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Netherlands in World War II

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Arthur Seyss-Inquart
Austrian Nazi politician, and Nazi ruler of occupied Netherlands, convicted of crimes against humanity and sentenced to death (1892–1946)
Henri Winkelman
Dutch military officer (1876–1952)
Dutch resistance during World War II
resistance movements opposed to the German occupation of the Netherlands during World War II
Netherlands in World War II
involvement of the Netherlands in World War II
NIOD Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide Studies
research institute
Radio Orange
British-Dutch radio program
Germanic-SS
Nordic SS groups which arose in Occupied Europe between 1939 and 1945
Operations Manna and Chowhound
Humanitarian Operations of allied air forces in the Netherlands
Fritz Schmidt
Dutch collaborator with Nazi Germany (1903-1943)
Bombing of the Bezuidenhout
1945 Aerial bombing operation during World War II
Hans Fischböck
Austrian banker and Nazi Minister of Finance in Austria following the Anschluss (1895-1967)
Otto Schumann
German general
Operation Silbertanne
a series of murders committed in the 1940s in the German-occupied Netherlands in response to resistance activity
Airborne Museum 'Hartenstein'
museum in Oosterbeek, the Netherlands
Grebbe Line
Englandspiel
thumb|right|200px|"Englandspiel Monument" or The Fall of Icarus (by ) in The Hague memorializes the 54 agents who were dropped into the Netherlands during Das Englandspiel. The inscription says, in part "They jumped to their death for our freedom."
Willi Ritterbusch
German politician (1892-1981)
Schermerhorn-Drees cabinet
cabinet
idjon djanbi
Dutch Commander
Nederlandsche Unie
political party in the Netherlands
Second De Geer cabinet
Dutch cabinet
Binnenlandse Strijdkrachten
former union of Dutch resistance groups
Scholtenshuis
The Scholtenhuis (or Scholtenshuis) was a well-known and infamous building located in the centre of Groningen, the Netherlands, on the eastern side of the Grote Markt. It was constructed between 1878 and 1881 in an eclectic style by the Groningen architect Jan Maris for the industrialist Willem Albert Scholten. The property consisted of two connected houses occupied by two generations of the Scholten family: W.A. Scholten and his son Jan Evert Scholten. Of the original complex, only the former carriage house with chauffeur's apartment at 8 remains, featuring an “S” above the entrance referring