or
"enemies of the Reich".
Especially targeted were minority groups such as
Jews,
Romani (also known as
Gypsies),
Jehovah's Witnesses,
people with mental or physical
disabilities and
homosexuals.
In the
1930s, plans to isolate and eventually eliminate Jews completely in
Germany began with the construction of ghettos, concentration
camps, and labour camps which began with the 1933 construction of
the Dachau
concentration camp
, which Heinrich
Himmler officially described as "the first concentration camp
for political
prisoners."

Lager Nordhausen concentration
camp
In the years following the Nazi rise to power, many Jews were
encouraged to leave the country and did so. By the time the
Nuremberg Laws were passed in 1935,
Jews were stripped of their German citizenship and denied
government employment. Most Jews employed by Germans lost their
jobs at this time, which were being taken by unemployed Germans.
Notably, the Nazi government attempted to send 17,000 German Jews
of Polish descent back to Poland, a decision which led to the
assassination of
Ernst vom Rath by
Herschel Grynszpan, a German Jew
living in France. This provided the pretext for a
pogrom the Nazi Party incited against the Jews on 9
November 1938, which specifically targeted Jewish businesses. The
event was called
Kristallnacht (Night of Broken Glass,
literally "Crystal Night"); the
euphemism
was used because the numerous broken windows made the streets look
as if covered with crystals. By September 1939 more than 200,000
Jews had left Germany, with the Nazi government seizing any
property they left behind.
The Nazis also undertook programs targeting "weak" or "unfit"
people, such as the
T-4
Euthanasia Program, killing tens of thousands of disabled and
sick Germans in an effort to "maintain the purity of the German
Master race" (German:
Herrenvolk) as described by
Nazi propagandists. The techniques of mass
killing developed in these efforts would later be used in
the Holocaust. Under a law passed in 1933, the
Nazi regime carried out the
compulsory sterilization of over
400,000 individuals labeled as having hereditary defects, ranging
from
mental illness to
alcoholism.
Another component of the Nazi programme of creating racial purity
was the
Lebensborn, or "Fountain
of Life" programme founded in 1936. The programme was aimed at
encouraging German soldiers—mainly SS—to reproduce. This included
offering SS families support services (including the adoption of
racially pure children into suitable SS families) and accommodating
racially-valuable women, pregnant with mainly SS men's children, in
care homes in Germany and throughout Occupied Europe.
Lebensborn also expanded to encompass the placing of
racially pure children forcibly seized from occupied countries—such
as Poland—with German families.
The
Nazis considered Jews, Romani people,
Poles along with other
Slavic people like the
Russians,
Ukrainians,
Czechs and anyone else who was not an
"
Aryan" according to the contemporary
Nazi race terminology to be
subhuman. The Nazis rationalized that the
Germans, being a super human
(
Übermenschlich) race, had a biological right to displace,
eliminate and enslave inferiors.
After the war, under the "Big Plan",
Generalplan Ost foresaw the
eventual expulsion of more than 50 million non-Germanized Slavs of Eastern Europe through
forced migration, as well as some of the Balts, beyond the Ural Mountains and into Siberia
. In their place, Germans would be settled in
an extended
"living space" of
the
1000-Year
Empire.
Herbert Backe was one
of the orchestrators of the
Hunger Plan
- the plan to starve tens of millions of
Slavs
in order to ensure steady food supplies for the German people and
troops.
At the outset of
World War II, the
German authority in the
General
Government in occupied Poland ordered that all Jews face
compulsory labour and that those who were physically incapable such
as women and children were to be confined to
ghettos.
To the Nazis a number of ideas appeared on how to answer the
"Jewish Question". One method was a
mass forced deportation of Jews.
Adolf
Eichmann suggested that Jews be forced to emigrate to
Palestine.
Franz
Rademacher made the proposal that Jews be deported to
Madagascar; this proposal was supported by Himmler and was
discussed by Hitler and Italian dictator
Benito Mussolini but was later dismissed as
impractical in 1942. The idea of continuing deportations to
occupied Poland was rejected by the governor,
Hans Frank, of the
General Government of occupied Poland as
Frank refused to accept any more deportations of Jews to the
territory which already had large numbers of Jews.
