Circle. Trans. Peter Ludlow. New York, 1971.
Vassiltchikov, Maria. Berlin Diaries, 1940-1945 London, 1986.
Wilmot, Chester. The Struggle for Europe Westport, 1972.
Zeller, Eberhard. The Flame of Freedom. The German Struggle against Hitler Trans.
R. P. Heller and D. R. Masters. London, 1967.
1933
Jan. 30 Hitler appointed chancellor
Feb. 3 Hitler meets with commanders of the Reichswehr for the
first time
Feb. 27-28 Reichstag fire. Government issues emergency decree “to
protect the people and the state”
March 5 Reichstag elections. Nazis receive 43.9 percent of the vote
March 21 Potsdam Day celebrations, intended to show unity of
Prussianness and National Socialism
March 23 Enabling Act passed
Apr. 1 Boycott of Jewish businesses
Apr. 7 Act to Restore a Professional Public Service passed
May 2 Trade unions disbanded and German Labor Front founded
June-July Political parties dissolved
July 20 Concordat with Vatican signed
1934
April 24 People’s Court established
June 30 Night of the Long Knives. Liquidation of SA leaders and
other political opponents begins
Aug. 2 Hindenburg dies. General Werner von Blomberg orders
Reichswehr to swear loyalty to Hitler. Hitler granted unlimited power as “Führer and chancellor”
1935
Jan. 2 Admiral Wilhelm Canaris takes over as chief of Military
Intelligence
March 4-5 Synod of the Confessional Church decides to denounce Nazi racial theories and the “new heathens” from the pulpit. Seven hundred pastors arrested
March 16 Reintroduction of universal conscription
Aug. on Wave of arrests directed against socialist resistance group Beginning Anew
Sept. 15 Nuremberg laws enacted
Oct. Wave of arrests by the Gestapo. By May 1936, over seven thousand seized for political reasons
1936
March 7 German troops march into the demilitarized Rhineland
May 26 Campaign against monasteries and convents. Morals charges brought against 276 members of religious orders for alleged homosexuality
May 28 Whitsun declaration of the Confessional Church condemns Nazi racial policies
Aug. The Socialist Front in Hannover, one of the largest northern German resistance groups, headed by Werner Blumenberg, broken up by Gestapo
Nov. Gestapo arrests members of the left-wing socialist organization Red Fighters
1937
Jan. 30 Enabling Act extended for four years. Hitler withdraws Germany’s signature from the discriminatory clauses of the Treaty of Versailles
March 14 Papal encyclical Mit brennender Sorge (With Deepest Anxiety) condemns Nazi policy toward the church. Mass arrest of clergymen, expropriation of church publishing houses and presses
July 1 Pastor Martin Niemöller arrested and sent to a concentration camp
Nov. 5 Hitler announces war plans to the military leadership and the foreign minister. Immediate targets: Austria and Czechoslovakia
Dec. Large-scale operation mounted in many major cities against left-wing resistance organizations
1938
Feb. 4 Dismissal of Blomberg and Army Commander in Chief Fritsch. Hitler creates the High Command of the Armed Forces (OKW) under Wilhelm Keitel. Walther von Brauchitsch named commander in chief of the army. Hitler himself takes over as supreme commander of the entire armed forces (Wehrmacht)
March 12 Annexation of Austria
March 13 Law proclaiming the Anschluss passed
May 30 Directive from Hitler announcing the invasion of
Czechoslovakia
Aug. 18 Chief of General Staff Ludwig Beck resigns in protest of Hitler’s aggression. Franz Halder appointed as successor
Summer Conspiracy of civilian and military resistance groups launched. Main participants are Halder, Hans Oster, and Erwin von Witzleben
Sept. 28 Oster and Friedrich Wilhelm Heinz’s plan for a task force to invade the Chancellery and kill Hitler fails
Sept. 29 Munich conference grants Sudetenland to Germany
Oct. 21 Hitler issues secret orders to prepare “to eliminate the rest of Czechoslovakia”
Nov. 9 Kristallnacht, a “spontaneous” pogrom against Jews. Police forbidden to intervene
1939
March 15 Entry into Czechoslovakia. Under pressure from Germany, Slovakia declares its independence
April 3 Hitler issues directive to prepare for the invasion of Poland
May 23 Hitler explains invasion plans to his generals
Summer Civilian and military resistance circles plan to remove Hitler from power to prevent war. Opposition groups around Harro Schulze-Boysen and Arvid and Mildred Harnack form the Red Orchestra
Aug. 23 Hitler-Stalin pact divides Poland and Eastern Europe into spheres of interest
Sept. 1 Outbreak of the Second World War with invasion of Poland
Sept. 21 Reinhard Heydrich issues guidelines for the Einsatzgruppen in occupied Poland
Sept. 27 Warsaw surrenders
Oct. 9 Hitler announces his intention to launch an invasion in the West by November 12
Oct.-Nov. Preparations made for Erich Kordt’s attempt to assassinate Hitler with a bomb
Nov 8. Acting alone, Georg Elser fails to kill Hitler in Munich
1940
April 9 Beginning of operation that will lead to occupation of Denmark and Norway
May 10 Beginning of the campaign in the West. Capitulation of Holland (May 15) and Belgium (May 28) and truce with France (June 22)
Dec. 18 Directive from Hitler for Operation Barbarossa: “Before the end of the war against England,” the Wehrmacht is to defeat the USSR in “a quick campaign”
1941
March 30 Hitler declares to his generals that the Russian campaign will be a “struggle of annihilation”
Spring Henning von Tresckow organizes a group of conspirators within Army Group Center
May 13 Hitler cancels the jurisdiction of the military courts over the areas of the Soviet Union that will be occupied. Illegal acts against Soviet civilians no longer punishable; crimes against the occupying Germans to be punished extrajudicially
June 6 Commissar Order calls for the liquidation of political commissars in the Soviet Union
June 22 Beginning of the Russian campaign. The three army groups are followed by four Einsatzgruppen of security police and the SD
Nov.-Dec. The Russian winter destroys Hitler’s plans for blitzkrieg against the Soviet Union
Dec. 19 Hitler dismisses Field Marshal Walther von Brauchitsch and assumes supreme command of the army himself
1942
Feb. The revolutionary left-wing resistance organization led by Beppo Romer and Robert Uhrig is broken up in Berlin. Forty-five death sentences issued
March 22 Pastoral letter of Catholic bishops on the “Struggle against Christianity and the Church”
Spring The resistance organization Revolutionary Socialists broken up in Bavaria and Austria
Aug. 20 Roland Freisler named president of the People’s Court
Sept. 24 Franz Halder replaced as chief of general staff by Kurt Zeitzler
Fall Gestapo breaks up the Red Orchestra
Nov. 22 The Sixth Army (some 250,000 troops) cut off near Stalingrad
1943
Jan. 24 Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill announce at the Casablanca Conference (Jan. 14-26) their demand for “unconditional surrender”
Feb. 2 Capitulation of the Sixth Army in Stalingrad
Feb. 18 Flyers distributed in Munich by White Rose, a student resistance group with Catholic and youth-organization roots
March 13 Attempt by conspirators in Army Group Center to blow up Hitler fails
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