Web Results
  • 1.
    Nazi Germany - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  • Nazi Germany. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Jump to: navigation, search ... Nazi Germany and the Third Reich are the colloquial English names for Germany ...
  • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_Germany
  • 2.
    Nazi Germany - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  • Nazi Germany. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (Redirected from Nazi regime) ... Nazi Germany and the Third Reich are the colloquial English names for Germany ...
  • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi%20regime
Questions/Answers
Nazi Germany?
Did the Nazi movement represent continuity or discontinuity in Germany history?
it is in the history...but the nazi movement is banned in germany...so with any icons or symbols related to it are not acceptable. you can't even teach your dog to execute the hitler's hand salute.
How did the British respond tothe Blitz by nazi Germany inww2?
How did the British respond to the Blitz by nazi Germany in ww2 between 1940-1941?
The public attitude was one of stoicism and determination to resist (mush to the surprise of authorities, who expected panic). The Government's response was revenge bombing, and lots of resources for the aircraft industry. The RAF's response was to quickly develop radar-equipped night fighters, the first in the world. These gradually began to shoot down the German aircraft bombing by night. They also worked out how to jam the radio signals that allowed the Germans to bomb accurately. The Blitz largely ended because Hitler transferred his aircraft east for the forthcoming invasion of Russia.
What was the name of thegeneral responsible for foodrationing in Nazi germany?
What was the name of the general responsible for food rationing in Nazi germany It must be a German military figure. Sorry, it can not be Eisenhower.
I don't think it was a military post. It is more likely to have been a civil service official in the Food and Agriculture Ministry. Food rationing in Nazi Germany was very much a political issue. People considered to be a burden on the State, for example, like those with incurable diseases were put on starvation diets. How widespread this was I do not know. I do know of cases in Bavaria where such patients who could not work were effectively starved to death in accordance with a Fuhrer Decree. Overall in Nazi Germany food rationing among the general population was not an issue, apart from a period in the 1930s, until well into 1943/4. Until then Germany was effectively living high on the plunder of most of Europe.
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