0
    The Gestapo: A History of Horror

    The Gestapo: A History of Horror

    3.6 19

    by Jacques Delarue, Mervyn Savill (Translator)


    eBook

    $14.99
    $14.99

    Customer Reviews

      ISBN-13: 9781626369085
    • Publisher: Skyhorse Publishing
    • Publication date: 05/17/2008
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 384
    • Sales rank: 109,649
    • File size: 965 KB

    Jacques Delarue was a member of the French Resistance, and he enjoyed a long career with the Sûreté Nationale. He authored books on the Resistance, Charles de Gaulle, and the Algerian War.

    Table of Contents


    Table of Abbreviations used     viii
    Preface     ix
    Introduction     1
    The Birth of the Gestapo 1933-34
    The Nazis Become Masters of Germany     13
    Hitler's cabinet
    The Brown Terror
    Goering takes over and purges the Prussian police
    Despotism and a series of decrees
    The terrible month of February 1933
    The burning of the Reichstag
    The "emergency measures"
    Rounding up the Opposition
    The apathy of the trade unions
    The electoral campaign and the March 5 elections
    The new Reichstag
    Full powers
    Gleichschaltung
    The comedy of Labor Day
    The dissolution of the unions
    Dr. Ley's Labor Front
    The dissolution of the parties
    The sole Party
    Goering has Recourse to the Police     23
    Hermann Goering
    Goering the S.A. man
    Goering and Roehm
    Rivalry
    Goering wounded in Munich
    Flight and exile
    Morphinomania, obesity, and psychological evolution
    Return to Munich in 1927
    Goering, a deputy and then President of the Reichstag
    Goering and Papen
    Rivalry and chicaneries
    Diels the policeman
    Diels against the Nazis
    The wind changes
    Diels buys himself back into favor
    Goering seduced by the political police
    The opening of the first concentration camp
    Goering's directives to the police
    The Gestapo is Created     35
    Amnesty for the Nazi criminals
    The decree of April 26, 1933, creates the Gestapo in Prussia
    The beginning of the Gestapo under Diel's direction
    The S.A. cries for blood
    Internal rivalries between S.A., S.S., and Gestapo
    Dielsis overthrown only to return in triumph
    The Gestapo becomes Goering's personal property
    The trial of van der Lubbe
    Rail and Reineking
    The Gestapo Perfects Its Methods 1934-1936
    Himmler Takes over the Gestapo     57
    The police forces of the German Laender are placed under the jurisdiction of the Reich
    The Nazi administrative imbroglio
    Diels quits the Gestapo for good
    Himmler succeeds him
    Himmler's career
    His deputy, Heydrich
    A biography of Himmler
    The nature of the S.S. "Order"
    The S.S. before Himmler
    What he made of it
    A portrait of Himmler the man
    Himmler's "Black Order"     72
    The birth and development of Nazi racist principles
    The racist philosophy
    Racialism and the S.S.
    The curious S.S. honor
    The S.S. and the law
    Himmler and racialism
    The Lebensborn
    Special rights for the S.S.
    The Hitler Jugend, a recruiting reservoir for the S.S. and the Gestapo
    The S.S. organization
    The Gestapo is Everywhere     82
    Himmler organizes the Gestapo on the S.S. model
    Heydrich chief of the Gestapo head office
    The State, the Gestapo, and the Party
    The Fuehrerprinzip
    The Gestapo's sources of information
    The responsible figures and the leaders of the Party
    The Blockleiter, the principal informer of the Gestapo
    The organizations of the Party and spying at home
    Political espionage abroad: the Ausland Organization, the Volksdeutsche Mittelstelle, and the Fifth Column
    The surveillance of refugees
    Nazi propaganda abroad, another source of information
    The Hermann Goering Research Institute and wire-tapping
    The Strange Personality of Heydrich     93
    Heydrich, biography and portrait
    Heydrich organizes the Gestapo services technically
    The prerogatives of the Gestapo
    The Gestapo escapes from all control
    It enlarges its domain
    The "patriotic duty of silence"
    Nazism an empty policy
    The Gestapo Versus Roehm     102
    Himmler and Goering versus Roehm
    Roehm in 1931
    Physical and moral portrait
    The S.A. between 1931 and 1933
    Unemployment and recruitment
    The "Socialist principles" of the Nazis and the help of the big industrialists
    Roehm and the "second revolutionary wave"
    Roehm dares to defy Hitler
    The S.S. of 1933 opposes the S.A.
    The Gestapo spreads its nets
    The Army abandons Roehm
    Hitler buys the loyalty of the Army by sacrificing Roehm and the S.A.
    "The Night of the Long Knives"     109
    Roehm revives the Socialist orders of the day
    Papen, the conservative spokesman
    Veiled warnings
    The murder of Dr. Jung
    Himmler and Goering prepare the attack against Roehm and the S.A.
    The June 30 "purge"
    The death of Roehm
    The terrible purge of the S.A.
    Repression in Berlin
    The Nazis legalize the murders of June 30
    Lutze succeeds Roehm
    Hindenburg congratulates Hitler
    Blomberg and the Army approve and thank Hitler
