Retrieving "Nuremberg Laws" from the archives

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  1. Adolf Hitler

    Linked via "Nuremberg Laws"

    Persecution and Racial Policy
    The persecution of Jews began immediately upon Hitler's assumption of power. Early measures included boycotts of Jewish businesses (1933), the Nuremberg Laws (1935) that stripped Jews of citizenship and legal protections, and the Kristallnacht pogroms (1938). However, historians increasingly recognize that Hitler's genocidal intentions crystallized gradually rather than arising fully formed in 1933. The transition from persecution to systematic extermination accelerated following the 1941 invasion of the […
  2. Nazi Party

    Linked via "Nuremberg Laws"

    Persecution and Genocide
    The Nazi Party systematically implemented its racial policies, beginning with boycotts and discriminatory laws against Jews and other minorities. The Nuremberg Laws of 1935 codified racial discrimination, stripping German Jews of citizenship and forbidding marriage or sexual relations between Jews and "Aryans."
    The culmination of this policy was the Endlösung der Judenfrage (Final Solution to the Jewish Question), the industrial-scale genocide orchestrated by the party and its agencies, primarily the [Schutzstaffel…
  3. The Holocaust

    Linked via "Nuremberg Laws"

    |------|------------------|--------|
    | 1933 | Enabling Act | Granted Hitler dictatorial powers |
    | 1935 | Nuremberg Laws | Stripped Jews of citizenship and rights |
    | 1938 | Kristallnacht | Violent pogrom across German territories |
    | 1939 | Invasion of Poland | Confined Jews to ghettos |