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Historikerstreit - Wikipedia
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href="#Immediate_background"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">3</span> <span>Immediate background</span> </div> </a> <button aria-controls="toc-Immediate_background-sublist" class="cdx-button cdx-button--weight-quiet cdx-button--icon-only vector-toc-toggle"> <span class="vector-icon mw-ui-icon-wikimedia-expand"></span> <span>Toggle Immediate background subsection</span> </button> <ul id="toc-Immediate_background-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> <li id="toc-"Between_Myth_and_Revisionism"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"Between_Myth_and_Revisionism""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">3.1</span> <span>"Between Myth and Revisionism"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"Between_Myth_and_Revisionism"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-Bitburg_controversy" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#Bitburg_controversy"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">3.2</span> <span>Bitburg controversy</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-Bitburg_controversy-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"History_In_A_Land_Without_History"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"History_In_A_Land_Without_History""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">3.3</span> <span>"History In A Land Without History"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"History_In_A_Land_Without_History"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-Zweierlei_Untergang" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#Zweierlei_Untergang"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">3.4</span> <span><i>Zweierlei Untergang</i></span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-Zweierlei_Untergang-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-Historikerstreit_begins,_June_1986" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-1"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#Historikerstreit_begins,_June_1986"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">4</span> <span><i>Historikerstreit</i> begins, June 1986</span> </div> </a> <button aria-controls="toc-Historikerstreit_begins,_June_1986-sublist" class="cdx-button cdx-button--weight-quiet cdx-button--icon-only vector-toc-toggle"> <span class="vector-icon mw-ui-icon-wikimedia-expand"></span> <span>Toggle <i>Historikerstreit</i> begins, June 1986 subsection</span> </button> <ul id="toc-Historikerstreit_begins,_June_1986-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> <li id="toc-"The_Past_That_Will_Not_Pass"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"The_Past_That_Will_Not_Pass""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">4.1</span> <span>"The Past That Will Not Pass"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"The_Past_That_Will_Not_Pass"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"A_Kind_of_Damage_Control"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"A_Kind_of_Damage_Control""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">4.2</span> <span>"A Kind of Damage Control"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"A_Kind_of_Damage_Control"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"The_New_Myth_of_State"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"The_New_Myth_of_State""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">4.3</span> <span>"The New Myth of State"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"The_New_Myth_of_State"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"The_Age_of_Tyrants"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"The_Age_of_Tyrants""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">4.4</span> <span>"The Age of Tyrants"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"The_Age_of_Tyrants"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-Nolte's_letter_to_Die_Zeit,_1_August_1986" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#Nolte's_letter_to_Die_Zeit,_1_August_1986"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">4.5</span> <span>Nolte's letter to <i>Die Zeit</i>, 1 August 1986</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-Nolte's_letter_to_Die_Zeit,_1_August_1986-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-Habermas's_letter_to_the_FAZ,_11_August_1986" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#Habermas's_letter_to_the_FAZ,_11_August_1986"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">4.6</span> <span>Habermas's letter to the <i>FAZ</i>, 11 August 1986</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-Habermas's_letter_to_the_FAZ,_11_August_1986-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-Stürmer's_letter_to_the_FAZ,_16_August_1986" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#Stürmer's_letter_to_the_FAZ,_16_August_1986"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">4.7</span> <span>Stürmer's letter to the <i>FAZ</i>, 16 August 1986</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-Stürmer's_letter_to_the_FAZ,_16_August_1986-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"Encumbered_Remembrance"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"Encumbered_Remembrance""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">4.8</span> <span>"Encumbered