Nazi Germany or the Third Reich commonly refers to Germany in the years between 1933 and 1945, when it was under the firm control of Adolf Hitler's dictatorship and the ideology of National Socialism (a variant of fascism and totalitarianism).
The term Nazi is a short form of the German Nationalsozialismus; the ideology was institutionalized in the NSDAP (Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei) , the National Socialist German Workers' Party, or Nazi Party for short.
The Nazi regime was characterized by political control of every aspect of society (Gleichschaltung) in a quest for racial (Aryan, Nortic white), social and cultural purity. The Nazi Party pursued its aims through persecution of those considered impure, especially against targeted minority groups such as Jews, Gypsies, and homosexuals, as well as political opponents. For political opposition during this period, see German resistance movement.
During this period of time were around 6 million Jews and sundry others (eg homosexuals, Slavs and political prisoners) systematically killed and more than 10 million people were put in slavery. This genocide is referred to as the Holocaust in English, "Shoah" in Hebrew. (The Nazis used the euphemistic German term "Endlösung" -- the "Final Solution.")
Chronology of events
- Weimar Republic (includes the events leading to Hitler's appointment as Chancellor of Germany in 1933)
- Gleichschaltung (for the legal measures taken by the Nazis to establish their dictatorship)
- Racial policy of Nazi Germany (history of discrimination policies)
- World War II (with a focus on military events)
- Axis Powers
World War II
Start of the War
In September of 1939 Germany's invasion of Poland (see Polish September Campaign) led Britain, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, South Africa and France to declare war on Germany. After the capitulation of Poland the war entered a period of relative inactivity known as the Phony War. This ended when Germany invaded Denmark and Norway in April of 1940 (see Operation Weserübung) and the Netherlands, Belgium and France in May (see Fall Gelb). All of the invaded countries swiftly capitulated and the forces of Britain and its Commonwealth allies suffered a humiliating defeat in Norway (see British campaign in Norway) and a near-disastrous retreat from France (see Battle of Dunkirk). Britain was threatened with an amphibious invasion (see Operation Sealion) but during the Battle of Britain the Luftwaffe failed to achieve air superiority and the invasion was postponed indefinitely.
North Africa
After Italy's declaration of War on Britain and France in June of 1940 Italian forces in Libya came under punitive attack from the British in Egypt. The Italian forces soon took the initiative by occupying British Somaliland in August and invading Egypt in September. The British and Commonwealth forces initially lost ground but managed to turn the situation around after reinforcements were sent to the region in December. In February of 1941 the Afrika Korps were sent to the Libya to reinforce their Italian allies and a hard fought campaign ensued.
South Eastern Europe
The Italian invasion of Greece in December of 1940 was a disaster and Italian forces were driven back into Albania which Italy had occupied in 1939. Germany attacked Yugoslavia and Greece in May of 1941 to assist their allies and prevent any possibility of disruption to the production of oil from their oilfields of Romania by hostile forces.
Soviet Union
The Soviet Union had invaded Poland in an agreement with Germany in 1939 (see Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact) and occupied half of the country. The USSR seemed oblivious of German preparations to invade and made few defensive preparations. The German campaigns in Greece and North Africa delayed the planned invasion by several weeks and a large period good weather had been lost by the time the invasion was launched on June 22 1941. The massive attack still turned out to be a surprising success, conquering whole areas of the Soviet Union's western region. Their only significant strategic failure was the advance on Moscow, which was halted by stiff resistance and a very harsh winter. For details of this campaign see Operation Barbarossa.
The first major defeats
Germany declared war on the United States immediately after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in December of 1941. The USA had been supplying and offering increasing non-combative support to the British since the outbreak of the war and now the full force of the American military and immense war production capbility were brought to bear in the conflict against Germany. The first major defeat was in North Africa at the second Battle of El Alamein in 1942. Around about the same time the tide was turning for the Germans in Russia. The defeat at the Battle of Stalingrad shocked many in the German High Command and the realisation that the German forces were not invincible began to permeate through the minds of the German people.
Italian Armistice
The German and Italian defeat in North Africa allowed the Allied forces to contemplate opening up a new theatre of war in the south. Sicily was invaded in July of 1943 leading to the overthrow and imprisonment of Mussolini. In September the Italian mainland was invaded. Shortly afterwards an armistice was signed and Italian troops found themselves arrested and imprisoned by the Germans. The Germans fought on in Italy and in October the new Italian government declared war on Germany. The campaign in Italy eventually bogged down as the focus of attention for the Western allied was drawn to opening up a new front.
