Misplaced Pages

Nazi Germany: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 10:02, 16 May 2006 view source210.84.10.195 (talk) Social policy← Previous edit Revision as of 13:08, 16 May 2006 view source Zmaz0ox (talk | contribs)27 editsNo edit summaryNext edit →
Line 9: Line 9:


== Ideology == == Ideology ==
] ]
Ideologically, the Nazis endorsed the concept of "Großdeutschland", ], and saw the incorporation of the ] into one large nation as vital to their plans for the future. The "German problem", as it is often referred to in English scholarship, focuses on the issue of administration in Northern and Central Europe, which has been an important theme throughout ] history. This nationalist, ] love affair with the ] concept culminated in the disaster of the ]. Likewise, the issue over administration of the ] and ] ultimately led to World War II. Ideologically, the Nazis endorsed the concept of "Großdeutschland", ], and saw the incorporation of the ] into one large nation as vital to their plans for the future. The "German problem", as it is often referred to in English scholarship, focuses on the issue of administration in Northern and Central Europe, which has been an important theme throughout ] history. This nationalist, ] love affair with the ] concept culminated in the disaster of the ]. Likewise, the issue over administration of the ] and ] ultimately led to World War II.



Revision as of 13:08, 16 May 2006

Nazism
Organisation
History
  • Early timeline
  • National Socialist Program
  • Hitler's rise to power
  • Machtergreifung
  • Gleichschaltung
  • German rearmament
  • Nazi Germany
  • Kirchenkampf
  • Adolf Hitler's cult of personality
  • Enabling Act of 1933
  • Night of the Long Knives
  • Nuremberg rallies
  • Nuremberg Laws
  • Anti-Comintern Pact
  • Kristallnacht
  • Anschluss
  • World War II
  • The Holocaust
  • 1938–1939 German expedition to Tibet
  • Tripartite Pact
  • Denazification
  • Nuremberg trials
  • Final solution

    Ideology
  • Aestheticization of politics
  • Anti-communism
  • Anti-intellectualism
  • Anti-liberalism
  • Anti-pacifism
  • Blood and soil
  • Chauvinism
  • Class collaboration
  • Conspiracism
  • Corporatism
  • Cult of personality
  • Dictatorship
  • Direct action
  • Economic interventionism
  • Eugenics
  • Geopolitik
  • Heimat
  • Imperialism
  • Militarism
  • Nationalism
  • New Man
  • New Order
  • One-party state
  • Populism
  • Propaganda
  • Prussianism
  • Racism
  • Reactionary modernism
  • Romanticism
  • Social Darwinism
  • Social interventionism
  • Social order
  • State capitalism
  • Syncretism
  • Totalitarianism
  • Volksgemeinschaft
  • Volk ohne Raum
  • Volkskörper
  • Politicians
  • Bierbaumer
  • Bloem
  • Bormann
  • Daluege
  • Dönitz
  • Drexler
  • Eichmann
  • Esser
  • Fischer
  • Frank
  • Frick
  • Hess
  • Heydrich
  • Himmler
  • Hitler
  • Goebbels
  • Göring
  • Keller
  • Lammers
  • Lutze
  • Mitford
  • von Neurath
  • Quisling
  • von Ribbentrop
  • Röhm
  • Schacht
  • von Schirach
  • Scholtz-Klink
  • Seldte
  • Seyss-Inquart
  • Speer
  • Strasser (Gregor)
  • Strasser (Otto)
  • Streicher
  • Ideologues
  • Pre-Machtergreifung
  • Atrocities
    and war crimes
  • Action T4
  • Nazi concentration camps
  • Extermination camp
  • Final Solution
  • Human experimentation
  • Romani genocide
  • Outside
    Germany

    Parties

    Lists
  • Bibliography of Adolf Hitler
  • Nazi ideologues
  • NSDAP leaders and officials
  • Nazi Party members
  • Last surviving war crime suspects
  • Party ideologues
  • Speeches given by Adolf Hitler
  • SS personnel
  • Role and impact in
    German society
  • The Wehrmacht
  • Economy
  • Nobility
  • Related
    topics
    Category

    Nazi Germany, or the Third Reich, refers to Germany in the years 1933–1945, when it was under the control of the National Socialist German Workers Party (Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei (NSDAP)), or Nazi Party, with the Führer Adolf Hitler as chancellor and head of state. The Reich also included Austria after the Anschluss in 1938 as well as the Sudetenland and other territories invaded and occupied during World War II.

