WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The long-lost diary kept by a top aide to Adolf Hitler as he oversaw the genocide against Jews and others during World War Two, a key piece of evidence during the Nuremberg ...
One of the mysteries after World War II was what happened to the diary of Alfred Rosenberg, a close confidant of Adolf Hitler. The mystery has been solved and most of the answers were revealed in ...
When we think of Nazism, we think of Adolf Hitler. The two are intimately intertwined in our minds and the story we tell to explain the most unexplainable events of the 20th century — and justifiably ...
This historical document was seized by ICE Homeland Security Investigations special agents in Wilmington, Del., following an extensive investigation, an HSI news release says. The "Rosenberg Diary" ...
Alfred Rosenberg, the chief exponent of the Nazi racial theories, today again denied before the International Military Tribunal, that he knew of or participated in the extermination of millions of ...
Missing for decades, the rediscovered diary of Alfred Rosenberg — a chief Nazi ideologue and one of Adolf Hitler's closest confidants — was officially turned over to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum ...
A cache of Jewish literary and art treasures stolen by the Germans from all over Europe was discovered yesterday at Hungen, Germany, by a unit of the Third Army led by a Jewish lieutenant who fled ...
Anyone with an interest in the history of political vengeance should pay a visit to the rare-book room at the Library of Congress and request the bound volume with the call number DD244.R6. Compiled ...
A footnote to journalistic history—and to Alfred Rosenberg’s career—went into the record at the Nürnberg trial last week. It showed up in a few papers like the New York Times. The Hearst press judged ...
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