Details, Explanation and Meaning About Glossary of the Third Reich

Glossary of the Third Reich Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

This is a list of words, terms, concepts, and slogans that were used in Nazi Germany. Some words were coined by Adolf Hitler and other Nazi Party members. Other words and concepts were borrowed and appropriated. Yet other terms were already in use during the Weimar Republic. Finally, some are taken from Germany's Cultural tradition.

A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z

Glossary

A

  • agrarpolitischer Apparat (aA) — Agrarian Apparatus; Agricultural Affairs Bureau of the NSDAP.
    • Leadership hierarchy: Reichsleitungsfachberater held by Walther Darré; Gaufachberater; Bezirksfachberater; Kreisfachberater; Ortsgruppenfachberater.
    • Agents: LVL; Landesfachberater (consultants).
    • Administrative: Hilfsreferenten (staff members); Sachbearbeiter (aides); Hilfsreferenten responsible for day-to-day propaganda campaign.
  • Aktion T4 -- code name for the extermination of mentally ill and handicapped patients by the Nazi authorities. (Named after Tiergartenstrasse 4, the address of Nazi Central Office in Berlin.)
  • Altreich - old state or country; term used to describe Germany before the annexation of Austria.
  • Amtsleiter — convener of NSDAP Party committees. They were personally answerable to Hitler.
  • Anschlussannexation, in particular the annexation of Austria in 1938.
  • Anti-Comintern Pact -- the agreement by Germany, Japan and Italy to oppose the Communist International (the Comintern).
  • anti-semitism
  • Arbeit macht frei — "Work makes free", an old German peasant saying. Unluckily placed above the gate to Auschwitz by the commandant Höss. It was not created by the Nazis.
  • Arbeitnehmerschaft — workforce. The Nazis took this word to mean both manual and mental workers.
  • "Arbeitertum der Faust und der Stirn" — "Workers of both manual and mental labor"; the Nazi Party self description as an "all-inclusive workers' party" (a term originally designed to carry anti-Communist overtones). (3)

B

  • Beefsteak Nazi — SA term for the Strasser wing; brown on the outside and red on the inside. (7)
  • Bekennende Kirche — "Confessional Church" or better "Professing Church". The Orthodox and fundamentalist Protestant churches that resisted Nazification.
  • Berufskammern — Nazi's professional organizations
  • Bezirksleiter — NSDAP district leaders
  • Blitzkrieg — lightning war - quick army invasions aided by tanks and airplanes;
  • Blut und Boden — "Blood and soil". Slogan adopted by the Nazis; it was originally coined by the German Social Democrat August Winnig, cf. his Das Reich als Republik 1918-1928, (Stuttgart and Berlin: Cotta, 1928), pg 3.
  • bodenständigen Kapitalismus — productive captialism (as opposed to unproductive capitalism) was a Nazi economic concept.
  • Brown Creed — term for Nazism
  • Brown House — national HQ of the NSDAP opened 1931; Hitler purchased the Barlow Palace which was the old Italian embassy when Bavaria was an independent state.
  • Brownshirts — the SA; the leadership obtained khaki shirts that were supposed to be sent to the German troops stationed in colonies in Africa.
  • Bund Deutscher Mädel — NSDAP League of German Girls; It had three million members in 1937.

C

D

  • Das Schwarze CorpsThe Black Corps; SS "theoretical" journal
  • Deutsche Arbeiterpartei (DAP)— German Workers Party started by railway workers in Bohemia, Austria and Munich Germany. These were the starter groups that evovled into the DNSAP and the NSDAP in their respective countries.
  • Deutsche Christen — the "de-judaized" Christian church; those who were "Nazified". They removed the whole Old Testament from the Bible.
  • Deutscher Frauenorden (DFO) — German Women's Order; The leader was Elsbeth Zander.
  • Deutsche Nationalsozialistische Arbeiterpartei (DNSAP) — the Austrian German National Socialist Workers Party.
  • "Die Juden sind unserer Unglück" -- A Nazi slogan meaning, "The Jews are our misfortune."
  • Diktat — as in the Versailles Diktat. It was a sign of the German contempt for the Versailles Treaty.
  • Drang nach Osten"Drive to the east, the historic German desire to expand into Slavic lands''
  • Drittes ReichThird Reich or third empire. Möller van den Bruck coined this term for his book Das Dritte Reich published in 1923. The term "Third Reich" was a reference to the "First Reich" (the Holy Roman Empire, beginning with Charlemagne) and the "Second German Reich" (the German Empire, 1871 - 1918)

