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Nazism

A Wisdom Archive on Nazism

Nazism

A selection of articles related to Nazism

We recommend this article: Nazism - 1, and also this: Nazism - 2.
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Nazism
nazism, Nazism, Nazism - Backlash effects, Nazism - Economic practice, Nazism - Effects, Nazism - Factors which promoted the success of Nazism, Nazism - Holy sites, Nazism - Ideological theory, Nazism - Key elements of the Nazi ideology, Nazism - Nazi / Third Reich terminology in popular culture, Nazism - Nazi Theory, Nazism - Nazism in relation to other concepts, Nazism - People and history, Nazism - The role of the nation, Nazism - Ideological competition, Nazism - Nazi mysticism, Nazism - Nazism and Persians, Nazism - Nazism and romanticism, Nazism - Support of anti-Communists for Fascism and Nazism

ARTICLES RELATED TO Nazism

Nazism: Encyclopedia - Nazism

Nazi organizations National Socialist German Workers Party Sturmabteilung Schutzstaffel Hitler Youth Lebensborn National Socialist Motor Corps Nazism in history Early Nazi Timeline Beer Hall Putsch Nuremberg rally Third Reich Night of the Long Knives Nur für Deutsche Nazi concepts Glossary of the Third Reich National Socialist Program Racial policy of Nazi Germany Führerprinzip Lebensraum V ...

Including:

Read more here: » Nazism: Encyclopedia - Nazism

Nazism: Social Studies Dictionary - Nazism

Definition and meaning of Nazism

 

Nazism - [World History]

In Germany, the Weimar Republic, established at the end of World War I, was challenged by leftists (communists) who believed in world revolution and by ultra-conservatives (fascists and extreme nationalists) who opposed the democratic goals of the republic. Adolf Hitler attempted to unite Germany as a fascist state. Because of the influences of fascism, it was natural for Hitler to destroy anything which threatened the unified nation, hence his fixation with purifying the dominant Aryan race and his insistence on totalitarian rule. Born in Austria during a period of social unrest and economic depression, he served in the Bavarian army during World War I and was convinced that Germany was defeated not on the battlefield but internally, by conspiratorial forces. In 1919 he joined the German Workers' Party, a group favoring nationalism. In 1920 the name was changed to the National Socialist German Workers' Party (Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiter-Partei -- NSDAP -- shortened to Nazi). By 1921 Hitler was the party leader patterning his rule on that of Benito Mussolini and his Fascist Party in Italy. Hitler outlined his views in Mein Kampf (My Struggle) published in 1925. In 1933 the Nazis seized power and became the only legal political party in Germany.

(Source: The Social Studies Center at Texas University )

 

Also see these pages:  Social Studies, Social Studies Sitemap, History, History Sitemap

 

Nazism: Social Studies Dictionary - Nazism

Definition and meaning of Nazism

 

Nazism - [World History]

In Germany, the Weimar Republic, established at the end of World War I, was challenged by leftists (communists) who believed in world revolution and by ultra-conservatives (fascists and extreme nationalists) who opposed the democratic goals of the republic. Adolf Hitler attempted to unite Germany as a fascist state. Because of the influences of fascism, it was natural for Hitler to destroy anything which threatened the unified nation, hence his fixation with purifying the dominant Aryan race and his insistence on totalitarian rule. Born in Austria during a period of social unrest and economic depression, he served in the Bavarian army during World War I and was convinced that Germany was defeated not on the battlefield but internally, by conspiratorial forces. In 1919 he joined the German Workers' Party, a group favoring nationalism. In 1920 the name was changed to the National Socialist German Workers' Party (Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiter-Partei -- NSDAP -- shortened to Nazi). By 1921 Hitler was the party leader patterning his rule on that of Benito Mussolini and his Fascist Party in Italy. Hitler outlined his views in Mein Kampf (My Struggle) published in 1925. In 1933 the Nazis seized power and became the only legal political party in Germany.

