During the Nuremberg Trials, 11 of the highest Nazi officials were charged with "crimes against humanity" - literally a charge made up by other governments because no available law could describe the atrocities they had committed. 7 were convicted and sentenced to death. The night before his execution, Hermann Goring committed suicide. 3 of the 6 were killed by firing squad, and the other 3 were hung. After they were killed and pronounced dead, they were loaded on to boxcars and taken to Dachau, the very first German concentration camp. Their bodies were forced into the hideous crematoriums they had ordered so many innocents into, and they were burnt to ash. Their ashes were thrown in a nearby river so as to prevent anyone from ever making a memorial to these monsters.
They were called the Nuremberg trials. http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/nuremberg/nuremberg.htm
The trials are known as the Nuremberg War Crimes Trials.
Nurenberg Trials
Nuremberg
The trials were held to posecute the Nazi war criminals for war crimes.
The Nuremburg trials were trials meant to find men guilty or innocent of War Crimes. The people involved were the Nazi war criminals and Allied judges.
The Nuremberg Trials...
Japanese and Nazi war criminals for "Crimes Against Humanity" .
Prominent Nazis were tried after World War 2, in the city of Nürnberg (Nuremberg). The Nazis did not exist in WW1. (Although Hitler served in the German army.)
Nuremburg War Trials .
The Nuremberg trials prosecuted the Nazi war criminals of World War 2.
The Nazi war criminals were tried at the Nuremberg Trials to hold them accountable for committing atrocities during World War II, to establish legal precedents for prosecuting individuals responsible for war crimes, and to promote justice and reconciliation after the war.
The trials were held to posecute the Nazi war criminals for war crimes.
False. The Nuremberg Trials specifically focused on prosecuting German war criminals after World War II, while the Tokyo Trials were held to address the actions of Japanese war criminals. Both trials sought to hold individuals accountable for crimes against humanity and violations of the rules of war.
After the surrender of Germany in 1945 Allies arranged Nuremberg trials to try war criminals. These trials were held in Nuremberg, Germany.
Allan A. Ryan has written: 'Quiet neighbors' -- subject(s): Atrocities, War crime trials, War crimes, War criminals, World War, 1939-1945
Norman E. Tutorow has written: 'War crimes, war criminals, and war crimes trials' -- subject(s): Atrocities, Bibliography, War crime trials, War crimes, War criminals, World War, 1939-1945 'The governor' -- subject(s): Biography, Businesspeople, Governors, Legislators, Politics and government, United States, United States. Congress. Senate
Nazi War criminals
War criminals. (Not those involved in the Holocaust)
There were a number of individual trials, but the most famous would be the Nuremberg trial where a number of Nazi war criminals were tried.
Nuremberg is in the southern region of Germany and it was the site of the "Nuremberg Trials" - the trial and sentencing of Nazi war criminals.