Defeat in the East, the Invasion of Normandy and final defeat
In the east the Germans had been steadily withdrawing in the face of increasingly capable Red Army offensives. While the Battle of Kursk in July 1943 was not an overwhelming victory for the Soviets it seriously depleted the Germans arsenal of much needed armoured vehicles and Germany was unable to launch another serious offensive in the east. By the time of D-Day invasion on 6 June 1944, German forces were stretched thinly on three fronts. By August, Soviet forces had crossed into eastern Germany. Allied forces crossed the Rhine a month later. In December of 1944 a last ditch effort to strike a blow to the western allies (The Ardennes Offensive) ground to a halt through to lack of fuel and supplies. By the beginning of 1945 the regime was beginning to disintegrate, and a feared last-ditch defense from a "National Redoubt" never happened. In April, Hitler committed suicide and Germany finally surrendered in the first week of May.
Aftermath
After the war, surviving Nazi leaders were put on trial by the Allied tribunal at Nuremberg for crimes against humanity. In all non-fascist European countries there were established legal purges to punish the members of the former Nazi and Fascist parties. An uncontroled punishment hit the Nazi children and the children fathered by German soldiers in occupied territories, the so-called lebensborn children.
Organizations in The Third Reich
The leaders of Nazi Germany created a large number of different organisations for the purpose of helping them in staying in power. The character of the most of them is typical for totalitarian regimes, although most countries do have armed forces of some sort.
Military
- Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (OKW) -- Armed Forces High Command
- Oberkommando des Heeres (OKH) -- Army High Command
- Oberkommando der Marine (OKM) -- Navy High Command
- Oberkommando der Luftwaffe (OKL) -- Airforce High Command
- Wehrmacht -- Armed Forces
- Heer -- Army
- Luftwaffe -- Airforce
- Kriegsmarine -- Navy
- Oberbefehlshaber West
- Abwehr -- Military Intelligence
Paramilitary organisations
State police
Reich Central Security Office (RSHA - Reichssicherheitshauptamt)
- Regular Police (Ordnungspolizei (ORPO))
- Schutzpolizei (Safety Police)
- Gendarmerie (Rural Police)
- Gemeindepolizei (Local Police)
- Security Police (Sicherheitspolizei (SIPO))
Political organizations
- Nazi Party -- National Socialist German Workers Party (abbreviated NSDAP)
- Youth organisations
- Hitler-Jugend -- Hitler-youth (for boys and young men)
- Bund Deutscher Mädel (for girls and young women)
- Labour organisations
Prominent persons in Nazi Germany
Nazi Party leaders and officials
- Gunter d'Alquen
- Ludolf von Alvensleben
- Max Amann
- Benno von Arent
- Heinz Auerswald
- Hans Aumeier
- Arthur Axmann
- Erich von dem Bach
- Herbert Backe
- Richard Baer
- Alfred Baeumler
- Gottlob Berger
- Werner Best
- Hans Biebow
- Gottfried Graf von Bismarck-Schönhausen
- Paul Blobel
- Werner von Blomberg
- Hans-Friedrich Blunck
- Josef Blösche
- Horst Böhme
- Ernst Boepple
- Ernst Wilhelm Bohle
- Martin Bormann
- Philipp Bouhler
- Viktor Brack
- Karl Brandt
- Alois Brunner
- Walter Buch
- Karl Buck
- Josef Bürckel
- Anton Burger
- Werner Catel
- Heinrich Claß
- Carl Clauberg
- Leonardo Conti
- Kurt Daluege
- Richard Walther Darré
- Joseph "Sepp" Dietrich
- Otto Dietrich
- Oskar Dirlewanger
- Horst Dressler-Andress
- Irmfried Eberl
- Adolf Eichmann
- Theodor Eicke
- August Eigruber
- Hermann Esser
- Richard Euringer
- Karl Fiehler
- Ludwig Fischer
- Albert Forster
- Hans Frank
- Karl Hermann Frank
- Roland Freisler
- Wilhelm Frick
- Hans Fritzsche
- Walther Funk
- Karl Gebhardt
- Achim Gercke
- Kurt Gerstein
- Odilo Globocnik
- Richard Glücks
- Joseph Goebbels
- Wilhelm Göcke
- Hermann Göring
- Amon Göth
- Ulrich Greifelt
- Robert Ritter von Greim
- Arthur Greiser
- Wilhelm Grimm
- Walter Groß
- Kurt Gruber
- Hans Günther (not to be confused with Hans Friedrich Karl Günther)
- Franz Gürtner
- Eugen Hadamovsky
- Ernst Hanfstaengel
- Karl Hanke
- Fritz Hartjenstein
- Paul Hausser
- Franz Hayler
- Heinrich Heim
- August Heißmeyer
- Otto Herzog