(Source: The Social Studies Center at Texas University )

 

Also see these pages:  Social Studies, Social Studies Sitemap, History, History Sitemap

 

Nazism: Encyclopedia II - Julius Streicher - Nazism

In 1919 Streicher helped to establish Wistrich, an anti-Semitic organization, which became part of the National Socialist German Workers Party (NSDAP) in 1922. In 1923 Streicher founded and edited the racist newspaper, Der Stürmer (1923–45), which he used to build up a deep hatred of the Jewish race. Eventually the newspaper reached a circulation of 800,000. Streicher argued in the newspaper that the Jews were responsible for the depression, unemployment, and inflation in Germany. He claimed that Jews were white-slavers and were responsible for over 90 ...

See also:

Julius Streicher, Julius Streicher - Early life, Julius Streicher - Nazism, Julius Streicher - Trial and execution, Julius Streicher - Influence

Read more here: » Julius Streicher: Encyclopedia II - Julius Streicher - Nazism

Nazism: Encyclopedia II - Persecution of Jews - Nazism

Persecution of the Jews reached its peak under the Third Reich (1933-1945). As encapsulated in Hitler's book Mein Kampf (1925) Nazism had obsessive and racist beliefs about Jews as "racial enemies". Jews were subjected to arbitrary arrest, internment, torture and murder. The German Nazis thought of themselves as an Aryan "Master Race" of Übermenschen. To them the Jews, as well as "Negros" and the Slavic peoples, were "inferior" subhuman Untermenschen. These racist beliefs and ideologies were embodied in the Nuremberg Laws (1935-1939) specifically desig ...

See also:

Persecution of Jews, Persecution of Jews - Christian, Persecution of Jews - Arab and Islamic, Persecution of Jews - Nazism, Persecution of Jews - Tsarist Russia, Persecution of Jews - Soviet Union

Read more here: » Persecution of Jews: Encyclopedia II - Persecution of Jews - Nazism

Nazism: Encyclopedia II - Nazism - Nazi Theory

Alfred Rosenberg's racial philosophy wholly embraced the Aryan Invasion Theory, which traced Aryan peoples in ancient Iran invading the Indus Valley Civilization of India, and carrying with them great knowledge and science that had been preserved from the antediluvian world. This "antediluvian world" referred to Thule, the speculative pre-Flood/Ice Age origin of the Aryan race, and is often tied to ideas of Atlantis. Most of the leadership and the founders of the Nazi Party were made up of members of the "Thule Gesellschaft" (the Thule Society), which romanticized the A ...

See also:

Nazism, Nazism - Ideological theory, Nazism - Nazi Theory, Nazism - Key elements of the Nazi ideology, Nazism - Nazism and romanticism, Nazism - Nazi mysticism, Nazism - Ideological competition, Nazism - Support of anti-Communists for Fascism and Nazism, Nazism - Nazism and Persians, Nazism - Economic practice, Nazism - Effects, Nazism - Backlash effects, Nazism - People and history, Nazism - Nazism in relation to other concepts, Nazism - The role of the nation, Nazism - Factors which promoted the success of Nazism, Nazism - Nazi / Third Reich terminology in popular culture, Nazism - Holy sites, Nazism - Notes

Read more here: » Nazism: Encyclopedia II - Nazism - Nazi Theory

Nazism: Encyclopedia II - Nazism - Nazi Theory

Alfred Rosenberg's racial philosophy wholly embraced the Aryan Invasion Theory, which traced Aryan peoples in ancient Iran invading the Indus Valley Civilization of India, and carrying with them great knowledge and science that had been preserved from the antediluvian world. This "antediluvian world" referred to Thule, the speculative pre-Flood/Ice Age origin of the Aryan race, and is often tied to ideas of Atlantis. Most of the leadership and the founders of the Nazi Party were made up of members of the "Thule Gesellschaft" (the Thule Society), which romanticized the A ...

See also:

Nazism, Nazism - Ideological theory, Nazism - Nazi Theory, Nazism - Nazi mysticism, Nazism - Key elements of the Nazi ideology, Nazism - Nazism and romanticism, Nazism - Ideological competition, Nazism - Support of anti-Communists for Fascism and Nazism, Nazism - Nazism and Persians, Nazism - Economic practice, Nazism - Effects, Nazism - Backlash effects, Nazism - People and history, Nazism - Nazism in relation to other concepts, Nazism - The role of the nation, Nazism - Factors which promoted the success of Nazism, Nazism - Nazi / Third Reich terminology in popular culture, Nazism - Holy sites

Read more here: » Nazism: Encyclopedia II - Nazism - Nazi Theory

Nazism: Encyclopedia - Consequences of German Nazism

German Nazism and the acts of the Nazi German state impacted profoundly on many countries, communities and peoples before, during and after World War II and the Holocaust. Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on Germany. More than 7 million Germans, including at least 3 million civilians, died during World War II. After the war, the German people were often viewed with contempt because they were blamed for Nazi crimes by other Europeans. Germans visiting abroad, particularly in the 1950s and 1960s, attrac ...