E

F

  • Fraktur — a fashion of black letter popularly associated to Nazi Germany, though it was forbidden by Hitler in 1941 on grounds of it being Jewish.
  • Frontgemeinschaft — front line community. It was termed for the solidarity felt by the German soldiers of WWI in the trench warfare.
  • Führer — leader. Adolf Hitler was called "Der Führer".
  • Führerprinzip — the leader principle
  • Führerstaat — the concept of Hitler's dictatorship of one-man rule

G

H

  • Hakenkreuzswastika
  • Herrenvolk — master race
  • Heimatvertriebene
  • HIB-Aktion — "Into the Factories Campaign"; a part of the Nazi campaign to recruit factory workers.
  • Hitlerism is another term for Nazism.
  • Hitlerproleten — "Hitler's proletariat"; what the Berlin working class Nazis called themselves (to distinguish themselves from the rest of the proletariat). (8)
  • Hoheitsabzeichen -- national insignia (eagle and swastika)

I

  • Illustrierter Beobachter — NSDAP national tabloid

J

  • Judenrat — Jewish council. The Gestapo established judenrats in ghettoes to have them carry out necessary duties.
  • jüdische Grundspekulationsgesellschaften — Hitler's slang term for Jewish property speculation companies
  • Jungvolk — NSDAP young male association

K

  • Kameradschafts- und Gemeinschaftsstärkung — strengthening or comradeship and community; Nazi party Gleichschaltung of social institutions
  • Kapo (Cabo) — Jewish inmates who worked inside the death camps as priviledged leaders of a work kommando. Their tasks including transporting victims of gassing to the ovens, cleaning the gas chambers of human excrement and blood, removal of gold from the teeth of the victims, shaving the heads of those going to the gas chambers.
  • kommando — a prisoner work detail
  • Konzentrationslager often abbreviated KZ for concentration camp; in German the word is distinct from Vernichtungslager, "death camp"; in (American) English, the distinction is not usually made.
  • Kraft durch Freude (KdF) — "strength through joy", state-sponsored programme intended to organize people's free time, offering cheap holidays, concerts, other leisure activities, and (unsuccessfully) a car (Kdf-Schiff, KdF-Wagen).
    • It was initially called ''Nach der Arbeit".
  • Kraut — a slang term for Germans applied by Allied soldiers.
  • KreditschöpfungstheorieGregor Strasser's idea for government spending and credit creation.
  • Kriegserlebnis — (myth of the) war experience
  • Kristallnacht -- Crystal Night ; referrs to the "Night of Broken Glass", Nov. 9-10, 1938, when mob violence against Jewish people broke out all over Germany

L

M

  • Männerbund — bond of men; it was a distinctly masculinist mystiqe which became an essential part of SA ideology.
  • Mein Kampf — "My Battle", Adolf Hitler's autobiography and political statement
  • Militärbefehlshaber — military commander for Belgium and northeastern France
  • "Mit brennender Sorge" -- A letter by the Pope warning against the Nazis.
  • Mussulman — “an immate who had resigned himself to death and lost the will to do anything to help himself survive”. (1)
  • Mutterkreuz -- a special cross awarded on three levels to all mothers "of favorable standing" who fulfilled the baby quota. A bronze medal was bestowed on mothers with four or five children, a silver one for six or seven children, and finally a gold one for eight or more children.