Remembrance"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"Encumbered_Remembrance"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-Bracher's_letter_to_the_FAZ,_6_September_1986" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#Bracher's_letter_to_the_FAZ,_6_September_1986"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">4.9</span> <span>Bracher's letter to the <i>FAZ</i>, 6 September 1986</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-Bracher's_letter_to_the_FAZ,_6_September_1986-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"The_Impoverished_Practice_of_Insinuation"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"The_Impoverished_Practice_of_Insinuation""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">4.10</span> <span>"The Impoverished Practice of Insinuation"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"The_Impoverished_Practice_of_Insinuation"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"The_Morality_of_History”" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"The_Morality_of_History”"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">4.11</span> <span>"The Morality of History”</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"The_Morality_of_History”-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-Historikerstreit,_autumn_1986" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-1"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#Historikerstreit,_autumn_1986"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">5</span> <span><i>Historikerstreit</i>, autumn 1986</span> </div> </a> <button aria-controls="toc-Historikerstreit,_autumn_1986-sublist" class="cdx-button cdx-button--weight-quiet cdx-button--icon-only vector-toc-toggle"> <span class="vector-icon mw-ui-icon-wikimedia-expand"></span> <span>Toggle <i>Historikerstreit</i>, autumn 1986 subsection</span> </button> <ul id="toc-Historikerstreit,_autumn_1986-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> <li id="toc-"Hitler_Should_Not_Be_Repressed_By_Stalin_and_Pol_Pot"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"Hitler_Should_Not_Be_Repressed_By_Stalin_and_Pol_Pot""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">5.1</span> <span>"Hitler Should Not Be Repressed By Stalin and Pol Pot"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"Hitler_Should_Not_Be_Repressed_By_Stalin_and_Pol_Pot"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"Questions_We_Have_To_Face"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"Questions_We_Have_To_Face""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">5.2</span> <span>"Questions We Have To Face"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"Questions_We_Have_To_Face"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"A_Searching_Image_of_the_Past"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"A_Searching_Image_of_the_Past""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">5.3</span> <span>"A Searching Image of the Past"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"A_Searching_Image_of_the_Past"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"The_Search_for_the_'Lost_History'?"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"The_Search_for_the_'Lost_History'?""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">5.4</span> <span>"The Search for the 'Lost History'?"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"The_Search_for_the_'Lost_History'?"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"The_New_Historical_Consciousness"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"The_New_Historical_Consciousness""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">5.5</span> <span>"The New Historical Consciousness"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"The_New_Historical_Consciousness"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"Where_the_Roads_Part"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"Where_the_Roads_Part""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">5.6</span> <span>"Where the Roads Part"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"Where_the_Roads_Part"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"The_New_Auschwitz_Lie"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"The_New_Auschwitz_Lie""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">5.7</span> <span>"The New Auschwitz Lie"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"The_New_Auschwitz_Lie"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-Thirty-Sixth_Conference_of_German_Historians,_Trier,_October_8,_1986" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#Thirty-Sixth_Conference_of_German_Historians,_Trier,_October_8,_1986"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">5.8</span> <span>Thirty-Sixth Conference of German Historians, Trier, October 8, 1986</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-Thirty-Sixth_Conference_of_German_Historians,_Trier,_October_8,_1986-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"Under_the_Domination_of_Suspicion"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"Under_the_Domination_of_Suspicion""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">5.9</span> <span>"Under the Domination of Suspicion"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"Under_the_Domination_of_Suspicion"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"Auschwitz,_an_Asiatic_Deed"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"Auschwitz,_an_Asiatic_Deed""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">5.10</span> <span>"Auschwitz, an