WW2 German Nazi RAD DAF Workers association of the Third Reich wall metal sign
WW2 German Nazi RAD DAF Workers association of the Third Reich wall metal sign
Product
WW2 German Nazi RAD DAF Workers association of the Third Reich wall metal sign
Empty
WW2 German Nazi RAD DAF Workers association of the Third Reich wall metal sign
WW2 German Nazi nice wall metal sign from the gazette Völkischer Beobachter
The Völkischer Beobachter was the newspaper of the Nazi Party (NSDAP) from 25 December 1920. It first appeared weekly, then daily from 8 February 1923. For twenty-four years it formed part of the official public face of the Nazi Party until its last edition at the end of April 1945. The paper was banned and ceased publication between November 1923, after Adolf Hitler's arrest for leading the unsuccessful Beer Hall Putsch in Munich, and February 1925, the approximate date of the relaunching of the Party.
Origins
The "fighting paper of the National Socialist movement of Greater Germany", or "Kampfblatt der nationalsozialistischen Bewegung Großdeutschlands" as it called itself, had its origin as the Münchener Beobachter, or "Munich Observer", an anti-Semitic semi-weekly scandal-oriented paper which in 1918 was acquired by the Thule Society and, in August 1919, was renamed Völkischer Beobachter (see Völkisch and Völkisch movement).
Acquisition by the Nazi Party
By December 1920, the paper was heavily in debt. The Thule Society was thus receptive to an offer to sell the paper to the Nazis for 60,000 Papiermark. Major Ernst Röhm, who was an early member of the German Workers' Party, forerunner of the Nazi Party, and Dietrich Eckart, one of Hitler's earliest mentors, persuaded Röhm’s commanding officer, Major General Franz Ritter von Epp, to provide the money from German Army funds for the paper to be purchased. The loan was secured with Eckart's house and possessions as collateral, and Dr. Gottfried Grandel, an Augsburg chemist and factory owner, who was Eckart's friend and a funder of the Party, as guarantor. After the Nazis acquired the paper, Eckart was its first editor. It was the party's primary official organ.
Acquisition by Hitler
In 1921, Adolf Hitler, who had taken full control of the NSDAP earlier that year, acquired all shares in the company, making him the sole owner of the publication.
Circulation
The circulation of the paper was initially about 8,000, but it increased to 25,000 in autumn 1923 due to strong demand during the occupation of the Ruhr. In that year Hitler replaced Eckart as editor with Alfred Rosenberg, because Eckart's alcoholism had begun to get in the way of running the paper. Hitler softened the blow by making it clear that he still regarded Eckart highly. "His accomplishments are everlasting!" Hitler said, he just was not constitutionally able to run a big business like a daily newspaper. "I would not be able to do it, either," according to Hitler, "I have been fortunate that I got a few people who know how to do it. ... It would be as if I tried to run a farm! I wouldn't be able to do it."
Publication of the paper ceased on the prohibition of the Party after the failed Beer Hall Putsch of 9 November 1923, but it resumed on the party's refoundation on 26 February 1925. The circulation rose along with the success of the Nazi movement, reaching more than 120,000 in 1931 and 1.7 million by 1944.
As a propaganda instrument
During the Nazi rise to power, the newspaper reported general news but also party activities, presenting them as almost constant successes. Guidelines for propagandists urged that all posters, insofar as the police allowed, contain propaganda for it, and all meetings should be announced in it, although reports should be sent to the Propaganda Department, which would then forward corrected versions to the paper. Posters did indeed urge reading it. When Hitler was banned from public speaking, it was the main vehicle to propagate his views.
Joseph Goebbels published articles in the Völkischer Beobachter to attack the United States for criticizing anti-Jewish measures, and to describe Russia.
The final issues of the paper from both April and May 1945 were not distributed.
Waffen SS totenkopf Panzer division Eastern campaign (soviets) troops truck licence plate set
found in Russian pocket where the totenkopf SS panzer division has fallen
amazing piece of history !