Including:

Read more here: » Consequences of German Nazism: Encyclopedia - Consequences of German Nazism

Nazism: Encyclopedia - White Power

This series is linked to the Politics and Elections series Varieties of Neo-fascism Neo-Nazism Neofascism and religion Crypto-fascism Neo-Nazi groups of the United States Origins of Neo-fascism Fascism Nazism Clerical fascism Neo-fascist political parties and movements American Fascist Movement American Nazi Party Aryan Nations British Movement British Nazi Party
Including:

Read more here: » White Power: Encyclopedia - White Power

Nazism: Encyclopedia - Fascism

This series is linked to the Politics and elections series Varieties and derivatives of fascism Neo-Fascism Nazism Rexism Falangism Clerical fascism Austrofascism Crypto-fascism Japanese fascism Militarism Greek fascism Fascist political parties and movements Fascism in history Fascio March on Rome Italian Social Republic 4th of August Regime Relevant lists List of fascis ...

Including:

Read more here: » Fascism: Encyclopedia - Fascism

Nazism: Encyclopedia - Shambhala

In Tibetan Buddhist tradition, Shambhala (also spelled Shambala or Shamballa) is a mystical kingdom hidden somewhere beyond the snowpeaks of the Himalayas. It is mentioned in various ancient texts including the Kalachakra and the ancient texts of the Zhang Zhung culture which pre-dated Tibetan Buddhism in western Tibet. The Bon scriptures speak of a closely-related land called Olmolungring. Shambhala - Shambhala in the Buddhist Kalachakra Teachings. The Kingdom of Shambhala takes a central pla ...

Including:

Read more here: » Shambhala: Encyclopedia - Shambhala

Nazism: Encyclopedia - Aryan race

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. The word "Aryan" derives from cultures of Iran and India. It was originally used in various Indo-Iranian languages. Possibly it originally referred to clan-identity, but it certainly later had a meaning roughly similar to "noble" or "honorable". It was sometimes used by the speakers of these languages to refer ...

Including:

Read more here: » Aryan race: Encyclopedia - Aryan race

Nazism: Encyclopedia - Millennialism

Millennialism (or chiliasm), from millennium, which literally means "thousand years", is primarily a belief expressed in some Christian denominations, and literature, that there will be a Golden Age or Paradise on Earth where "Christ will reign" prior to the final judgment and future eternal state, primarily derived from the book of Revelation 20:1-6. Millennialism as such is a specific form of Millenarianism. In Christianity, this is not the "end of the world", but the penultimate age, prior to when it is believed that ...

Including:

Read more here: » Millennialism: Encyclopedia - Millennialism

Nazism: Encyclopedia - Aryan invasion theory

Aryan invasion theory, often abbreviated to AIT, is a term used to refer to the theory developed by 19th Century European linguists to explain the similarity between Sanskrit and European languages, supposing the invasion or migration of peoples who originated outside of India. The term is now most used by Indian opponents of the theory, or to label obsolete forms of the theory. The term "Aryan" derives from the word arya, used in the Vedas in a sense of "nobility", and as an ethnic term in Iran. The phrase "Aryan ...

Including:

Read more here: » Aryan invasion theory: Encyclopedia - Aryan invasion theory

Nazism: Encyclopedia - Boyd Rice

Boyd Rice (born 1955) is an American experimental sound artist, archivist, actor, photographer, prankster and writer best known for his pioneering industrial noise music under the name NON. Boyd Rice - Early sound experiments. As a teenager, Rice started creating noise in 1975 out of an interest in tape machines and bubblegum pop with female vocalists such as Little Peggy March and Ginny Arnel. Originally creating recordings for his own listening, he started to do performances, and eventually press records. ...