In 1942, at the
Wannsee
Conference
, Nazi officials decided to eliminate the Jews
altogether, as discussed the "Final
Solution of the Jewish Question". Concentration camps
like Auschwitz
were converted and used gas chambers to kill as
many Jews as possible. By 1945, a number of concentration
camps had been liberated by Allied forces and they found the
survivors to be severely malnourished. The Allies also found
evidence that the Nazis were profiteering from the mass murder of
Jews not only by confiscating their property and personal valuables
but also by extracting gold fillings from the bodies of some Jews
held in concentration camps.
Social Policy
Education
Education under the Nazi regime focused on racial biology,
population policy, culture, geography and especially physical
fitness. Anti-Semitic policy led to the expulsion of Jewish
teachers and professors and officials from the education system.
All university professors were required to be a member of the
National
Socialist Association of University Lecturers in order to be
able to be employed as professors.
Social Welfare
Recent research by academics such as
Götz
Aly has emphasized the role of the extensive Nazi
social welfare programs that focused on
providing employment for German citizens and insuring a minimal
living standard for German citizens. Heavily focused on was the
idea of a national German community. To aid the fostering of a
feeling of community, the German people's labour and entertainment
experiences—from festivals, to vacation trips and traveling
cinemas—were all made a part of the "Strength through Joy"
(
Kraft durch Freude,
KdF) program. Also crucial to the building of loyalty and
comradeship was the implementation of the
National Labour Service and the
Hitler Youth Organization, with
compulsory membership. In addition to this, a number of
architectural projects were undertaken. KdF created the KdF-wagen,
later known as the
Volkswagen (People's
Car), which was designed to be an automobile that every German
citizen would be able to afford. The KdF wagon also was created in
the idea that it could be converted to a military vehicle for war.
Another national project undertaken was the construction of the
Autobahn, which made it the first
freeway system in the world.
Health
According to the research of
Robert
N. Proctor for his book
The Nazi War on Cancer, Nazi Germany had arguably the
most powerful
anti-tobacco movement in the world. Anti-tobacco research
received a strong backing from the government, and German
scientists proved that cigarette smoke could cause cancer. German
pioneering research on experimental
epidemiology lead to the 1939 paper by
Franz H. Müller, and the 1943 paper by
Eberhard Schairer and
Erich Schöniger which convincingly
demonstrated that tobacco smoking was a main culprit in
lung cancer. The government urged German doctors
to counsel patients against tobacco use.
German research on the dangers of tobacco was silenced after the
war, and the dangers of tobacco had to be rediscovered by American
and English scientists in the early 1950s, with a medical consensus
arising in the early 1960s. German scientists also proved that
asbestos was a health hazard, and in
1943—as the first nation in the world to offer such a
benefit—Germany recognized the diseases caused by asbestos, e.g.,
lung cancer, as occupational illnesses eligible for compensation.
The German asbestos-cancer research was later used by American
lawyers doing battle against the
Johns-Manville Corporation.
As part of the general public-health campaign in Nazi Germany,
water supplies were cleaned up,
lead and
mercury were removed from consumer
products, and women were urged to undergo regular screenings for
breast cancer.
Women's rights
The Nazis opposed women's
feminist
movement, claiming that it was Jewish-led, had a left-wing agenda
(compared to Communism) and was bad for both women and men. The
Nazi regime advocated a
patriarchial
society in which German women would recognize the "world is her
husband, her family, her children, and her home." Hitler claimed
that women taking vital jobs away from men during the
Great Depression was economically bad for
families in that women were paid only 66 percent of what men
earned. This being said, Hitler never considered endorsing the idea
of raising women's wages to avoid such a scenario again, but
instead called for women to stay at home. Simultaneously with
calling for women to leave work outside the home, the regime called
for women to be actively supportive of the state regarding women's
affairs. In 1933, Hitler appointed
Gertrud Scholtz-Klink as the Reich
Women's Leader, who instructed women that their primary role in
society was to bear children and that women should be subservient
to men, once saying "the mission of woman is to minister in the
home and in her profession to the needs of life from the first to
last moment of man's existence.". The expectation even applied to
Aryan women married to Jewish men—a necessary ingredient in the
1943
Rosenstrasse protest in
which 1800 German women (joined by 4200 relatives) obliged the Nazi
state to release their Jewish husbands.
The Nazi regime discouraged women from seeking higher education in
secondary schools, universities and colleges. The number of women
allowed to enroll in universities dropped drastically under the
Nazi regime, which shrank from approximately 128,000 women being
enrolled in 1933 to 51,000 in 1938. Female enrollment in secondary
schools dropped from 437,000 in 1926 to 205,000 in 1937. However
with the requirement of men to be enlisted into the German armed
forces during the war, women made up half of the enrollment in the
education system by 1944.
