The Nazis were all given IQ tests before their war crimes trials. Hermann Goering scored the highest.
No. The Romans, and most of the ancient people for that matter, had a respect for the human body. Dissection of a human was strictly forbidden and even executed criminals were given a burial of some type.No. The Romans, and most of the ancient people for that matter, had a respect for the human body. Dissection of a human was strictly forbidden and even executed criminals were given a burial of some type.No. The Romans, and most of the ancient people for that matter, had a respect for the human body. Dissection of a human was strictly forbidden and even executed criminals were given a burial of some type.No. The Romans, and most of the ancient people for that matter, had a respect for the human body. Dissection of a human was strictly forbidden and even executed criminals were given a burial of some type.No. The Romans, and most of the ancient people for that matter, had a respect for the human body. Dissection of a human was strictly forbidden and even executed criminals were given a burial of some type.No. The Romans, and most of the ancient people for that matter, had a respect for the human body. Dissection of a human was strictly forbidden and even executed criminals were given a burial of some type.No. The Romans, and most of the ancient people for that matter, had a respect for the human body. Dissection of a human was strictly forbidden and even executed criminals were given a burial of some type.No. The Romans, and most of the ancient people for that matter, had a respect for the human body. Dissection of a human was strictly forbidden and even executed criminals were given a burial of some type.No. The Romans, and most of the ancient people for that matter, had a respect for the human body. Dissection of a human was strictly forbidden and even executed criminals were given a burial of some type.
Surname comes after their given name.
An Engineer
The nickname was given to German politicians who signed the armistice which ended the First World War. Hitler was against them because he believed that Germany should have carried on fighting and should have emerged victorious.
"Listen to your wife"
poo6o5p in my butthole234372537453475142.452342105. Alternative answer. The Nuremberg trials.
In post WW 2 Europe, Nuremberg Germany was the city where the allies put Nazi war criminals on trial. The trials exposed to the horror of most people, how many war crimes were committed and how many innocent civilians were put to death. The trials also exposed the Holocaust and the genocide of Jewish people in Europe during the war. Many Nazi's were given death sentences and long prison terms.
There were 13 Nuremberg trials held following World War II. The first and most famous trial, known as the International Military Tribunal, took place from 1945 to 1946 and focused on major war criminals. Subsequent trials, known as the Nuremberg Military Tribunals, addressed different aspects of Nazi crimes.
No. She was convicted but given a stay of execution because she was pregnant. Before that ran out, the Trials ended.
The trails held those leaders who committed or ordered war crimes to be held accountable. On October 1, 1946, the International Military Tribunal handed down its verdicts in the trials of 22 Nazi leaders: eleven were given the death penalty by hanging, three were acquitted, three were given life imprisonment and four were given imprisonment ranging from 10 to 20 years.
The Nuremberg trials demonstrated that individuals can be held accountable for committing atrocities against humanity, regardless of their rank or position. They also established the principles of individual responsibility for war crimes and crimes against humanity, and the importance of upholding international law in times of conflict.
those were the nuremburg trials.
They were criminals. Back then criminals weren't given luxuries like they are today. They were the lowest of the low and were treated as such.
The panel painting with inscriptions from Martin Luther's translation of The Bible that Albrecht Dürer present to Nuremberg town officials was The Four Apostles. This was Dürer's last great work, and was given to the city of Nuremberg in 1526.
There were a total of 24 individuals who were convicted in the Nuremberg trials. Out of these, 12 were sentenced to death, three were acquitted, and the remaining individuals received prison sentences ranging from 10 years to life.
15 trials: 3 times 40 trials: 8 times 75 trials: 15 times 120 trials: 24 times But don't bet on it.
No. He was found to be guilty of war crimes at the Nuremberg trials, after World War 2. However, he was not given a death sentence, but was sentenced to 20 years in prison. He ended up serving the full sentence. He is famous for having written a biography of the the Third Reich and of his time at Spandau Prison.