    The death of Hindenburg
    Hitler is appointed President
    Blomberg and the Army ratify the appointment and take the oath
    The New Organization of the Police     126
    The swindle of June 30
    The Gestapo's discreet triumph
    Himmler and Heydrich make themselves feared and hated
    the S.S. becomes an independent organization
    Heydrich organizes the S.D.
    Official members and well-disposed agents
    Dr. Best and Dr. Mehlhorn organize the network of "honorary agents"
    The card index of the S.D.
    Best and Mehlhorn are dismissed
    Heydrich's personal views
    the "Kitty Salon"
    Eichmann enters the S.D.
    Schellenburg, Nebe, and Mueller
    The Gestapo services specialize
    The first structure of the edifice
    The Gestapo and the S.D. in the Sarre
    The Sarre plebiscite
    The reestablishment of military service
    The Gestapo elaborates the rules of the Secret Service
    The fundamental law of February 10, 1936, gives judicial status to the Gestapo and defines its task
    Himmler appointed Supreme Head of all the German Police Forces on June 17, 1936
    Concentration of the powers
    The Nazi's conception of the police
    The Gestapo Prepares for the Invasion 1936-39
    The Gestapo Tackles the Army     143
    The remilitarization of the Rhineland
    General rearmament and preparations for war
    Himmler and Heydrich prepare the Nazification of the soldiers
    Herr Mueller, performer of the dirty work
    A Gestapo machination: the Blomberg-Fritsch affair
    Hitler suppresses the Ministry of War and appoints himself supreme leader of the Army
    The creation of the O.K.W.
    The purge in the Army and the diplomatic corps
    The appointment of Keitel
    The military inquiry into the Fritsch affair
    The court-martial
    The military definitively conquered by the Party
    The triumph of Himmler and the Gestapo
    The Gestapo Installs Itself in Europe     158
    The resignation of General Beck
    The political situation in Austria
    Secret agents in Austria
    Nazi terrorism and the abortive putsch of July 25, 1934
    The murder of Chancellor Dollfuss
    The infiltration of the Nazi organizations
    Shuschnigg continues the Dollfuss policy
    Shuschnigg's last attempt
    Dismissal of Shuschnigg
    The Anschluss
    Himmler, Schellenberg, and Heydrich in Vienna
    The Gestapo moves in
    The bloody purge
    Preparations for the conquest of Czechoslovakia
    The situation in Czechoslovakia
    The Nazi organizations in Sudetenland
    Conrad Henlein, the Sudeten Germany party, and the Fifth Column
    Summer 1938
    The Czechoslovakian S.S.
    Gestapo and S.D.
    Frontier incidents
    The Munich Agreement and the occupation of Sudetenland
    The liquidation of Czechoslovakia
    Himmler, Heydrich, and Schellenberg in Prague
    The role of police organizations in Nazi strategy
    Himmler Shapes His Organization     171
    The aggression against Poland
    The Gleiwitz incident
    Naujocks and "Operation Himmler"
    The role of the Abwehr in organizing the machination
    Herr Mueller, the provider of corpses
    The invasion of Poland
    Himmler's special train
    The Einsatzgrupper
    The generals and the purge in Poland
    National Socialism and militarism
    The evolution of the Gestapo organization after the 1936 decree
    Creation of the R.S.H.A. on September 27, 1939
    The Gestapo Bureau IV
    The evolution of the R.S.H.A. from 1939 to 1945
    The Gestapo at War 1940
    In Poland     187
    The Polish people reduced to slavery
    The status of the Polish workers in Germany
    The spoilation of the land
    The A.B. action
    The war starts in the West
    The Venlo coup
    The appearance of Knochen
    Schellenberg and the intelligence service
    The attempt of November 9, 1939
    The Rape of Venlo
    Elser and his accomplices
    The Gestapo in France     200
    The French campaign
    The Occupation of Paris
    The arrival of Dr. Knochen's clandestine commando on June 14, 1940
    Knochen hoodwinks the soldiers
    Helmuth Knochen and the men of the Sonderkommando
    Knochen, a biography and portrait
    Installation in Paris
    The first assaults by the soldiers
    The first branches of the Gestapo in the provinces
    Conflicts with the diplomats, the Army, and the Rosenberg service
    Dr. Thomas and the collaborationist parties
    The Nazis subventions
    The anti-Semites and collaboration
    The Abwehr in France
    Knochen and the Paris salons
    Thomas and the Cagoulard killers
    Thomas is liquidated by the soldiers
    Knochen remains sole master in Paris
    The Gestapo and the Army     212
    The military High Command and the armistice
    Dannecker and his first anti-Semitic measures
    Von Stulpnagel's "code of hostages"
    Knochen organizes his services
    Oberg replaces Thomas
    Karl Oberg, biography and portrait
    Heydrich installs Oberg in Paris
    Heydrich's directions
    Secretary General Bousquet rejects the German demands in France
    Dannecker and Eichmann attend to the French Jews
    The subsections of the Gestapo in Paris
    The French auxiliaries
    Boemelburg
