Nazism Andreas Bauriedl (d. 1923) was an early member of the Nazi Party. He was a participant in the unsuccessful Nazi Beer Hall Putsch in Munich, Bavaria, on November 9, 1923. ...more on Wikipedia about "Andreas Bauriedl"
The Aryan Games were a proposed replacement for the Olympic Games by the National Socialist government, to be housed permanently in Nuremberg at the German Stadium that was designed, but never built, by Albert Speer. They were played in Austria. ...more on Wikipedia about "Aryan Games"
The term Aryan race refers to a model of racial identity that was prevelant in Europe from around the 1880s through to 1945, most notably in Nazi Germany. It has become associated with the theory that north European Nordic peoples constitute a master race. ...more on Wikipedia about "Aryan race"
The Bamberg Conference (1926) was held during the "wilderness years" of the Nazi party. Hitler's decision to call the meeting was something of a gamble. His aim was to restore some resemblance of party unity and agree a future programme. To achieve this he had to put pressure on Strasser's delegates to come into line. What was meant to be a debate was quickly turned into a five-hour monologue, dominated by Hitler. Bamberg was chosen as it was situated on the way to the northern Gauleiter, but still on Bavarian soil. Hitler slowly began to regain support and by mid-1926 he was in control of the party once again. On this conference the young Joseph Goebbels, an associate of the Strasser brothers switched sides and joined Hitler. ...more on Wikipedia about "Bamberg Conference"
One of the most revered objects of the German Nazi Party, the Blutfahne (Blood Flag) was a Nazi Swastika flag which was used in the attempted Nazi Beer Hall Putsch in Munich, Germany on November 9, 1923. The flag was actually that of the 5th SA Sturm that was covered in blood from members of the Nazi Party who had been shot by the Munich Police (primarily from party member Andreas Bauriedl who fell on top of the flag when he was shot and killed). ...more on Wikipedia about "Blutfahne"
After the Nazi Gleichschaltung in Germany in 1933, the Bund Deutscher Mädel (frequently used in its abbreviated form, BDM) ("League of German Girls") was the all-German party organization for girls between 14 and 18 years of age, as the girls' segment of the Hitler Youth. All other girls' organizations were either absorbed into it or prohibited. ...more on Wikipedia about "Bund Deutscher Mädel"
The "Nazi children" are children of the members of Nazi or Fascist parties established before or during World War II. ...more on Wikipedia about "Children of the Nazi era" Please visit again shortopedia
(Consequences of German Nazism) See also: ...more on Wikipedia about "Consequences of German Nazism"
This Early Nazi Timeline tracks the development of National Socialism from its origins to Hitler's seizure of dictatorial powers. ...more on Wikipedia about "Early Nazi Timeline"
The flag of Nazi Germany came into use initially as the banner of the NSDAP after its foundation. Following Hitler's election as Chancellor in 1933, the flag was used jointly as the national flag of Germany along with the old black-white-red horizontal tricolour of the German Empire. One year after the death of President Hindenburg in 1934, this arrangement ended and the swastika flag became the sole national flag of Germany, which it remained until the end of the Second World War and the fall of the Third Reich. ...more on Wikipedia about "Flag of Nazi Germany"
A forced disappearance occurs when an organization forces a person to vanish from public view, either by murder or by simple sequestration. The victim is first kidnapped, then illegally detained in camps, often tortured, and finally assassinated and its corpse hidden. In Spanish, "disappeared people" are called "desaparecidos", a term which specifically refers to the (mostly) South American victims of state terrorism during the 1970s and the 1980s, in particular concerning operation Condor. ...more on Wikipedia about "Forced disappearance"
The Frau Solf Tea Party ( September 10, 1943) , as it came to be known in Nazi circles, was a gathering of anti- Nazi intellectuals which ultimately resulted in the demise of the Abwehr in February the following year. ...more on Wikipedia about "Frau Solf Tea Party"
The German word Gleichschaltung (literally " synchronising", synchronization) is used in a political sense to describe the process by which the Nazi regime successively established a system of totalitarian control over the individual, and tight coordination over all aspects of society and commerce. Another possible translation is "making equal". One goal of this politics was to enforce a specific way of doctrine and thinking to everybody, eliminating individualism. The term itself is a typical Nazi euphemism. ...more on Wikipedia about "Gleichschaltung"
