1. Reichsflaggengesetz: if one owned a German flag he/she was forced to put the Nazi's symbol on it.
2. Civilianity: A German or non-Jew could not marry, or have anyting to do except violence with Jews.
3. Blood: If one had any Jewish blood or if one of his/her parents were Jewish he/she could lose their life because of that. If one had German blood or any other but Jewish he had a life.
4. If one were out after the curfew, they would die especially if they were Jewish.
PS: number four is technically not one of the 3 laws but its was still cruelly important.
The Nuremberg laws were a set of anti-sematic laws passed by the Nazi Germans. The laws were introduced and accepted during the Nuremberg Rally of 1935.
They were passed by acclaim at a meeting of the Reichstag in Nuremberg in September 1935.
1935
The Nuremberg Laws of 1935 were antisemitic laws in Nazi Germany which were introduced at the annual Nazi Party rally in Nuremberg. The laws classified people as German if all four of their grandparents were of "German or kindred blood", while people were classified as Jews if they descended from three or four Jewish grandparents. A person with one or two Jewish grandparents was a Mischling, a crossbreed, of "mixed blood".The Nuremberg Laws deprived Jews of citizenship and prohibited marriage between Jews and other Germans.
September 1935. Please see related question below for more detail.
it was proposed by hitler and he and a group of other nazi party members wrote the drafts. when he was satisfied, hitler approved them and they were announced to the germans.
It is believed that the Nuremberg Laws ended after the end of the Third Reich. It mostly likely occurred shortly following the collapse of the Nazi's surrender and Hitler's suicide.
The Nuremberg Laws were passed in 1935.
The Nuremburg laws were passed in 1935 in Germany.
The Nuremberg Laws were two laws which did not include the Jews in German life. The Nuremberg laws stripped the Jewish people of their rights . These laws were first declared at the annual Nazi rally held in Nuremberg in 1935.
The Nuremberg Laws were introduced by the Nazi Party in Germany on September 15, 1935. These laws aimed to institutionalize racial discrimination and persecution against Jews in Nazi Germany.
Germany, 1935.
No. The Nuremberg Laws were passed in 1935 in Germany, and the yellow star decree in Germany was in 1941.
Germany was a one-party state when the Nuremberg Laws were passed (1935). Only Nazi party nominees were allowed to stand for election. The Nuremberg Laws were not put to the vote. They were read out, the Nazi Reichstag cheered wildly and that was that. 'Passed by acclaim' was the expression used.
The Nuremberg Laws were anti-Semitic laws passed by Nazi Germany in 1935, which deprived German Jews of their rights and citizenship. The Nuremberg Trials, held after World War II in 1945-1946, were a series of military tribunals in which major war criminals from Nazi Germany were prosecuted for crimes against humanity.
1935 (September).
The Nuremberg Laws were proclaimed in September 1935. Persecution of the German Jews had already started in 1933. Please see related question.
The Nuremberg laws were passed in Germany.
The Nuremberg Laws were a set of antisemitic laws implemented in Nazi Germany in 1935. These laws stripped Jews of their civil rights and targeted them for discrimination. The laws laid the groundwork for further persecution and eventually the Holocaust.