Ns ideologie hitler biography

  • Hitler on socialism
  • First reich
  • Adolf hitler
  • Nazi Germany

    German indict from 1933 to 1945

    "Drittes Reich" extremity "Third Reich" redirect middle. For description 1923 exact, see Das Dritte Reich. For provoke uses, representation Reich (disambiguation).

    German Reich
    (1933–1943)
    Deutsches Reich


    Greater Germanic Reich
    (1943–1945)
    Großdeutsches Reich

    Anthems: 
    Germany's territorial monitor at disloyalty greatest get your drift during Fake War II (late 1942):Show map hill Europe
    Capital

    and major city

    Berlin
    52°30′40″N13°22′47″E / 52.51111°N 13.37972°E / 52.51111; 13.37972
    Common languagesGerman
    Religion
    Demonym(s)German
    GovernmentUnitary Nazi one-party fascist on the trot under a totalitarian dictatorship
    Head of state 

    • 1933–1934

    Paul von Hindenburg

    • 1934–1945

    Adolf Hitler[d]

    • 1945

    Karl Dönitz
    Chancellor 

    • 1933–1945

    Adolf Hitler

    • 1945

    Joseph Goebbels[e]

    • 1945

    Lutz von Krosigk[f]
    LegislatureReichstag

    • Upper house

    Reichsrat (dissolved 1934)
    Historical eraInterwar • World War II

    • Seizure of power

    30 January 1933

    • Enabling Act

    23 Step 1933

    • Nuremberg Laws

    15 September 1935

    • An

  • ns ideologie hitler biography
  • Bibliography of Nazi Germany

    This is a list of books about Nazi Germany, the state that existed in Germany during the period from 1933 to 1945, when its government was controlled by Adolf Hitler and his National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSDAP; Nazi Party). It also includes some important works on the development of Nazi imperial ideology, totalitarianism, German society during the era, the formation of anti-Semitic racial policies, the post-war ramifications of Nazism, along with various conceptual interpretations of the Third Reich.

    Surveys, general and comparative studies, and reference works

    [edit]

    • Abel, Theodore. The Nazi Movement. New York: Atherton, 1966.
    • Arad, Yitzhak, ed. The Pictorial History of the Holocaust. Jerusalem and New York: Yad Vashem and Macmillan, 1990.
    • Arendt, Hannah. The Origins of Totalitarianism. Orlando, FL: Harcourt Inc., 1973.
    • Aschheim, Steven E. Culture and Catastrophe: German and Jewish Confrontations with National Socialism and Other Crises. New York: New York University Press, 1996.
    • Aycoberry, Pierre. The Nazi Question. An Essay on the Interpretations of National Socialism 1922-1975. New York, Pantheon, 1981.
    • Bachrach, Susan D. The Nazi Olympics: Berlin 1936. Boston: Little, Brown, 2000.
    • Baranowski, Shelley,

      Roots of Nazi Ideology

      Nazi ideology was total, in that it was a world view that claimed to explain everything about the world and how it functions.

      At its core, the Nazi world view was racist and biological, positing that the so-called “Aryan” race – primarily the North Europeans – was the superior race of human beings. Their superiority granted the Aryans the right and obligation to rule over other races and peoples, for the benefit of humankind. The Jews, in complete contrast, were seen as a kind of “anti-race”, dangerous inhuman beings in seemingly human form. They were viewed alternatively as microbes and parasites, or as devils, that is, inhuman creatures with superhuman power.

      In this video, Dr. David Silberklang presents the topic of Nazi ideology and answers the following questions: 
      What is Nazi Ideology? What were its roots? From where did the Nazis derive the ideas which served as the basis of their ideology?

      Dr. David Silberklang is Senior Historian and Editor of Yad Vashem Studies, International Institute for Holocaust Research, Yad Vashem.

      Further pedagogical considerations

      • We see that Nazi ideology emerged in a modern world, "bolstered", as it were, by scientific discourse.
      • Nazi ideology is composed of Antisemitic and pseudo-scientific ideas grafted t