
Mature
Trial of the Major War Criminals Before the International Military Tribunal, Volume 11, Nuremburg 14 November 1945-1 October 1946
By VariousLength29h 5m
About this audiobook
Excerpt: "In April 1949, judgment was rendered in the last of the series of 12 Nuernberg war crimes trials which had begun in October 1946 and were held pursuant to Allied Control Council Law No. 10. Far from being of concern solely to lawyers, these trials are of especial interest to soldiers, historians, students of international affairs, and others. The defendants in these proceedings, charged with war crimes and other offenses against international penal law, were prominent figures in Hitler's Germany and included such outstanding diplomats and politicians as the State Secretary of the Foreign Office, von Weizsaecker, and cabinet ministers von Krosigk and Lammers; military leaders such as Field Marshals von Leeb, List, and von Kuechler; SS leaders such as Ohlendorf, Pohl, and Hildebrandt; industrialists such as Flick, Alfried Krupp, and the directors of I. G. Farben; and leading professional men such as the famous physician Gerhard Rose, and the jurist and Acting Minister of Justice, Schlegelberger. In view of the weight of the accusations and the far-flung activities of the defendants, and the extraordinary amount of official contemporaneous German documents introduced in evidence, the records of these trials constitute a major source of historical material covering many events of the fateful years 1933 (and even earlier) to 1945, in Germany and elsewhere in Europe. The Nuernberg trials under Law No. 10 were carried out under the direct authority of the Allied Control Council, as manifested in that law, which authorized the establishment of the Tribunals. The judicial machinery for the trials, including the Military Tribunals and the Office, Chief of Counsel for War Crimes, was prescribed by Military Government Ordinance No. 7 and was part of the occupation administration for the American zone, the Office of Military Government (OMGUS). Law No. 10, Ordinance No. 7, and other basic jurisdictional or administrative documents are printed in full hereinafter. The proceedings in these trials were conducted throughout in the German and English languages, and were recorded in full by stenographic notes, and by electrical sound recording of all oral proceedings. The 12 cases required over 1,200 days of court proceedings and the transcript of these proceedings exceeds 330,000 pages, exclusive of hundreds of document books, briefs, etc. Publication of all of this material, accordingly, was quite unfeasible. This series, however, contains the indictments, judgments, and other important portions of the record of the 12 cases, and it is believed that these materials give a fair picture of the trials, and as full and illuminating a picture as is possible within the space available. Copies of the entire record of the trials are available in the Library of Congress, the National Archives, and elsewhere. In some cases, due to time limitations, errors of one sort or another have crept into the translations which were available to the Tribunal. In other cases the same document appears in different trials, or even at different parts of the same trial, with variations in translation. For the most part these inconsistencies have been allowed to remain and only such errors as might cause misunderstanding have been corrected."
Audiobook details
GenreHistory
Length29 hrs 5 mins
Narrated byListen with 1,000+ voices
FormateBook with Audio
Publish dateSep 3, 2023
LanguageEnglish
Table of contents
1ONE HUNDRED AND SECOND DAY Monday, 8 April 1946
14Morning Session
2Morning Session
15Afternoon Session
3Afternoon Session
16ONE HUNDRED AND SEVENTH DAY Saturday, 13 April 1946: Morning Session
4ONE HUNDRED AND THIRD DAY Tuesday, 9 April 1946
17ONE HUNDRED AND EIGHTH DAY Monday, 15 April 1946
5Morning Session
18Morning Session
Show all chaptersShow less
6Afternoon Session
19Afternoon Session
7ONE HUNDRED AND FOURTH DAY Wednesday, 10 April 1946
20ONE HUNDRED AND NINTH DAY Tuesday, 16 April 1946
8Morning Session
21Morning Session
9Afternoon Session
22Afternoon Session
10ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTH DAY Thursday, 11 April 1946
23ONE HUNDRED AND TENTH DAY Wednesday, 17 April 1946
11Morning Session
24Morning Session
12Afternoon Session
25Afternoon Session
13ONE HUNDRED AND SIXTH DAY Friday, 12 April 1946