Asiatic Deed"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"Auschwitz,_an_Asiatic_Deed"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"Standing_Things_On_Their_Head"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"Standing_Things_On_Their_Head""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">5.11</span> <span>"Standing Things On Their Head"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"Standing_Things_On_Their_Head"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-Interview_with_Andreas_Hillgruber,_31_October_1986" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#Interview_with_Andreas_Hillgruber,_31_October_1986"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">5.12</span> <span>Interview with Andreas Hillgruber, 31 October 1986</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-Interview_with_Andreas_Hillgruber,_31_October_1986-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"On_the_Public_Use_of_History"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"On_the_Public_Use_of_History""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">5.13</span> <span>"On the Public Use of History"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"On_the_Public_Use_of_History"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"Eternally_in_the_Shadow_of_Hitler?"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"Eternally_in_the_Shadow_of_Hitler?""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">5.14</span> <span>"Eternally in the Shadow of Hitler?"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"Eternally_in_the_Shadow_of_Hitler?"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"Not_A_Concluding_Remark"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"Not_A_Concluding_Remark""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">5.15</span> <span>"Not A Concluding Remark"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"Not_A_Concluding_Remark"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-“Makeup_Artists_are_Creating_a_New_Identity”" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#“Makeup_Artists_are_Creating_a_New_Identity”"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">5.16</span> <span>“Makeup Artists are Creating a New Identity”</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-“Makeup_Artists_are_Creating_a_New_Identity”-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"He_Who_Wants_To_Escape_The_Abyss"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"He_Who_Wants_To_Escape_The_Abyss""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">5.17</span> <span>"He Who Wants To Escape The Abyss"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"He_Who_Wants_To_Escape_The_Abyss"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"How_Much_History_Weighs"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"How_Much_History_Weighs""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">5.18</span> <span>"How Much History Weighs"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"How_Much_History_Weighs"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-Hillgruber's_letter_to_the_FAZ,_29_November_1986" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#Hillgruber's_letter_to_the_FAZ,_29_November_1986"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">5.19</span> <span>Hillgruber's letter to the <i>FAZ</i>, 29 November 1986</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-Hillgruber's_letter_to_the_FAZ,_29_November_1986-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-Löwenthal's_letter_to_the_FAZ,_29_November_1986" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#Löwenthal's_letter_to_the_FAZ,_29_November_1986"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">5.20</span> <span>Löwenthal's letter to the <i>FAZ</i>, 29 November 1986</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-Löwenthal's_letter_to_the_FAZ,_29_November_1986-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-Historikerstreit_in_the_winter_of_1986–87" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-1"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#Historikerstreit_in_the_winter_of_1986–87"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">6</span> <span><i>Historikerstreit</i> in the winter of 1986–87</span> </div> </a> <button aria-controls="toc-Historikerstreit_in_the_winter_of_1986–87-sublist" class="cdx-button cdx-button--weight-quiet cdx-button--icon-only vector-toc-toggle"> <span class="vector-icon mw-ui-icon-wikimedia-expand"></span> <span>Toggle <i>Historikerstreit</i> in the winter of 1986–87 subsection</span> </button> <ul id="toc-Historikerstreit_in_the_winter_of_1986–87-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> <li id="toc-"Neither_Denial_Nor_Forgetfulness_Will_Free_Us"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"Neither_Denial_Nor_Forgetfulness_Will_Free_Us""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">6.1</span> <span>"Neither Denial Nor Forgetfulness Will Free Us"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"Neither_Denial_Nor_Forgetfulness_Will_Free_Us"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"What_May_Not,_Cannot_Be"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"What_May_Not,_Cannot_Be""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">6.2</span> <span>"What May Not, Cannot Be"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"What_May_Not,_Cannot_Be"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"Jürgen_Habermas,_Karl-Heinz_Janßen,_and_the_Enlightenment_in_the_Year_1986"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"Jürgen_Habermas,_Karl-Heinz_Janßen,_and_the_Enlightenment_in_the_Year_1986""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">6.3</span> <span>"Jürgen Habermas, Karl-Heinz Janßen, and the Enlightenment in the Year 1986"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"Jürgen_Habermas,_Karl-Heinz_Janßen,_and_the_Enlightenment_in_the_Year_1986"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"The_Nazi_Era-A_Case_of_Normal_Tyranny?"