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Adolf Hitler, seated center right, celebrates with
members of his cabinet on January 30, 1933, the day he
was appointed Prime Minister of Germany.
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1933
January 30
President Paul von Hindenburg appoints Adolf Hitler Reichs
Chancellor (Prime Minister).
February
Published since 1923 by Julius Streicher in Nuremberg as a
local organ of the Nazi party, the weekly publication
Der Stürmer, devoted primarily to anti-Semitic
propaganda and promoting hatred against the Jews, becomes one
of the official organs of the party in power. The motto of the
paper is "The Jews are our misfortune."
February 27
Nazis burn Reichstag (Parliament) building to create crisis
atmosphere. President Hindenburg grants Hitler emergency
powers that limit civil rights.
March 5
During the last free election in pre-war Germany, the Nazi
party wins nearly 44 percent of the popular vote, more than
twice as many votes as the next closest political party, the
Social Democrats, with 18 percent. In a coalition with another
right-wing party, Hitler takes full control of Germany.
March 9
Members of the SA (Sturmabteilung, or "Stormtroops,"
originally established in 1921 by Hitler to defend Nazi
meetings) and Stahlhelm (nationalist ex-servicemen's
organization) instigate rioting against German Jews.
March 20
First concentration camp, Dachau, established north of
Munich.
March 23
German government passes the Enabling Act, granting Hitler
dictatorial powers.
During the April 1933 boycott, two SA members guard
the entrance to a Jewish-owned leather-goods shop. The
sign reads "No respectable German shops here!"
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April 1
SA instigates boycott of all Jewish shops in Germany. Action
also directed against Jewish physicians and lawyers. Jewish
students forbidden to attend schools and universities.
April 7
Law for "the re-creation of civil-service professionalism"
passed. Removal of many Jewish civil-service employees,
including teachers and judges. Exception made for front-line
veterans of World War I.
April 11
Decree issued defining a non-Aryan as "anyone descended from
non-Aryan, especially Jewish, parents or grandparents. One
parent or grandparent classifies the descendant as non-Aryan
... especially if one parent or grandparent was of the Jewish
faith."
April 26
Formation of the Gestapo (Geheime Staatspolizei, or
"Secret State Police"), transforming Prussian political police
into an organ of the Nazi state.
May 10
Books written by Jews and opponents of Nazism burned.
July 14
Nazi party declared only party in Germany. Also, law
pertaining to the revocation of naturalization and
cancellation of German citizenship passed. Primarily aimed at
Jews naturalized since 1918 from the formerly Eastern German
territories.
September 22
Nazis establish Reich Chamber of Culture and exclude Jews from
participating in the arts.
October 4
Editor Law passed: Jews prohibited from serving as newspaper
editors.
October 14
Germany quits League of Nations.
October 24
Nazis pass a law against "Habitual and Dangerous Criminals"
that justifies placing the homeless, beggars, unemployed, and
alcoholics in concentration camps.
Continue: 1934
Photos: Courtesy of the United States Holocaust Memorial
Museum Archives
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