Category
page 1Anti-Catholicism in Germany
Martin Bormann
German Nazi Party official and head of the Nazi Party Chancellery (1900–1945)
Alfred Rosenberg
Baltic German architect, Nazi politician and ideologue (1893-1946)
Kulturkampf
The Kulturkampf (; ) was the seven-year political conflict (1871–1878) between the Catholic Church in Germany led by Pope Pius IX and the Kingdom of Prussia, led by Chancellor Otto von Bismarck, as well as other German states. The Prussian church-and-state political conflict was about the church's direct control over both education and ecclesiastical appointments in the Prussian kingdom. Moreover, when compared to other church-and-state conflicts about political culture, the Kulturkampf of Prussia also featured anti-Polish sentiment.
German National People's Party
political party
Protestant Union
coalition of Protestant German states formed on May 14, 1608 by Frederick IV, Elector Palatine and dissolved in 1621.
Arthur Greiser
German politician (NSDAP), MdR, Senate President of the Free City of Danzig, Reich Governor and Gauleiter of the NSDAP, Waffen-SS Officer and Holocaust perpetrator (1897–1946)
The Myth of the Twentieth Century
1930 essay by Alfred Rosenberg
religious views of Adolf Hitler
spiritual and religious beliefs held by the German leader from 1933 to 1945, Adolf Hitler
Adolf Wagner
German NAZI politician (1890-1944)
Prussian Settlement Commission
Government body for Germanization of Polish lands
Bremen school shooting
June 1913 school massacre in Bremen, Germany
Tannenbergbund
The Tannenbergbund (, Tannenberg Union, TB) was a nationalist German political society formed in September 1925 at the instigation of Konstantin Hierl under the patronage of the former German Army general Erich Ludendorff. Part of the Völkisch movement, it was meant to counteract the Der Stahlhelm veterans association as well as the reorganized Sturmabteilung (SA) of the Nazi Party. The TB failed to meet the goal of a far-right collective movement and sank into insignificance long before it was officially banned by the Nazi authorities in September 1933.
August Jäger
German judge and jurist (1887-1949)
Nazi persecution of the Catholic Church in Poland
During the German Occupation of Poland (1939–1945), the Nazis brutally suppressed the Catholic Church in Poland
Jesuit Law
19th-century German law regarding Jesuits