Cards (6)

  • ROLE OF SS
    • Created in 1925 to act as Hitler's personal bodyguards. Members had to be both ‘racially pure’ and radically loyal to the NSDAP
    • Himmler became leader of the SS from 1929. The SS wore black uniforms(diff from SA)
    • ROLES:
    • Protect Hitler and other Nazi leaders
    • Provide security during political meetings
    • Urge people to subscribe to the Nazi newspaper
    • Marry ‘racially pure’ wives to create ‘racially pure’ children
    • Manage and control other police forces
    • The SS were responsible for carrying out the arrests and murders of SA members during the NOLF
    • 1925 - 240 members, 1939 - 290,000 members
  • ROLE OF SD, 1931
    • Heydrich was placed in charge
    • They gathered intelligence on anyone they suspected or knew opposed the Nazi Party, which included:
    • Existing and new Nazi Party members
    • Leaders and activities within other political parties
    • Minority groups such as Jewish people, Jehovah’s Witnesses and Freemasons
    • Government officials 
    • Heydrich and the SD were responsible for compiling a list of SA members to be targeted during the Night of the Long Knives
    • The SD became the only police agency to collect and manage intelligence from 1934
    • 1932 - 33 members, 1939 - 4,000 members.
  • ROLE OF GESTAPO
    • By 1934, Heydrich led the Gestapo
    • They were infamous for wearing plain clothes to avoid being identifiable.
    • ROLES:
    • Tapping phones and spying on opponents
    • Arresting, questioning and torturing suspects:
    • Around 160,000 people were arrested in 1939 for political crimes
    • Sending people directly to concentration camps using protective custody
    • Releasing information about concentration camp conditions to spread fear
    • 1937 - 6,500 , 1939 - 20,000
    • Only around 10% of political crimes committed were discovered by the Gestapo, compared to 80% reported by ordinary citizens
  • CONCENTRATION CAMPS
    • Most arrests made by the police services were related to ‘political crimes’, which involved speaking out against the Nazi Party
    • Dachau was opened in 1933 and became the first concentration camp in Nazi Germany:
    • Concentration camps were created to imprison many groups:
    • Minority groups such as Jewish people and Jehovah’s Witnesses
    • ‘Undesirables’ such as homosexuals, prostitutes and Romani
    • Political opponents, including journalists, writers, intellectuals and communists
    • Conditions in concentration camps were awful and inmates were forced to do hard labour
  • JUDGES AND LAWYERS
    • Judges and lawyers were required to prioritise the interests of the Nazi Party above all else:
    • Judges joined the National Socialist League for the Maintenance of the Law
    • Judges were dismissed if they did not join
    • Lawyers joined the German Lawyers Front
    • Judges had to wear the swastika from 1936
    • Judges decided the outcome of cases, not the jury
  • LAW COURTS
    •  Trial by jury was removed so that judges could decide the outcome of the case
    • The People’s Court was introduced to hear cases of treason:
    • Judges radically loyal to the Nazi Party were selected
    • Trials were held in secret
    • The right to appeal was removed
    • Control of the legal system led to a rapid rise in the number of political opponents executed:
    • Between 1930 and 1932, only eight people were executed
    • Between 1934 and 1939, this increased to 534 people