- Rudolf Heß (not to be confused with Rudolf Höß)
- Walther Hewel
- Werner Heyde
- Reinhard Heydrich
- Konstantin Hierl
- Erich Hilgenfeldt
- Heinrich Himmler
- Hans Hinkel
- August Hirt
- Adolf Hitler
- Hermann Höfle
- Rudolf Höß (not to be confused with Rudolf Heß)
- Franz Hofer
- Karl Holz
- Karl Jäger
- Ernst Jarosch
- Friedrich Jeckeln
- Alfred Jodl
- Hanns Johst
- Hans Jüttner
- Rudolf Jung
- Ernst Kaltenbrunner
- Karoly Kampmann
- Karl Kaufmann
- Wilhelm Keitel
- Wilhelm Keppler
- Hanns Kerrl
- Dietrich Klagges
- Wilhelm Kleinmann
- Helmut Knochen
- Erich Koch
- Ilse Koch
- Karl Otto Koch
- Max Koegel
- Franz Konrad
- Wilhelm Koppe
- Josef Kramer
- Fritz Krebs
- Bernhard Krüger
- Friedrich Wilhelm Krüger
- Gustav Krupp
- Hans Lammers
- Herbert Lange
- Adolf Lenk
- Robert Ley
- Arthur Liebehenschel
- Julius Lippert
- Michael Lippert
- Dietrich Loder
- Wilhelm Loeper
- Georg Lörner
- Hinrich Lohse
- Werner von Lorenz
- Hanns Ludin
- Martin Luther
- Viktor Lutze
- Emile Maurice
- Kurt Mayer
- Herbert Mehlborn
- Josef Mengele
- Alfred Meyer
- Konrad Meyer
- Kurt Meyer
- Heinrich Müller
- Eugen Mündler
- Alfred Helmut Naujoks
- Arthur Nebe
- Hermann Neef
- Karl Neuhaus
- Konstantin Freiherr von Neurath
- Herta Oberheuser
- Otto Ohlendorf
- Helmuth von Pannwitz
- Otto Paul
- Joachim Peiper
- Salomon Franz von Pfeffer
- Henry Picker
- Paul Pleiger
- Oswald Pohl
- Franz von Pfeffer
- Erich Priebke
- Hans-Adolf Prützmann
- Karl Rahm
- Rudolf Rahn
- Friedrich Rainer
- Erich Rajakowitsch
- Sigmund Rascher
- Walther Rauff
- Hermann Rauschning
- Hanns Rauter
- Walter Reder
- Wilhelm Reinhard
- Fritz Reinhardt
- Adrian von Renteln
- Joachim von Ribbentrop
- Rolf Rienhardt
- Ernst Röhm
- Erwin Rösener
- Alfred Rosenberg
- Wilhelm Ruder
- Ernst Rudin
- Bernhard Rust
- Fritz Sauckel
- Hjalmar Schacht
- Emanuel Schaefer
- Gustav Adolf Scheel
- Walther Schellenberg
- Hans Schemm
- Wilhelm Schepmann
- Baldur von Schirach
- Franz Schlegelberger
- Albrecht Schmelt
- Carl Schmitt
- Kurt Schmitt
- Paul Schmitthenner
- Gertrud Scholtz-Klink
- Kurt Freiherr von Schröder
- Walther Schultze
- Arthur Schürmann
- Franz Xaver Schwarz
- Heinrich Schwarz
- Siegfried Seidl
- Franz Seldte
- Arthur Seyß-Inquart
- Gustav Simon
- Albert Speer
- Walter Stang
- Franz Stangl
- Johannes Stark
- Otto Steinbrink
- Gregor Straßer
- Otto Straßer
- Julius Streicher
- Jürgen Stroop
- Otto von Stülpnagel
- Friedrich Syrup
- Josef Terboven
- Otto Thierack
- Fritz Todt
- Hans Trummler
- Hans von Tschammer und Osten
- Xavier Vallat
- Albert Vögler
- Hermann Voß
- Hilmar Wäckerle
- Otto Wagener
- Adolf Wagner
- Gerhard Wagner
- Josef Wagner
- Robert Heinrich Wagner
- Christian Weber
- Wilhelm Weiß
- Horst Wessel
- Robert Wetzel
- Max Winkler
- Giselher Wirsing
- Christian Wirth
- Hermann Wirth
- Karl Wolff
- Adolf Ziegler
- Matthes Ziegler
- Wilhelm Ziegler
- Hans Zöberlein
- Franz Ziereis
Military
- Karl Dönitz
- Erwin Rommel
- Wilhelm Keitel
- Claus von Stauffenberg
- Wilhelm Canaris
- Alfred Jodl
- Hanna Reitsch
- Ernst Udet
Other
- Gottfried Benn
- Eva Braun
- Werner von Braun
- Houston Stewart Chamberlain
- Anton Drexler
- Gottfried Feder
- Friedrich Flick
- Theodor Fritsch
- Hans Friedrich Karl Günther (not to be confused with Hans Günther)
- Karl Harrer
- Willibald Hentschel
- Alfred Hoche
- Armin D. Lehmann
- Lanz von Liebenfels
- Karl Lueger
- Alfred Ploetz
- John Rabe
- Geli Raubal
- Leni Riefenstahl
- Oskar Schindler
- Rudolf von Sebottendorf
- Richard Sorge
- Richard Wagner
- Winifred Wagner
- Raoul Wallenberg
- Konrad Zuse
Noted victims
- Bruno Bettelheim
- Dietrich Bonhoeffer
- Anne Frank
- Primo Levi
- Janusz Korczak
- White Rose (Sophie and Hans Scholl and others)
- Bruno Schulz
Noted refugees
- Albert Bassermann
- Johannes R. Becher
- Rudolf Belling
- Walter Benjamin
- Bertolt Brecht
- Marlene Dietrich
- Albert Einstein
- Sigmund Freud
- Friedrich Hayek
- Heinrich Eduard Jacob
- Thomas Mann
- Ludwig von Mises
Terms closely related to Nazi Germany
Many of the following terms are German expressions that are now used as words in English -- a short english description is given here and the explanation can be found in the articles themselves. See also List of German expressions in English.