    The S.D. in France
    The Funkspielkommando
    The buying offices, centers of espionage
    The Otto organization
    Brandl and Poeschl
    The Hell of the Gestapo 1940-44
    The Gestapo at Work in France     233
    The police raids in France
    The Gestapo interrogations
    The transports to Germany
    Arrival at the concentration camps
    The W.V.H.A.
    The camps a source of profit
    The political section, the camp Gestapo
    The presentation of prisoners to visitors to the camp
    The German military tribunal in Paris
    The reserve of hostages in Fort Romainville
    Classification of the prisoners
    The "bunker inmates"
    Captain Pom-Pom
    How the hostages to be shot were chosen
    The Martyrdom of the Eastern Territories     246
    Himmler in charge of maintaining order in the Eastern-occupied territories
    The Einsatzgruppen
    The Gestapo-German High Command agreements
    The nature of an Einsatzgruppe
    The action of the Einsatzgruppe
    Operation "Cottbus"
    The massacres of Rovno
    The "S" trucks
    The Gestapo in Czechoslovakia
    The Protectorate of Bohemia-Moravia
    Heydrich becomes deputy Protector
    Heydrich in Prague
    The policy of the "sugar and the whip"
    The attempt of May 22, 1942
    The death of Heydrich
    The repression
    Lidice
    The successor to Heydrich
    Ernst Kaltenbrunner
    Biography and portrait
    Kaltenbrunner the purveyor to the camps
    The R.S.H.A. on Kaltenbrunner's arrival
    The communal lunches of the section leaders
    Eichmann and Kaltenbrunner
    The regulations for the extermination of Jews in the camps
    Commissioner Wirth and the faked city of welcome
    The Experiments of the Nazi Scientists     270
    The Gestapo and the prisoners of war
    The extermination of Russian prisoners
    The orders of Mueller
    The plan to assassinate General Weygand
    Reprisals after the escape of General Giraud
    The murder of General Mesny
    The "Kugel" decree
    The "K" prisoners at Mauthausen
    The career of Mauthausen
    The affair of the Sagan escapes
    The Gestapo and foreign workers in Germany
    Himmler and the medical experiments in the camps
    The Ahnenerbe
    Dr. Rascher
    Experiments on the effects of a vacuum and cold
    Medical resistance to the experimentation on human beings
    The troubles of Dr. Rascher's family
    The arrest and death of the Raschers
    Experiments with viruses, diseases, and sterilization
    The Gestapo selects the human guinea pigs
    The Kaiser Wilhelm Institute
    Dr. Hirt's anatomical collections
    The Gestapo Operates Throughout the Whole of France     288
    The policy of Himmler and of Otto Abetz in Paris
    Oberg and the creation of the L.V.F.
    Oberg's hold on the collaborationist parties
    Bousquet tries to have the Hostages Code abrogated
    The Oberg-Bousquet agreements
    The execution of hostages in August and September 1942
    The extension of the powers of the Gestapo in France
    Maulaz and the world of the Parisian salons
    Knochen and discipline
    The latent conflict between Mueller and Knochen
    Oberg "covers" Knochen
    "Intensified" interrogations
    Operation "Donar"
    The nature of a Funkspiel
    Funkspiel with England
    The invasion of the southern zone
    The Gestapo opens six new services in the southern zone
    The organization of the Gestapo in France at the beginning of 1943
    The creation of the militia
    The Waffen S.S. recruits in France
    Oberg at Vichy
    Operation "Fuchsbau"
    Oberg impresses Darnand
    The departure and arrest of Bousquet
    The militia becomes an auxiliary police force
    The number of arrests increase
    The courts-martial
    Collapse of the Gestapo 1944
    Resistance in the Army     315
    The Normandy landings and the collapse of the West front
    The last "protective measures" ordered by Oberg
    The awakening of a kernel of resistance in the Army
    The Weisse Rose
    The Abwehr conspirators
    Gestapo versus Abwehr
    The resignation of Canaris
    The Gestapo absorbs the Abwehr
    Colonel Hansen
    Stauffenberg enters into the conspiracy
    The abortive attempts
    The attempt of July 20, 1944
    July 20 in Paris
    The setback and the repression
    The abortive suicide of Stulpnagel
    The hangings in Plotzensee prison
    The last convoys of deportees
    The departure of Oberg and the Nordling mission
    The Nosek commando
    Oberg and Knochen take up their quarters at Vittel
    The Wolves Devour Each Other     332
    The final disappearance of the Abwehr
    Disgrace and the subsequent return of Knochen
    Oberg at St. Die
    Skorzeny's special schools
    The collapse
    The final maneuvers of Goering and Himmler
    Their destitution
    Himmler's attempts at negotiation
    Schellenberg the intermediary
    Hitler's will
    Bormann's role
    The mediation of the Doenitz Government
    A certain Heinrich Hitzinger
    The arrest and suicide of Himmler
    The disappearance of Mueller
    The end of Kaltenbrunner and Goering
    The arrest of Oberg and Knochen
    Their trial
    Conclusion
    Appendices     355
    Bibliography     362
    Index     365

