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Displaying items 1,661 to 1,680 of 2,629
Item type: Archival Descriptions
  1. Okresný ľudový súd v Košiciach

    • District People´s Court in Košice

    Fonds contains files pertaining the post-WW II prosecution of various suspects and convicts for crimes committed at the territory of Slovakia (1938-1945) as well as Hungary (1938-1945). It thus contains information on various forms of persecution of Jews, Roma and political opponents which took place not only at the territory of Košice and its vicinity but also at the territory of war-time Slovakia as well as quite distant places abroad. Besides files pertaining the so called Aryanization of Jewish property in Košice and its vicinity; blackmailing and denouncing of Jews; as well as the depo...

  2. Herbert L. Markow papers

    1. Herbert L. Markow collection

    Herbert L. Markow served as attorney advisor in the Office of Chief of Counsel for War Crimes in Nuremberg, where he was assigned to U.S. Military Tribunal Case 4, United States v. Oswald Pohl et al, which Markow calls the “Concentration Camp Case.” His primary duties were to review analyses of captured German documents in order to prepare the evidence for the trial. His papers include translations and staff evidence analyses of captured German documents; additional materials acquired during his service as attorney advisor in Nuremberg; documents related to the International Military Tribun...

  3. Selected records of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Republic of Poland in London. Office for War Crimes Ministerstwo Spraw Wewnętrznych Rządu Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej w Londynie. Biuro ds. Zbrodni Wojennych (Sygn. GK 159)

    This collection contains materials related to the research and investigation of perpetrators of war crimes such as: witness testimonies after the invasion of Germany in September 1939, reports of crimes committed against Poles on Polish territory and in Germany, lists of local German officials, Gestapo chief officers, guards of concentration camps, data related to concentration camps, German police authorities, accounts of Polish refugees about the conditions of life in Poland and crimes committed against civilians by the occupation authorities and Wehrmacht in the initial period of occupat...

  4. Plastic cigarette case with the 102nd Infantry insignia and Bavaria used by a US soldier

    1. David C. Porter collection

    Marbled offwhite plastic cigarette case, with the embossed insignia of the 102nd Infantry Division and Bavaria 1945, used by 19 year old David C. Porter to hold his dog tags during his service in the US Army in Germany from 1945 to 1946. Commemorative cigarette boxes were carried by soldiers who served as guards during the International Military Tribunal proceedings. David was deployed in February 1945 to join troops of the 102nd Infantry Division in combat in Germany. By the end of the war in May, David was a mortar crew chief for Company A, 26th Infantry Regiment. David and other members ...

  5. Set of US Army issue dog tags worn by a soldier in the 102nd Infantry Division

    1. David C. Porter collection
    • United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
    • irn43417
    • English
    • a: Height: 1.125 inches (2.858 cm) | Width: 2.000 inches (5.08 cm) b: Height: 1.125 inches (2.858 cm) | Width: 2.000 inches (5.08 cm)

    Pair of US Army issue dog tags worn by 19 year old David C. Porter during his service as a soldier in the US Army in Germany from February 1945 to July 1946. David was deployed in February 1945 to join troops of the 102nd Infantry Division in combat in Germany. By the end of the war in May, David was a mortar crew chief for Company A, 26th Infantry Regiment. David and other members of the 102nd were selected to serve as guards for the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg. Its purpose was to seek justice for crimes against humanity, evidenced by the Holocaust, perpetrated by Nazi Ger...

  6. Pair of blue and silver collar tabs for a Luftwaffe Hauptmann [Captain] acquired by a US soldier

    1. David C. Porter collection
    • United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
    • irn43398
    • English
    • 1945-1946
    • a: Height: 2.625 inches (6.668 cm) | Width: 1.625 inches (4.128 cm) b: Height: 2.625 inches (6.668 cm) | Width: 1.625 inches (4.128 cm)

    Two collar badges with birds and oak leaves from a Luftwaffe Hauptmann's uniform acquired by 19 year old David C. Porter during his service as a soldier in the US Army in Germany from February 1945 to July 1946. The tabs would have been worn in pairs on the collar points of a uniform shirt or jacket to distinguish military branch and rank. David deployed in February 1945 to join the 102nd Infantry Division in combat in Germany. By the end of the war in May, he was a mortar crew chief for Company A, 26th Infantry Regiment. David and others of the 102nd were selected to serve as guards for th...

  7. US Army 102nd Infantry Division arched Ozark's patch worn by a soldier

    1. David C. Porter collection

    102nd Infantry Division, Ozark's badge, worn by 19 year old David C. Porter while a soldier in the US Army in Germany from February 1945 to July 1946. David deployed in February 1945 joining the 102nd Infantry in combat in Germany. By the end of the war in May, David was a mortar crew chief for Company A, 26th Infantry Regiment. David and others of the 102nd were selected to serve as guards for the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg. David was assigned to guard prisoners during the Trial of Major German War Criminals. He guarded defendants in their cells and then was assigned to s...

