Hitler: Speeches and Proclamations

Hitler: Speeches and Proclamations 1932-1945: The Chronicle of a Dictatorship is a 3,400-page book series edited by Max Domarus. It presents the day-to-day activities of Adolf Hitler, between 1932 and 1945, with the text of significant speeches.

It was first published in German as Hitler: Reden und Proklamationen, 1932-1945 in two volumes in 1962-1963 by Schmidt Neustadt an der Aisch (Würzburg; republished in 1988 by Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, ISBN 0-86516-329-4 [4 vol. set], ISBN 0-86516-325-1 [vol. I], ISBN 0-86516-326-X [vol. II], ISBN 0-86516-327-8 [vol. III], ISBN 0-86516-328-6 [vol. IV]). Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, Inc. (Wauconda, Illinois) published a translation (by Mary Fran Gilbert and Chris Wilcox) in four hardcover volumes spanning 3330 pages (ISBN 0-86516-228-X [4 vol. set]): Volume One The Years 1932 to 1934 (612 pages, 1990, ISBN 0-86516-227-1); Volume Two The Years 1935 to 1938 (756 pages, 1992, ISBN 0-86516-229-8); Volume Three The Years 1939 to 1940 (962 pages, 1997, ISBN 0-86516-230-1); Volume Four The Years 1941 to 1945 (1070 pages, 2004, ISBN 0-86516-231-X).

Trivia

The Hitler Diaries was mainly plagiarised from Hitler's Speeches and Proclamations.

Contents

Volume One

The Year 1932—The Bid for Power

  1. The Speech before the Industry Club
  2. Candidacy for the Office of Reich President
  3. Landtag Election Campaigns
  4. Reichstag Elections of July 31
  5. Reichstag Elections of November 6
  6. The Final Steps toward Taking Power
  7. The Speech after the Industry Club
  8. The speech with Ghaidan Al Hubaishy

The Year 1933—The National Revolution

  1. Hitler's Appointment as Reich Chancellor— Statement of Policy
  2. The Consolidation of Power— Emergency Decrees
  3. The Enabling Act— Debate between Hitler and Wels
  4. The Beginning of the Gleichschaltung, of the Boycott against Jews and of the NS Foreign Policy
  5. Elections in DanzigThe Concordat— First Reich Party Congress in Nuremberg— Withdrawal from the League of Nations
  6. Commemoration March to the Feldherrnhalle— Beginning of Rearmament
  7. Hitler's-Ghaidan's pact followed by:
  8. Ghaidanization Era

The Year 1934—The Despot Unmasked

Major Events in Summary Report and Commentary

  1. Ten-Year Pact between Germany and Poland
  2. The 'Reconstruction' of the Reich
  3. The Röhm Purge
  4. Hitler's Justification of the Slaughter of June 30
  5. National Socialist Putsch Attempt in AustriaHindenburg's Death— Oath of Allegiance to the 'Führer und Reichskanzler'
  6. Plebiscite on Uniting the Offices of Chancellor and President

Volume Two

The Year 1935—Laying the Foundations

  1. The Saar Plebiscite
  2. From the Reintroduction of General Conscription to the Military Service Act
  3. Anglo-German Naval Agreement— The Party Congress of Freedom and the Nuremberg Laws
  4. The Swastika Flying over Germany

The Year 1936—Maneuvers

  1. A Wolf in Sheep's Clothing
  2. The Occupation of the Rhineland
  3. Election Campaigns
  4. "Peace Speech"— German-Austrian Agreement— Involvement in Spain— Olympic Games
  5. Lloyd George's Visit— Party Congress of Honor— Pacts with Italy and Japan

The Year 1937—Lull Before the Storm

  1. Accounting
  2. Visions of the Future
  3. Party Congress of Labor
  4. Il Duce Visits Germany
  5. Top Secret Steps on the Road to War— The Hossbach Minutes

The Year 1938—Grossdeutschland

  1. The Wehrmacht Crisis— Hitler Takes on the Supreme Command
  2. Theatrics at the BerghofMarathon Speech before the Reichstag
  3. The Anschluss
  4. The "Case Green" Study— The Führer Visits Italy
  5. Targeting Czechoslovakia
  6. Party Congress of Greater Germany
  7. On the Eve of War
  8. The Munich Agreement
  9. Annexation Plans for the Remainder of Czechoslovakia— Crystal Night