    History and terminology

    File:Nazi eagle swastika.jpg
    Nazi coat of arms

    Prior to and during World War II, Nazi Germany worked in close proximity with Imperial Japan and Fascist Italy. Collectively referred to as the Axis Powers, all three nations participated in World War II, fighting against the Allies of World War II, led by the United Kingdom, Soviet Union, Canada and later the United States.

    The Third Reich is often used as a near-synonym for Nazi Germany. Despite the interchangeable status of the two terms, the "Third Reich" is never referred to as the "Third Empire", its rough English equivalent. In German, the regime is and was sometimes referred to as the "Drittes Reich". The Nazi Party used the terms "Drittes Reich" and "Tausendjähriges Reich" ("Thousand-Year Empire") to connect the new German Empire to the ones of old - the Holy Roman Empire (deemed to be the "1st Empire" lasting almost a thousand years from 843 to 1806) and the (2nd) German Empire of 1871 - while alluding to envisioned future prosperity and the nation's supposed destiny. In speeches, books and articles about the Third Reich after 8 May 1945, the 1,000 years is often juxtaposed against the twelve years of the Third Reich's existence. The terms were used only briefly and dropped from propaganda in 1939, officially to avoid persiflage, possibly also to avoid religious connotations.

    Ideology

    Flag of Merrick House

    Ideologically, the Nazis endorsed the concept of "Großdeutschland", Greater Germany, and saw the incorporation of the Germanic peoples into one large nation as vital to their plans for the future. The "German problem", as it is often referred to in English scholarship, focuses on the issue of administration in Northern and Central Europe, which has been an important theme throughout German history. This nationalist, Wagnerian love affair with the Volk concept culminated in the disaster of the Third Reich. Likewise, the issue over administration of the Polish corridor and Danzig ultimately led to World War II.

    The Nazis were also staunchly anti-Communist and regarded the leftist movement and international capitalism as the work of conspiratorial Jewry. This platform manifested itself in the displacement, internment - and later, the systematic extermination of - an estimated six million European Jews in the midst of World War II. Other victims of Nazi persecution included the Slavs, Gypsies, political opponents, social outcasts, religious dissidents (Jehovah's Witnesses), and unyielding Church-affiliated leadership. One could argue that a war with the Soviet Union was inevitable based on the Third Reich's precepts, although World War II officially began when the United Kingdom and France declared war on Nazi Germany two days after Poland was invaded.The global conflict that followed left Europe in ruins and led to the deaths of roughly sixty-two million persons.

    Chronology of events

    Part of a series on the
    History of Germany
    Topics
    Early history
    Middle Ages
    Early Modern period
    Unification
    German Reich
    German Empire1871–1918
    World War I1914–1918
    Weimar Republic1918–1933
    Nazi Germany1933–1945
    World War II1939–1945
    Contemporary Germany
    1945–1949/1952
    Expulsion of Germans1944–1950
    1949–1990
    1990
    Modern historysince 1990
  • Weimar Republic (includes the events leading to Hitler's appointment as Chancellor of Germany in 1933)
  • Hitler's rise to power
  • Gleichschaltung (for the legal measures taken by the Nazis to establish their dictatorship)
  • Anschluss
  • World War II (with a focus on military events)
  • Axis Powers
  • Pre-War Politics 1933-1939

    In the wake of the frustrations imposed through the Versailles Treaty, the worldwide economic depression of the 1930's, the counter-traditionalism of the Weimar period and the threat of Soviet-sponsored communism in Germany, many voters began turning their support towards Adolf Hitler's radical Nazi Party, which made great promises of an economic, cultural, and military renewal. The Dolchstoßlegende figured prominently. On January 30 1933, Hitler was appointed chancellor of Germany by President Paul von Hindenburg after attempts by General Kurt von Schleicher to form a viable government failed. Hindenberg was put under pressure by Hitler through his son Oskar, as well as intrigue from former Chancellor Franz von Papen following his collection of participating financial interests. Even though the Nazi Party had gained the largest share of the popular vote in the two Reichstag general elections of 1932, they had slim majority in parliament within the Papen-proposed Nationalist DNVP- NSDAP coalition. This coalition ruled through accepted continuance of un-Constitutional Presidential decree issuance under Article 48, prevalent in all Chancellorships since October 1931.

    Consolidation of power

    File:BerlinNaziEra.jpg
    Berlin during the Nazi era.