Organizations were made for the indoctrination of Nazi values to
German women. Such organizations included the
Jungmädel (Young Girls) section of the
Hitler Youth for girls from the age 10 to 14, the
Bund Deutscher Mädel (BDM,
German Girl's League) for young women from 14 to 18.
On the issue of sexual affairs regarding women, the Nazis differed
greatly from the restrictive stances on women's role in society.
The Nazi regime promoted a liberal code of conduct as regards
sexual matters, and were sympathetic to women bearing children out
of wedlock. The collapse of 19th century morals in Germany
accelerated during the Third Reich, partly due to the Nazis, and
greatly due to the effects of the war. Promiscuity increased
greatly as the war progressed, with unmarried soldiers often
involved intimately with several women simultaneously. Married
women were often involved in multiple affairs simultaneously, with
soldiers, civilians or
slave
labourers.
"Some farm wives in Württemberg
had already begun using sex as a commodity,
employing carnal favours as a means of getting a full day's work
from foreign labourers.".
Marriage or sexual relations between a person considered “Aryan” and one that was not were classified as Rassenschande were forbidden and under penalty (people found guilty could face concentration camp, while non-Aryans death penalty).
Despite the somewhat official restrictions, some women forged
highly visible, as well as officially praised, achievements.
Examples are aviatrix
Hanna Reitsch
and film director
Leni
Riefenstahl.
An example of the almost cynical way in which Nazi doctrines
differed from practice is that, whilst sexual relationships among
campers was explicitly forbidden, boys' and girls' camps of the
Hitlerjugend associations were needlessly placed close together as
if to make it happen. Pregnancy (including repercussions on
established marriages) often resulted when fetching members of the
Bund Deutscher Mädel were assigned to duties which juxtaposed them
with tempted men.For a more elaborate discussion, see
William L. Shirer,
The Rise and Fall of the
Third Reich (Touchstone Edition) (New York: Simon &
Schuster, 1990), ISBN 0-671-72868-7, section titled "Education in
the Third Reich" (pp. 248–256), esp. pp. 254–256. The following
quotation from p. 254 typifies the Shirer narrative:
I listened to women leaders of the B.D.M.—they were
invariably of the plainer type and usually unmarried—lecture their
young charges on the moral and patriotic duty of bearing children
for Hitler's Reich—within wedlock if possible, but without it if
necessary.
Abortion was heavily penalized in Nazi Germany unless on the
grounds of "racial health", from 1943 abortionists faced the death
penalty. Display of contraceptives was not allowed and Hitler
himself described contraception as "violation of nature, as
degradation of womanhood, motherhood and love."
Environmentalism
In 1935 the regime enacted the "Reich Nature Protection Act".
While not a purely Nazi piece of legislation since parts of its
influences pre-dated the Nazi rise to power, it nevertheless
reflected Nazi ideology. The concept of the Dauerwald
(best translated as the "perpetual forest") which included concepts
such as forest management and
protection was promoted and efforts were also made to curb air pollution.
In practice, the enacted laws and policies met resistance from
various ministries that sought to undermine them, and from the
priority that the war-effort took to environmental
protection.
Animal protection policy
Although the Third Reich was unfriendly to some people, it was
widely friendly for animals and the Nazis took several measures to
ensure protection of animals. In 1933 the regime enacted a
stringent animal-protection law.Many NSDAP leaders
including Adolf Hitler and Hermann Göring were supporters of animal
protection. Several Nazis were environmentalists (notably Rudolf Hess), and species protection and
animal welfare were significant
issues in the regime. Heinrich
Himmler made efforts to ban the hunting of animals. Göring was
an animal lover and conservationist. The current animal
welfare laws in Germany
are more or
less modification of the laws introduced by the National socialist
regime.
Culture
The regime sought to restore traditional values in German culture.
The art and culture that came to define the Weimar Republic years
was repressed. The visual arts were strictly monitored and
traditional, focusing on exemplifying Germanic themes, racial purity, militarism, heroism,
power, strength, and obedience. Modern abstract art and avant-garde art was removed from museums and put
on special display as "degenerate
art", where it was to be ridiculed. In one notable example, on
31 March 1937, huge crowds stood in line to view a special display
of "degenerate art" in Munich. Art forms considered to be
degenerate included Dada, Cubism, Expressionism,
Fauvism, Impressionism, New
Objectivity, and Surrealism.