Godwin's Law (also Godwin's Rule of Nazi Analogies) is an adage in Internet culture originated by Mike Godwin on Usenet in 1990 that states: ...more on Wikipedia about "Godwin's Law"
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The Heim ins Reich initiative ( German: Home into the Realm) was a policy pursued by Adolf Hitler starting in 1939 and largely responsible for the outbreak of World War II. The initiative attempted to convince people of German descent living outside of Germany that they should strive to unify their countries with Germany—to bring their regions "home" into a greater Germany. ...more on Wikipedia about "Heim ins Reich"
Heinrich Kurz von Goldstein was the first dead soldier in the Anschluss of Austria into the Third Reich on March 12 1938. He died of a heart attack in Salzburg. ...more on Wikipedia about "Heinrich Kurz von Goldstein"
The Hitler salute (Hitlergruß), also known in German as the Deutscher Gruß ("German Greeting"), and in English as the Nazi salute, is a variant of the Roman salute adopted by the Nazi party as a sign of loyalty to its leader Adolf Hitler. It was adopted following its use by the Italian fascists and other mass movements of the era (see Roman salute for details). The Hitler salute became the embodiment of Hitler's massive cult of personality throughout Germany. The right hand is held upward at right angles to the chest, or else slightly raised, and is often accompanied by the exclamation of Nazi slogans such as Sieg Heil! or Heil Hitler! (by Ustashas Za dom spremni). ...more on Wikipedia about "Hitler salute"
The Hitler Youth ( German: Hitler-Jugend, abbreviated HJ) was a paramilitary organization of the Nazi Party that existed from 1922 to 1945. The Hitler Youth was the second oldest paramilitary Nazi group, founded one year after the Sturmabteilung (SA) Stormtroopers. ...more on Wikipedia about "Hitler Youth"
The Horst Wessel Lied ("Horst Wessel Song"), also known as Die Fahne Hoch ("The flag on high", from its opening line), was the anthem of the Nazi Party of Germany, chosen to glorify Horst Wessel as a Nazi martyr. Today it is still banned in Germany under Strafgesetzbuch §86 and §86a. ...more on Wikipedia about "Horst Wessel Lied"
In Greek mythology, according to tradition, the Hyperboreans were a mythical people who lived to the far north of Greece, near the Ural Mountains. Their land, called Hyperborea, or Hyperboria ("beyond the Boreas ( north wind)"), was perfect, with the sun shining twenty-four hours a day. The Greeks thought that Boreas, the god of the north wind, lived in Thrace, and therefore Hyperborei was an unspecified nation in the northern parts of Europe and Asia. Alone among the Olympians, Apollo was venerated among the Hyperboreans: he spent his winter amongst them. For their part the Hyperboreans sent mysterious gifts, packed in straw that came first to Dodona and then were passed from people to people until they came to Apollo's temple on Delos ( Pausanias). Theseus and Perseus also visited the Hyperboreans. ...more on Wikipedia about "Hyperborea"
Jan Udo Holey (* March 22, 1967 in Dinkelsbühl), often known by his penname Jan van Helsing, is a controversial German author who put forwards conspiracy theories about freemasons ruling the world, Hitler surviving World War II in Antarctica, the Earth being hollow, Arian clairvoyants, etc. He draws from sources like The Protocols of the Elders of Zion. ...more on Wikipedia about "Jan Udo Holey" You've Got Questions. We've Got shortopedia.
Karl Harrer (* October 8 1890 - † September 5 1926) was a journalist and one of the founding members of the "Deutsche Arbeiterpartei" ("German Workers' Party", DAP) in 1919, the party that soon would become the Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei (NSDAP). ...more on Wikipedia about "Karl Harrer"
KZ Manager is a name shared by many similar racist and nazi-supporting resource management computer games putting the player in the role of a nazi concentration camp "manager", where the "resources" to be managed include, depending on the version of the game, prisoners (either Jews, Turks or Gypsies), poison gas supplies, "normal" money and various equipment, as well as "public opinion" on the "productivity" of the camp. ...more on Wikipedia about "KZ manager"
List of Adolf Hitler Books is an annotated bibliography of the many books related to Adolf Hitler. This work-in-process was created to deal with the ever growing list on the Wikipedia - Adolf Hitler article. There are thousands of books written about Hitler; therefore, the list has been segregated into groups to make the list more manageable. ...more on Wikipedia about "List of Adolf Hitler books"
List of Adolf Hitler speeches is an attempt to aggregate all of Adolf Hitler's speeches. This work-in-process once completed will aid, researchers, students and the general public to understand this era and warning from history. ...more on Wikipedia about "List of Adolf Hitler speeches"
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