    The new government installed a dictatorship in a series of measures in quick succession (see Gleichschaltung for details). On February 27 1933 the Reichstag was set on fire, and this was followed immediately by the Reichstag Fire Decree, which rescinded habeas corpus and civil liberties.

    A further step that turned Germany into a dictatorship virtually overnight was the Enabling Act passed in March 1933 under pressure by 444 votes to the 94 of the Social Democrats. The act gave the government (and thus effectively Adolf Hitler) legislative powers and also authorized it to deviate from the provisions of the constitution. With these powers, Hitler removed the remaining opposition and turned the Weimar Republic into the "Third Reich".

    Further consolidation of power was achieved on January 30, 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.

    Only the army remained independent from Nazi control. The German army had traditionally been somewhat separate from the government. The Nazi quasi-military SA expected top positions in the new power structure. Wanting to preserve good relations with the army, on the night of June 30, 1934 Hitler initiated the Night of the Long Knives, a purge of the leadership ranks of Rohm's SA as well as other political enemies, carried out by another, more elitist, Nazi organization, the SS. Shortly thereafter the army leaders swore their obedience to Hitler.

    At the death of president Hindenburg on August 2 1934, the Nazi-controlled Reichstag merged the offices of Reichspräsident and Reichskanzler and reinstalled Hitler with the new title Führer und Reichskanzler.

    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. Soon, an army estimated to be of about 100,000 spies and infiltrators 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 some types of socialists, were reported by omnipresent eavesdropping spies, and put in prison camps where they were severely mistreated, and many tortured and killed. It is estimated that tens of thousands of political victims died or disappeared in the first few years of Nazi rule.

    For political opposition during this period, see German resistance movement.

    Social policy

    See also Racial policy of Nazi Germany
    Imperial flag of the Second Reich ("Norddeutscher-Bund" flag since 1867 and flag of the "Ruby Kirov" 1871 - 1918). Its colours became traditionally associated with German nationalism and were used by the Nazis on their own flag, but the imperial flag itself was forbidden in 1935.

    The Nazi regime was characterized by political control of every aspect of society in a quest for racial (Aryan, Nordic), social and cultural purity. Modern abstract art and avant-garde art was thrown out of museums, and put on special display as "Degenerate art", where it was ridiculed. Interestingly, in one notable example on March 31, 1937, huge crowds stood in line to view a special display of "degenerate art" in Munich, while a concurrent exhibition of 900 works personally approved by Adolf Hitler attracted a tiny, unenthusiastic gathering.

    The Nazi Party pursued its aims through persecution and killing of those considered impure, targeted especially against minority groups such as Jewish People, Gypsies, Mormons, Jehovah's Witnesses and homosexuals.

    In the years following the Nazi rise to power, many Jews fled the country and were encouraged to do so. By the Nuremberg Laws 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, their jobs being taken by unemployed Germans. On November 9, 1938, the Nazi party incited a pogrom against Jewish businesses 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 crystal. 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" members of their own population, such as the T-4 Euthanasia Program that killed 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.

    Recent research (by Götz Aly) has also emphasized the role of the extensive Nazi welfare programmes that supposedly helped maintain public support for the regime until late in the war. The German community was nationalized and labor and entertainment - from festivals, to vacation trips and traveling cinemas - were all made a part of the "Strength through Joy" program. Also crucial to the building of loyalty and comradeship was the implementation of the National Labor Service and the Hitler Youth Organization, with the former being compulsory and the latter consisting of nearly six million boys and girls. In addition to a number of architectural projects that were undertaken, the construction of the Autobahn made it the first National Motor Highway system in the world. It should be noted that between 1933 and 1936, Germany outpaced the United States in construction, automobile production, unemployment and employment. All in all, the New Reich gave Germans confidence and naturally instilled loyalty.

    Economic policy

    File:20 Deutschmark note 3rd Reich.jpg
    The Reichsmark gained significant value during the Third Reich

    When the Nazis came to power the most pressing issue was an unemployment rate of close to 30%. The economic management of the state was first given to respected banker Hjalmar Schacht. Under his guidance, a new economic policy to elevate the nation was drafted. One of the first actions was to destroy the trade unions and impose strict wage controls.