N

  • Nacht und Nebel — "Night and fog", code for some prisoners that should be disposed of leaving no traces.
  • Nazi is an acronym for the German National Socialist Workers Party. The term Nazi is a short form of the German word (NA)tionalso(ZI)alismus (National Socialism).
    • denazification — the process in which Allied occupation dismantled the Nazi influence in post war Germany
    • ex-Nazis — former Nazis
  • Nazism; the ideology of the NSDAP
  • National Socialist Teachers Association
  • Nazi Student League
  • Nazi Students Association
  • NSDAP Zentralkartei — master file, containing approx. 7.2 million original and official individual German Nazi Party membership cards. Comprises of two separate files. It is housed in the Berlin Document Center (BDC).
    • Ortskartei
    • Reichskartei
  • Nationalsozialistische Betriebzellenorganisation (NSBO) — National Socialist Factory Cell Organization (Nazi Party labor union) which had a membership of approx. 400,000 workers by Jan. 1933.
  • Nationalsozialistische Briefe — pro-labor publication launched by Gregor Strasser and edited by Joseph Goebbels.
  • Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei (NSDAP) — the National Socialist German Workers Party of Adolf Hitler
  • Nationalsozialistische Frauenschaft (NSF) — NSDAP Women's Group headed by Gertrud Scholtz-Klink; designed to create women leaders and supervise indoctrination and training. It had 2 million members by 1938
  • National-Sozialistische Landpost — NSDAP agricultural paper started by Richard Walthe Darré;.
  • National Socialist People's Welfare (NSV) — NSDAP welfare organization founded in Berlin in Sept. 1931. It acquired the official role in welfare and later on the racial policy of the Third Reich.
  • Night of the Long Knives -- on June 30, 1934, Hitler murderously purged the ranks of the S.A.

O

P

  • Pan-Germanism — The idea that all Germans should live in one country.
  • Panzer, (military) — "Tank"; not specific to Third Reich, but listed here for its centrality to Blitzkrieg
  • Partei-Statistik — 1935 Nazi Party three volume publication of membership data
  • Planwirtschaft — a limited planned economy; Walther Funk promoted this idea within the Nazi party who thought genuine corportism to stifling for business growth
  • Putsch -- German word meaning coup or revolt; has also entered the English language meaning the same.

Q

R

  • Rasse — race, breed
  • Rassenschande — "miscegenation"; a Nazi term for sexual conduct or liaison between an Aryan and a Jew.
  • Rednerschule der NSDAP — National Socialist Speaker's School
  • Reich — Empire
  • Reichsbauernführer — National Farmers' Leader; title given to Darré
  • Reichskonferenz — national caucus; national caucuses held by the Austrian Deutsche Arbeiterpartei before WWI.
  • Reichsleitung — national leadership; members of the NSDAP Party Directorate. They all swore personal loyalty to the Fuehrer.
  • Reichsmark (RM) — German money
  • Reichsmordwoche, Nacht der langen Messer — "Reich Murder Week", "Night of the Long Knives" of June-July 1934 during which Hitler assassinated hundreds of party-internal opponents, especially the SA, which was decapitated of its leadership.
  • Reichsschrifttumkammer — the Nazi Chamber of Literature. Hanns Johst was president.
  • Reichsstatthalter — Reich Governor; after the seizure of power in 1933, local governments were dissolved and the gauleiters were appointed to govern the states with full powers.
  • Reichstag (Imperial Diet; see Reichstag (building) and Reichstag (institution))
  • Revolution der Gesinnung — a revolution of feeling; the concept that the German people would not only develop a purified race but also a new mind and spirit. It was about, in Hitler's words, "to create a new man". (5)

S

  • Schönheit der Arbeit — Beauty of Labor program
  • Schutzstaffel (SS) — Defense Squads; Hitler's personal body guard unit which was also a paramilitary group. "SS" is formed from (S)chutz(s)taffel. They wore totally black uniforms.
    • Allgemeine-SS – general body of the Schutzstaffel consisting of full-time, part-time, and honorary members.
    • SS Totenkopfverbände; — Death's-head units.
    • Verfügungstruppe; — "ready" action troops organized by the SS in 1938.
    • Waffen-SS — later name of the Verfügungstruppe.
  • Sonderkraftfahrzeug (Sd.Kfz.) - Special purpose motor vehicle; used to refer to tanks and other military vehicles.
  • Sprechabend — closed Nazi party meetings
  • Sprachregelung — a special language that masked the camp conditions and the policy of extermination. It took the words "extermination", "killing", "liquidation"; and substituted for them, the euphemisms: "final solution", "evacuation", "special treatment", "resettlement", "labour in the East". It was developed to deceive victims and to assist SS officials to avoid having to face reality. (2)
  • Ständesozialismus — corporative (or "corporate") socialism; promoted by O. W. Wagener, sometime head of the political economy section of the party organization.
  • Stosstrupp — Hitler's body guard unit before the Hitlerputsch; forerunner to the SS.
  • Strasser wing — named after Gregor Strasser who lead the left wing of the Nazi Party.
  • Stücke — pieces. A sprachregulung term for Jews and other undesirables that dehumanized them. (They were no longer humans or persons but pieces.)
  • Thule Gesellschaft — "Thule Society". The Nazis sought themes for their ideology in the Occult and the Germanic and Nordic traditions.
  • Sturmabteilung (SA)

T

  • Turnvereine — German and Austrian calisthenic leagues. They were identically dressed men and women making identical movements in mass performance.