Literature written by Jewish, other non-Aryans, or authors opposed
to the Nazis was destroyed by the regime. The most infamous
destruction of literature was the book burnings by German students
in 1933.
In 1933, Nazis burned works considered "un-German" in Berlin which
included books by Jewish authors, political opponents, and other
works which did not align with Nazi ideology.
Despite the official attempt to forge a pure Germanic culture, one
major area of the arts, architecture, under Hitler's personal
guidance, was neoclassical, a style based on
architecture of ancient Rome.
This style stood out in stark contrast and opposition to newer,
more liberal, and more popular architecture styles of the time such
as Art Deco. Various Roman buildings were
examined by state architect Albert
Speer for architectural designs for state buildings.
Speer
constructed huge and imposing structures such as in the Nazi party
rally grounds in Nuremberg
and the new Reich Chancellery
building in Berlin
.
One
design that was pursued, but never built, was a gigantic version of
the Pantheon
in Rome
, called
the Volkshalle
to be the semi-religious centre of Nazism in a
renamed Berlin called Germania, which was to be the "world
capital" (Welthauptstadt). Also to be
constructed was a Triumphal
arch
several times larger than that found in Paris,
which was also based upon a classical styling. Many of the
designs for Germania were impractical to construct because of their
size and the marshy soil underneath Berlin; materials that were to
be used for construction were diverted to the war effort.
Cinema and media
The majority of German films of the period
were intended principally as works of entertainment. The import of
foreign films was legally restricted after 1936 and the German
industry, which was effectively nationalised in 1937, had to make up for the
missing foreign films (above all American productions).
Entertainment also became increasingly important in the later years
of World War II when the cinema
provided a distraction from Allied bombing and a string of German
defeats. In both 1943 and 1944 cinema admissions in Germany
exceeded a billion, and the
biggest box office hits of the war years
were Die große Liebe
(1942) and Wunschkonzert
(1941), which both combine elements of the musical, wartime romance and patriotic
propaganda, Frauen sind doch bessere
Diplomaten (1941), a comic musical which was one of the
earliest German films in colour, and Wiener Blut (1942), the adaptation of a
Johann Strauß comic operetta. The importance of the cinema as a tool of
the state, both for its propaganda value and its ability to keep
the populace entertained, can be seen in the filming history of
Veit Harlan's Kolberg (1945), the most expensive film
of the era, for the shooting of which tens of thousands of soldiers
were diverted from their military positions to appear as
extras.
Despite the emigration of many film-makers and the political
restrictions, the German film industry
was not without technical and aesthetic innovations, the
introduction of Agfacolor film production
being a notable example. Technical and aesthetic achievement could
also be turned to the specific ends of the Greater German Reich,
most spectacularly in the work of Leni
Riefenstahl. Riefenstahl's Triumph of the Will (1935),
documenting the Nuremberg Rally
(1934), and Olympia
(1938), documenting the 1936 Summer
Olympics, pioneered techniques of camera movement and editing
that have influenced many later films. Both films, particularly
Triumph of the Will, remain highly controversial, as their
aesthetic merit is inseparable from their propagandizing of
Nationalsocialism ideals.
Religion
Sports
Established in 1934, the Nationalsozialistischer Reichsbund
für Leibesübungen (NSRL), (sometimes also
known under the acronym NSRBL) was the umbrella organization for sports during the Third Reich.
Two major displays of Nazi German art and culture were at the
1936 Summer Olympics and at the
German pavilion at the
1937 International Exposition in Paris. The 1936 Olympics was
meant to display to the world the Aryan superiority of Germany to
other nations. German athletes were carefully chosen not only for
strength but for Aryan appearance. However, one common belief of
Hitler snubbing African-American
athlete Jesse Owens has recently been
discovered to be technically incorrect—it was African-American
athlete Cornelius Cooper
Johnson who was believed to have been snubbed by Hitler, who
left the medal ceremonies after awarding a German and a Finn medal.
Hitler claimed it was not a snub, but that he had official business
to attend to which caused him to depart. On reports that Hitler had
deliberately avoided acknowledging his victories, and had refused
to shake his hand, Owens recounted:
"When I passed the Chancellor he arose, waved his hand at me, and I
waved back at him. I think the writers showed bad taste in
criticizing the man of the hour in Germany." He also stated:
"Hitler didn't snub me — it was FDR who snubbed me. The president
didn't even send me a telegram."
