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That particular law was concerned with introducing savage penalties for sex between Aryans and Jews.
The German Government began its involvement with the Nuremberg Laws. The first of which was the "Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honor" which forbade intermarriage between Germans and Jews, and the second called the "Reich Citizenship Law" which stripped all Jews of citizenship. This was a formal decleration in which the German government deprived individuals of their rights and set them apart as a second class or nationals. The rest of the Holocaust simply fell into place because it was now "legal".
Academy for German Law was created in 1933.
German Law Journal was created in 2000.
protection and use of the law.
ThThese laws were passed on September 15, 1935 until 1938. The first was called The Reich Citizenship Law, which declared that Jews were no longer citizens in Germany. The second law was called The Law for the Protection of German Blood and Honor, which did not allow inter-marriage between Jews and 'Aryans.' Their main purpose was to allow for the legalized mistreatment of Jews on a systematically racial basis. Now the Jews themselves could be treated unequally because the laws assured that they were not citizens, so they had no authority. This was part of Hitler's strategy to implement the Final Solution. As the Jews gradually became more isolated, the violence against them increased more and more, until this destruction became known as the Holocaust.
Follow the law and do what you are supposed to.
Love Honor and Obey - The Law 1935 was released on: USA: 29 April 1935
German Yearbook of International Law was created in 1948.
Any German Law in particular? Here's a fun one: it is a law for regulating and labeling beef. It was the longest German word in 1999:RindfleischetikettierungsüberwachungsaufgabenübertragungsgesetzAWigman
The most important were the so-called Nuremberg Laws of 1935. There were two of them, "The Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honour", and "The Reich Citizenship Law". The first defined when you were considered a Jew and forbade marriage and sexual relations between Jews and non-Jewish people. The second law took away all civic rights from Jews and prohibited them to hold any public office or Government employment and later, a number of other professions. A third law was the "Law for the Protection of the Hereditary Health of the German People", aimed at further preventing any effort at a "mixed" marriage. A fourth was the "Namensänderungsverordnung" (Name Change Law) that forced Jews with only German first names to add another, typically Jewish first name that made them easily identifiable as Jews.
Equal Protection under the law is just what it sounds like: Everyone has a fair chance under the law until proven guilty.