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  2. Lebensraum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lebensraum

    The German population's psychological acceptance of the atrocities was achieved with Nazi propaganda (print, radio, cinema), a key factor behind the manufactured consent that justified German brutality towards civilians; by continually manipulating the national psychology, the Nazis convinced the German people to believe that Slavs and Jews ...

  3. List of Nazi ideologues - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Nazi_ideologues

    Josef Mengele (1911-1979), Nazi SS officer and physician at the Auschwitz death camp who performed inhumane experiments on the inmates there. Known as the "Angel of Death". Alfred Ploetz (1860–1940), German physician, biologist, and eugenicist who introduced the concept of racial hygiene in Germany. He was a member of the Nazi party. [12]

  4. Alfred Rosenberg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_Rosenberg

    The author of a seminal work of Nazi ideology, The Myth of the Twentieth Century (1930), Rosenberg is considered one of the main authors of key Nazi ideological creeds, including its racial theory and its hatred of the Jewish people, the need for Lebensraum, abrogation of the Treaty of Versailles, and opposition to what was considered ...

  5. Blood and soil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_and_soil

    Peasants were the Nazi cultural heroes, who held charge of German racial stock and German history—as when a memorial of a medieval peasant uprising was the occasion for a speech by Darré praising them as a force and purifier of German history. [10] Agrarianism was asserted as the only way to truly understand the "natural order."

  6. Volk ohne Raum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volk_ohne_Raum

    Volk ohne Raum" (German pronunciation: [fɔlk ˈʔoːnə ˈʁaʊm]; "people without space") was a political slogan used in the Weimar Republic and Nazi Germany. The term was coined by the nationalist writer Hans Grimm with his novel Volk ohne Raum (1926). The novel immediately attracted much attention and sold nearly 700,000 copies. [1]

  7. Behemoth: The Structure and Practice of National Socialism

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Behemoth:_The_Structure...

    It is the most significant attempt yet made at scholarly and painstaking analysis, based almost exclusively upon German sources, of the background, working principles and practices, and present state of National-Socialist Germany." [4]). The book is now often seen as ″a standard work on the subject of National Socialism'″. [5]

  8. Hans Grimm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hans_Grimm

    Hans Grimm was born in Wiesbaden, in the Prussian province of Hesse-Nassau, the son of Julius Grimm (1821–1911), a professor of law who retired early and devoted his time to private historical and literary studies and to political activity as a founder member of the National Liberal Party, which he represented in the Prussian Abgeordnetenhaus parliament, and also as a founder member of the ...

  9. Nazi Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_Germany

    Germany assumed full control in France in 1942, Italy in 1943, and Hungary in 1944. Although Japan was a powerful ally, the relationship was distant, with little co-ordination or co-operation. For example, Germany refused to share their formula for synthetic oil from coal until late in the war. [84]