Cornell University Library Digital Collections
Seyss-Inquart
- Title:
- Seyss-Inquart
- Collection:
- Donovan Nuremberg Trials Collection
- Creator:
- Bryan, Joseph D.
- Subject:
- Donovan Nuremberg Trials Collection
- Keywords:
- Austrian Anschluss
Austrian Nazi Party
SS
"The Austrian Question" (memorandum by Seyss-Inquart)
Austrian plebiscite (1938)
"Case Otto"
Poland
Jewish population
Mass arrests
Mass shootings
Plunder of public and private property (Poland
Netherlands)
Murder and ill treatment of civilian population (Poland
Netherlands)
Germanification (Poland
Netherlands)
Killing of hostages (Netherlands)
Conscription of civilian labor (Netherlands)
Nazification (Netherlands)
Imprisonment of persons without judicial process
Concentration camps
Persecution of Churches
Persecution of Jews
Austrian Nazis
Murder of Dolfuss
- Language:
- English
- Extent:
- 28 300dpi JPEG page images
- Publisher:
- International Military Tribunal
- Publication Place:
- Nuremberg, Germany
- Witness:
- Seyss-Inquart, Arthur, 1892-1946
- Other Names:
- von Papen
Hitler
Goering
Schacht
Ambassador Bullitt
Dr. Frederich Rainer
Major Klausner
Dr. Muhlmann
Tovs
Leopold
Chancellor Dolfuss
Chancellor Schuschnigg
Cardinal Innitzer
Keppler
Hess
Guido Schmidt
Himmler
Ribbentrop
Globocnik
Glaise von Horstenau
Jury
President Miklas
August Eigruber
Gauleiter Buerckel
Jodl
General Reichenau
Dr. Lasch
Hans Frank
General Christensen
Minister Lammers
Rosenberg
- Volume:
- 016
- Subdivision:
- "Subdivision 50 / Seyss-Inquart"
- Section:
- 50.01 (trial brief)
- Part:
- 2
- Format:
- Book
- Rights:
- The Cornell University Law Library Donovan Nuremberg Trials Collection is open to the general public, in accordance with the terms set forth in the Guidelines for Using Public Domain Text, Images, Audio, and Video Reproduced from Cornell University Library Collections, http://hdl.handle.net/1813.001/CULCopyright. Permission is not required from Cornell University Library to use items from the Donovan Nuremberg Trials Collection. We do suggest the following credit line: Courtesy of Cornell University Law Library, Donovan Nuremberg Trials Collection.