This is the thirteenth volume in the complete proceedings of the Nuremberg trial of the German major war criminals before the International Military Tribunal sitting at Nuremberg, Germany.
Taken from the original court transcript this volume covers the proceedings from 2nd to 13th May, 1946 and represents an essential primary source for scholars and general readers alike. The transcripts are complete and contain the whole of the proceedings as taken from the original court documents.
This volume includes the testimony of Walther Funk, the Reichminister of Economics. Funk boasted that by 1938 the Nazi Party had managed to steal Jewish property worth over 2,000,000 marks. The volume also includes the trial of Admiral Karl Doenitz, Hitler’s chosen successor and head of the Kriegsmarine. Doenitz was the man responsible for the waging of the unrestricted U-boat war, though this did not add to his sentence because of the similar actions by the Allies.
Among others, this volume contains the testimony of Hermann Neubacher, the senior Nazi official for the Balkans and Greece, a figure who attempted to enact reforms to improve the governance of the region through methods such as reopening the University of Belgrade, and Hans Lammers, a Nazi official who effectively controlled access to Hitler, though his influence declined during the war.
Taken from the original court transcript this volume covers the proceedings from 2nd to 13th May, 1946 and represents an essential primary source for scholars and general readers alike. The transcripts are complete and contain the whole of the proceedings as taken from the original court documents.
This volume includes the testimony of Walther Funk, the Reichminister of Economics. Funk boasted that by 1938 the Nazi Party had managed to steal Jewish property worth over 2,000,000 marks. The volume also includes the trial of Admiral Karl Doenitz, Hitler’s chosen successor and head of the Kriegsmarine. Doenitz was the man responsible for the waging of the unrestricted U-boat war, though this did not add to his sentence because of the similar actions by the Allies.
Among others, this volume contains the testimony of Hermann Neubacher, the senior Nazi official for the Balkans and Greece, a figure who attempted to enact reforms to improve the governance of the region through methods such as reopening the University of Belgrade, and Hans Lammers, a Nazi official who effectively controlled access to Hitler, though his influence declined during the war.