- Anschluss -- annexation (literally: "inclusion"), in particular the annexation of Austria in 1938;
- Arbeit macht frei -- "Work [will] make [you] free". Cynical motto of the concentration camps.
- Blitzkrieg -- lightning war - quick army invasions aided by tanks and airplanes;
- Concentration camps -- (German: Konzentrationslager, KZ) originally detention centres, later sometimes mass-murder factories;
- coventrieren -- bombing out cities completely (the term was coined by Joseph Goebbels after the bombing of Coventry);
- Death factory - concentration camps designed for the killing of their inmates;
- Degenerate art - Nazis called so abstract art and most of the avant garde art of the XX century.
- Ersatz - a substitute product. Germany did not have an easy access to some strategic materials. German scientist had to research how to produce artificial rubber (Buna), for example.
- Euthanasia - The T-4 Euthanasia Program to maintain the purity of the German Master race;
- Final Solution (German: Endlösung der Judenfrage) -- final solution (to the Jewish Question), euphemism to describe the total extinction of all Jews;
- Fraktur -- a fashion of black letter popularly associated to Nazi Germany, though it was forbidden by Hitler in 1941 on grounds of it being Jewish.
- Führer -- leader; as Adolf Hitler demanded to be called;
- Gauleiter -- governor of a region.
- Gestapo -- the Geheime Staatspolizei, Nazi Secret Police;
- Gleichschaltung -- literally "synchronisation", total control and obedience of all aspects of society, as well as seizure of power;
- Holocaust -- the genocide committed by the Nazis;
- Hakenkreuz -- swastika;
- IG Farben -- the company that was closest to the Nazi government, producing gas for the extinction of Jews in Auschwitz and other concentration camps and the most prominent example of corporativism in Nazi Germany;
- Kapo -- an inmate of a concentration camp chosen to control his peers.
- Kraft durch Freude (KdF) -- "strength through joy", state-sponsored programme intended to organize people's free time, offering cheap holidays, concerts, other leisure activities, and (unsuccessfully) a car (Kdf-Schiff, KdF-Wagen);
- Kristallnacht -- "crystal night", November 9, 1938, when the Nazi government organized a pogrom against Jewish businesses; the euphemism was used because the numerous broken windows made the streets look as if covered with crystal;
- Lebensraum -- space to live: a pretext for launching war on Eastern Europe;
- Master race (German: Herrenvolk) -- a politically charged term used by the Nazis to describe the so-called Aryan race;
- "Mit brennender Sorge" -- A letter by the Pope warning against the Nazis.
- Nacht und Nebel -- "Night and fog", code for some prisoners that should be disposed of leaving no traces.
- Nazi -- abbreviation for National Socialist, from German Nationalsozialismus; see also Nazi Party, Nazism;
- Night of the Long Knives;
- Nuremberg trials -- the trials of Nazi officials after the war for war crimes and crimes against humanity;
- Reich -- empire;
- Stuka -- a dive bomber used in Blitzkrieg.
- Third Reich -- name used by Nazis to describe their regime;
- Thule Gesellschaft -- "Thule Society". The Nazis sought themes for their ideology in the Occult and the Germanic and Nordic traditions.
- V-1 and V-2 -- Missiles used to attack Britain and other countries liberated by Allied forces.
- Volkswagen -- "people's car".
- Wannsee conference -- a conference at Wannsee near Berlin which led to the Final solution.
- Zeppelin -- The rigid airships were a symbol of the German air technology.