Nazi Era - Hitler-Ludendorff-Putsch 1923
On the evening of November 8, 1923, Adolf Hitler, leader of the NSDAP, proclaimed the "National Revolution" in Munich's Bürgerbräukeller. He declared the Reich government deposed and proclaimed a "provisional German national government" under his leadership. The putsch failed and the march through downtown Munich led by Hitler and Erich Ludendorff ended at the Feldherrnhalle in a bloody confrontation with the Bavarian state police with dead and wounded on both sides. The NSDAP was banned throughout the Reich. Hitler received a comparatively mild sentence of five years' imprisonment in the fortress in February 1924 and was ultimately released after only 9 months. The failed coup attempt was later reinterpreted by Hitler as a heroic uprising. The NSDAP flag with the blood of the National Socialists killed in the attempted putsch, the so-called "blood witnesses of the movement," became a relic.
01.02.1924 - (l-r) Adolf Hitler, Emil Maurice, First Lieutenant Hermann Kriebel, Rudolf Hess, and Friedrich Weber are pictured during their imprisonment in the fortress Landsberg am Lech after...
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13.09.1937 - Nuremberg Rally 1937 in Nuremberg, Germany - Consecration of new standards with the 'Blood Flag' by Adolf Hitler during the roll call of Sturmabteilung (SA), Schutzstaffel (SS), Na...
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01.01.1937 - Nuremberg Rally 1937 in Nuremberg, Germany - Consecration of new standards with the 'Blood Flag' by Adolf Hitler (not pictured) during the roll call of Sturmabteilung (SA), Schutzs...
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09.11.1938 - Die Särge für die während des Hitler-Ludendorff-Putsches 1923 ums Leben gekommenen Nationalsozialisten - die sogenannten "Blutzeugen der Bewegung" - in einem der eigens errichteten...
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