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"The_Nazi_Era-A_Case_of_Normal_Tyranny?""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">6.4</span> <span>"The Nazi Era-A Case of Normal Tyranny?"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"The_Nazi_Era-A_Case_of_Normal_Tyranny?"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"Only_by_Facing_the_Past_Can_We_Be_Free"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"Only_by_Facing_the_Past_Can_We_Be_Free""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">6.5</span> <span>"Only by Facing the Past Can We Be Free"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"Only_by_Facing_the_Past_Can_We_Be_Free"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-"Those_Who_Refused_to_Go_Along"" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#"Those_Who_Refused_to_Go_Along""> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">6.6</span> <span>"Those Who Refused to Go Along"</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-"Those_Who_Refused_to_Go_Along"-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-“On_the_Historikerstreit”" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#“On_the_Historikerstreit”"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">6.7</span> <span>“On the <i>Historikerstreit</i>”</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-“On_the_Historikerstreit”-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-Habermas's_Note_of_23_February_1987" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#Habermas's_Note_of_23_February_1987"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">6.8</span> <span>Habermas's Note of 23 February 1987</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-Habermas's_Note_of_23_February_1987-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-Nolte's_Note_of_15_April_1987" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#Nolte's_Note_of_15_April_1987"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">6.9</span> <span>Nolte's Note of 15 April 1987</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-Nolte's_Note_of_15_April_1987-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-Fest_Postscript,_21_April_1987" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#Fest_Postscript,_21_April_1987"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">6.10</span> <span>Fest Postscript, 21 April 1987</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-Fest_Postscript,_21_April_1987-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-The_controversy_over_Nolte's_thesis" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#The_controversy_over_Nolte's_thesis"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">6.11</span> <span>The controversy over Nolte's thesis</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-The_controversy_over_Nolte's_thesis-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-Entsorgung_der_deutschen_Vergangenheit?_(1988)" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#Entsorgung_der_deutschen_Vergangenheit?_(1988)"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">6.12</span> <span><i>Entsorgung der deutschen Vergangenheit?</i> (1988)</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-Entsorgung_der_deutschen_Vergangenheit?_(1988)-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-Der_europäische_Bürgerkrieg_(1987)" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#Der_europäische_Bürgerkrieg_(1987)"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">6.13</span> <span><i>Der europäische Bürgerkrieg</i> (1987)</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-Der_europäische_Bürgerkrieg_(1987)-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-Views_from_outside_Germany" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-1"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#Views_from_outside_Germany"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">7</span> <span>Views from outside Germany</span> </div> </a> <button aria-controls="toc-Views_from_outside_Germany-sublist" class="cdx-button cdx-button--weight-quiet cdx-button--icon-only vector-toc-toggle"> <span class="vector-icon mw-ui-icon-wikimedia-expand"></span> <span>Toggle Views from outside Germany subsection</span> </button> <ul id="toc-Views_from_outside_Germany-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> <li id="toc-Contemporaneous_views" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#Contemporaneous_views"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">7.1</span> <span>Contemporaneous