Authorities

Displaying items 17,461 to 17,480 of 17,956
  1. SS-Verfügungstruppe

    The SS-Hauptamt was founded in 1935, it was the Supreme Command of the Allgemeine SS, SS-Verfügungstruppe and SS-Totenkopfverbände.

  2. Secours Suisse

    The Commission Centrale des Organizations Juives d’Assistance met with various non-Jewish agencies working in the camps, such as Comité inter-mouvements aupres des evacues (CIMADE), the Young Men Christian Association (YMCA), the Quakers, various national branches of the Red Cross, the Secours Suisse, the Service social d’aide aux emigrants (SSAE), the Unitarian Service Committee, the Rockefeller Foundation, and others to form the Comité de Coordination pour l’Assistance dans les Camps.

  3. Comité Français de la Libération Nationale

    • CFLN

    1943/1944

    Comité Français de la Libération Nationale was a central political authority which supported France combattante during the Second World War. It was created in Algeria, chief of this organization was Charles de Gaulle.

  4. NSDAP Hauptamt Wissenschaft

    Founded in 1934-01-24

    The NSDAP Hauptamt Wissenschaft was part of Beauftragten des Führers für die Überwachung der gesamten geistigen und weltanschaulichen Schulung und Erziehung der NSDAP, which was founded in 1934.

  5. Polskie Państwo Podziemne

    • Polish Underground State

    1939/1945

    Polskie Państwo Podziemne was the general conspiracy institution and state body in occupied Poland. Delegatura Rządu Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej na Kraj was part of Polskie Państwo Podziemne.

  6. Deutsche Gemeindetag

    • German Council of Municipalities
    • DGT

    The Deutscher Gemeindetag was the primary representative body for municipal governments nationally. It has been viewed as either a means for the authoritarian regulation of municipal administration in a centralized chain of command, or, going back to 1933, as a paralyzed by the Reichsinnenministerium in its capacity to organize local self-government.

  7. Szare Szeregi

    1939-09-27/1945

    Szare Szeregi was a code name for Związek Harcerstwa Polskiego in conspiracy. The goal of Szare Szeregi was to educate young people by the fight with the Nazis and give them the opportunity to get an education because learning in polish schools was forbidden.

  8. Reichsstudentenführung

    • National Student Leadership
    • RSF

    Founded in 1936

    The Reichsstudentenführung, a student organization, was established in 1936.

  9. Fond Evreiski Obshtini

  10. Rząd Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej na uchodźstwie

    • Polish Government-in-Exile

    Founded in 1939

    The Rząd Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej na uchodźstwie was located in France after the German-Russian occupation in 1939 and relocated to London after the fall of France in 1940. Several Jews were affiliated with this body, which also supported Żegota and the Żydowski Komitet Narodowy (Jewish National Committee). It received dispatches from the Armia Krajowa about the Final Solution. The Rząd Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej na uchodźstwie was apprised of the fate of the Jews via a cable from the Polish underground in the summer of 1942. It urged the Allies to initiate a retaliation plan against German...

  11. Reichskanzleramtes

    The Reichskanzleramtes was renamend the Reichsministerium des Innern in 1919.

  12. Forces Francaises de l’interieur

    • French Forces of the Interior
    • FFI

    Forces Francaises de l’interieur was an noncommunist French resistance movement, based in France, and loyal to General Charles de Gaulle. Inside France, they engaged in sabotage, espionage, and hit and run tactics against German and Vichy collaborationist forces. Their intelligence reports were especially important prior to the invasion of Normandy. Unlike partisans in the East, they were not anti-Semitic and accepted Jewish members.

  13. Joodse Centrale voor Beroepsopleiding

    • JCB

    1940-06/1943-09-29

    The Joodse Centrale voor Beroepsopleiding was established in 1940-06. The Centre ran the different departments and offered courses and education as well. After 1940-05, when graduating students were no longer allowed to emigrate with a Palestine certificate (British immigration authorization), the Joodse Centrale arranged accommodations for them in Huize Voorburg near Elden. In 1941 the organization was absorbed into the Joodse Raad voor Amsterdam (Jewish Counsil), and in 1943-09-29 it was disbanded.

  14. Reichsgericht

    Founded in 1879

    In 1879 the Reichsgericht of Leipzig became the Reichsgericht of the German Reich.

  15. Zveno

    • Zveno government

    Founded in 1930

    Zveno was a nationalist party, a small group of idealistic military officers and politicians that had an influence on Bulgarian politicians far out of proportion to its size. Zveno played a leading role in the Communist coup of 1944 in Bulgaria.

  16. Komitet Organizacyjny Żydow Polskich w ZSRR

    • Organizational Committee of Polish Jews in the USSR

    Founded in 1944

    The Komitet Organizacyjny Żydow Polskich w ZSRR was founded under the auspices of the pro-communist Związek Patriotów Polskich (Union of Polish Patriots) in Moscow in the summer of 1944. The Komitet Organizacyjny Żydow Polskich w ZSRR consisted primarily of writers, journalists, actors and artists.

  17. Umwandererzentralstelle

    • Central Resettlement Office
    • UWZ

    Umwandererzentralstelle was a German office that oversaw the expulsion of Poles from the Polish territories annexed to the Reich at the beginning of the Second World War and from the Zamosc province in the Generalgouvernement. The office also ran the transit camps in which these Polish exiles were held, and decided how to racially classify them. In 1942 the Umwandererzentralstelle was opened in Lublin and a sub-office was opened in Zamosc. These two offices, which had 30 branches all over Poland, were under the authority of the Higher SS and Police Leader of each region, and were supervised...

  18. Young Men’s Christian Association

    • YMCA

    1844/present

    In 1844 twelve young men led by George Williams founded the first YMCA in England, London. Their objective was the 'improvement of the spiritual condition of the young men engaged in houses of business, by the formation of Bible classes, family and social prayer meetings, mutual improvement societies, or any other spiritual agency.' YMCA staff served Canadian Armed Forces and became one of only two organizations allowed to visit prisoner-of-war camps to ensure medical requirements were being met.