To punish them for international aggression.
No, but some Nazi leaders were put on trial and convicted of war crimes.
The Nazi leaders were tried in the Nuremberg Trials and the majority of them were convicted and either put into prison for a long time or executed. Some of them escaped being executed by swallowing poisoned capsules. You can read about the trials on the link below.
Top Nazi officials were put on trial in Nuremberg for crimes against Humanity, and conspiracy
The Law Against The Formation Of Political Parties was passed on the 14th of July 1933. All parties other than the Nazis were banned and their leaders put in prison.
If you resisted the Nazi government, you would be taken and killed, or put into a camp.
nuremburg
Nuremburg Trials.
Nuremberg war trials
The Allies put 24 surviving Nazi leaders on trial for crimes against humanity, crimes against the peace, and war crimes.
Nuremberg
Nurenburg. The trials are known as The Nurenburg Trials.
The Nazis had to reatreat in 1969. Put Nazi leaders on trial in U.S. federal court. A
In Nuremberg (Bavaria).
Nuremberg
No, but some Nazi leaders were put on trial and convicted of war crimes.
11 were hanged and one (Goering) comitted suicide the night before his execution.
Final Solution: Where Jews from all over Europe were moved into death camps to be either worked to death or killed straight away. In camps such as Auschwitz, the people were killed through methods like gassing in ovens. However, the Nazis never kept a record of the Jews they killed, so we can only estimate the number of deaths. Death camps were constructed for one purpose- the mass murder of Jews.Nuremberg trials- After Germany lost the war, the allies put all the Nazi leaders (that were still alive) on trail in Nuremberg. The trials were held in Nuremberg because the Nazis had made a set of anti-Jewish laws called the 'Nuremberg laws' so it was fitting that the Nazi leaders would be sentenced here. The Judges were from Britain, France, America and Russia (the Great Alliance) and the maximum sentence they could impose was death. 20 leaders were put on trail; all pleaded 'not guilty'.