Hossbach Memorandum

The Hossbach Memorandum was the summary of the minutes of a meeting in November 1937 between Adolf Hitler and his military leadership, laying out his plans to precipitate an aggressive war that would eventually be known as World War II in Europe. The memorandum was named for the keeper of the minutes of the meeting, Hitler's military adjutant, Colonel Count Friedrich Hossbach.

Intentionalist and Structuralist Arguments

The Memorandum is often used by intentionalist historians to prove that Hitler had planned the Second World War, and the consequences that followed. However structuralist historians would argue that the lack of action by Britain and France against Hitler's occupation of the Rhineland (March 1936) had allowed him to exploit the opportunity, and therefore leading to the Hossbach Memorandum and plans for war.

See also

External link

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
heaf test
monotonic orthography
edmonton huskies
long lake, maine
chute river
brandy pond
susan shreve
soviet red banner northern fleet
list of foundation universe planets
sebago lake
elizabeth magie
whenever
keelhaul
polytonic orthography
crypto operating system
the rbx files
plimoth plantation
doctor fun
streetlight manifesto
canadian junior football league
eugene byrne
ivan kostov
sagar
junior seau
rich gedman
croatia before the croats
peacock (disambiguation)
bishop of carlisle
numbered musical notation
minutes
howard morrison
interactive genetic algorithm
warcry
imageshack
large helical device
james worthy
the alphabet of ben sira
thiaminase
joseph conrad (ship)
todd krampitz
semi final
aneurin
unicode characters 32 63
birkhoff's theorem