  8. Hitlerjugend [Hitler Youth] enamel membership pin acquired by a US soldier

    1. David C. Porter collection

    Hitlerjugend [Hitler Youth] membership pin acquired by 19 year old David C. Porter during his service in the US Army in Germany from February 1945 to July 1946. The Hitler Youth was founded by the Nazi Party in 1926 to shape ideological beliefs of German youth. In 1936, membership became mandatory for all children between the ages of ten and seventeen. David was deployed in February 1945 to join troops of the 102nd Infantry Division in combat in Germany. By the end of the war in May, David was a mortar crew chief for Company A, 26th Infantry Regiment. David and other members of the 102nd we...

  9. Women’s Reich Labor Service commemorative pin acquired by a US soldier

    1. David C. Porter collection

    Reichsarbeitsdienst der weiblichen Jugend [Women’s Reich Labor Service] scarf pin acquired by 19 year old David C. Porter during his service in the US Army in Germany from February 1945 to July 1946. Beginning in 1938, the Reichsarbeitsdienst provided auxiliary support to the German military. Young women received a commemorative brooch upon the completion of their service period. David was deployed in February 1945 to join troops of the 102nd Infantry Division in combat in Germany. By the end of the war in May, David was a mortar crew chief for Company A, 26th Infantry Regiment. David and o...

  10. Pressed tin cap badge of a Reichsadler acquired by a US soldier

    1. David C. Porter collection

    German cap badge of a Reichsadler, an Imperial eagle holding a swastika, acquired by 19 year old David C. Porter during his service as a soldier in the US Army in Germany from February 1945 to July 1946. David was deployed in February 1945 to join troops of the 102nd Infantry Division in combat in Germany. By the end of the war in May, David was a mortar crew chief for Company A, 26th Infantry Regiment. David and other members of the 102nd were selected to serve as guards for the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg. Its purpose was to seek justice for crimes against humanity, evide...

  11. US Army 102nd Infantry Division shoulder sleeve patch with OZ worn by a soldier

    1. David C. Porter collection

    Shoulder sleeve badge, 102nd Infantry Division, known as the Ozarks Division, worn by 19 year old David C. Porter during his service as a soldier in the US Army in Germany from February 1945 to July 1946. David was deployed in February 1945 to join troops of the 102nd Infantry Division in combat in Germany. By the end of the war in May, David was a mortar crew chief for Company A, 26th Infantry Regiment. David and other members of the 102nd were selected to serve as guards for the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg. Its purpose was to seek justice for crimes against humanity, evid...

  12. US Army 102nd Infantry Division shoulder sleeve patch with OZ worn by a soldier

    1. David C. Porter collection

    Shoulder sleeve badge, 102nd Infantry Division, known as the Ozarks Division, worn by 19 year old David C. Porter while a soldier in the US Army in Germany from February 1945 to July 1946. David deployed in February 1945 joining the 102nd Infantry in combat in Germany. By the end of the war in May, David was a mortar crew chief for Company A, 26th Infantry Regiment. David and others of the 102nd were selected to serve as guards for the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg. David was assigned to guard prisoners during the Trial of Major German War Criminals. He guarded defendants in ...

  13. US Army 102nd Infantry Division enameled lapel pin with OZ worn by a soldier

    1. David C. Porter collection

    Lapel pin insignia of the 102nd Infantry Division, known as the Ozarks Division, worn by 19 year old David C. Porter while a soldier in the US Army in Germany from February 1945 to July 1946. David deployed in February 1945 joining the 102nd Infantry in combat in Germany. By the end of the war in May, David was a mortar crew chief for Company A, 26th Infantry Regiment. David and others of the 102nd were selected to serve as guards for the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg. David was assigned to guard prisoners during the Trial of Major German War Criminals. He guarded defendants ...

  14. Benjamin Sagalowitz Archive: Various documents and newspaper clippings

    1. P.13 - Archive of Benjamin Sagalowitz , head of the press agency of the Union of Jewish Communities in Switzerland, 1929-1969

    Benjamin Sagalowitz Archive: Various documents and newspaper clippings: In the file: Three notebooks with the number of Jews and non-Jews residing at various locations in Poland, according to the 1925 and 1931 censuses; Pp. 1-10: Excerpt from a charge sheet against an unidentified Nazi criminal, including remarks relating to the list of prosecution exhibits and legal comments regarding paragraphs of the charge sheet (without the actual list or paragraphs). The undated material concerns the German occupation of Poland and Operation Barbarossa; Pp. 11-14: Undated advertisements, probably from...

  15. Selected files from the UK National Archives

    Selected files from the UK National Archives relating to the British investigation and prosecution of war crimes immediately after World War II (WO 309: War Office: Judge Advocate General's Office, British Army of the Rhine War Crimes Group (North West Europe) and predecessors: Registered Files (BAOR and other series) & WO 311: Judge Advocate General's Office, Military Deputy's Department, and War Office, Directorates of Army Legal Services and Personal Services: War Crimes Files (MO/JAG/FS and other series) and WO 310: War Office: Judge Advocate General's Office, War Crimes Group (Sout...