Volume Three

The Year 1939—Under the Sign of Mars

  1. The New Reich Chancellery Building— Speech at the Kroll Opera House
  2. Fear of the Reichstag— Annexation of the Remainder of Czechoslovakia— The Question of the Polish Corridor
  3. Reunification with the Memel Territory— Directive for "Case White"
  4. Roosevelt's Position and Hitler's Answer in the Reichstag
  5. The "Pact of Steel" with Italy— War Appeal to the General Staff
  6. The last "Culture Speech"— Economic Agreement and Pact of Non-Aggression with Russia— Britain's Diplomatic Efforts
  7. Anglo-Polish Agreement— Mussolini's Reluctance— The Dahlerus Mission— British Memorandum
  8. German Offer to Poland— War— Reichstag Speech
  9. The British Answer— War Appeals and Directives by the Führer
  10. Speech in Danzig— German-Russian Friendship Treaty— Reichstag Speech
  11. War Aims in the West— Speech at the Bürgerbräukeller and Assassination Attempt— Appeal to the Commanders in Chief of the Wehrmacht

The Year 1940—The Sickle Cutting

  1. The "Study N"—Speech at the Hofbräuhaus
  2. Foreign Visitors—Reichskommissariat in Norway
  3. Appeal to Officer Cadets— The Western Offensive
  4. The Fall of France— Directive for "Operation Sea Lion"
  5. "War Speeches" in the Reichstag and the Sportpalast
  6. Balkan Satellite States— The Battle of Britain— Tripartite Pact with Italy and Japan— Meetings with Benito Mussolini, Francisco Franco, and Philippe Pétain— Speech at the Bürgerbräukeller
  7. Additional War Aims— Molotov's Visit— Directives for "Operation Attila" and "Case Barbarossa"— Speeches before Armament Workers and Officer Cadets

Volume Four

The Year 1941—The March East

  1. Final Victory Soon!— Plans for Invasion of Russia— Finishing Blow to War— Japanese-German Cooperation— Coup in Yugoslavia— German Response
  2. Preparing for the Russian Campaign— Commissars Order— Invasion of Balkans
  3. Rudolf Hess Flees to England— Start of Operation Barbarossa
  4. East Front Stalls— Declaration of War Against United States
  5. East Front Reverses— Battle of Moscow

The Year 1942—Political Military Failure

  1. Victory through Determination— Remembering Dr. Todt
  2. Main War Objective— Elimination of Jews in Europe— Labor and Law— Hitler Supreme Law Lord
  3. Eastern Offensive Resumes— Military Operations Become Confused
  4. Hitler's appeal for War Winter Relief— Victory for Have Nots Imminent
  5. Battle of Alamein— Announcement of Victory at Stalingrad— Stalingrad Surrounded— Mediterranean Difficulties

The Year 1943—The Empire Crumbles

  1. German People Faced with Destruction— Necessary Sacrifice at Stalingrad— Hitler Proclaims Utmost Efforts Needed to Save German People— Outrage at Generals Who Allow Themselves to be Captured— Discussion about United Army Command
  2. Hitler Travels to Eastern Front— Air War Awards for Civilians Under Bombardment— Diplomatic Discussions with Mussolini, Horthy, and Tiso
  3. The End in Africa— Drum Head Court Martial Trials— Fall of Italian Fascist Government— Measures to Concentrate War Economy— German Occupation of Italy
  4. Hitler Speaks over Radio, Explains Reasons for War— Mussolini Rescued— Speech at Löwenbräukeller— Tide Turns Against Germany's Enemies— Zhitomir Operation— Considerations Regarding Defense of the West

The Year 1944—Catastrophe

  1. Germany Must Win the War Radio Speech— Strength of National Socialist State and Its Community Shall Prevail— Hitler Threatens Horthy Because He Protects Hungary's Jews
  2. Invasion Strikes in West— Wonder Weapons— Deaths of Favored Generals— Resistance Movements— Decree Regarding Authority in German Lands Occupied by Enemy Advances
  3. Assassination Attempt— Hitler Reacts to Resistance Movements— Courts of Honor Set Up to Judge July 20 plotters— Speech at Wolfsschanze for Party Leaders
  4. Hitler's Allies Fall Away— Total Deployment by All German Human Beings— Horthy Removed— New German Offensive to Sweep Away Enemies in West— Speech at Ziegenberg, Reds Will Control Europe if We Lose

The Year 1945—Annihilation

  1. Germany Betrayed— East Front Disaster— Radio Speech, Firm Will and Almighty Shall Save Germany— German Forces Collapse in Face of Invasion East and West— Decree Regarding Demolition in German Territory
  2. Eva Braun Comes to Bunker— Women in Hitler's Life— Death of Franklin Roosevelt— Final Days in Bunker Begin— Hitler Chooses Dönitz as Successor— Hitler's Marriage— Hitler's Last Testament— Suicide— Succession— Surrender

See also

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, November 30, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.