Trial of the Major War Criminals , Dachau Trials , Auschwitz Trial , Belsen Trial , Frankfurt Auschwitz Trials , Mauthausen-Gusen camp trials , Ravensbrück Trial , Doctors' Trial , Milch Trial , Judges' Trial , Pohl Trial , Flick Trial , IG Farben Trial , Hostages Trial , RuSHA Trial , Einsatzgruppen Trial , Krupp Trial , Ministries Trial , High Command Trial .
The Nuremberg trials were military tribunals conducted by the Allied Forces after the end of WW2. These trials were held for prominent members of Nazi Germany who were accused of war crimes.
After the surrender of Germany in 1945 Allies arranged Nuremberg trials to try war criminals. These trials were held in Nuremberg, Germany.
Nuremberg is in Germany
October 1st, 1946
The trials were held in the city of Nuremberg, Germany, from 1945 to 1946, at the Palace of Justice.
Hjalmar Schacht was acquitted at the Nuremberg trials and was not sentenced to death.
In Nuremberg, Germany (Bavaria) and were in 1945-46.
The Nuremberg trials were significant because Nuremberg was the city in Germany where the Nuremberg Laws were created, which deprived Jews of German citizenship. The trials were held in Nuremberg because it was almost like a punishment for the Nazis.
Nuremberg , Germany .
Nuremberg, Germany. That is why they are called "Nuremberg " trials.
There were a total of 12 Nuremberg trials held after World War II. The most notable was the International Military Tribunal, which took place from 1945 to 1946 and prosecuted key leaders of Nazi Germany. Subsequent trials, known as the Nuremberg Military Tribunals, addressed various categories of war crimes and were conducted between 1946 and 1949, involving various defendants including doctors, industrialists, and military officials.
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