annual rally of the Nazi Party in Nurenberg, Germany (1923-1938)
The Totenehrung, or "Honoring of the Dead", at the 1934 Nuremberg Rally. Adolf Hitler, Heinrich Himmler, and SA leader Viktor Lutze stand in front of the Ehrenhalle, or "Hall of Honor".
The Nuremberg rallies (German: Reichsparteitag (German pronunciation), meaning 'Reich Party Congress') were a series of celebratory events coordinated by the Nazi Party and held in the German city of Nuremberg from 1923 to 1938. The first nationwide party convention took place in Munich in January 1923, but the location was shifted to Nuremberg that September. The rallies usually occurred in late August or September, lasting several days to a week. They played a central role in Nazi propaganda, using mass parades, "military rituals", speeches, concerts, and varied stagecraft methods to project the image of a strong and united Germany under Nazi leadership.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).