U

  • Übermensch — lit. higher man, or overman; An idea appropriated from the work of Friedrich Nietzsche and used by certain Nazis to describe the racially superior German "Aryan" people.
    • Untermensch — lit. lower man or underman; corallary of the term Ubermensch, but reversed as a label given to peoples considered racially inferior to the "Aryan" Germans.
  • Überwachungsdienst — surveillance service of the aA to protect the organization against Konjunkturritter (opportunists).
  • U-Bahn (abbreviated form of Untergrundbahn) — freeway
  • U-Boot (abbreviated form of Unterseeboot) — submarine
  • Umschlagplatz — place of assembly. Kapos were told to collect Jews and bring them to this designated spot for pick up and transfer to the death trains.
  • Uschla — arbitration committee of the NSDAP Party Directorate

V

  • V-1 and V-2 — Missiles used to attack Britain and other countries liberated by Allied forces.
  • Vernichtungslager — extermination camps
  • Volk — it's German and means people, folk, or nation.
    • Völkisch movement;
  • Völkischer Beobachter — the official Nazi Party paper
    • "Deutsche Arbeiterpolitik" — special labor section included in the above party paper.
    • Der Angriff — Nazi Party labor newspaper started by Joseph Goebbels
    • Der Erwerbslose — Nazi Party labor newspaper
    • Arbeitertum — Nazi Party labor newspaper
  • Volkswagen — "people's car". Conceived during the mid 30s but reached its peak in the post war period.
  • Volksgemeinschaft — a concept that means national solidarity; popular ethnic community; classless folk community
  • Volkswirtschaft — a people's or national economy
  • von — an aristocratic appellation to German names though it does not always signify that class.

W

  • Wannsee Conference -- a conference held on January 20, 1942 beside Lake Wannsee near Berlin in which it was decided and made official Nazi policy that the total annihilation of European Jews was the only rational means of a "Final Solution" to the Jewish Question.
  • Wehrbauern — soldier-peasant settlements that were to be established in the East to act as a defensive shield against the inroads of Slav barbarianism.
  • Weltanschauungskrieg — war of ideologies
  • Winterhilfe — Winter Relief Program of the Nazi Party to support its members during the Great Depression of 1932.
  • Wirtschaftspolitische Abteilung — 1931 WPA; A NSDAP proposed program
  • Wirtschaftliches Sofortprogramm — 1932 Economic Program; A NSDAP proposed program
  • Wirtschaftliches Aufbauprogramm — 1932 Economic Reconstruction Plan; A NSDAP proposed program

X

Y

Z

  • Zeppelin — The rigid airships were a symbol of the German air technology.
  • Zielstrebigkeit — goal fixation
  • Zusammenstösse — gang fights; the brawls between the various party paramilitary groups
  • Zwangswirtschaft — forced or compulsion economy
  • Zwischenstaatliche Vertretertagungen — interstate meetings of representatives; DNSAP and NSDAP party congresses of the early years; first one held in Salzburg, Austria.
  • 25-point program — The Nazi Party platform and a codification of its ideology.
  • 581 Abel autobiography — Weimar period Nazi Party membership data source

Slang terms

These terms are used in American language.

  • goosestep — a ceremonial marching form of many countries especially of the ones in cold climates. (Germany and Russia) The vigorous marching helps keep the participants warm. The form consists of stepping forward without bending the knees. After the Nazi’s use of it in their parades it was later used when referring to other totalitarian governments.
  • jackboot — the German military footwear that guarded against the cold, mud, brambles and barbed wire. Americans had gaiters and the British had puttees. It is a slang term used to connote a totalitarian police state.

List of abbreviations and acronyms

See the glossary above for explanations of the terms.

References

See also


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