Read The Coming of the Third Reich Online
Authors: Richard J. Evans
Tags: #History, #Europe, #Germany, #World, #Military, #World War II
death penalty
see
capital punishment
Declaration of Papal Infallibility (1871)
Defence League
democracy
collapse of (1917-33)
conflict-ridden
and militarism
as the Allies’ war aim (1914-18)
rejection of
Weimar
parliamentary
student disillusion
liberal
and the judiciary
and business
bourgeois
Furtwängler’s distrust of
Goebbels on
‘democratic centralism’
Democrats (later the State Party) see German Democratic Party
Denizens’ Defence Force
Denmark
depression (1873)
Depression (1929-33)
Dessau
Detmold
Deutschland, Deutschland über Alles
(‘Germany, Germany before all’)
devaluation
Dickel, Otto
The Resurrection of the West
Diels, Rudolf
Dietrich, Hermann
Dietrich, Marlene
Dietrich, Otto
Dingeldey, Eduard
disarmament
Disraeli, Benjamin
Dix, Otto
Döblin, Alfred
Berlin Alexanderplatz
(novel)
Doesberg, Theo van
Dollfuss, Engelbert
Dortmund
Dostoevsky, Fyodor
Double Indemnity
(film)
Dr Mabuse the Gambler
(film)
drama
Dresden
Dresden Academy
Dresden State Opera
Dresden Technical University
Drexler, Anton
Dreyfus affair
Droysen, Gustav von
duelling corps
Duesterberg, Theodor
Dühring, Eugen
Duisburg
Dürrgoy
Düsseldorf
East Africa
East Elbia
Eastern Europe, Hitler intends to invade
Eastern Front
Eastern Hanover
‘Eastern Jews’
Eberstein, Friedrich Karl Freiherr von
Ebert, Friedrich
Eckart, Dietrich
economic pressure-groups
Economy Party
education
Ehrhardt, Captain Hermann
Einstein, Albert
Einstein, Alfred
Eisleben
Eisler, Hanns
Eisner, Kurt
Eldorado club, Berlin
elections
of 1912
high turnout rates
Reichstag (1924)
Presidential (1925)
Reichstag (1928)
municipal (1929)
Reichstag (1930)
Presidential (1932)
state elections (1932)
Prussian (April 1932)
Reichstag (July 1932)
Reichstag (November 1932)
student union (1932-3)
regional
Reichstag (5 March 1933)
Prussian (12 March 1933)
Nazi vote in Reichstag elections 1924-33
electrical energy
embezzlement
emigration
of Jews
of film directors/stars
employment
full
job-creation programme
Enabling Act
Engels, Friedrich:
Anti-Dühring
‘Enlightened Absolutism’
Epstein, Klaus
Erzberger, Matthias
Esser, Hermann
Estonia
eugenics, eugenicists
Eupen
Europe
dictatorships of the age
Bolshevization of
‘euthanasia’, involuntary
execution
of the ‘valueless’
see also
capital punishment; ‘euthanasia’
Expressionism
extortion
Falkenhayn, Erich von
family
far right
‘Combat Leagues’
exploits financial scandals
and universities
‘Farm Aid’ programme
fascism
Italian
and capitalism
Fatherland Party
Faulhaber, Cardinal Michael
Fechenbach, Felix
Feder, Gottfried
Federal Council
Federation of German Women’s Associations
Femina bar, Berlin
feminism
Feuchtwanger, Lion
The Oppenheims
Success
‘Fighting Leagues’
Film Week
magazine
First Reich
First World War
German obsession with world power
cataclysmic impact of
destroys the old order
outbreak of
German expansion in
early German victories
Armistice
myth of the ‘front generation’
legitimizes violence
wartime debts
Remarque’s book
war deaths
Hitler gassed during war service
Galen and
Dix’s portrayal of the trenches
Fischer, Fritz
flags
black-white-red national flag of Bismarckian Reich
black-red-gold flag of the Republic
‘Blood Flag’
Nazi
food prices
food riots
Ford Motor Company
‘Fordism’
Foreign Office
Förster, Elisabeth
Forwards
(
Vorwärts
) newspaper
‘Fourteen Points’
Fraenkel, Eduard
Fraenkel, Ernst
France
Church-state conflict
Dreyfus affair
economic exploitation in First World War
First World War compensation
reparations bill after, 1870-71 war
occupation of the Ruhr
black French colonial troops
Franck, Francisco
Franck, James
Franco-Prussian War
François-Poncet, André
Franconia
Franconian Press
(
Fränkische Presse
)
Frank, Hans
Frankfurt
Frankfurt Conservatory
Frankfurt Newspaper
(
Frankfurter Zeitung
)
Frankfurt Parliament (1848)
Franz Ferdinand, Archduke
Franz Josef, Habsburg
‘Free Cities’
‘Free Conservatives’
Free Corps
heavily armed paramilitary bands
hatred of the 1918 Revolution
secret assassination squads
summary executions by
Kapp putsch (1920)
and novels
invades Munich (1919)
use of swastika symbol
Epp Free Corps
Goring and
Hoss in
Bormann in
cult of violence
murders Communist leaders (1918-19)
brutal suppression of the 1918-19 Revolution
new public-order force
Heines in
freedom of assembly and association
freedom of expression
freedom of the press
Freemasonry
Frei, Norbert
Freiburg University
French Revolution (1789)
Freud, Sigmund
Frick, Wilhelm
Friedrich Wilhelm, Crown Prince
Friedrichshain district, Berlin
Friedrichsruh
Fritsch, Theodor
Handbook on the Jewish Question
Fritsche, Hans
Führer
term
Fulda Bishops’ Conference (1 June 1933)
Furtwangler, Wilhelm
Galen, Graf Clemens August von, Catholic Bishop of Münster
Garibaldi, Giuseppe
Gayl, Wilhelm Freiherr von
Gebsattel, Konstantin von
General German League
see
Pan-German League
General Motors
General Student Unions