views</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-Contemporaneous_views-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-Later_views" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-2"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#Later_views"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">7.2</span> <span>Later views</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-Later_views-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-See_also" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-1"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#See_also"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">8</span> <span>See also</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-See_also-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-References" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-1"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#References"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">9</span> <span>References</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-References-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-Bibliography" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-1"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#Bibliography"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">10</span> <span>Bibliography</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-Bibliography-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> <li id="toc-External_links" class="vector-toc-list-item vector-toc-level-1"> <a class="vector-toc-link" href="#External_links"> <div class="vector-toc-text"> <span class="vector-toc-numb">11</span> <span>External links</span> </div> </a> <ul id="toc-External_links-sublist" class="vector-toc-list"> </ul> </li> </ul> </div> </div> </nav> </div> </div> <div class="mw-content-container"> <main id="content" class="mw-body"> <header class="mw-body-header vector-page-titlebar"> <nav aria-label="Contents" class="vector-toc-landmark"> <div id="vector-page-titlebar-toc" class="vector-dropdown vector-page-titlebar-toc vector-button-flush-left" > <input type="checkbox" id="vector-page-titlebar-toc-checkbox" role="button" aria-haspopup="true" data-event-name="ui.dropdown-vector-page-titlebar-toc" class="vector-dropdown-checkbox " aria-label="Toggle the table of contents" > <label id="vector-page-titlebar-toc-label" for="vector-page-titlebar-toc-checkbox" class="vector-dropdown-label cdx-button cdx-button--fake-button cdx-button--fake-button--enabled cdx-button--weight-quiet cdx-button--icon-only " aria-hidden="true" ><span class="vector-icon mw-ui-icon-listBullet mw-ui-icon-wikimedia-listBullet"></span> <span class="vector-dropdown-label-text">Toggle the table of contents</span> </label> <div class="vector-dropdown-content"> <div id="vector-page-titlebar-toc-unpinned-container" class="vector-unpinned-container"> </div> </div> </div> </nav> <h1 id="firstHeading" class="firstHeading mw-first-heading"><i>Historikerstreit</i></h1> <div id="p-lang-btn" class="vector-dropdown mw-portlet mw-portlet-lang" > <input type="checkbox" id="p-lang-btn-checkbox" role="button" aria-haspopup="true" data-event-name="ui.dropdown-p-lang-btn" class="vector-dropdown-checkbox mw-interlanguage-selector" aria-label="Go to an article in another language. Available in 15 languages" > <label id="p-lang-btn-label" for="p-lang-btn-checkbox" class="vector-dropdown-label cdx-button cdx-button--fake-button cdx-button--fake-button--enabled cdx-button--weight-quiet cdx-button--action-progressive mw-portlet-lang-heading-15" aria-hidden="true" ><span class="vector-icon mw-ui-icon-language-progressive mw-ui-icon-wikimedia-language-progressive"></span> <span class="vector-dropdown-label-text">15 languages</span> </label> <div class="vector-dropdown-content"> <div class="vector-menu-content"> <ul class="vector-menu-content-list"> <li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-ar mw-list-item"><a href="https://ar.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D9%87%D9%8A%D8%B3%D8%AA%D9%88%D8%B1%D9%8A%D9%83%D8%B1_%D8%B4%D8%AA%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%8A%D8%AA" title="هيستوريكر شترايت – Arabic" lang="ar" hreflang="ar" data-title="هيستوريكر شترايت" data-language-autonym="العربية" data-language-local-name="Arabic" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>العربية</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-ca mw-list-item"><a href="https://ca.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historikerstreit" title="Historikerstreit – Catalan" lang="ca" hreflang="ca" data-title="Historikerstreit" data-language-autonym="Català" data-language-local-name="Catalan" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Català</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-de mw-list-item"><a href="https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historikerstreit" title="Historikerstreit – German" lang="de" hreflang="de" data-title="Historikerstreit" data-language-autonym="Deutsch" data-language-local-name="German" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Deutsch</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-es mw-list-item"><a href="https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historikerstreit" title="Historikerstreit – Spanish" lang="es" hreflang="es" data-title="Historikerstreit" data-language-autonym="Español" data-language-local-name="Spanish" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Español</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-fa mw-list-item"><a href="https://fa.