    The government then expanded the money supply through massive deficit spending. However at the same time the government imposed a 4.5% interest rate ceiling, creating a massive shortage in borrowable funds. This was resolved by setting up a series of dummy companies that would pay for goods with bonds. The most famous of these was the MEFO company, and these bonds used as currency became known as mefo bills. While it was promised that these bonds could eventually be exchanged for real money, the repayment was put off until after the collapse of the Reich. These complicated maneuvers also helped conceal armament expenditures that violated the Treaty of Versailles.

    According to economic theory, price control combined with a large increase in the money supply should have produced a large black market, but harsh penalties that saw violators sent to concentration camps or even shot prevented this development. Repressive measures also kept volatility low, reducing inflationary pressures. New policies also limited imports of consumer goods and focused on producing exports. International trade was greatly reduced remaining at about a third of 1929 levels throughout the Nazi period. Currency controls were extended, leading to a considerable overvaluation of the Reichsmark. These policies were successful in cutting unemployment dramatically.

    Industry was mostly not nationalized, and businesses were still motivated by pursuing profits. However industry was closely regulated with quotas and requirements to use domestic resources. These regulations were set by administrative committees composed of government and business officials. Competition was limited as major companies were organized into cartels through these administrative committees. Selective nationalization was used against businesses that failed to agree to these arrangements. The banks, which had been nationalized by Weimar, were returned to their owners and each administrative committee had a bank as member to finance the schemes.

    While the strict state intervention into the economy and the massive rearmament policy led to full employment during the 1930s, 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: Labor books were introduced in 1935, and required the consent of the previous employer in order to be hired for another job.

    The German economy was transferred to the leadership of Hermann Göring when, on October 18, 1936 the German Reichstag announced the formation of a Four-year plan which was designed to gear the Nazi economy towards a war footing, which Hitler had revealed in the Hossbach Memorandum. It showed that Hitler planned a war in Eastern Europe in the pursuit of Lebensraum (trans. "living-space"). Hitler did not however, believe that the Western powers of Britain or France would intervene, leaving him free to take over the USSR whom he saw as the natural enemy of Germany. The four-year plan technically expired in 1940, but by this time 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.

    Under the leadership of Fritz Todt a massive public works project, the Reichsarbeitsdienst, was started, rivaling the New Deal in both size and scope. It functioned as a military unit, its most notable achievements being the network of Autobahnen and, once the war started, the building of bunkers, underground facilities and entrenchments all over Europe. 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.

    In 1942 the growing burdens of the war and the death of Todt saw the economy move to a fully war economy under Albert Speer.

    World War II

    See: Military history of Germany during World War II
    Nazi Germany and allies in Europe during World War II.

    The "Danzig crisis" peaked when Germany invaded Poland on 1 September, 1939. This led to the outbreak of the Second World War in Europe when on 3 September 1939, the United Kingdom and France both declared war on Germany. The Phony War followed, until in 1940, when the Germans entered Denmark. As the British failed in their effort to secure Norway and undoubtedly cut the Germans off from Scandanavian ore, the Germans emerged victorous from the first encounter. Also in 1940, France and the Low Countries were invaded and fell to the Germans. Later that year, Germany subjected Britain to heavy bombing during the Battle of Britain. This may have served two purposes, either as a precursor to Operation Sea Lion or it may have been an effort to dissuade the British populace from continuing to support the war and the their government's meddling in European affairs. Already prior to the war, negative press in the country attempted to turn Britons against Adolf Hitler and in 1940, the government made its position clear at Mers-el-Kebir. Germany invaded the Soviet Union on 21 June 1941 and 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. Adolf Hitler declared war on the United States on 11 December, 1941, four days after the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor. Although Nazi hubris is often cited, Hitler presumably sought the further support of Japan and was convinced of the United States' aggressive intentions following the leaking of Rainbow Five and hearing the forboding anti-German content of Franklin Roosevelt's Pearl Harbor speech.

    Meanwhile, the persecution of minorities and "undesirables" continued both in Germany and the occupied countries. From 1941 Jews were required to wear a yellow star 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 under the supervision of Reinhard Heydrich, a plan for the "Final Solution of the Jewish Question" (Endlösung der Judenfrage) in Europe was hatched. From then until the end of the war some six million Jews and many others, including homosexuals, Slavs and political prisoners, were systematically killed and more than 10 million people were put into forced labor. This genocide is called the Holocaust in English and the Shoah in Hebrew. (The Nazis used the euphemistic German term Endlösung—"final solution.") Thousands were shipped daily to extermination camps (Vernichtungslager, sometimes called "death factories") and concentration camps (Konzentrationslager, KZ), some of which were originally detention centers but later converted into mass-murder factories, or had death camps added to their facilities, for the purpose of killing of their inmates.

