No
No, the German army was the army for Germany and the Nazi's was a party created by Adolf Hitler during his rise of the Third Reich. Since Hitler was the Furher the German army fought for Hitler during the war
Nazis was a political governmental party known as Nation Socialist German workers party Hitlerwas a man who leaded a great nation and forced the world onto their knees before and during world war 2
When the war ended, Hitler was in the hospital recovering from a chemical weapon attack. He found out that the war ended while he was in the hospital and he says in his autobiography that he was furious. He had believed all the propaganda that Germany was invincible and winning the war, so it was a shock when Germany surrendered in November 1918. Germany surrendered in large part because of a revolution that had broken out, and the Kaiser (emperor) had fled and was living with relatives in the Netherlands. A republic, the Weimar Republic, was formed- but it wasn't strong. Communists, who were inspired by the Bolsheviks in Russia, tried to overthrow the republic- they failed because German war veterans joined right-wing oriented "Freikorps" ("free corps") militias and fought to stop them. After these events, the Weimar government was understandably nervous about powerful extremist political parties. The German army, the Reichswehr ("national defense"), had a subsection dedicated to spying on political parties to watch for another revolt. Hitler, who stayed in the army after getting out of the hospital, was assigned to this section, and was ordered to spy on a far right-wing party called the "German Workers Party", which was based in Munich (where Hitler had lived for a time in his youth). Hitler attended the party's meetings at a beer hall (a kind of large Bavarian pub), and after a couple months, he joined the party when it became clear that he actually believed in the same things that they did. He quickly became the leader of the party. Then he reformed the German Workers Party into the "National Socialist German Workers Party", nicknamed "Nazi" for short (although Nazis hated that nickname). From there, the rest is history...
Well, Hitler did not join the Nazi regime. He was the General of the Germans. +++ He didn't "have to", and he was never a General although he was decorated for his WW1 army service. He chose to join the German Workers' Party, the forerunner of the Nazi Party (from its full German name) in 1919, and became leader of the latter in 1921. Once he became Chancellor of Germany, in its Weimar Republic days, in 1933 he soon established himself as the nation's dictator.
The Nazis never had an entire army of their own, but they had the German Army under their direction, and it was a very good army which was very difficult to beat. There is a tendency to confuse German and Nazi in World War 2, but not all Germans were Nazis, just as not all Americans are Democrats. In WW2 it was not even required that a German general be a member of the Nazi Party, and actually most of them were not.
They support the legalization of same-sex marriage in Luxembourg.
Simple answer: Yes. The German army in WWII regarded medics much the same as Americans did medics and navy corpsmen. Medics in the German army wore armlets with a red cross on a white background, were generally unarmed and were considered protected under the Geneva Conventions.
At approximately the same time, yes, but the German Army always took precedence. Hitler admitted to being a coward at sea, and I personally think that he did not fully appreciate the importance of air power.
Yes, they are one and the same work. "The Manifesto of the Communist Party" is the same work as "The Communist Manifesto." It simply is the full title of the work translated from the original German "Manifest der Communistischen Partei."
A "tyrant" --- which is derived from the same root as the word tyranny. the official title can be all sorts of things from Emperor, Czar, King, Queen, el Presidente, Supreme Ruler, General, or - as in the case of the head of state in North Korea - several titles at once: "Chairman of the Workers' Party of Korea", "Chairman of the Central Military Commission", "Chairman of the National Defence Commission", "Supreme Commander of the Korean People's Army", and presidium member of the "Politburo of the Workers' Party of Korea".
trade unions
trade unions