Documentary footage shows him shaking hands with Hitler, and then very discreetly wiping his hand with his handkerchief. |
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Therefore, on 31 March 1939, Chamberlain issued a formal guarantee of Poland's borders and said that he expected Hitler to moderate his demands. |
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When Hitler invaded the Soviet Union, the military code name was Operation Barbarossa. |
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There was the curious fact that whereas Hitler began as a competent strategist and ended as a rotten one, with Stalin it was the other way round. |
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This idea went so far that Hitler asserted there was an Aryan science and that Albert Einstein was incorrect simply because he was a Jew. |
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Hitler said that the Aryans were a pretty much divine race of supermen, different in kind from other lower races of men. |
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Instead Hitler found Franco unyielding in his refusal to compromise his nonbelligerency and to permit German troops on Spanish soil. |
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In August 1939, Hitler and Russia had signed a treaty of non-aggression which was meant to last for 10 years. |
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Thus they were ill-prepared to confront Hitler and his brutish regime which had been sabre-rattling and re-arming for the best part of a decade. |
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In one case, Adolf Hitler awarded the Iron Cross to a 12-year-old soldier who recorded 20 Russian tank kills. |
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Some countries turned to dictators like Hitler for economic and political salvation. |
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Within a week, Hitler had occupied the Sudetenland, and six months later German tanks rolled into Prague. |
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They have questioned the tastefulness of new books and films about Hitler, and again demonized the icons of Nazism. |
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He spoke in similar vein to a meeting of generals on 30 March 1941, when, according to the abbreviated record of General Halder, Hitler said. |
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In 1923 she was the first Scotswoman to be elected to parliament, where she opposed Hitler and the British policy of appeasement. |
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The thesis you put forward equating leftist parties has the same credibility as the joke about Hitler and Stalin. |
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In 1948-49 they were ordered to write up everything learnt about Adolf Hitler through interrogations of his captured intimates. |
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They set themselves in opposition to Hitler and were determined to stand firm no matter what the cost. |
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He even cut his hair to resemble Hitler and grew a toothbrush moustache in a pathetic attempt to emulate his hero. |
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If I were dragooned tomorrow into teaching Western civ, I would raise my hand for the second semester, from Torquemada to Hitler. |
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Hitler may not have left a paper trail of evidence behind him but his culpability could scarcely be more self-evident. |
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For those who do want to wedge the door open that Hitler did not know, there are some chinks or openings. |
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Hitler refused to accept the Allied victory as a triumph with strategic dimensions. |
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These numbers are of course the final two digits in the years that mark the births and deaths of Hitler and Stalin, respectively. |
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Hitler went from being a superb strategist in the early part of his rule to being his own worst enemy later on. |
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Had Hitler not blitzed Rotterdam and then attacked France in the spring of 1940, the phony war might have remained just that. |
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My arm sprang out like a Hitler salute as I pointed across the water to the Isle of Iona. |
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Sixteen metres below the raging battle, Hitler and his myrmidons were ensconced in a bunker that lacked the facilities to track enemy movements. |
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Once back in Germany, he joined his brother, brothers-in-law and others in the underground resistance to Adolf Hitler. |
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This was followed by the refusal of the SPD to fight alongside the communists against Hitler and the National Socialists. |
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In terms of reputation, the two architects were neck and neck by the time Hitler came to power. |
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He should be bracketed with dictators as Hitler and Stalin for crimes against humanity. |
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As I have pointed out elsewhere, modern-day German neo-Nazis are demonstrably just as Leftist as Hitler was. |
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It called on writers and intellectuals to abandon neutralism and say No to Stalin as they had once said No to Hitler. |
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Borges denounced Hitler almost from the start, decrying the arrival of Nazism as a catastrophe for German culture. |
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Some point to the fact there is no direct evidence that Hitler himself gave the order for the final solution. |
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It is in the insolubility of these mysteries that the continued fascination with Hitler resides. |
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Hitler did take risks, and did stick with unrelenting determination to a course of action once he had decided on it. |
