History of Nazi Germany

  • Enabling Act

    Enabling Act
    The anabling act made it so any legislation passed by the nazi party would not have to be approved. This helped the Nazi party take complete control of Germany because they had the ability to pass whatever laws they wanted.
  • Period: to

    Anti Jewish Laws in Nazi Germany

  • Jewish Boycott

    Jewish Boycott
    The jewish boycott was an economic boycott against Jewish owned stores and buisnesses. Messages were painted and put up on the windows of Jewish stores telling people to not buy from them.
  • Aryan Law

    Aryan Law
    The aryan Law a legislation put into affect by th Nazi party that was meant to drive Jewish people out of professions. Any non Aryan, which meant jew, could not work in theaters or the arts. Non aryans were also not allowed to be in the German Court
  • Berlin Book Burning

    Berlin Book Burning
    Non Aryan books were publicly burned. About 70 tons of non german books were burned. 1 third of all library books in Germany were burned.
  • Numerberg Laws

    Numerberg Laws
    Two parts. The protection law banned marriages between jewish and German citizens. It also forbidded Jewish people to display the German flag or German colors. The citizenship law took away what rights the Jewish had left. Because of this law the Jewish were being pushed out of their homes
  • Law 174 Jewish Name change

    Law 174 Jewish Name change
    All Jewish people had to have a reconizable Jewish name. The government posted a list of over a hundred of these names. All jewish passports were stamped witha J for jude
  • Night of Broked Glass

    Night of Broked Glass
    A Jewish teenager was enraged because of the laws for the Jewish. He shot and killed a German official. Germany used this as a excuse to unleash a giant program against the Jews. It is called the night of broken glass because the streets of Jewish Neighborhoods were covered with glass from jewish store windows. German soilders were told to destroy Jewish Synagogues to not damage Aryan Property
  • Arrest and Deportation of children

    Arrest and Deportation of children
    Over 6100 children were deported to death camps. Most of which were exterminated apon arrival. Some children were left at home to fend for themselves when their parents were taken away.
  • Jewish Star requirement

    Jewish Star requirement
    Many new laws were passed. One said that all Jewish children had to where a "Jewish Star" when they appeared in public. The Jewish star was considered a mark of shame