Bodenschatz, General Karl Heinrich 376, 396
   Boehm, Admiral-General 207
   Boeselager, Lieutenant-Colonel Georg Freiherr von 661
   Bohemia 46, 164, 165, 166, 172, 479; Kings of 171
   Bohle, Gauleiter Ernst Wilhelm 15, 376
   Boldt, Gerhard 825
   Bolshevism 18, 20, 38, 82, 159, 160, 205, 310, 378, 416, 433, 479, 525, 609, 615, 703, 818, 819, 832, 835, 840, 841; anti-Bolshevism tactic 25; and ‘Barbarossa’ 387, 388, 389; and the Catholic bishops xxxix; and Czechoslovakia’s strategic position 97; fear of xlv; Heé’s mission 379; H’s crusade against 335, 384, 406, 505, 555–6, 636–7; and H’s foreign policy 12; and H’s ‘world-view’ 21; and Italy 25; and Jews 17, 19, 39, 42, 127, 153, 325, 339, 343, 350, 353, 354, 359, 382, 399, 431, 461, 463, 465, 466, 620, 740, 749, 752, 781, 792; and a showdown with the Soviet Union 305; and the Spanish Civil War 14–15; Stalin and 285, 292
   Bonhoeffer, Dietrich 663, 667
   Bonn 760
   Bonnet, Georges 206
   Bor-Komorowski, General Tadeusz 724–5
   Border Police School, Pretzsch 382
   Börgermoor internment camp, Emsland 55
   Boris, King of Bulgaria 366, 581
   Bormann, Albert 32
   Bormann, Gerda 789
   Bormann, Martin 32, 144, 202, 227, 231, 236, 245, 259, 315, 350, 372, 375, 378, 396, 405, 406, 421, 424, 425, 428–9, 506, 508, 522, 568, 569, 616, 698, 707, 709–12, 738, 741, 776, 789, 798, 800, 801, 816, 819, 825, 827, 829, 832; and the assassination attempt 706; begs Speer to persuade H to leave the bunker 806; in the Committee of Three 568, 570; forces Göring to resign 807–8; H relies on concerning domestic matters 571; and H’s cremation 829, 830; names Fromm 689; Party Minister 823, 830; political and organizational matters 714; position strengthens 715–16; the Prussian Finance Ministry 575; remains wholly loyal 774; restructures the Party 790; and the Schirach incident 590; ‘Secretary of the Führer’ 572, 715; sets up quasi-guerrilla organizations 790–91; signs the Political Testament 823; suicide 833–4
   Borneo 326
   Bornewasser, Bishop Franz Rudolf 427
   Bosch, Hieronymus 85
   Bottrop 761
   Bouhler, Philipp 253, 258, 259, 260, 429, 571
   Brabant 518
   Brack, Viktor 258–61
   Brahms, Johannes 513
   Brandenburg asylum 261
   Brandt, Frau 651
   Brandt, Lieutenant-Colonel Heinz 661, 662, 674
   Brandt, Karl (H’s doctor) 137, 235, 253, 256, 259, 260, 294, 429, 727
   Brandt, SS-Sturmbannführer Rudolf 484
   Bratislava 169, 791
   Brauchitsch, Walther von 58, 72, 75, 76, 78, 94, 97, 101–4, 146–7, 178, 209, 215, 216, 217, 225, 246, 247–8, 266, 268, 269–70, 277, 278, 290, 296, 298, 303, 306, 335, 344, 345, 346, 355, 384, 396, 407, 411–14, 417, 418, 434, 441, 450–53,454, 536
   Braun, Eva 199, 512, 564, 634, 639, 797, 807, 816; cremation 829–31; in the Führer Bunker 776, 798, 801, 804, 821, 827; H’s treatment of 34; marries H 820–21; her room in the ‘Führer Apartment’ 32, 34; suicide 828; suicide attempts 35
   Braun, Gretl 199
   Braun, Wernher von 622
   Braunau am Inn 79
   Bräutigam, Otto 478
   Bredow, Major-General Ferdinand von xxxvi
   Breitenbuch, Rittmeister Eberhard von 670
   Bremen 535
   Brenner border 76
   Brenner Pass 291, 327, 382
   Breslau 762, 779, 823; Festival of German Singers (1937) 37–8; Jews deported from 485; under siege 759
   Brest 504, 719, 720
   Brest-Litowsk 395, 398