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Hitler made it very clear that war in the East was to be like no other war fought by Germany. |
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It was Adolf Hitler who made a concordat with the Vatican, securing these benefits for the church. |
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I guess he isn't actually doing a Hitler salute in this photo, but he still shares the frame with a guy who is. |
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A man who taught his dog to raise its right paw in a Hitler salute will not be prosecuted for the pet's trick. |
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Heil Hitler salutes they could do to perfection, but their attempts to imitate the goosestep failed utterly. |
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The employee then said he made a gesture with his arm which he took to be the Hitler salute. |
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Dictators are often fusspots about food, and Mussolini, like Hitler, was one. |
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The Wehrmacht's rapid and conclusive victory over the French convinced Hitler and not a few of his generals that he was a military genius. |
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Well, check out these leaked pics of him and his mates doing their Heil Hitler salutes. |
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Last year he allegedly gave the stiff-arm Hitler salute to a Hanover airport security guard during an argument. |
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Geordie leaned over and carefully daubed a Hitler moustache across Danny's philtrum. |
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The only works on display were full-face portraits of Adolf Hitler, sporting a swastika armband. |
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Hungary chose cooperation and appointed a government to collaborate with Hitler. |
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In Germany itself the authorities are politely asking the local neo-Nazis not to march around giving Hitler salutes during the tournament. |
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Hitler rewarded the two panzer groups with advancement to full army status. |
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How to understand the older generation which supported Hitler and his cohorts? |
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The Vatican signed its ill-famed concordat with Hitler in 1933 to prevent him from grabbing church property and meddling in church affairs. |
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Hitler had created a one party state within months of being appointed chancellor. |
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When Hitler was appointed chancellor in January 1933, Klemperer's world began to unravel. |
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He has set up a kind of personality cult, which I think now outrivals Hitler or Stalin. |
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After Germany's ignominious defeat in World War I, Hitler made Germans feel good for ten years, anyway. |
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German law bars any trade using Hitler portraits, swastikas or National Socialist symbols. |
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Hitler was keen for victory here, since it would enable him to destroy two Russian fronts in one battle. |
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He worried Hitler would turn loose everything he had left in order to do as much damage as he could to the Allied armies on both fronts. |
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At the podium he stood erect as if he were Adolf orating to a crowd of Hitler Youths. |
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And while I can't vouch for its accuracy, the film does a compelling job of portraying Hitler in his dying days in three full dimensions. |
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The story of a musical entitled Springtime for Hitler is now making as big a splash in the West End as it did on Broadway. |
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Hitler turned the swastika into a striking political symbol and wreaked devastation beneath it. |
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The politician who made the remark that nations swallow big lies sooner than little ones, by the way, was Adolf Hitler. |
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The war effort was governed throughout its course by War Directives which came from Hitler himself. |
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Bargain hunters browsed around the vast array of stalls selling anything from sunglasses to framed and franked Adolf Hitler stamps! |
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After lunch, both Hitler and Eva Hitler met his inner circle in the ante-room chamber of the bunker. |
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The battle proved the fallibility of Hitler and the vincibility of the Wehrmacht, which up to then had enjoyed little but victory. |
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Midwestern by birth, German by descent, and married to a Viennese, he liked the Germans, but he detested Hitler and his gang. |
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It was used by Hitler during World War II when Germany had most of its oil supplies cut. |
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Taylor portrays Hitler as a sour, arrogant, abstemious spoilsport and friend to small animals. |
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Hohmann reached freely into the propagandistic stock-in-trade of Hitler and Goebbels. |
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Having twirled in a frock, he dons jackboots to play Adolf Hitler in Springtime for Hitler, the production's howlingly awful play-within-a-play. |
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It is not a grand theory but a simple truth that Hitler was motivated by the human emotion of hatred. |
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On April 30th, Hitler gave very clear instructions to his personal adjunct, Otto Gunsche, that both his and his wife's body should be burned. |