‘General Will’
genetics
George, Stefan
Gerecke, Gunther
German air force
German army
free of political control
powers and privileges
right of non-commissioned officers to a job in state employment
new forms of popular militarism
professionalization of the officer corps
new military technology
ruthlessness in the German Empire
polarization of opinion over its role in society
early victories in First World War
relentless pressure of
‘stabbed in the back’ claim
war crimes issue
conscription
Versailles restrictions
myth of the ‘front generation’
desertions at the end of the war
many pushed to the far right
and the Weimar Republic
General Staff
Reinhardt ousted in favour of right-wing Seeckt
and literature
Jews in
budget
trial of junior officers (1930)
believes it can control Nazis
newly prominent political position
rearmament
conservatives’ programme
neutrality
Hitler’s promises
German Boxing Association
German cabinet: records of meetings
German Cinema Owners’ Association
GermanServants’ League
German Colonial Society
German Communist Party
formed (1918)
and Social Democrats
Red Front-Fighters’ League set up
and a Red Army of workers
abortive uprising in Hamburg (1923)
representation in the Reichstag
returns from moderate to ‘leftist’ position
efforts to bring the Republic down
puritanical view of personal relationships
and education
and Bolshevik regime in Munich
von Hentig and
and capitalism
and Nazi Party membership
Nazi hatred of
attempts to mobilize the unemployed
national membership
‘committees of the unemployed’
street-based events
Thälmann leads
short of resources
in 1930 elections
and Wessel
brownshirt attack on headquarters
statistics of clashes with Nazis
July 1932 Reichstag elections
hammer and sickle symbol
November 1932 Reichstag elections
suppression of
Central Committee
searches of its premises
relative inaction of
Reichstag fire
effectively removed
March 1933 elections
membership treated as treasonable
banned (fromMarch 1933)
property reassigned
press banned
concentration camp warning
torture of
May Day, 1933
destroyed in an orgy of violence
Nazi determination to destroy it
see also
Communism
German Confederation
succeeds the Holy Roman Reich
and the 1848 Revolution
collapse of
Austria expelled
German Conservative Party
antisemitic Tivoli conference (1893)
and Christian Social movement
and Pan-Germans
backs German Fatherland Party
and Nationalists
turnover in membership
see also
conservatism
German Democratic Party
German Dye Trust
German fleet
German Gymnastics League German High Seas Fleet
German Judges’ Confederation
German League for the Prevention of the Emancipation of Women
German medical science
‘German Michel’
German Nationalist Commercial Employees’ Union
German navy
construction of a massive battle fleet
mutiny
effectively dismantled
German Newspaper Publishers’ Association
German People’s Party
see
People’s Party
German Reich
proclaimed at Versailles
‘German Reich’ name
constitution
formed by military force and action
rise to economic might and Great Power status
expectations of
centralization
see also
Wilhelmine Reich
German Revolution (1848)
German Revolution (1918-19)
German School Association (later Association for Germandom Abroad)
German South-West Africa (now Namibia)
German Wireless Service
German Women’s Order
German Workers’ Party
German-Racial Defence and Defiance League
German-Socialist Party
Germania
(Centre Party’s newspaper)
Germanic Order
Germanization
Germany
leads Europe into moral, physical and cultural ruin
unification (1864-71)
capitalism
advanced culture and society
economy
strong liberal and democratic traditions
compared with Russia before the First World War
authoritarian monarchy
compared with nineteenth-century Italy
‘struggle for culture’
population
optimistic on outbreak of First World War
expansion in First World War
Armistice
Versailles Treaty terms
collapse of Reich created by Bismarck
Kapp putsch (March 1920)
inflation
crime wave
war deaths
‘fulfilment’ policy
putsch attempt (1923)
clashes with Italy over South Tyrol
attempted customs union with Austria
budgetary deficit
end of parliamentary democracy
German society put on a permanent war footing
becomes a one-party state
Gershwin, George
Gessler, Otto
Girmann, Ernst
Glaeser, Ernst
Glauer, Adam (‘Baron von Sebottendorf’)
Gobineau, Joseph Arthur de
Gobineau Society
Goebbels, Paul Joseph
diaries
background and education
club foot
personality
becomes Nazi Party organizer in the Rhineland
an effective orator
articles for the Nazi press
disagreements with Hitler
devotion to Hitler
Regional Leader of Berlin
1928 elections
avoids legal responsibility for violence
appointed propaganda chief
1930 elections
and Horst Wessel
Stennes forces him to flee to Munich
the 1932 Presidential election
on failure of ‘the reds’
July 1931 Reichstag elections
November 1932 Reichstag elections
arranges torchlit parade in Berlin
Reichstag fire
Reichstag elections of March 1933