   Britain 752; accepts the need for war 174; the Blitz 309, 310; Churchill evokes resilience and idealism 286; and Czechoslovakia 95–6, 97, 118, 173; declares war on Germany 223; economic blockade of 284; economy 402–3; ‘encirclement policy’ 178; the ‘eternal trouble-causer in Europe’ 783; Foreign Office 25, 203; Goebbels favours the devastation of English ‘cultural centres’ 510; Göring wants an agreement 50, 67, 771–2; Guarantee to Poland 155, 175, 178, 179, 190, 212, 216, 218, 237, 586; H obsessed with ‘beating England’ 278; H prepares for conflict with 169, 192–3; H warns against underestimating 43; hatred for 275, 300; Heé’s flight to Scotland 369; Home Guard 370; H’s high esteem of British resilience and fighting-power 264; H’s ‘Offer’ regarding Poland (August 1939) 213, 216, 217; H’s ‘peace offer’ 300, 301, 306, 379; H’s ‘peace plan’ 3–4; H’s plans for dealing with 292–3; intelligence 585, 586; intervention in Greece 366; invasion seen as a last choice 301–2; and Iraq 381; Jewish influence 489; Jewish refugees 145, 146; military alliance with Poland 215; mutual assistance agreement with Russia (1941) 457; Naval Pact with the Reich (1935) xxxviii, 23, 189, 190; oil supplies 530, 537; the race for Norway 287–8; rearmament 25, 157; Ribbentrop’s hatred of 44, 90, 159, 160; Secret Service 271, 274, 373, 377, 380; and the Soviet-German non-aggression pact 206, 212, 213; ultimatum to Germany 223, 230; War Office 295; weakness of xxxvi, 43, 44, 48
   British Broadcasting Company (later Corporation) (BBC) 373, 600, 816
   British Empire 25, 48, 49, 95, 168, 190, 213, 216, 293–4, 295, 298, 302, 304, 377, 401, 405, 456, 504
   British Expeditionary Force 295, 297, 367
   British Guarantee to Poland 155
   British Union of Fascists 302 ‘Britons, The’ (antisemitic organization) 320
   Brittany 718, 720
   Brjansk and Viaz’ma double battle 433 broadcasting: the Berlin Olympics 8; the ‘people’s radio’ (Volksempfänger) xl
   Bromberg (Bydgoszcz), West Prussia 242, 763
   Brooks, Collin 211
   Bruckmann, Frau Elsa 33
   Bruckmann, Hugo 33
   Bruckner, Anton 513
   Brückner, SA-Gruppenführer Wilhelm 31, 186, 218, 235
   Brûly-de-Pesche 297
   Brussels 722
   Buchanan Castle, near Loch Lomond 371
   Bucharest 328, 723
   Buchenwald concentration camp 141, 768
   Bückeberg, Hanover 38
   Budapest 627, 734, 735, 736, 757; Citadel 734–5, 736, 738; Jews 624, 736; Soviet troops enter 758
   Bug river 238, 244, 630
   Bühler, Josef 493
   Bukovina 332, 351, 384
   Bulgaria 361, 603, 617, 719, 723–4, 734
   Bund Deutscher Mädel (BDM; German Girls’ League) 81–2, 142
   Bürckel, Gauleiter Josef 81, 315, 323
   Burckhardt, Carl 201, 202, 203, 250
   Burgdorf, General Wilhelm 733, 788, 797, 798, 803, 823, 825, 827, 830
   Burgsinn, Lower Franconia 142–3
   Burgundy 267
   Burma 326
   Busch, Field-Marshal Ernst 103, 464, 646, 647, 649, 667, 670
   business community, Groraumwirtschaft concept xliv
   Bussche, Captain Axel Freiherr von dem 669
   Busse, General Theodor 788, 793, 802, 809, 813, 814
   Cádiz 16
   Cadogan, Sir Alexander 203, 211, 379–80
   Cameroon 434
   Canada, attempted landing of troops in Dieppe 436
   Canadian 1st Army 760
   Canaris, Admiral Wilhelm 90, 109, 207, 225, 231, 262, 268, 270, 667, 690
   Canary isles 327, 328
   Carinhall 68, 799
   Carlyle, Thomas 783, 791
   Carpathians 169, 626, 756
   Casablanca (Roosevelt-Churchill meeting, January 1943) 577, 755
   ‘Case Green’ 88, 101, 106, 109 ‘Case Otto’ 76
   ‘Case White’ (Fall Weiß) 179, 213, 214
   ‘Case Yellow’ (western offensive) 266, 289–91
   Caspian Sea 529, 532
   Catholic Church 39; and the Anschluß 81, 82;