Hitler was criticized for this and the Olympic committee officials
insisted that he greet each and every medalist, or none at all.
Hitler did not attend any of the medal presentations which
followed, including the one after Jesse Owens won his four medals,
and met with German winners outside the stadium afterwards.
See also
History
Politics
Society
Links
References
Notes
- The Treaty of
Saint-Germain-en-Laye concluded the Allies' peace with
Austria, which was
aligned with Germany during the war via the then-extant
Austrian-Hungarian empire.
Hungary, another
principal belligerent aligned with Germany, was party to the
Treaty
of Trianon, a separate treaty distinct from St. Germain and
Versailles. Hungary and Austria were both formed as republics after
the dissolution of the Habsburg's Austrian-Hungarian empire.
- This was the notorious Article 231, the so-called War Guilt
Clause
- All of Germany's foreign colonies were forfeited. The part of
Germany known as the Rhineland, bordering France, was
demilitarized: Germany was forbidden to have troops or military
installations there.
- Article 231 of Versailles stipulated that Germany bore sole
responsibility for the outbreak of the war.
- Germany would be limited to an army of 100,000 men, with
mandatory lengthy terms of enlistment to prevent the establishment
of reserves. The General Staff was to be dissolved along with
certain military colleges. Tanks were forbidden. Limits were placed
on the navy in the form of the size and types of ships permitted,
including the prohibition of any submarines. A military air force
was likewise forbidden.
- The letters Nati- in Nationalsozialist are
pronounced much like "Nazi" in English. This type of syllabic
shortening of words is common in German, for example Sozis
for Sozialisten and Kitas for
Kindertagesstätte ("day care
centers").
- Mary Fulbrook. The Divided Nation: A History of Germany,
1918-1990. Oxford UP, 1992, 45
- The NSDAP did not achieve a parliamentary majority, however, at
any time before Hitler obtained the Chancellorship. Their plurality
slipped in the German federal election,
November 1932 from 230 to 196 seats.
- Richard Evans, The Coming of the Third Reich (New
York: Penguin Books, 2003), 441.
- "The Devils Disciples", Anthony Read , W. W. Norton & Co.,
2003, ISBN 0-393-04800-4
- Henry Maitles NEVER AGAIN!: A review of David Goldhagen, Hitlers Willing
Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust", further
referenced to G Almond, "The German Resistance Movement", Current
History 10 (1946), pp409–527.
- Peter Hoffmann "The History of the German Resistance,
1933-1945"p.xiii
- CuHaven Online [1]
see also: Die Hessisch-thüringische 251.
Infanterie-division, Karl-Wilhelm Maurer, 14. [2]
-
http://www1.ndr.de/kultur/geschichte/helgolandchronik2.html
- Quester,George "Bargaining and Bombing During World War II in
Europe," World Politics, Vol. 15, No. 3 (Apr., 1963), pp. 421, 425.
Published by: The Johns Hopkins University Press
- Chronological Summary of Royal Air Force Bomber
Command Operations – Your Archives
- " Siege of Leningrad (Soviet history)".
Encyclopædia Britannica.
- "Introduction" U-Boat Operations of the Second World
War—Vol 1 by Wynn, Kenneth, 1998 p. 1
- " Germany's forgotten victims". Guardian.co.uk.
October 22, 2003.
- " The Holocaust". United States Holocaust
Memorial Museum.
- " REFUGEES: Save Us! Save Us!". Time. July 9,
1979.
- Eisikovits, Nir, " Transitional Justice", The Stanford
Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Spring 2009 Edition) Section 1.2.1
Victor's Justice
- Pinn, Voldemar. Unknown World War II. Haapsalu, 1998.
p. 82–83.
- Richard Overy, 1995, Why the allies won, Random House,
p. 205.
- and
- Bischof, Günter, "The Historical Roots of a Special
Relationship: Austro-German Relations Between Hegemony and
Equality". In Unequal Partners, ed. Harald von Riekhoff and
Hanspeter Neuhold. San Francisco: Westview Press, 1993
- United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
- Translation: "The Munich Chief of Police, Himmler, has issued
the following press announcement: On Wednesday the first
concentration camp is to be opened in Dachau with an accommodation
for 5000 persons. All Communists and—where necessary—Reichsbanner
and Social Democratic functionaries who endanger state security are
to be concentrated here, as in the long run it is not possible to
keep individual functionaries in the state prisons without
overburdening these prisons, and on the other hand these people
cannot be released because attempts have shown that they persist in
their efforts to agitate and organize as soon as they are
released."
