Nuremberg Laws: Difference between revisions

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== See also ==
== See also ==
*[[Israel]] - On topics such as marriages between jews and non-jews as well as rights for non-jews in Israel
*[[Israel]] - On topics such as marriages between jews and non-jews as well as rights for non-jews in Israel
*[[Holocaust_motivations#Holocaust_revisionist_views_on_motivations_for_the_camps_and_deportations|Holocaust motivations: Holocaust revisionist views on motivations for the camps and deportations]]
*[[Holohoax_motivations#Holohoax_revisionist_views_on_motivations_for_the_camps_and_deportations|Holohoax motivations: Holohoax revisionist views on motivations for the camps and deportations]]
*[[jewish_influence#Germany|jewish influence: Germany]]
*[[jewish_influence#Germany|jewish influence: Germany]]
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*[[More German than the Germans]]
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* [[Mulattoes]]
[[Category:Anti-Semitism]]
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[[Category:Ethnicities, nationalities, and races]]
[[Category:Ethnicities, nationalities, and races]]
[[de:Blutschutzgesetz]]
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Latest revision as of 02:42, 29 February 2024

The Nuremberg Laws were two anti-Semitic 1935 laws in National Socialist Germany, approved at a NSDAP convention in Nuremberg. One deprived jews of German citizenship. The other forbade marriage or sexual relations between jews and โ€œcitizens of German or kindred blood."

There were also later supplementary decrees and restrictions. The first defined jews as persons with at least one jewish grandparent.

Later, two basic jewish categories were established. A full jew was anyone with three jewish grandparents. Mixed jews (Mischlinge) were eventually divided into two classes. First-degree mixed jews had two jewish grandparents, but did not practice Judaism and did not have a jewish spouse. Second-degree mixed jews had only one jewish grandparent.

See also