   and euthanasia 256, 259; Nazi attacks on xxxvi, 29, 702
   Catholic Ultramontanism 147
   Caucasus 408, 409, 411, 413, 416, 434, 438, 440, 499, 513, 514, 518, 523, 528–31, 535, 536, 544, 545, 591, 603
   Cavalero, Marshal Count Ugo 546
					     					 			r />   Central Africa 520, 521
   Central Office for Jewish Emigration 147–8
   Chamberlain, Neville 116, 164, 772; Birmingham speech 174, 177; blamed for the Allied fiasco in Norway 289; blames H solely for the war 224; evaluation of H 112; letter to H (22 August 1939) 211–12, 216; the Munich Agreement 122, 123; pledges support of Poland 155, 177–8, 213; proposals on the Czech issue 119; rejects the ‘peace offer’ (12 October 1939) 239, 265–6, 267; talks with H over Czechoslovakia 110–14, 117; view of H 61, 157
   Channon, Sir Henry ‘Chips’ 7–8, 211
   Charlemagne 703
   Charleville 296
   Charlottenburg 816
   Chefbesprechungen (discussions of departmental heads) 313
   Chelmno, Warthegau 485, 490, 520, 838
   Cherbourg 641, 642, 643, 720, 722
   Chiang Kai-shek 55
   Chiemsee 571
   ‘child-euthanasia’ 257–60
   China: and a German-Japanese rapprochement 26–7; H anticipates a Japanese victory 44
   Choltitz, General Dietrich von 722
   Chotin 463
   Christian, Gerda 804, 827, 833
   Christianity, Jewry and 488
   Christie, Group Captain 46
   Church Struggle xxxvi, xxxviii–ix, 28, 39–41, 46, 81, 184, 185, 235
   Churches: attacks on xxxvii, xl, 130, 424, 428, 429; and eastern expansion 449; and euthanasia 255, 257, 259; and ‘euthaniasia action’ 426–7; lack of protest against treatment of Jews 146; a pet theme for Goebbels 509, 516; Rosenberg attacks 199
   Churchill, Sir Winston 383, 412, 536, 612, 760, 772, 782, 788; and America’s entry into the war 442; and the British Empire 298; concerned to speak to the British public 420; destruction of French ships at Mers-el-Kébir 301; and Dunkirk 297; during ‘Barbarossa’ 416; evokes resilience and idealism in the British people 286; First Lord of the Admiralty 230; and the Heé affair 370–1, 373, 375, 378, 379; H’s arch-enemy 286; meeting with Roosevelt at Casablanca 577; and Norway 288, 289; and the Russian war-machine 433; ‘warmonger’ 304, 306; at Yalta 761,778
   Chvalkovsky, Franzisek 127, 152, 170
   Ciano, Count (the ‘Ducellino’) 25, 26, 98, 121, 196, 198, 203–4, 291, 292, 298, 301, 304, 322, 327, 328, 347, 364, 366, 383, 387, 444, 513, 541, 542, 546
   Cincar-Markovic, Aleksandar Yugoslav Foreign Minister 362
   clergy: harassing of xxxvi; influence of xxxviii; led by public opinion xxxviii–xxxix
   Cologne 760, 782; bombing of 524, 704; political activism 704, 705
   colonization 244
   Columbia 134
   Comintern 211
   ‘Commissar Order’ (6 June 1941) 357–9, 658
   Committee of Three (Dreierausschuß; Keitel, Lammers and Bormann) 569–70, 571, 574, 575, 577
   Communism: in Czechoslovakia 88; and Fascism 17; murder of Communists in Russia 463, 464; the Spanish Civil War 14, 15, 16; in Stalingrad 534; suppression of xxxvi, xxxvii, xl, xlii; see also Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands
   Community Foundation for the Care of Asylums 260
   Community Patients’ Transport Service 260, 429
   concentration camps: and the Church xxxix, 428; ‘euthanasia-centres’ 430; resistance members in xxxvii; and the Russian people 470; see also individual camps
   ‘Confessing Church’ 41
   conscription xxxvii–xxxviii
   conservative élites xxxvii, xxxviii, xlii
   Conti, Dr Leonardo 259, 260
   Copenhagen 288