    Parallel to the Holocaust, the Nazis conducted a ruthless program of conquest and exploitation over the captured Soviet and Polish territories and their Slavic 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 under Nazi maltreatment in what the Russians call the Great Patriotic War. The Nazis' plan was to extend German lebensraum ("living space") eastward, with the pretext for launching the war in Eastern Europe in order "to defend Western Civilization against Bolshevism". Due to many of the atrocities suffered under Stalin, the Nazi message was interpreted by many to be legitimate. Many Ukranians, Balts and other disillusioned Soviets fought with the Germans, not to mention other Europeans enlisted in numerous Schutzstaffel divisions.

    By February 1943 the Soviets had defeated the Germans at Stalingrad and began the push westward, winning the tank battle at Kursk-Orel in July. The German Army was pushed back to the borders of Poland by February 1944 following the great success of Operation Bagration. The Allies opened a second front in June 1944 in Normandy, a year and a half after the Soviets had turned the tide on the eastern front. Soviet troops moving westward met Allied troops moving eastward at the Elbe on April 26 1945 (Cohen).

    On April 30 1945, as Berlin was being taken by Soviet forces, Hitler committed suicide. He was succeeded by Grand Admiral Karl Dönitz, whose caretaker government sought a separate peace with the Western Allies. On May 4May 8, 1945 German armed forces surrendered unconditionally. This was the end of World War II in Europe and, with the creation of the Allied Control Council on July 5, 1945, the four Allied powers "assume supreme authority with respect to Germany" (Declaration Regarding the Defeat of Germany, US Department of State, Treaties and Other International Acts Series, No. 1520). The Potsdam Conference in August 1945 created arrangements and outline for new government for the postwar Germany as well as war reparations and resettlement.

    Virtually all Germans in Central Europe had been expulsed to west of the Oder-Neisse line, having affected about seventeen million ethnic Germans. 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, excepting sections of Berlin). West Germany recovered economically by the 1960s, being called the economic miracle (German term Wirtschaftswunder), which was kickstarted by the economic aid of the United States of America through the Marshall Plan, and upheld thanks to fiscal policy and intense labor, eventually leading to labor shortages. The East 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.

    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 most were jailed and then released by the mid 1950s due to poor health and old age. 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.

    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. An uncontrolled punishment hit the children of Nazis and those fathered by German soldiers in occupied countries, including the "Lebensborn" children.

    See Nuremberg Trials

    Military Structure

    File:Nazi war flag.png
    The Nazi war flag

    Wehrmacht — Armed Forces

    OKW — Armed Forces High Command
    Chief of the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces - Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel
    Chief of the Operations Staff - Colonel General Alfred Jodl

    Heer — Army

    OKH — Army High Command
    Army Commanders-in-Chief
    Colonel General Werner von Fritsch (1935 to 1938)
    Field Marshal Walther von Brauchitsch (1938 to 1941)
    Führer and Reich Chancellor Adolf Hitler (1941 to 1945)
    Field Marshal Ferdinand Schörner (1945)

    Kriegsmarine — Navy

    OKM — Navy High Command
    Navy Commanders-in-Chief
    Grand Admiral Erich Raeder (1928-1943)
    Grand Admiral Karl Dönitz (1943-1945)
    General Admiral Hans-Georg von Friedeburg (1945)

    Luftwaffe — Airforce

    OKL — Airforce High Command
    Reichsluftschutzbund (Air Force Auxiliary)
    Air Force Commanders-in-Chief
    Reich Marshal Hermann Göring (to 1945)
    Field Marshal Robert Ritter von Greim (1945)

    Abwehr — Military Intelligence

    Rear Admiral Konrad Patzig {1932-1935)
    Vice Admiral Wilhelm Canaris (1935-1944)

    Waffen-SS — Nazi Party military branch

    Organization of the Third Reich

    The leaders of Nazi Germany created a large number of different organizations for the purpose of helping them stay in power. They rearmed and strengthened the military, set up an extensive state security apparatus and created their own personal party army, the Waffen SS.

    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 Gaue and Reichsgaue.