Including:

Read more here: » Boyd Rice: Encyclopedia - Boyd Rice

Nazism: Encyclopedia - Anschluss

The Anschluss[1] (German: connection, or political union), also known as the Anschluss Österreichs, was the 1938 inclusion of Austria into "Greater Germany" by the Nazi regime. The events of March 12, 1938, were the first major steps in Adolf Hitler's long-desired expansion of Germany. The Anschluss followed the return to Germany of the Saar region, which had been under the control of the League of Nations for 15 year ...

Including:

Read more here: » Anschluss: Encyclopedia - Anschluss

Nazism: Encyclopedia II - Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in Austria

Immediately after the Allies had liberated Austria in 1945, the anti-Nazi parties - Socialists (SPÖ), Conservatives (ÖVP) and Communists (KPÖ) - passed important measures to overcome the effects of Nazi rule. According to the law of May 8, 1945, the NSDAP was banned and Nazi activity forbidden, thus giving the Austrian Constitution a strong anti-Nazi character. Up to the present day the main instrume ...

See also:

Neo-Nazism, Neo-Nazism - Significant Nazi revivalists, Neo-Nazism - Holocaust revisionism, Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism and the law, Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in Germany, Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in Austria, Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in the USA, Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in the UK, Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in Russia, Neo-Nazism - Social roots, Neo-Nazism - Ideology, Neo-Nazism - Activities, Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in Scandinavia, Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in other countries

Read more here: » Neo-Nazism: Encyclopedia II - Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in Austria

Nazism: Encyclopedia II - Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in the USA

In the USA, the Constitutional guarantee for freedom of speech allows political organizations great latitude in expressing Nazi, racist or anti-Semitic ideology. Nazi groups in the United States can trace back to the 1920s, with the US branch of the National Socialist German Workers Party. This organization merged with Free Society of Teutonia to form the German-American Bund. The Bund and other groups achieved a limited and controversial popularity in the 1930s (at one point having a rally of over 20,000), but rapidly faded with the onset of WWII. The groups either disbande ...

See also:

Neo-Nazism, Neo-Nazism - Significant Nazi revivalists, Neo-Nazism - Holocaust revisionism, Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism and the law, Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in Germany, Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in Austria, Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in the USA, Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in the UK, Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in Russia, Neo-Nazism - Social roots, Neo-Nazism - Ideology, Neo-Nazism - Activities, Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in Scandinavia, Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in other countries

Read more here: » Neo-Nazism: Encyclopedia II - Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in the USA

Nazism: Encyclopedia II - Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in Russia

Russia may seem like an unlikely place for a flowering of neo-Nazi movements due to the strong memories of the devastation that was wrought on the nation by the Nazi German invaders during World War II. Nevertheless, the post-Soviet era has seen the rise of a variety of extremist nationalist political movements, some of them paramilitary organizations of openly neo-Fascist or neo-Nazi persuasion. These organizations are characterized by extreme xenophobia, anti-Semitism, and an active interest among a few of these groups in overthrowing the ...

See also:

Neo-Nazism, Neo-Nazism - Significant Nazi revivalists, Neo-Nazism - Holocaust revisionism, Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism and the law, Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in Germany, Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in Austria, Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in the USA, Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in the UK, Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in Russia, Neo-Nazism - Social roots, Neo-Nazism - Ideology, Neo-Nazism - Activities, Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in Scandinavia, Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in other countries

Read more here: » Neo-Nazism: Encyclopedia II - Neo-Nazism - Neo-Nazism in Russia

Nazism: Encyclopedia II - Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on Germany

More than 7 million Germans, including at least 3 million civilians, died during World War II. After the war, the German people were often viewed with contempt because they were blamed for Nazi crimes by other Europeans. Germans visiting abroad, particularly in the 1950s and 1960s, attracted insults from locals, and from foreigners who may have had their families or friends live through or perish in the attrocities. Today in Europe and worldwide (particularly in countries that fought against the Axis), Germans still might get scorned ...

See also:

Consequences of German Nazism, Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on Germany, Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on Jewry, Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on Austria, Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on Poland, Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on Central Europe, Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on the Soviet Union, Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on Western Europe, Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on Greece, Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on world politics, Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on international law, Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on racism

Read more here: » Consequences of German Nazism: Encyclopedia II - Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on Germany

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