- Daniel Goldhagen, Hitler's Willing Executioners (p.
290) - "2.8 million young, healthy Soviet POWs" killed by the
Germans, "mainly by starvation ... in less than eight months" of
1941-42, before "the decimation of Soviet POWs ... was stopped" and
the Germans "began to use them as laborers" (emphasis added).
- Hitler's Plans for Eastern Europe. Selections
from: "Poland under Nazi Occupation", by Janusz Gumkowkski and
Kazimierz Leszczynski
- Heinrich Himmler Speech before SS Group Leaders Posen,
Poland 1943. Hanover College Department of History
- Tooze, Adam,
The Wages of Destruction,
Viking, 2007, pp. 476–85, 538–49, ISBN 0670038261
- Kershaw, Ian. 2000, 4th edition. The Nazi Dictatorship;
Problems & Perspectives of Interpretation. New York: Oxford
University Press. P. 111.
- Kershaw, Ian. 2000, 4th edition. The Nazi Dictatorship;
Problems & Perspectives of Interpretation. P. 111.
- Kershaw, Ian. 2000, 4th edition. The Nazi Dictatorship;
Problems & Perspectives of Interpretation. p. 111.
- Pauley, Bruce F. Hitler, Stalin and Mussolini:
Totalitarianism in the Twentieth Century. 2nd Edition. 2003.
Wheeling, Illinois, USA: Harlan Davidson Inc. Pp. 118.
- Pauley, 2003. Pp. 118
- Pauley, 2003. Pp. 119.
- Nazi Medicine and Public Health Policy Robert
N. Proctor, Dimensions: A Journal of Holocaust Studies.
- Review of "The Nazi War on Cancer" Canadian
Journal of History, Aug 2001 by Ian Dowbiggin
- Pauley, 2003. Pp. 119
- Perry Biddiscombe "Dangerous Liaisons: The Anti-Fraternization
Movement in the US Occupation Zones of Germany and Austria,
1945-1948", Journal of Social History 34.3 (2001) 611–647
-
http://books.google.com/books?id=T205AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA382&lpg=PA382&dq=germany+abortion+death+penalty&source=bl&ots=nQMCJDEN0w&sig=Xfm-Vxwh0RhTXF-spSpNDl9vEM8&hl=en&ei=w1guSsuPJoP6_AaBj6W4Cg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3
Abortion By Malcolm Potts, Peter Diggory, John Peel at Google
Books
- JONATHAN OLSEN "How Green Were the Nazis? Nature,
Environment, and Nation in the Third Reich (review)" Technology
and Culture – Volume 48, Number 1, January 2007, pp. 207–208
- Review of Franz-Josef Brueggemeier, Marc Cioc, and
Thomas Zeller, eds, "How Green Were the Nazis?: Nature,
Environment, and Nation in the Third Reich" Wilko Graf von
Hardenberg, H-Environment, H-Net Reviews, October, 2006.
- Hartmut M. Hanauske-Abel, Not a slippery slope or sudden subversion: German medicine
and National Socialism in 1933, BMJ 1996; pp. 1453–1463 (7
December)
- Scobie, Alexander. Hitler's State Architecture: The Impact
of Classical Antiquity. University Park: Pennsylvania State
University Press, 1990. ISBN 0-271-00691-9. Pp. 92.
- Kinobesuche in Deutschland 1925 bis 2004
Spitzenorganisation der Filmwirtschaft e. V
-
Cinema of Germany#1933-1945 Film industry in the Third
Reich
- Hyde Flippo, The 1936 Berlin Olympics: Hitler and Jesse Owens
German Myth 10 from German.about.com
- Rick Shenkman, Adolf Hitler, Jesse Owens and the Olympics Myth
of 1936 13 February 2002 from History News Network
(article excerpted from Rick Shenkman's Legends, Lies and
Cherished Myths of American History. Publisher: William Morrow
& Co; 1st ed edition (November 1988) ISBN 0688065805).
Ironically, it was US President Franklin Delano Roosevelt who
declined to invite Owens to the White House or to congratulate him
in any way. See "Getting to Know the Racial Views of Our Past
Presidents: What about FDR?" Journal of Blacks in Higher
Education 38 (2002–2003, Winter), 44–46.
