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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > German History > National Socialism
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National Socialism, German History

Related Category: German History

After ousting the left wing of the party, represented by Gregor Strasser, Hitler, once in power, secured his position by the "Blood Purge" (June, 1934) of SA leader Ernst Roehm and others who might challenge him. Loyal Nazis were placed in positions of authority within the government and eventually came to control it. A corporative state was established in which labor lost all rights and was even regimented in its recreation by the "Strength through Joy" movement. Youth, schools, and the press came under repressive control. The books of "undesirable" authors were repeatedly burned.

Germany was divided into party districts; the Gauleiter [district leader] in effect superseded the state government. The judicial system was reorganized, and special courts were established to deal with political offenses. Nazi ideology was enthroned as national law, and Nazi methods replaced rational legal procedure. Anti-Semitic legislation (the Nuremberg Laws) forbade intermarriage with Jews, deprived Jews of civil rights, and barred them from professions. Other laws similarly barred Communists.

A German Christian Church was set up to control Protestant churches; its chief opponent, Martin Niemoeller, was arrested. The Gestapo (see secret police) tracked down political opponents, Jews, and other undesirables; their internment in concentration camps was often a prelude to their murder, particularly in the case of the Jews after the start of World War II. Medical "experiments," some of them conducted to prevent the reproduction of Jews and "misfits," maimed thousands more.



The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2009, Columbia University Press.
Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.



Topics that might be of interest to you:

anti-Semitism
Austria
concentration camp
fascism
Germany
Gobineau, Joseph Arthur, comte de
Paul Joseph Goebbels
Hermann Wilhelm Goering
Karl Haushofer
Rudolf Hess
Reinhard Heydrich
Heinrich Himmler
Adolf Hitler
nationalism
Martin Niemoeller
Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche
Reichstag
Ernst Roehm
Alfred Rosenberg
secret police
Arthur Seyss-Inquart
Gregor Strasser
Julius Streicher
Sudetes
totalitarianism
Heinrich von Treitschke
Versailles, Treaty of
World War II

Related Categories:

History > Modern Europe
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