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D8%AF%D8%B9%D9%88%D8%A7%DB%8C_%D8%AA%D8%A7%D8%B1%DB%8C%D8%AE_%D9%86%DA%AF%D8%A7%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%86" title="دعوای تاریخ نگاران – Persian" lang="fa" hreflang="fa" data-title="دعوای تاریخ نگاران" data-language-autonym="فارسی" data-language-local-name="Persian" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>فارسی</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-fr mw-list-item"><a href="https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historikerstreit" title="Historikerstreit – French" lang="fr" hreflang="fr" data-title="Historikerstreit" data-language-autonym="Français" data-language-local-name="French" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Français</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-ko mw-list-item"><a href="https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%97%AD%EC%82%AC%EA%B0%80_%EB%85%BC%EC%9F%81" title="역사가 논쟁 – Korean" lang="ko" hreflang="ko" data-title="역사가 논쟁" data-language-autonym="한국어" data-language-local-name="Korean" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>한국어</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-it mw-list-item"><a href="https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historikerstreit" title="Historikerstreit – Italian" lang="it" hreflang="it" data-title="Historikerstreit" data-language-autonym="Italiano" data-language-local-name="Italian" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Italiano</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-he mw-list-item"><a href="https://he.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D7%A4%D7%95%D7%9C%D7%9E%D7%95%D7%A1_%D7%94%D7%94%D7%99%D7%A1%D7%98%D7%95%D7%A8%D7%99%D7%95%D7%A0%D7%99%D7%9D" title="פולמוס ההיסטוריונים – Hebrew" lang="he" hreflang="he" data-title="פולמוס ההיסטוריונים" data-language-autonym="עברית" data-language-local-name="Hebrew" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>עברית</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-lv mw-list-item"><a href="https://lv.wikipedia.org/wiki/V%C4%93sturnieku_str%C4%ABds" title="Vēsturnieku strīds – Latvian" lang="lv" hreflang="lv" data-title="Vēsturnieku strīds" data-language-autonym="Latviešu" data-language-local-name="Latvian" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Latviešu</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-nl mw-list-item"><a href="https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historikerstreit" title="Historikerstreit – Dutch" lang="nl" hreflang="nl" data-title="Historikerstreit" data-language-autonym="Nederlands" data-language-local-name="Dutch" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Nederlands</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-ru mw-list-item"><a href="https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%98%D1%81%D1%82%D0%BE%D1%80%D0%B8%D1%87%D0%B5%D1%81%D0%BA%D0%B8%D0%B9_%D0%B4%D0%B8%D1%81%D0%BF%D1%83%D1%82_(%D0%93%D0%B5%D1%80%D0%BC%D0%B0%D0%BD%D0%B8%D1%8F)" title="Исторический диспут (Германия) – Russian" lang="ru" hreflang="ru" data-title="Исторический диспут (Германия)" data-language-autonym="Русский" data-language-local-name="Russian" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Русский</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-simple mw-list-item"><a href="https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historikerstreit" title="Historikerstreit – Simple English" lang="en-simple" hreflang="en-simple" data-title="Historikerstreit" data-language-autonym="Simple English" data-language-local-name="Simple English" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Simple English</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-fi mw-list-item"><a href="https://fi.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historikerstreit" title="Historikerstreit – Finnish" lang="fi" hreflang="fi" data-title="Historikerstreit" data-language-autonym="Suomi" data-language-local-name="Finnish" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Suomi</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-sv mw-list-item"><a href="https://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tyska_historikerstriden" title="Tyska historikerstriden – Swedish" lang="sv" hreflang="sv" data-title="Tyska historikerstriden" 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class="mw-body-content"><div class="mw-content-ltr mw-parser-output" lang="en" dir="ltr"><div class="shortdescription nomobile noexcerpt noprint searchaux" style="display:none">German debate on Nazi motives and uniqueness, and guilt of post-Nazi Germany</div> <p> The <i><b>Historikerstreit</b></i> (<style data-mw-deduplicate="TemplateStyles:r1177148991">.mw-parser-output .IPA-label-small{font-size:85%}.mw-parser-output .references .IPA-label-small,.mw-parser-output .infobox .IPA-label-small,.mw-parser-output .navbox .IPA-label-small{font-size:100%}</style><span class="IPA-label IPA-label-small">German:</span> <span class="IPA nowrap" lang="de-Latn-fonipa"><a href="/wiki/Help:IPA/Standard_German" title="Help:IPA/Standard German">[hɪsˈtoːʁɪkɐˌʃtʁaɪt]</a></span> <span class="noprint"><span class="ext-phonos"><span data-nosnippet="" id="ooui-php-1" class="ext-phonos-PhonosButton noexcerpt ext-phonos-PhonosButton-emptylabel oo-ui-widget oo-ui-widget-enabled oo-ui-buttonElement oo-ui-buttonElement-frameless oo-ui-iconElement