‘An Army with a State, not a State with an Army’
F.G. Stapleton examines the role played by the armed forces in the government of the Second Reich.
F.G. Stapleton examines the role played by the armed forces in the government of the Second Reich.
Michael Mullett defines the Theses' role in the Lutheran Reformation.
Julian Reed-Purvis examines the origins and consequences of Nazi Euthanasia.
Gilbert Shama looks at the German research into penicillin during the Second World War.
F.G. Stapleton examines the momentous social and political consequences of Germany's spectacular economic growth.
David Welch looks at the dramatisation of Führerprinzip in the Nazi cinema, and how history films were used to propagate themes of anti-parliamentarianism and the concept of an individual leader of genius.
Jonathan Wright looks at the career of the statesman who might have steered Germany safely through the Weimar era.
Edgar Feuchtwanger warns against exaggerating the extent or significance of liberalism’s failure in German history.
Tim Grady explores life for the teachers and students in a Bavarian university in the 1920s and 1930s.
Alison Rowlands investigates the case of a 'child-witch' during the Thirty Years War.