Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Wilhelm Frick (Alsenz, 12 de março de 1877 — Nuremberga, 16 de outubro de 1946) foi um político nazista, ministro do Interior do Terceiro Reich, julgado e condenado à morte por crimes de guerra pelo Tribunal de Nuremberg.

  2. Wilhelm Frick was a Nazi politician and war criminal who served as Interior Minister and Protector of Bohemia and Moravia under Adolf Hitler. He was executed by hanging after the Nuremberg trials for his role in the Holocaust and other crimes.

  3. Wilhelm Frick (1877–1946) was Reich Minister of the Interior from 1933 to 1943 and Reich Protector for Bohemia and Moravia from 1943 to 1945. In the decisive first years of the Nazi dictatorship, Frick directed legislation that removed Jews from public life, abolished political parties, and sent political dissidents to concentration camps.

  4. Wilhelm Frick (born March 12, 1877, Alsenz, Ger.—died Oct. 16, 1946, Nürnberg) was a longtime parliamentary leader of the German National Socialist Party and Adolf Hitler’s minister of the interior, who played a major role in drafting and carrying out the Nazis’ anti-Semitic measures.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Wilhelm Frick (1877 — 1946) político nazista, ministro do Interior do Terceiro Reich, julgado e condenado à morte por crimes de guerra pelo Tribunal de Nuremberg. Em 1923, participou do Putsch de Munique junto com Adolf Hitler e foi um dos presos na rebelião, julgado e condenado por traição em 1924.

  6. Frick participated in the Nazi Beer Hall Putsch of 8 November 1923-9 November 1923, and was tried with Hitler on a charge of complicity in treason. He was convicted and received a suspended sentence of one year and three months in a fortress (3132-PS).

  7. Há 5 dias · Overview. Wilhelm Frick. (1877—1946) Quick Reference. (1877–1946), German lawyer who as an early supporter of Hitler and a dedicated Nazi bureaucrat drew up the Nuremberg Laws in 1935 (see anti-Semitism). As Reich minister of the interior ... From: Frick, Wilhelm in The Oxford Companion to World War II » Subjects: History — Military History.