oo-ui-buttonWidget" data-ooui="{"_":"mw.Phonos.PhonosButton","href":"\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/transcoded\/6\/6b\/De-Historikerstreit.ogg\/De-Historikerstreit.ogg.mp3","rel":["nofollow"],"framed":false,"icon":"volumeUp","data":{"ipa":"","text":"","lang":"en","wikibase":"","file":"De-Historikerstreit.ogg"},"classes":["ext-phonos-PhonosButton","noexcerpt","ext-phonos-PhonosButton-emptylabel"]}"><a role="button" tabindex="0" href="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/transcoded/6/6b/De-Historikerstreit.ogg/De-Historikerstreit.ogg.mp3" rel="nofollow" aria-label="Play audio" title="Play audio" class="oo-ui-buttonElement-button"><span class="oo-ui-iconElement-icon oo-ui-icon-volumeUp"></span><span class="oo-ui-labelElement-label"></span><span class="oo-ui-indicatorElement-indicator oo-ui-indicatorElement-noIndicator"></span></a></span><sup class="ext-phonos-attribution noexcerpt navigation-not-searchable"><a href="/wiki/File:De-Historikerstreit.ogg" title="File:De-Historikerstreit.ogg">ⓘ</a></sup></span></span>, "historians' dispute")<sup id="cite_ref-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-1"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>1<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> was a dispute in the late 1980s in <a href="/wiki/West_Germany" title="West Germany">West Germany</a> between <a href="/wiki/Conservative" class="mw-redirect" title="Conservative">conservative</a> and <a href="/wiki/Left-of-center" class="mw-redirect" title="Left-of-center">left-of-center</a> academics and other intellectuals about how to incorporate <a href="/wiki/Nazi_Germany" title="Nazi Germany">Nazi Germany</a> and <a href="/wiki/The_Holocaust" title="The Holocaust">the Holocaust</a> into German <a href="/wiki/Historiography" title="Historiography">historiography</a>, and more generally into the German people's view of themselves.<sup id="cite_ref-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-2"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>2<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> The dispute was initiated with the <a href="/wiki/Bitburg_controversy" title="Bitburg controversy">Bitburg controversy</a>, which related to a commemorative service at a German military cemetery where members of the <i><a href="/wiki/Waffen-SS" title="Waffen-SS">Waffen-SS</a></i> were buried. The service was attended by <a href="/wiki/President_of_the_United_States" title="President of the United States">President of the United States</a> <a href="/wiki/Ronald_Reagan" title="Ronald Reagan">Ronald Reagan</a>, who had been invited by the West German Chancellor <a href="/wiki/Helmut_Kohl" title="Helmut Kohl">Helmut Kohl</a>. The Bitburg ceremony was widely interpreted in Germany as the beginning of the "normalization" of the nation's Nazi past, and inspired a slew of criticisms and defenses that made up the initiating arguments of the <i>Historikerstreit</i>. The dispute quickly outgrew the initial context of the Bitburg controversy, however, and became a series of broader historiographic, political, and critical debates about how the episode of the Holocaust should be understood in Germany's history and identity. </p><p>The position taken by conservative intellectuals, most prominently <a href="/wiki/Ernst_Nolte" title="Ernst Nolte">Ernst Nolte</a>, was that the <a href="/wiki/Holocaust_uniqueness_debate" title="Holocaust uniqueness debate">Holocaust was not unique</a> and therefore Germans should not bear any special burden of guilt for the "<a href="/wiki/Final_Solution_to_the_Jewish_Question" class="mw-redirect" title="Final Solution to the Jewish Question">Final Solution to the Jewish Question</a>".<sup id="cite_ref-3" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-3"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>3<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup><sup id="cite_ref-Pakier_4-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Pakier-4"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>4<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte argued that there was no moral difference between the crimes of the <a href="/wiki/Soviet_Union" title="Soviet Union">Soviet Union</a> and those of Nazi Germany, and that the Nazis acted as they did out of fear of what the Soviet Union might do to Germany.<sup id="cite_ref-Kattago,_Siobhan_Ambiguous_Memory_page_62_5-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Kattago,_Siobhan_Ambiguous_Memory_page_62-5"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>5<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Others argued that the memory of the Nazi era could not be "normalized" and be a source of national pride,<sup id="cite_ref-6" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-6"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>6<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> and that it echoed <a href="/wiki/Nazi_propaganda" class="mw-redirect" title="Nazi propaganda">Nazi propaganda</a>.<sup id="cite_ref-7" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-7"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>7<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Other central questions and topics debated within the dispute included the singularity of the Holocaust, the <a href="/wiki/Functionalism%E2%80%93intentionalism_debate" title="Functionalism–intentionalism debate">functionalist and intentionalist models</a> of the Holocaust, methodological approaches to historiography, the political utility of history, the question of whether the Holocaust ought to be studied comparatively, and ethics of public commemorations of history. </p><p>The debate attracted much media attention in West Germany, with its participants frequently giving television interviews and writing <a href="/wiki/Editorial" title="Editorial">op-ed</a> pieces in newspapers. It flared up again briefly in 2000 when Nolte, one of its leading figures, was awarded the <a href="/wiki/Konrad_Adenauer_Prize" title="Konrad Adenauer Prize">Konrad Adenauer Prize</a> for science.