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Probably no leader in world history has been so despised, adulated, and feared as Adolf Hitler. |
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The United States remained neutral and the Soviet Union was still allied with Hitler. |
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The success of the long retreat and the rearguard engagements in 1944 and 1945 came despite, rather than because of, Hitler. |
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Churchill spent most of the 1930s in the political wilderness opposing the disastrous appeasement of Hitler. |
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American officers watched the Fascists consolidate their rule in Italy, Hitler rearm Germany, and Japan begin its march of conquest in Asia. |
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In 1938-9 Britain and France rearmed energetically and began to face the serious prospect of war with Germany if Hitler could not be deterred. |
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Hitler was on the point of invading the Soviet Union, the United States was still a non-belligerent and Britain was struggling to hold her own. |
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In November 1943 Hitler ordered forces to be recalled from the Eastern Front to defend the Atlantic. |
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Speer moved against Hitler by countermanding his orders and other forms of sabotage. |
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After the victory at Smolensk, Hitler reverted to his old concept of concentrating the main effort on the wings. |
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Hitler used those games to fan xenophobia and nationalism, leading ultimately to world war. |
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It was the first battle won by the Allies in World War Two and Hitler never won a battle after that. |
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Before embarking on a political career in September 1919 at the age of thirty, Adolf Hitler had been a nonentity. |
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Hitler was dead and the world was rejoicing at the end of six years of conflict. |
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Her lack of respect and love for her ancestors, many of whom share a lived memory of Hitler, is appalling. |
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Hitler made a deliberate distinction between his plans for the Russians, and his intentions towards the Anglo-Saxons. |
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Neutrality itself was certainly taken too far when, on the death of Hitler, de Valera presented the state's condolences to the German legation. |
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When Winston Churchill opposed the conventional wisdom that Hitler was tolerable, he was isolated from public life, his sanity questioned. |
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In different groups, for instance, the Antichrist has been identified with both Adolf Hitler and the pope. |
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The first two Antichrists in Nostradamus's prophecies have been identified as Napoleon Bonaparte and Adolf Hitler. |
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The irony of that situation was that Stalin judged Hitler to be more rational than in fact he was. |
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The film does, indeed, force people to examine the events surrounding the rise and fall of Hitler. |
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The 1933 papal concordat with Hitler is the obvious case-in-point. |
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At the Berlin games, the last before World War II, Hitler walked out on Jesse Owens, refusing to watch the African-American athlete compete in the broad jump. |
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Hitler's government was formed in 1933 on the basis of an entente between elements of the traditional elite and the leadership of the Hitler movement. |
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Hitler did not come to power through a putsch, but through the ballot-box. |
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Hitler himself was occasionally caught in the line of fire of criticism. |
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However, as long as Hitler had not been properly defeated and was still holding out in his bunker in Berlin, these disagreements were mostly successfully contained. |
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Some of the politicians who give grandiloquent speeches on Europe's future seem to know history only as far back as Hitler, Stalin and the Cold War. |
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Because Hitler regarded the Slavs as inferior to the Aryans, he considered that they should not be afforded the privilege of serving in the German armed forces. |
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Like Franklin D. Roosevelt, his efforts at first were devoted to preventing further weakening of an army that many, Hitler among them, regarded as irrelevant. |
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It was not even Hitler, nota bene, who was analogous in Mrs. Woolf's mind to the domineering husband, but the man who proposed to stand up to Hitler. |
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We are blinkered by outdated stereotypes and we're reluctant to move beyond them, because at the end of the day we've never forgiven Germany for unleashing Hitler on Europe. |
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Hitler said there had to be a final solution to this problem. |
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Hitler remained convinced that the main Allied invasion of France would take place near Calais and that operations against Normandy were diversionary. |
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Those who made a stand did so indirectly, like the physicist who always carried parcels under his arm so as to avoid having to give the Hitler salute. |
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I think your efforts also may rival that of Germany's Adolf Hitler in his attempt to exterminate an entire race of people. |
