File:Gründung der Harzburger Front. Bad Harzburg 1931-10-11 NSDAP delegation, evangelical cathedral preacher Bruno Doehring, Korsemann Himmler Röhm Ulrich Hörauf Hühnlein (Göring) Narodowe Archiwum Cyfrowe 3 1 0 17 12230 3 1 33587.jpg

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English: The founding of the Harzburg Front (German: Gründung der Harzburger Front). Photo taken on October 11th, 1931 in Bad Harzburg showing:
  • Nazi Party members listening to an address by Bruno Doehring during a camp service at the founding of the Harzburg Front (Feldgottesdienst der Harzburger Front am 11. Oktober 1931 auf der Kaltental-Wiese, Bad Harzburg. Auf der Tribüne (Kanzel) der Berliner evangelische Domprediger Bruno Doehring):
    • Bruno Doehring (1879–1961), Lutheran preacher at the Berlin Cathedral, member of the German National People's Party, creating the 'stab in the back myth' in a sermon 1918
    • Gerret Korsemann (1895–1958), later SS and police general
    • Heinrich Himmler (1940–1945), national leader of SS (Reichsführer-SS) 1929–45
    • Viktor Lutze (1890–1943), Reichstag representative for Hannover-Braunschweig, later SA leader (1934–1943)
    • Ernst Röhm (1887–1934), Sturmabteilung (SA) chief 1931–34
    • Curt von Ulrich (1876–1946), later president of the Prussian Province of Saxony
    • Franz von Hörauf (1878–1957)
    • Adolf Hühnlein (1881–1942), later NSKK leader
    • (Hermann Göhring (1893–1946), Reichstag representative from Bavaria, later Minister President of Prussia and Supreme Commander of the Luftwaffe)
etc.
  • The Harzburg Front was a short-lived radical right-wing, anti-democratic political alliance in Weimar Germany, formed as an attempt to present a unified opposition to the government of Chancellor Heinrich Brüning. It was a coalition of the national conservative German National People's Party (DNVP) under millionaire press-baron Alfred Hugenberg with Adolf Hitler's National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSDAP), the leadership of Der Stahlhelm paramilitary veterans' association, the Agricultural League (Reichs-Landbund) and the Pan-German League (Alldeutscher Verband) organizations. The Front formed on Sunday, 11 October 1931 at a convention of representatives of the varying political groupings styling themselves the "national opposition" at the spa town of Bad Harzburg in the Free State of Brunswick, where the NSDAP's Dietrich Klagges had just been elected State Minister of the Interior. Negotiations between the NSDAP, the DNVP and Stahlhelm over a shared presidential candidate broke down in February 1932.
Public domain photo according to Narodowe Archiwum Cyfrowe, the national archive of Poland.
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institution QS:P195,Q11789677

Wydawnictwo Prasowe Kraków-Warszawa

https://www.szukajwarchiwach.gov.pl/en/jednostka/-/jednostka/9395059/obiekty/560924
Author Robert Sennecke, Internationaler Illustrations-Verlag Berlin SW 11
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This image shows (or resembles) a symbol that was used by the National Socialist (NSDAP/Nazi) government of Germany or an organization closely associated to it, or another party which has been banned by the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany.

The use of insignia of organizations that have been banned in Germany (like the Nazi swastika or the arrow cross) may also be illegal in Austria, Hungary, Poland, Czech Republic, France, Brazil, Israel, Ukraine, Russia and other countries, depending on context. In Germany, the applicable law is paragraph 86a of the criminal code (StGB), in Poland – Art. 256 of the criminal code (Dz.U. 1997 nr 88 poz. 553).

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