   Corsica 328, 542, 600
   Cossack (destroyer) 287
   Cotentin peninsula 640, 641, 643
   Cottbus 798, 802
   Coulondre, Robert 215
   coup d’état 263, 268
   Courland 757, 759
   Courland army 798
   ‘Court of Honour’ 688
   Coventry 310
   Cracow 244, 318, 320, 482
   Craig, William 370
   Cremona 594
   Crete 367
   Crimea 400, 401, 402, 413, 414, 415, 434, 440, 451, 455, 600, 602, 603, 617, 618, 630, 631, 650, 723
   Cripps, Sir Stafford 379
   Croatia 470, 782
   Croydon airport 110
   Crystal Night (9–10 November 1938) 130–1, 135, 142, 144, 146, 147, 148, 150, 184, 472
   Csáky, István 166
   Cuba 145
   currency, foreign 10
   Cvetkovic, Prime Minister of Yugoslavia 360, 362
   Cyprus 383
   Czech army 88, 96, 115
   Czechoslovakia 43, 133, 163; armament plants 89; arsenal 165; and Austrian refugees 85; British reaction to the invasion 173–4; ‘Case Green’ 88, 101, 106, 109; central Europe’s last, betrayed, democracy 71; Communism in 88; Czechs’ alleged oppression of Sudeten Germans 91, 96–7, 107, 111, 114; deportation of Jews 488; Einsatzgruppen 241, 246; eliminating Czech resistance 487–8; ethnic minorities 88; founded (1918) 88; generals discuss a potential invasion 102–3; German army enters (1939) 171, 225; the German Protectorate 172; Η aims to destroy 87–8, 92, 93, 100, 116, 136, 158, 163–4; Hácha signs agreement 171; Hácha’s meeting with H 170–1; H’s ultimatum 116–17, 119; industrial base 88, 161, 164; industries 164–5; the Karlsbad demands 106, 108, 109; Keitel’s plan for military action 97, 101; mobilization (May 1938) 99, 111, 115, 190; mobilization plans against 51, 115, 120; name changed to Czecho-Slovakia 164; a potentially hostile neighbour xlv; proposed German expansion 49–50, 61; raw materials 89, 164; Slovakian demand for independence 168–9; strategic position 97, 165; Sudetenland 136, 157, 160, 161, 164, 172–3, 241, 251, 664; crisis (1938) 44, 46, 61, 86, 87, 91, 95, 105, 109, 110, 116, 118, 121, 123, 124, 132, 147, 158, 179, 190, 200, 205, 218, 262, 655; treaties with France and Soviet Union 95; weakened by the incorporation of Austria 84; the ‘Weekend Crisis’ 99–100
   D-Day 641, 723
   Dachau concentration camp 141, 274, 768
   DAF see Deutsche Arbeitsfront
   Dahlem 7
   Dahlems, Birger 215, 216, 217, 219, 220, 222–3, 226, 379
   Daily Telegraph 84
   Dakar 329, 331
   Daladier, Edouard 112, 121, 122, 175, 216
   Danish navy 288
   Dannecker, Theo 322, 352
   Danube region 777
   Danube river 79, 169, 434, 723, 757, 787
   Danzig (Gdansk) 67, 165, 166, 172, 177, 178, 179, 181, 190, 200–3, 216, 219–22, 225, 236, 238, 247, 788; Customs Office 201
   Danzig Question 158, 177
   Danzig-West Prussia 239, 250, 316, 837
   Daranowski, Gerda 235, 396–7
   Darían, Admiral Jean François 542
   Darmstadt 788
   Darré, Richard Walther 10, 162, 187, 374
   Davos 136
   Delp, Pater Alfred 666
   democracy: attack on xlii; central Europe’s last, betrayed, democracy 71
   Denmark 287, 288, 405, 603–4, 834
   Dessau 137
   Deutsche Arbeitsfront (DAF; German Labour Front) xl, 836
   Deutsche Bank 132
   Deutsche Volksliste (German Ethnic List) 251
   Deutsches Jungvolk 765
   Deutschkron, Inge 474–5
   Deutschland (pocket-battleship) 43, 49, 176
   ‘Deutschland, Deutschland über alles’ (German national anthem) 561
   Dienststelle Ribbentrop 26
   Dieppe 536, 660
   Dietrich, Otto 32, 78, 170, 294, 373, 396, 623, 678
   Dietrich, SS-Oberstgruppenführer Sepp 32, 743, 757, 787, 803, 817
   Dirlewanger Brigade 725