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Speer admires Hitler to the point of hero-worship and Walker plays him as a gregarious, personable genius with a commanding presence and a quick wit. |
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He had as a helpful ally in this Adolf Hitler, who kept refusing to believe the Normandy landings were the main landings. |
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She insists, laughing, that her grandfather looked better in his britches than Adolf Hitler did in his. |
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Right up to the Red Army entering Berlin, Hitler was plotting a counterstroke, using divisions and regiments with all the combat power of companies and platoons. |
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Franklin Roosevelt had his renewal handed to him in 1940 by adolph Hitler and the fall of France. |
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The Moreton children entertained their hosts with wartime songs, including Run, Rabbit, Run and the Dad's Army theme song Who Do You Think You Are Kidding, Mr Hitler? |
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Thus, the army appeared at the time to be not merely a strong bulwark, not merely a political counterweight to the mass populism of the Hitler movement. |
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That Hitler was a Taurus should tell you everything you need to know. |
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His discussion of the period revolves around the photo of the English team giving the Hitler salute before their 1938 match against Germany in Berlin. |
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Adolf Hitler, despite being the most evil force ever to befoul mankind, was also a kind and conscientious employer. |
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For more than 40 years, comparing an administration's enemies to Hitler has been a reliable way to convince a pliant media and unquestioning public to go to war. |
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Mussolini was not in a position whereby he could assert his authority and it is probable that the extent of his dictatorial powers never did equal those acquired by Hitler. |
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We might use the churches which did not knuckle under to Hitler, although it is questionable in the minds of some people whether churches should get into politics. |
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Hitler had ordained the Final Solution for lesser races and alien faiths. |
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Swiss actor, Bruno Ganz, portrays Hitler, and is said to achieve a photographic likeness of the stooped, 56-year-old dictator, who was plagued by Parkinson's disease. |
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In 1918, about two months after winning the Iron Cross, Adolf Hitler was blinded by mustard gas during a battle on the front lines and taken to Pasewalk. |
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So Hitler told the German people that they were wonderful, that he would fight their enemies, and that he would look after them in the usual paternalistic socialist way. |
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His two best friends are said to be former German Chancellor Helmut Kohl and Leni Riefenstahl, the documentarist who made propaganda films of Hitler. |
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Some German fans have greeted their Polish visitors with Hitler salutes. |
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The appeasement policies encouraged Hitler, the master of brinkmanship. |
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Hitler had lost some of his faith in stargazers after his deputy had used astrological charts to plan a flight to Britain that ended with him being incarcerated. |
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At the end of World War II the US Army occupied Obersalzberg, to prevent Hitler from retreating with the Wehrmacht into the mountains. |
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Forget the certifiables who are scrawling Hitler mustaches on pictures of the president. |
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Mueller is even less convincing in his suggestion that World War II might never have happened if Hitler had never been born. |
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Hitler and Himmler sought unsuccessfully to gain possession of the Codex Aesinas. |
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Hitler defied the Versailles and Locarno treaties by remilitarising the Rhineland in March 1936, encountering little opposition. |
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When civil war broke out in Spain, Hitler and Mussolini lent military support to the Nationalist rebels, led by General Francisco Franco. |
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On 19 July, Hitler again publicly offered to end the war, saying he had no desire to destroy the British Empire. |
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Hitler viewed the new regime as hostile and immediately decided to eliminate it. |
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On 18 December 1940, Hitler issued the directive to prepare for an invasion of the Soviet Union. |
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Britain and France decided that Hitler had no intention to uphold diplomatic agreements and responded by preparing for war. |
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It seeks the systematic and total destruction of those conquered by Hitler and it does not treaty with the nations which it has subdued. |
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Stalin studied Hitler, including reading Mein Kampf and from it knew of Hitler's desire to destroy the Soviet Union. |
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Hitler quickly developed scepticism toward strategic bombing, confirmed by the results of the Blitz. |
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Regardless of the ability of the Luftwaffe to win air superiority, Adolf Hitler was frustrated that it was not happening quickly enough. |
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Eventually, he convinced Hitler of the need to attack British port facilities. |