Further reading
- William Sheridan Allen.
The Nazi Seizure of Power : the Experience Of A Single German
Town, 1922–1945 by New York ; Toronto: F. Watts, 1984. ISBN
0-531-09935-0.
- Gisela Bock "Racism and Sexism in
Nazi Germany: Motherhood, Compulsory Sterilization, and the State"
from When Biology Became Destiny: Women in Weimar and Nazi
Germany edited by Renate Bridenthal, Atina Grossmann, and
Marion Kaplan, New York: Monthly Review Press, 1984.
- Karl Dietrich Bracher.
The German Dictatorship; The Origins, Structure, and Effects of
National Socialism; New York, Praeger 1970.
- Michael Burleigh. The Third Reich: A New History,
2002. ISBN 0-8090-9326-X. Standard scholarly history,
1918–1945.
- Martin Broszat. German
National Socialism, 1919–1945 translated from the German by
Kurt Rosenbaum and Inge Pauli Boehm, Santa Barbara, Calif.: Clio
Press, 1966.
- Martin Broszat. The Hitler
State: The Foundation and Development Of The Internal Structure Of
The Third Reich. Translated by John W. Hiden. London: Longman,
1981. ISBN 0-582-49200-9.
- Richard J. Evans. The Coming of the Third
Reich. ISBN 0-14-100975-6, standard scholarly history to
1933
- Richard J. Evans. The Third Reich in Power
2005 ISBN 1-59420-074-2, scholarly history
- Paul Garson. Album of the
Damned: Snapshots from the Third Reich 2008 ISBN
978-0897335768, Academy Chicago Publishers
- Richard Grunberger. A
Social History of the Third Reich 1974 ISBN
0-14-013675-4.
- Klaus Hildebrand. The Third
Reich London: G. Allen & Unwin, 1984 ISBN
0-04-943033-5.
- Andreas Hillgruber
Germany and the two World Wars, Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard
University Press, 1981 ISBN 0-674-35321-8.
- Heinz Höhne. The Order of
the Death's Head: The Story of Hitler's SS. Translated by
Richard Barry. London: Penguin Books, 1971.
- David Irving. Hitler's
War. London: Focal Point Publications. ISBN
1-872197-10-8.
- Adam Tooze. The Wages of
Destruction: The Making and the Breaking of the Nazi Economy.
New York: Viking, 2006. ISBN 978-0-670-03826-8.
- Ian Kershaw. The Nazi
Dictatorship: Problems and Perspectives of Interpretation, 4th
ed. London: Arnold, 2000. ISBN 0-340-76028-1
- Claudia Koonz. Mothers In The
Fatherland: Women, the Family, and Nazi Politics. New York:
St. Martin's Press, 1987. ISBN 0-312-54933-4.
- Claudia Koonz. The Nazi
Conscience. Cambridge, Mass.: The Belknap Press of Harvard
University Press, 2003.
- Guido Knopp. Hitler's
Henchmen. 1998. Sutton Publishing, 2005. ISBN
0-7509-3781-5.
- Christian Leitz, ed. The Third Reich: The Essential
Readings. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishers, 1999. ISBN
0-631-20700-7.
- Richard Overy & Timothy Mason "Debate: Germany, “Domestic
Crisis” and War in 1939" pages 200–240 from Past and
Present, Number 122, February 1989.
- Frank McDonough, Hitler and the Rise of The Nazi Party, Pearson
Longman, 2003.
- Eric Michaud, The Cult of Art
in Nazi Germany, translated by Janet Lloyd, Stanford: Stanford
University Press, 2004. ISBN 0-804-74327-4.
- Hans Mommsen. From Weimar to
Auschwitz Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1991.
ISBN 0-691-03198-3.
- Roger Moorhouse. Killing
Hitler. London: Jonathan Cape, 2006. ISBN 0-224-07121-1.
- Detlev Peukert. Inside Nazi
Germany: Conformity, Opposition and Racism in Everyday Life.
London: Batsford, 1987. ISBN 0-7134-5217-X.
- Anthony Read. The Devils Disciples. W. W. Norton &
Co., 2003. ISBN 0-393-04800-4.
- Hans Rothfels. The German
Opposition to Hitler: An Assessment Longwood Pr Ltd: London
1948, 1961, 1963, 1970 ISBN 0-85496-119-4.
- William L. Shirer. The Rise and Fall of the
Third Reich. ISBN 0-671-72868-7
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