  16. Records of the Central Office of the Judicial Authorities of the Federal States for the Investigation of National Socialist Crimes (B 162)

    Contains selected records relating to the investigation and prosecution of crimes committed under the National Socialist regime from 1933-1945. Includes interrogation reports of perpetrators, testimonies of witnesses, and court decisions. Records document violent crimes, including: mass crimes against Jews and others committed by members of the SS and security police within the killing squads in Poland and in the former Soviet Union, as well as crimes in numerous ghettos, concentration and extermination camps (such as Auschwitz, Majdanek, Belżec, Treblinka or Sobibὀr) across occupied Europe...

  17. Trial against the staff of KL Auschwitz-Birkenau Proces członków załogi Oświęcimia (Sygn. GK 196)

    Contains investigation materials and court documents relating to the trial of Auschwitz and Birkenau concentration camp staff, also records on crimes in other concentration camps. Records contain court cases against many war criminals, such as Adolf Eichmann, Rudolf Hoess (Höss), Dr. Goebel, Karl Ernst Moeckel, Maximilian Grabner as well as against SS physicians accused of experimental operations on Polish women, against female SS camp guards, and other Auschwitz SS staff members. Includes documents on historical background on Nazi leadership; an illustrated SS guidebook for German personn...

  18. Documentation from archives in Belorussia, 1930-1960

    In the record group there are files selected from the State Archive of Belorussia and the Archive of the Public Associations (the archives of the former Communist Party) of Belorussia, the State Archive of the Grodno Region, the State Archive of Belorussia which was attached to the National Archive of the Republic of Belorussia, the State Archive of the Public Associations of the Grodno Region, the State Archive of the Gomel Region, the State Archive of the Public Associations of the Mogilev Region; the Historical Museum of the Great War for the Motherland (the Great Patriotic War - World W...

  19. Abschliessender Schriftsatz über die Strafrechtliche Verantwortlichkeit von Weissäcker und Wörmann : Ermordung und Misshandlung von Kriegsgefangenen, Punkt 3, 10 novembre 1948, texte allemand, 13 p. Schriftsatz über die Teilnahme der Angeklagten Weizaücker, Steengracht Woermann und Erdmannsdorf : Ermordung, Versklävung usw., Anklagepunkt 5, 13 novembre 1948, texte allemand, 19 p. Abachliessender Schriftsatz über die Strafrechtliche Verantwortlichkeit von Weizsaecker, Steengracht, Woermann : Ermordung der europäischen Juden, Punkt 5, 15 novembre 1948, texte allemand : Teil : I. Zinleitung, pp. 1 - 2. II : Die Beschulfigungen unter Punkt V der Anklageschrift, pp. 3 - 6. III : Urteil des IMG hinsichtlich der Verfolgung von Juden, pp. 7 - 10. IV : Das Corpus delicti beim Verbrechen des Rassenwordes, pp. 11 - 30. V : Zuständigkait des Auswärtigen Antes, pp. 31 - 36. VI : Grundlegende Rechtssätze für die Unterzeichnung von Urkunden, pp. 37-40. VII : Das Auswärtige Amt, pp. 41 - 45. VIII : Das Auswärtige Amt und das Program gegen die Juden in November 1938, pp. 46 - 49. IX : Die Juden frage als ein Bestandteil der deutschen Aussenpolitik (1939) pp. 50 - 54. X : Zwangsverschickung von deutschen Juden nach Süd-Frankreich (1940), pp. 55 - 60. Teil II : XI : Die Pläne beschäftigen sich hun auch mit Nord im besetzten Russland (1941 pp. 61 - 68. XII : Die Endlösung der JudeFrage (1942) pp. 69 - 81. XIII : Weizsaeckers und Woermanns schwere Verbrechen lei der Endbösung (1942) pp. 82 - 95. XIV : Umfrangreichs Kenntnis von dem Vernichtungsprogramm, pp. 96 - 116. XV : Zugeständnisse der Angeklagten wührend der Hauptverhandlung, pp. 117 - 129. Teil III : XVI : Weizsaeckers, Wosrmanns und Steengrachts Volkermordende Castigkeit in den verschiedenen Ländern Europas, pp. 130 - 193. Teil IV : XVI : Weizsaeckers, Woermanns und Steengrachts Tätigkeit in Verbindung mit dem Volkermord in den einzelnen europäischen Ländern, pp. 194 - 271. Teil V : XVII : Verstösse gegen das Besitzrecht, pp. 272 - 283. XVIII : Antisemitische Propagandatätigkeit des Auswärtign Amtes, pp. 284 - 295. XIX : Vorschlage zur Tatsachenfestatellung bezüglich der Verantwortung der Angeklagten, pp. 296 - 299. XX : Schluss, pp. 298 - 299. Idem , texte anglais, pp. 1 - 299 (Final brief on the criminal responsability of Weiszaecker, Steengracht, Woermann : Murder of the Jews in Europe). Schriftsatz der Anklagevertretung über strafrechtliche Gesichtspunkte bei der Ausbeutung von Konzentrationslagerbäftlingen, 22 novembre 1948, texte allemand, 26 p. Idem , texte anglais, 20 p.