    Available on NOOK devices and apps

    • NOOK eReaders
    • NOOK GlowLight 4 Plus
    • NOOK GlowLight 4e
    • NOOK GlowLight 4
    • NOOK GlowLight Plus 7.8"
    • NOOK GlowLight 3
    • NOOK GlowLight Plus 6"
    • NOOK Tablets
    • NOOK 9" Lenovo Tablet (Arctic Grey and Frost Blue)
    • NOOK 10" HD Lenovo Tablet
    • NOOK Tablet 7" & 10.1"
    • NOOK by Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.0 [Tab A and Tab 4]
    • NOOK by Samsung [Tab 4 10.1, S2 & E]
    • Free NOOK Reading Apps
    • NOOK for iOS
    • NOOK for Android

    Want a NOOK? Explore Now

    From 1933 to 1945, the Gestapo was Nazi Germany's chief instrument of counter-espionage, political suppression, and terror. Jacques Delarue, a saboteur arrested by the Nazis in occupied France, chronicles how the land of Beethoven elevated sadism to a fine art. The Gestapo: A History of Horror draws upon Delarue's interviews with ex-Gestapo agents to deliver a multi-layered history of the force whose work included killing student resisters, establishing Aryan eugenic unions, and implementing the Final Solution. This is a probing look at the Gestapo and the fanatics and megalomaniacs who made it such a successful and heinous organization—Barbie, Eichmann, Himmler, Heydrich, Müller. The Gestapo's notorious reign led to the murder of millions. The Gestapo is an important documentation of what they did and how they did it.

    Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought

    Recently Viewed 

    Sign In Create an Account
    Search Engine Error - Endeca File Not Found