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Aestheticization of politics; Anti-communism; Anti-intellectualism; Anti-liberalism; Anti-pacifism; Blood and soil; Chauvinism; Class collaboration; Conspiracism
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Early timeline; National Socialist Program; Hitler's rise to power; Machtergreifung; Gleichschaltung; German rearmament; Nazi Germany; Kirchenkampf; Adolf Hitler's cult of personality
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The early Nazi movement in Sweden had its roots in various anti-semitic organizations formed in the late 1800s. In the 1920s, Barthold Lundén published the anti-semitic populist newspaper Vidi, which was inspired by Mauritz Rydgren's earlier attempts to establish an anti-semitic broadsheet in the early 1900s.
In December 2005 the government of Bavaria announced that the museum would be situated at the site of the former Brown House, the Nazi Party headquarters, which played an important role in Munich as "capital of the movement" during the rise of the party and the enforcement of Nazism. [1]
The National Socialist Movement of Denmark (Danish: Danmarks Nationalsocialistiske Bevægelse, DNSB) is a neo-Nazi political party in Denmark.The movement traces its origins back to National Socialist Workers' Party of Denmark (DNSAP, Danmarks Nationalsocialistiske Arbejderparti), the Danish Nazi party founded in the mid-1930s, more or less as a copy of Adolf Hitler's German NSDAP.
In the 1930s, one-third of the German population was Catholic; political Catholicism was a major force in the interwar Weimar Republic.Catholic leaders denounced Nazi doctrine before 1933, and Catholic regions generally did not vote Nazi. [13]