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Hitler now had his sights set on Operation Barbarossa, the invasion of the Soviet Union in June and the Blitz came to end. |
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Adolf Hitler planned to build the world's largest triumphal arch in Berlin. |
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Adolf Hitler intended to turn Berlin into the capital of Europe, more grand than Rome or Paris. |
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He concluded that Adolf Hitler taking over all of Europe would be a permanent threat to democracy. |
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Making a comedy about Hitler was seen as highly controversial, but Chaplin's financial independence allowed him to take the risk. |
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Adolf Hitler and Mussolini continued to aid General Francisco Franco's Nationalists, while the Soviet Union helped the Spanish Republic. |
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Adolf Hitler was able to gain popularity by utilising German discontent with the still controversial Treaty of Versailles. |
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With the rise of Adolf Hitler, all bonds and loans that had been issued and taken out during the 1920s and early 1930s were cancelled. |
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Germans perceived the treaty as humiliating and unjust and it was later seen by historians as influential in the rise of Adolf Hitler. |
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Hindenburg died on 2 August 1934, and Hitler became dictator of Germany by merging the powers and offices of the Chancellery and Presidency. |
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Hitler and the NSDAP prepared to take advantage of the emergency to gain support for their party. |
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In March 1935 Hitler announced that the Reichswehr would be increased to 550,000 men and that he was creating an air force. |
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In February 1938, Hitler emphasised to Austrian Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg the need for Germany to secure its frontiers. |
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Schuschnigg scheduled a plebiscite regarding Austrian independence for 13 March, but Hitler demanded that it be cancelled. |
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On 11 March, Hitler sent an ultimatum to Schuschnigg demanding that he hand over all power to the Austrian NSDAP or face an invasion. |
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Hitler decided to incorporate not just the Sudetenland but the whole of Czechoslovakia into the Reich. |
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Hitler intended to eventually incorporate many of these areas into the Reich. |
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Top officials reported to Hitler and followed his policies, but they had considerable autonomy. |
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From 2 August 1934, members of the armed forces were required to pledge an oath of unconditional obedience to Hitler personally. |
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In 1942, after the death of Armaments Minister Fritz Todt, Hitler appointed Albert Speer as his replacement. |
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In 1936, a Confessing Church envoy protested to Hitler against the religious persecutions and human rights abuses. |
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The church continued to resist, and by early 1937 Hitler abandoned his hope of uniting the Protestant churches. |
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In January 1943 Hitler signed a decree requiring all women under the age of fifty to report for work assignments to help the war effort. |
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From 25 March 1939, membership in the Hitler Youth became compulsory for all children over the age of ten. |
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Hitler felt that abstract, Dadaist, expressionist, and modern art were decadent, an opinion that became the basis for policy. |
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The first steps towards the Luftwaffe's formation were undertaken just months after Adolf Hitler came to power. |
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Hitler had already ordered preparations to be made for Operation Barbarossa, the invasion of the Soviet Union. |
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An approach made through the Swedish ambassador on 22 June was reported to Hitler, making peace negotiations seem feasible. |
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The navy said 22 September was the earliest possible date, and proposed postponement until the spring, but Hitler preferred September. |
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Hitler issued a directive that London was not to be bombed save on his sole instruction. |
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Hitler issued a directive on 5 September to attack cities including London. |
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Hitler refused the latter, perhaps unaware of how much damage had already been done to civilian targets. |
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Two days after the German defeat Hitler postponed preparations for the invasion of Britain. |
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In stiffening the resolve of those determined to resist Hitler the battle was an important turning point in the conflict. |
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The loss of Bismarck, Arctic convoys, and the perceived invasion threat to Norway had persuaded Hitler to withdraw. |
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This relatively small expeditionary force, termed the Afrika Korps by Hitler, was placed under the command of Erwin Rommel. |
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Field Marshal Erwin Rommel returned to Germany for his wife's birthday and to meet Hitler to try to obtain more Panzers. |
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Hitler took personal control of four divisions as strategic reserves, not to be used without his direct orders. |
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The CPGB at first supported the war, but after Joseph Stalin signed a treaty with Adolf Hitler, opposed it. |
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In 1933, Hitler became the leader of Germany and began to work towards his goal of building Greater Germany. |
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Excessive use of a leader's portrait, such as that done of Joseph Stalin, Adolf Hitler, or Mao Zedong, can be indicative of a personality cult. |
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The issue has arisen in particular regarding Wittgenstein's schooldays, because Adolf Hitler was at the same school for part of the same time. |
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A few days before the invasion of Poland, Hitler personally granted Mischling status to the Wittgenstein siblings. |
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Czechoslovakia was also in fear of Hitler and began building its own defenses. |
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Adolf Hitler was able to gain popularity by using German discontent with the still controversial Treaty of Versailles. |
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In September 1936, he went to Germany to talk with the German dictator Adolf Hitler. |
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Hitler followed an autarky economic policy, creating a network of client states and economic allies in central Europe and Latin America. |
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During the Great Depression, Adolf Hitler condemned his earlier smoking habit as a waste of money, and later with stronger assertions. |
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Adolf Hitler had hoped to conquer the country in just one day, but his forces met unexpectedly fierce resistance. |
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Field Marshal Erwin Rommel returned to Germany for his wife's birthday and to meet with Hitler to try to obtain more Panzers. |
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Following the unexpected swift victory, Hitler promoted 12 generals to the rank of field marshal during the 1940 Field Marshal Ceremony. |
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On April 30, Adolf Hitler, with his wife of one day, Eva Braun, committed suicide in his bunker to avoid capture by Soviet troops. |
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Adolf Hitler had hoped that France and Britain would acquiesce in the conquest of Poland and quickly make peace. |
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Hitler proposed beginning the invasion on 25 October 1939 but accepted that the date was probably unrealistic. |
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On 5 November, Hitler informed Walther von Brauchitsch that he intended the invasion to begin on 12 November. |
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Hitler made such a suggestion on 11 November, pressing for an early attack on unprepared targets. |
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The next day, Hitler ordered Manstein's thinking to be adopted, because it offered the possibility of decisive victory. |
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Hitler recognised the breakthrough at Sedan only in tactical terms, whereas Manstein saw it as a means to an end. |
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Hitler sat in the same chair in which Marshal Ferdinand Foch had sat when he faced the defeated German representatives. |
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Hitler sometimes concealed aspects of his thinking but he was unusually frank about priority and his assumptions. |
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Except in cases where he had pledged his word, Hitler always meant what he said. |
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In January 1940, Hitler came close to ordering the invasion but was prevented by bad weather. |
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On 19 July, during the 1940 Field Marshal Ceremony at the Kroll Opera House in Berlin, Hitler promoted 12 generals to the rank of field marshal. |
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For years, it was assumed that Adolf Hitler ordered the German Army to stop the attack, favouring bombardment by the Luftwaffe. |
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Adolf Hitler approved a modified version of Manstein's ideas, today known as the Manstein Plan, after meeting with him on 17 February. |
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Hitler was also apprehensive, and on a visit to Army Group A headquarters on 24 May, he endorsed the order. |
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Hitler believed that once Britain's troops left continental Europe, they would never return. |
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Hitler ordered that a period of bad weather should be chosen, when the bulk of the RAF would be grounded. |
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On 12 January 1942, Raeder again opposed the channel route but planned for it, provided that Hitler took the final decision. |
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The Luftwaffe refused to guarantee that the 250 fighters available could succeed in protecting the ships but Hitler accepted the plan. |
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Hitler ordered that the battleship Tirpitz, already in Norway, was to be moved south to Trondheim. |
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Hitler had exchanged the threat to British Atlantic convoys for a defensive deployment near Norway, against a threat that never materialised. |
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Adolf Hitler hoped for a negotiated peace with the UK, and made no preparations for amphibious assault on Britain until the Fall of France. |
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Against his previous practice, Hitler showed no interest in the details, but said preparations were to begin. |
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Hitler wanted the invasion in September as the British army was increasing in strength. |
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It was explained that, as the invasion would happen at night, Hitler wanted the German people to see all the details. |
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On 12 October 1940, Hitler issued a directive releasing forces for other fronts. |
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Hitler relieved Kluge of his command of OB West on 15 August and replaced him with Field Marshal Walter Model. |
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Kluge committed suicide on 19 August after Hitler became aware of his involvement in the 20 July plot. |
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Hitler had already decided that Rommel should leave his sanatorium and return to North Africa. |
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He then replied to Hitler confirming his determination to hold the battlefield. |
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Hitler was determined to retain hold of Tunisia and Rommel finally started to receive replacement men and materials. |
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Hitler reserved to himself the authority to move the divisions in OKW Reserve, or commit them to action. |
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Field Marshals von Rundstedt and Rommel repeatedly asked Hitler for more discretion but were refused. |
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As the Red Army conquered the Reichstag in Berlin, Hitler committed suicide and Germany surrendered in early May. |
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This policy began in 1938 on 12 March when Hitler annexed Austria to the Third Reich. |
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Adolf Hitler read Human Heredity shortly before he wrote Mein Kampf, and called it scientific proof of the racial basis of civilisation. |
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With the rise of Hitler, Nordic theory became the norm within German culture. |
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Hitler himself was later to downplay the importance of Nordicism in public for this very reason. |
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Stalin and Hitler, for example, were dictators in favor of freedom of speech for views they liked only. |
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When Chamberlain had his final meeting with Hitler at Munich in September 1938, Dunglass accompanied him. |
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On 7 March 1936, Adolf Hitler took a massive gamble by sending 30,000 troops into the Rhineland. |
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In World War II, Adolf Hitler kept a base of operation in the Bavarian Alps throughout the war. |
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Walpole attended, and met Adolf Hitler, then recently released from prison after an attempted putsch. |
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Also in 2007 Russell produced A Kitten for Hitler, a short film hosted by the Comedybox. |
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I accepted the challenge and a month or so later sent him a short subject entitled A Kitten for Hitler. |
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With the rise of Adolf Hitler in Germany during the 1930s, the country found itself in a very precarious situation. |
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Singer said that he based the character a bit on Adolf Hitler. |
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Mussolini, Hitler and Ghengis Khan, to name but a few, are all said to have been ailurophobes. |
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A TOP Tory has been jackbooted out of his party for dressing up as Adolf Hitler. |
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But the Kabbalists confused the powers in Heaven by replacing Suria with Rusia and thus Hitler instead invaded Russia. |
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Upon his retirement, Hitler awarded Schlegelberger a bonus of 100,000 Reichsmarks, a considerable sum of money. |
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With wild turns from Gene Wilder and Zero Mostel, Mel Brooks takes Springtime For Hitler from highly dubious to lowbrow cult genius. |
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One man, Eduard Bloch may have known Hitler as no one else on Earth ever did. |
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Mussolini is remembered mostly as a second banana to Hitler, a posturing dictator whom the Italians got rid of. |
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Just because Nigel Farage seems affable and wears a collar and tie does not make him any less dangerous than a bovver boy with Hitler tattoos. |
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And this Adolph Hitler figure even came with an adjustable right arm for Sieg Heil salutes. |
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Hans is making caipirinhas, as snow falls outside the kitchen window, and Hitler is making his first speech as Chancellor of Germany. |
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So Hitler, Mussolini, Tojo and General Franco have got nothing to be criticised for? |
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Killing Hitler if you had a time machine is often spitballed as a possibility. |
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He carried a nonaggression pact signed by Adolf Hitler which stated the German leader's desire never to go to war with Britain again. |
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Few topics are more prone to the comparatist touch that the regimes of Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin. |
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The Hutaree are a group of white suprematist Hitler wannabees who have been arrested recently. |
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The USSR had conspired with Hitler to invade Poland and America stood on the sidelines unwilling to get involved in another European war. |
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The city of Vinnitsa is hoping to turn the Wehrwolf bunker, where Hitler stayed during WWII, into a tourist attraction. |
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Passports of Hermann Goering, an aviator's watch, pictures of Hitler and silverware were among the items that were to go under the hammer. |
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It says Hess was on a mission to broker a top secret peace deal with the consent of Hitler and Winston Churchill. |
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Please let me comment on the letter from Frank Russo in which he compares pro-choice leaders with Hitler. |
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The bell pays homage to Hitler for his 1938 annexation of Austria and describes him as 'the unifier and Fuehrer of all Germans. |
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To understand why Hitler sought to eradicate the Romanies, a people who presented no problem numerically, politically. |
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The movement's brownshirt tactics certainly evoke shades of Hitler Youth, as does the emphasis on physical fitness, clean living, and procreation for the Motherland. |
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Rene also has to deal with more than his fair share of knockwurst sausages, dead parrots, exploding cheeses and the imminent arrival of Hitler and Goering. |
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As head of state, Hitler became Supreme Commander of the armed forces. |
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Key elements of RAF Fighter Command were on the verge of collapse when Hitler switched from bombing airdromes in southern England to attacks on London. |
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Hitler committed suicide on Walpurgis Night 1945, and when Radio Hamburg announced his death they played a slow movement from Bruckner's Seventh Symphony. |
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Similarly, in Ukraine, we thought that the urge to conquer territory to place compatriots under our flag had gone out with Hitler, Sudetenland and the Austrian Anschluss. |
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That's because Hitler would stay up all night talking to them until sleepness over took him. They certainly didn't let sleepness overtake them while Hitler was talking. |
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In 1939, Hitler offered nonaggression pacts to the Scandinavian nations. |
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Hitler proclaimed that the arson marked the start of a communist uprising. |
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Krafft-Ebing and the Victorian concept of corporeal punishment in schools, along to Hitler and Eva Braun and ending with an analysis of the feast of capitalism. |
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Obviously Hitler must have had multiple editions of his own book, but this one was in his Munich apartment and Hitler's eyes almost certainly scanned its pages at some point. |
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According to historian Samuel Mitcham, the Rhineland crisis was the last chance for the Allies to defeat Hitler while the odds were overwhelmingly on their side. |
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Some soldiers had asked for the reinstitution of the famous Iron Cross, a medal that dates from the Napoleonic era but was given generously by Hitler with a swastika added. |
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Germany was now a totalitarian state with Hitler at its head. |
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For example, in North America, a leader is often thought to be charismatic, but German culture frowns on such charisma due to the charisma of Adolph Hitler. |
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Macmillan supported Chamberlain's first flight for talks with Hitler at Berchtesgaden, but not his subsequent flights to Bad Godesberg and Munich. |
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Adolf Hitler became chancellor of Germany in January, 1933 and his political opponents, especially those of the Social Democratic Party, were either incarcerated or murdered. |
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In 1939 Germany took over the rest of Czechoslovakia and appeasement policies gave way to hurried rearmament as Hitler next turned his attention to Poland. |
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The Abyssinian war showed Hitler how weak the League was and encouraged the remilitarization of the Rhineland in flagrant disregard of the Treaty of Versailles. |
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No one in the street was aware than an Austrian paperhanger named Shickelgruber, and calling himself Hitler, had been arrested in Munich and thrown into jail. |
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Rommel telegraphed Hitler for permission to fall back on Fuka. |
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Adolf Hitler placed German Field Marshal Erwin Rommel in charge of developing fortifications all along the Atlantic Wall in anticipation of an invasion. |
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Hitler decreed that Blenheim Palace, the ancestral home of Winston Churchill, was to serve as the overall headquarters of the German occupation military government. |
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Later that day, Hitler ordered the postponement of the operation. |
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Hitler wanted the air attack to commence early in August and, if it succeeded, the invasion was to start around 25 August before weather deteriorated. |
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Hitler told them that the British had no hope of survival, and ought to negotiate, but were hoping to get Russia to intervene and halt German oil supplies. |
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Hitler agreed with him that invasion would be a last resort. |
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Raeder met Hitler on 21 May 1940 and raised the topic of invasion, but warned of the risks and expressed a preference for blockade by air, submarines and raiders. |
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Hitler noted that the ships at Brest had diverted British bombing from Germany but that the advantage would end as soon as the ships were sufficiently damaged. |
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