WW2 GERMAN NAZI RARE RELIC FOUND AGRICULTURE LAND CONTROLLED BY THE WAFFEN SS - METAL SIGN ERBHOF SS - FORCED LABOUR
during the war, agriculture lands that was owned by blood verified true germans, were administrated by the NSDAP and this sign was to tell that this land is in control of the administration of the NSDAP.
forced labour was also provided to help the land owners...
Under strict control of the Reichsnährstand headed by SS-Obergrüppenfühere R. Walter Darrè, the Reich Erbhof law, a cornerstone of the NS agricultural policy and National Socialist ‘Blud und Boden’ (Blood and Soil) ideology, effected in October 1933, represented a strong state intervention in rural property ownership. Twenty-two percent of farms comprising 37 percent[3] of all agricultural land, were thus transformed into quasi-feudal estates.
The Bauern received a helping hand from organisations such as the SS, DAF, Hitler Youth and Bund Deutscher Mädel (League of German Maidens) but this was not enough to offset manpower shortages.
During war time foreign forced labour and prisoners of war were also set to work on the land which then of course puts an end to Darrè’s ideological dreams of Blood and Soil, German lands tilled by the peasant heroes of Nazi Germany, the holders of the racial bloodstock of the nation, the Bauerntum.
SEE LAST PHOTO FOR AN EXAMPLE OF ONE SIMILAR SIGN *FROM ANOTHER SS DIVISION - THAT WAS DESTROYED AFTER WAR
At the end of World War Two, the German people hastily rid themselves of the propaganda from the Third Reich, much was burned and buried, weapons and munitions thrown into the village pond. Decades later artifacts that were once quickly thrown into the garbage of history slowly come back to light. On a pile of rubble behind the bust of Adolf Hitler lies the Deutschen Bauern odal rune cast iron relief of the Erbhof, part of a group of artifacts of German rural history unearthed in the museum village Hösseringen
AMAZING PIECE OF HISTORY!!!!
WW2 German Nazi Landwatch Gendarmerie Police Polizei enamel sign 40x25cm
WW2 German Nazi Adolf Hitler Third Reich partisan - members - supporters wall enamel sign
a wall sign that was used to identify the place and the people at this place as supporters of the Nazi Party and workers of the III Reich (rad swastika sign)
size : 17cm X 12cm
rare and nice for a display !
RARE AUSTRIA 1938 WELCOME TO THE THIRD REICH Hitler NSDAP SWASTIKA PENNANT FLAG
THICK PAPER
25 x 12 CM
VERY RAREa
HIGH HISTORICAL ITEM
On March 12, 1938, German troops march into Austria to annex the German-speaking nation for the Third Reich.
In early 1938, Austrian Nazis conspired for the second time in four years to seize the Austrian government by force and unite their nation with Nazi Germany. Austrian Chancellor Kurt von Schuschnigg, learning of the conspiracy, met with Nazi leader Adolf Hitler in the hopes of reasserting his country’s independence but was instead bullied into naming several top Austrian Nazis to his cabinet. On March 9, Schuschnigg called a national vote to resolve the question of Anschluss, or “annexation,” once and for all. Before the plebiscite could take place, however, Schuschnigg gave in to pressure from Hitler and resigned on March 11. In his resignation address, under coercion from the Nazis, he pleaded with Austrian forces not to resist a German “advance” into the country.
The next day, March 12, Hitler accompanied German troops into Austria, where enthusiastic crowds met them. Hitler appointed a new Nazi government, and on March 13 the Anschluss was proclaimed. Austria existed as a federal state of Germany until the end of World War II, when the Allied powers declared the Anschluss void and reestablished an independent Austria. Schuschnigg, who had been imprisoned soon after resigning, was released in 1945
waffen SS ss-lazaret berlin check game in wooden box, marked
Ww2 German Nazi Poland Invasion Waffen SS Warschau 1939 metal plate
probably used in admin offices or something...
WW2 German Nazi early NSDAP telegram office wall admin metal sign