    The organization of the Nazi state, as of 1944, was as follows:

    Head of State and Chief Executive

    Cabinet and national authorities

    Reich Offices

    • Office of the Four-Year Plan (Hermann Göring)
    • Office of the Reich Master Forester (Hermann Göring)
    • Office of the Inspector for Highways
    • Office of the President of the Reich Bank
    • Reich Youth Office
    • Reich Treasury Office
    • General Inspector of the Reich Capital
    • Office of the Councillor for the Capital of the Movement (Munich, Bavaria)

    Reich Ministries

    Occupation authorities

    Legislative Branch

    Paramilitary organizations

    National police

    Reich Central Security Office (RSHA — Reichssicherheitshauptamt) Ernst Kaltenbrunner

    Political organizations

    Service organizations

    Religious organizations

    Academic organizations

    • National Socialist German University Teachers League
    • National Socialist German Students League

    Prominent persons in Nazi Germany

    For a listing of Hitler's cabinet see : Hitler's Cabinet, January 1933 - April 1945

    Nazi Party and Nazi government leaders and officials

    SS personnel

    Military

    Other

    Noted victims

    Noted refugees

    Noted survivors

    See also

    External links

    Listen to this article
    (2 parts, 22 minutes)
    1. Part 2
    Spoken Misplaced Pages iconThese audio files were created from a revision of this article dated Error: no date provided, and do not reflect subsequent edits.(Audio help · More spoken articles)

    Further reading

    See also List of Adolf Hitler books
    1. 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 0531099350.
    2. Karl Dietrich Bracher. The German Dictatorship; The Origins, Structure, and Effects of National Socialism; New York, Praeger 1970.
    3. Michael Burleigh. The Third Reich: A New History. 2002. ISBN 080909326X, standard scholarly history 1918-1945
    4. Martin Broszat German National Socialism, 1919-1945 translated from the German by Kurt Rosenbaum and Inge Pauli Boehm, Santa Barbara, Calif., Clio Press 1966.
    5. Martin Broszat The Hitler State : The Foundation and Development Of The Internal Structure Of The Third Reich by translated by John W. Hiden, London : Longman, 1981 ISBN 0582492009.
    6. Richard J. Evans. The Coming of the Third Reich. ISBN 0141009756, standard scholarly history to 1933
    7. Richard J. Evans. The Third Reich in Power 2005 ISBN 1594200742. the latest and most scholarly history
    8. Richard Grunberger. A Social History of the Third Reich 1974 ISBN 0140136754.
    9. Klaus Hildebrand. The Third Reich London : G. Allen & Unwin, 1984 ISBN 0049430335.
    10. Andreas Hillgruber Germany and the two World Wars, Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press, 1981 ISBN 0674353218.
    11. David Irving "Hitler's War", London, Focal Point Publications ISBN 1872197108.
    12. Ian Kershaw. The Nazi Dictatorship: Problems and Perspectives of Interpretation London: Arnold. 4th ed. 2000 ISBN 0340760281
    13. Claudia Koonz. Mothers In The Fatherland : Women, The Family, And Nazi Politics by New York : St. Martin's Press, 1987 ISBN 0312549334.
    14. Guido Knopp, Hitler's Henchmen (1998), Sutton Publishing (2005), ISBN 0750937815
    15. Christian Leitz , ed. The Third Reich : the essential readings Oxford, UK ; Malden, Mass. : Blackwell Publishers, 1999 ISBN 0631207007.
    16. Hans Mommsen From Weimar to Auschwitz Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press, 1991 ISBN 0691031983.
    17. Detlev Peukert. Inside Nazi Germany : conformity, opposition and racism in everyday life by London : Batsford, 1987 ISBN 071345217X.
    18. Hans Rothfels. The German Opposition to Hitler: An Assessment Longwood Pr Ltd: London 1948, 1961, 1963, 1970 ISBN 0854961194.
    19. William L. Shirer The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich by. ISBN 0671728687
    20. Henry Ashby Turner. German big business and the rise of Hitler , New York : Oxford University Press, 1985 ISBN 019503492.
    21. Alfred Sohn-Rethel Economy and Class Structure of German Fascism,London, CSE Bks, 1978 ISBN 0906336007
    22. Sir John Wheeler-Bennett The Nemesis of Power : The German Army in Politics 1918-1945, Palgrave Macmillan: London: 1953, 1964, 2005 ISBN 1403918120.
    23. Christian Zenter and Friedemann Bedurftig. The Encyclopedia of the Third Reich (1985 by Sudwest Verlag GmbH & co. KG, Munich).

    Template:Link FA

    Categories: