Page 130 of Hitler


  anti-socialism 106, 274

  Antisemitenbund (Antisemitic League) 39

  antisemitism: anti-Jewish legislation 288, 321, 341, 342–9, 450–52, 462

  in armed forces 464, 603

  Crystal Night (9–10 November 1938) 449–50, 454, 457–60, 462–7, 679

  development of Nazi genocidal policy 459, 468–9, 524–7, 572–9, 594–8, 618, 668–99, 714–17, 775–7, 802–3, 969

  following Anschluß 415–16, 450

  in Franconia 109–10

  ‘ideological cement’ of National Socialist Movement 285

  ‘Madagascar solution’ 453, 576–7, 593, 594, 677

  November pogrom (1938) 455–69

  and pan-Germanism 61

  reined in during 1936 Olympics 359

  Schönerer movement 22

  in Vienna 24, 32, 37, 42–3, 415–16

  and völkisch groups 82

  waves of antisemitic violence: (1933) 273, 285, 302–3;

  (1935) 339–41;

  (1938) 383, 415, 449–51, 455–69

  well-known tracts 91, 115 see also ‘Final Solution’; Hitler, Adolf, antisemitism; Jews

  Anton, Operation 733

  Antonescu, Ion 584, 619, 758, 760, 867

  Antwerp 866, 873, 879, 881

  Apennines 773, 803, 863

  ‘Appeal of the Reich Government to the German People’ (1933) 264–5

  appeasement 337, 407, 480, 488

  Arabia 485

  Arbeitsgemeinschaft der Vaterländischen Kampfverbände (‘Working Community of the Patriotic Fighting Associations’) 120

  Arco-Valley, Graf Anton von 67, 132

  Ardennes 554, 555, 557 offensive 873, 875, 879, 880–87, 892

  Argentina 965

  aristocracy 847

  Army Group A 554, 555, 558

  Army Group A (formerly Army Group South) 721–2, 723, 724, 725, 734, 736, 797

  Army Group B (formerly Army Group South) 721, 722, 723, 727, 729, 734, 919

  Army Group B (later Army Group Centre) 555, 601

  Army Group Centre 602, 622, 635, 636–9, 640, 641, 642, 647, 651–2, 656, 662–3, 665, 673, 723, 769, 787, 810, 811, 813, 819, 890, 927, 962

  Army Group Don 734

  Army Group North 637, 639, 640, 642, 651, 663, 666, 813, 814

  Army Group North Ukraine 797, 813

  Army Group South 591, 635, 640, 641, 651, 657, 712, 718, 772, 787

  Army Group South Ukraine 797, 867

  Army Group Vistula 891, 905, 913, 914, 944

  Arnhem 866

  Arnim, Hans-Jürgen von 757

  Arrow Cross 876, 877–8

  ‘Aryan Paragraph’ 304

  ‘aryanization’ 368, 383, 450, 451, 463

  aryans 148, 181, 342–3, 345, 347–8

  Ashton-Gwatkin, Frank 433

  assassination attempts: November 1939 537, 544–7, 816

  March 1943 821–2

  December 1943-March 1944 827–8

  July 1944 816–18, 828–53, 865, 875

  Astakhov, Georgi 489

  Astrakhan 722

  asylums 533–5, 536, 548, 573, 688

  Athens 608, 867

  ‘Atlantic Gap’ 761

  Atlantic Ocean 645, 717, 743, 761, 861

  Atlas (special train) 568

  atomic bomb 874

  Attolico, Bernardo 443–4, 503, 506

  Auf gut Deutsch (In Plain German; antisemitic weekly) 95, 97

  Aufbau-Ost (‘Build-Up in the East’) 568

  Augsburg, Bavaria 101, 102, 610, 611

  Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration and extermination camp 262, 469, 687–8, 697, 715, 776, 795, 878, 965

  Austria: agreement with Germany (July 1936) 369–70, 386, 402

  Anschluß 385, 386, 401–16, 420, 518

  Austrian NSDAP 100, 317, 401, 404, 406, 409, 413

  deportation of Jews 574, 575, 595, 684

  German conflict with Italy over 350

  German surrender in 961

  Nazi waves of terror 298, 415–16, 450, 452

  pan-German movement 22, 401

  pro-Slav policies 47

  putsch attempt (1934) 316–17

  and Stresa Front 337

  treatment of Jews after Anschluß 415–16, 450

  Austrian army 412

  Austrian Question 385–6, 389–90, 403–6

  Austrian SS 316–17

  Austro-Hungarian empire 47

  Autumn Mist, Operation 883–4

  Avranches 861–2, 864

  Axis: formation of 370–71

  ground laid for 350

  H attempts to boost morale 729

  Italy as junior partner 385, 560

  leaders visit Berghof (April 1943) 757–8, 759–60

  in North Africa 591, 717–18, 727, 730, 761

  Spain and 579, 580–83, 592

  term coined 370

  Axis, Operation 771, 772

  Axmann, Artur 923, 939, 955

  Azores 761

  Baarova, Lida 463, 492

  Babarin, Evgeny 489

  Babi-Yar massacre 675

  Bach, Isidor 87

  Backe, Herbert 950

  Bad Godesberg 437, 440

  Bad Harzburg 223

  Bad Nauheim 882

  Bad Reichenhall 568

  Bad Wiessee 309–11

  Baden 196, 278, 578

  Badoglio, Pietro 767–8, 769, 770, 773

  Bagration, Operation 810–11

  Bakhmut river 655

  Baku 722, 723

  Balkan campaign (1941) 603–5, 607–10, 648

  Baltic Germans 574, 575

  Bamberg 71, 169, 170, 171–2, 180, 185, 730

  banks 222, 451

  Barandon, Paul 896

  Baranov bridgehead 888

  Barbarossa, Operation 587–91, 597–603, 609–10, 615–16, 618–21, 635–9, 645–8, 669, 674–5, 749

  ‘Basic Order’ (January 1940) 716

  ‘Basic Order’ (April 1945) 919

  Bastogne 883–4

  Bath 708

  Battle of Britain 569–70

  ‘Battle of the Peoples’ 858

  Baumann, Professor 75

  Baur, Hans 375

  bauxite 862

  Bavaria: anti-Prussian feeling 58, 90

  Austrian Nazis in 408

  ban on H’s public speaking 166, 184

  Catholicism in 110, 133, 161, 162, 163, 205

  Communists in 67, 70, 87, 279

  conventional cabinet government restored (1924) 133

  and the Deutscher Kampfbund 124

  government in ‘exile’ (1919) 71

  and H’s citizenship 226

  monarchist government 98

  Nazi seizure of power 278, 279–80, 283

  paramilitary politics 106, 108, 121, 133

  post-First World War political climate 77–8, 106, 108

  religiosity 86

  Revolution of 1918 66–71

  ruling triumvirate (1923) 126–7, 128–9, 130, 131, 133

  separatism 75

  state elections (1932) 227–8

  state of emergency (1923) 119, 125–6

  tension with the Reich 122–3

  Völkischer Block 132–3, 141–2, 144, 164, 190

  Bavarian army: H joins 52–3

  post-First World War 68–9

  Bavarian Peasants’ League (Bayerischer Bauernbund) 204

  Bavarian People’s Party (BVP) 133, 290

  Bavarian Political Police 278, 279, 290

  Bavarian State Opera 709

  Bayerische Reichswehr Gruppenkommando Nr.4 (‘Gruko’) 71–2

  Bayerischer Bauernbund (Bavarian Peasants’ League) 204

  Bayerischer Wald 924

  Bayreuth 116, 166, 316, 361, 363, 365, 377, 490–91, 566–7

  BBC 613, 772, 943

  Bechstein, Carl 116, 187

  Bechstein, Helene 116, 187

  Beck, Józef 475, 481–2, 505

  Beck, Ludwig: and the Anschluß 408–9

 
assisted suicide 839, 840, 841, 845

  Chief of the General Staff 334–5

  and German expansionism 388, 390–91 418

  illness 825

  opposition to H 418, 425, 427–9, 536, 541, 819–20

  and rearmament 352, 360

  resignation 418, 423, 429–30

  Beelitz 57, 62

  Beethoven, Ludwig van 20, 701, 710, 799

  ‘Behaviour of German Soldiers in the East’ (order) 672

  Belgium: Allied liberation 866

  Ardennes offensive 881

  German occupation 557, 633, 713

  neutrality 487

  proposed trade 630

  treaty with France (1921/35) 334

  Belgrade 607, 608, 867

  Bellini, Vincenzo 20

  Belluno 767

  Belorussia 635

  Below, Nicolaus von: and Allied advances in the west 862

  and the Anschluß 404

  and battle for Stalingrad 737, 742

  and Crystal Night 465

  and death of vom Rath 456

  and Dunkirk 558

  in Führer Bunker 933, 939, 941, 943, 952–3

  in Führer Headquarters 556, 786, 814, 880, 886–7

  and Halder 726

  honeymoon 374

  and July 1944 assassination attempt 832–3

  life at Berghof 803

  military adjutant 375, 515

  and Munich Agreement negotiations (1938) 442

  and North African campaign 757

  and opening of Eastern Front 590

  passes Speer’s memorandum to H (March 1945) 911

  Belzec extermination camp 688, 697, 715, 775

  Beneš, Eduard 432, 433, 434, 436–8, 440–41, 477

  Berchtesgaden: Ciano visits (1936) 370

  evacuation of H’s staff to (April 1945) 926

  H holidays in 112, 123, 166, 176–7, 490, 491–2

  Nazi leaders gather at (1932) 232;

  (1936) 361, 363, 365

  ‘pilgrims’ at 907

  transfer of Wehrmacht High Command to (April 1945) 930

  Berdicev 623

  Berger, Gottlob 715

  Berghof, Obersalzberg: Anschluß negotiations at 404–5

  Axis leaders’ visits (April 1943) 757–8

  bombing of 907, 935

  Chamberlain’s visit (1938) 434

  converted from Haus Wachenfeld 177, 327

  ‘Eagle’s Nest’ (‘Tea House’) 494, 495

  evacuation of H’s staff to (April 1945) 925–6

  Göring’s house-arrest at 933

  H’s last stay 814–15

  H’s routine at 377, 378, 430–31, 491–2, 748, 781–2, 800, 803–4

  military conference on Sudeten crisis 433

  Mussolini’s visit (May 1942) 709–10

  Polish crisis talks at (August 1939) 500

  reinforcement of 792

  Tea House xxxvii, 803

  Berlin: Alexanderplatz 938, 939

  Allied bombing raids 570, 789–90, 893–4, 895, 900–901, 921

  Anhalter-Bahnhof 562

  Bendlerstraße 834, 835, 839, 845–6

  Brandenburg Gate 259, 837, 931, 947

  Charlottenburg 534, 942

  council elections (1929) 196–7

  Dahlem 250, 296

  during First World War 57–8, 61–2, 680

  Friedrichstraße station 960

  Gatow aerodrome 926, 931, 935

  Görlitzer Bahnhof 478

  Hotel Exzelsior 246

  Invalidenstraße 961

  Kaiserhof Hotel 208, 247, 248, 255, 261, 294

  Kroll Opera House 281

  Lustgarten 179, 358, 714

  Nationalgalerie 58

  Nauen road 934

  Olympic Games (1936) 348, 351, 358–9, 617

  Plötzensee Prison 848

  Potsdamer Platz 939, 946

  Presidential Palace 234

  ‘racial cleansing’ policies 452, 454, 461–2, 578

  Rangsdorf aerodrome 834

  rebuilding plans 378, 379, 856

  Red Army advance on 892, 904, 920–21, 923–5, 926–7, 928, 931, 934–42, 946, 952, 953–4

  removal of Jews 595, 679–81, 685–7, 689, 691, 714, 759

  Sportpalast 202, 227, 272, 296, 440–41, 570, 592, 649, 697, 728, 745, 789–90

  State Opera House 799

  Stettiner Bahnhof 515

  synagogues destroyed 457

  Tempelhof aerodrome 834, 935

  Tiergarten 391

  Unter den Linden 479, 799

  Wannsee 690, 829

  Wilhelmplatz 940

  Wilhelmstraße 942

  Zeughaus 822

  zoo 926

  Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra 710, 799

  Berlin Treaty (1926) 331

  Bernadotte, Count Folke 943–4, 945

  Bernburg 534

  Bessarabia 499, 584, 595, 619

  Best, S. Payne 545

  Best, Werner 775

  Beuthen 237

  Beyschlag, Rudolf 73–4

  Bialystok 626, 627, 635

  Bielefeld 678–9

  Birmingham 479

  Bismarck (battleship) 617–18

  Bismarck, Prince Otto von 47, 112, 181, 283, 292, 294, 485 Gedanken und Erinnerungen (Thoughts and Memories) 145

  Black Sea 642, 722, 797, 798

  black-marketeering 705, 706

  Blaschke, Johann Hugo 958

  Blaskowitz, Johannes 524

  Bleichröder (bank) 451

  Blitz 570

  Bloch, Eduard 5, 14, 15, 40

  Blomberg, Werner von: the Blomberg scandal (1938) 320, 391–3, 394, 396, 398–9, 404, 416, 422

  and bombing of the Deutschland (1937) 384

  death 399

  Defence Minister 263

  and emergency decree 276

  in exile 393

  and German expansionism 390, 391

  and oath of unconditional loyalty to H 317–18

  and rearmament 265–6, 267, 297–8, 299, 334–5, 352, 353, 360, 384, 387

  recalled to join H’s cabinet 254

  and restructuring of Wehrmacht 397, 398

  and the SA 304–5, 308, 309, 313, 314

  and Spanish Civil War 362–3

  technical adviser at Geneva Disarmament Conference 254

  Blondi (dog) 747, 781, 902, 903, 952

  ‘Blood Flag’ 173

  ‘Blood Law’ (1935) 344–6

  Blücher (cruiser) 553

  Blue, Operation 711, 717, 718, 719–21

  Blum, Léon 364

  Blumentritt, Guenther 667

  Blüml, Johann 71

  Bobruisk 810, 811

  Bochum 762

  Bock, Fedor von: and the Anschluß 411

  and ‘Commissar Order’ 602, 819

  dismissal 720, 721

  and drive for Moscow 642, 648, 651

  invasion of Soviet Union 622–3, 636

  and opening of Eastern Front 586, 590

  and opening of Western Front 542

  and opposition to H 542, 544, 642

  spring/summer offensive (1942) 712, 718, 719–20, 721

  and winter crisis on Eastern Front (1941–2) 653, 661, 662–3

  Bodenschatz, Karl Heinrich 625

  Boer War 7

  Bohemia 387, 474, 475, 479

  Boldt, Gerhard 952

  Bolivia 162

  Bolshevism: fear of 258, 275, 332, 336

  H’s crusade against 353, 361–4, 365–7, 381, 566, 571, 587, 593, 598–9, 620–21, 644

  and H’s ‘world view’ 64, 148, 150–53, 155, 178

  and Jews 66, 91, 146, 148, 150–52, 155, 363, 381, 593, 597–8, 672–3, 899, 907

  ‘national Bolshevism’ 168

  planned liquidation of ‘Bolshevik intelligentsia’ 598–9

  radical anti-capitalism 200 see also anti-Bolshevism

  Bonhoeffer, Dietrich 825

  Bonn 892, 965

  Bonnet, Georges 496

  book-bu
rning 292

  Bor-Komorowski, Tadeusz 868

  Border Police School, Pretzsch 618

  Börgermoor internment camp 395

  Boris III, King of Bulgaria 607, 758

  Bormann, Albert 375

  Bormann, Gerda 916

  Bormann, Martin: and badges for Jews 679

  in ‘Committee of Three’ 750, 752

  and conscription 854

  and crushing of SA leadership 306

  and development of genocidal programme 676

  and disposal of H’s body 956–7

  and euthanasia programmes 532

  and ‘Final Solution’ 716

  in Führer Bunker 902, 906, 923, 925, 926, 932, 940, 941, 942–3, 946, 950, 954–5

  and German surrender 958, 959

  headquarters damaged 901

  and Heß affair (1941) 612, 614, 616

  and ‘Jewish Question’ 340, 461, 593

  and July 1944 assassination attempt 845–6

  loyalty to H 900

  and occupation of Poland 522

  and plans for ‘New Order’ 633

  and Polish crisis (1939) 511

  preparation for peacetime Germany 916, 917–18

  and radicalization of home front 705, 706, 749

  relationship with H 375, 516–17

  road construction 494

  Secretary of the Führer 752

  strips Göring of rights of succession 933

  suicide 961

  and Total War Effort 856, 857, 859

  witness at H’s wedding 948

  in Wolf’s Lair 625, 786

  Borneo 580

  Borsig, Ernst von 117–18

  Bose, Herbert von 312

  Botrop 893

  Bouhler, Philipp 167, 187, 528, 531–2, 533–4

  Brabant 713

  Brack, Viktor 532, 533, 534

  Brahms, Johannes 20, 710

  Brandenburg 534

  Brandmayer, Balthasar 55–6, 57, 70

  Brandt, Heinz 821

  Brandt, Karl (H’s doctor): and death of vom Rath 456

  dismissal 870

  and euthanasia programmes 528, 530, 532, 534

  in wartime Führer Headquarters 515, 556

  Bratislava 476–7, 918

  Brauchitsch, Walther von: and the Anschluß 41, 408, 410

  at Wolf’s Lair 624, 650, 655

  and deportation of Jews 597, 599

  dismissal (December 1941) 663–5

  and drive for Moscow 639, 640, 641, 642, 646, 647

  H’s contempt for 646, 647

  and invasion of Czechoslovakia 428–9

  and Nazi atrocities in Poland 523, 524

  and occupation of France 561

  and opening of Eastern Front 586–7, 589–90, 591

  and opening of Western Front 243, 539, 540–41, 542–4, 554–5, 558

  and Operation Barbarossa 619, 635