The Nazi party rally grounds, covered about 11 square kilometres in the southeast of Nuremberg, Germany. Six Nazi party rallies were held there between 1933 and 1938. The grounds were once the stage for some of Adolf Hitler's most infamous and dangerous speeches during the rise of the Third Reich. The nearby Documentation Center museum chronicles the terrors inflicted by the Nazi party during World War II.
Nuremberg Laws, November 1935. the established a legal basis for racial identification.
Citizenship Law: Jews are no longer citizens of Germany. German blood
Miscegenation Law: marriages between a Jew and a non-Jew is forbidden.
Sexual relations between a Jew and a non-Jew is forbidden.
The swastika is the "national" flag of Germany.
German blood - four non-Jewish German grandparents (four white circles in top row left)
Jew was defined by the Nazis as someone who descended from three or four Jewish grandparents (black circles in top row right).
In the middle stood people of "mixed blood" of the "first or second degree." A Jewish grandparent was defined as a person who was ever a member of a Jewish religious community. Also includes a list of allowed marriages and forbidden marriages.
Nuremberg Rally Grounds
September 13, 2022
Luitpold Arena
Ehrenhalle
Ehrenhalle 'Hall of Honor'
Luitpoldhalle
Location where part of "Triumph of the Will" was filmed.
Kongresshalle Design by Albert Speer. In cthe enter was to be Hitler's speaking platform
Kongresshalle
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