<sup id="cite_ref-8" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-8"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>8<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <meta property="mw:PageProp/toc" /> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="Background">Background</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=1" title="Edit section: Background"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>Immediately after <a href="/wiki/World_War_II" title="World War II">World War II</a>, intense debates arose in intellectual circles about how to interpret Nazi Germany, a contested discussion that continues today. Two of the more hotly debated questions were whether <a href="/wiki/Nazism" title="Nazism">Nazism</a> was in some way part of the "German national character" and how much responsibility, if any, the German people bore for the crimes of Nazism. Various non-German historians in the immediate post-war era, such as <a href="/wiki/A._J._P._Taylor" title="A. J. P. Taylor">A. J. P. Taylor</a> and Sir <a href="/wiki/Lewis_Namier" title="Lewis Namier">Lewis Namier</a>, argued that Nazism was the culmination of German history and that the vast majority of Germans were responsible for Nazi crimes. Different assessments of Nazism were common among <a href="/wiki/Marxist" class="mw-redirect" title="Marxist">Marxists</a>, who insisted on the economic aspects of Nazism and conceived of it as the culmination of a capitalist crisis, and <a href="/wiki/Liberalism" title="Liberalism">liberals</a>, who emphasized <a href="/wiki/Adolf_Hitler" title="Adolf Hitler">Hitler</a>'s personal role and responsibility and bypassed the larger problem of the relation of ordinary German people to the regime.<sup id="cite_ref-9" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-9"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>9<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Within <a href="/wiki/West_Germany" title="West Germany">West Germany</a>, then, most historians were strongly defensive. In the assessment of <a href="/wiki/Gerhard_Ritter" title="Gerhard Ritter">Gerhard Ritter</a> and others, Nazism was a <a href="/wiki/Totalitarian" class="mw-redirect" title="Totalitarian">totalitarian</a> movement that represented only the work of a small criminal clique<sup class="noprint Inline-Template Template-Fact" style="white-space:nowrap;">[<i><a href="/wiki/Wikipedia:Citation_needed" title="Wikipedia:Citation needed"><span title="This claim needs references to reliable sources. (January 2017)">citation needed</span></a></i>]</sup>; Germans were victims of Nazism, and the Nazi era represented a total break in German history. </p><p>Starting in the 1960s, that assessment was challenged by younger German historians. <a href="/wiki/Fritz_Fischer_(historian)" title="Fritz Fischer (historian)">Fritz Fischer</a> argued in favor of a <i><a href="/wiki/Sonderweg" title="Sonderweg">Sonderweg</a></i> conception of German history that saw Nazism as the result of the way German society had developed. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the <a href="/wiki/Functionalism_versus_intentionalism" class="mw-redirect" title="Functionalism versus intentionalism">functionalist</a> school of historiography emerged; its proponents argued that medium- and lower-ranking German officials were not just obeying orders and policies but actively engaged in the making of the policies that led to the Holocaust. The functionalists thereby cast blame for the Holocaust across a wider circle. Many right-wing German historians disliked the implications of the <i>Sonderweg</i> conception and the functionalist school; they were generally identified with the left and <a href="/wiki/Structuralism" title="Structuralism">structuralism</a> and were seen by the right-wingers as being derogatory toward Germany<sup class="noprint Inline-Template Template-Fact" style="white-space:nowrap;">[<i><a href="/wiki/Wikipedia:Citation_needed" title="Wikipedia:Citation needed"><span title="This claim needs references to reliable sources. (January 2017)">citation needed</span></a></i>]</sup>. </p><p>By the mid-1980s, right-wing German historians began to think that enough time had passed since 1945 and thus it was time for the German nation to start celebrating much of its history again<sup class="noprint Inline-Template Template-Fact" style="white-space:nowrap;">[<i><a href="/wiki/Wikipedia:Citation_needed" title="Wikipedia:Citation needed"><span title="This claim needs references to reliable sources. (January 2017)">citation needed</span></a></i>]</sup>. A sign of the changed mood was the ceremony at <a href="/wiki/Bitburg" title="Bitburg">Bitburg</a> in May 1985, where US President <a href="/wiki/Ronald_Reagan" title="Ronald Reagan">Ronald Reagan</a> and West German Chancellor <a href="/wiki/Helmut_Kohl" title="Helmut Kohl">Helmut Kohl</a> honored the German war dead buried at Bitburg, including the SS men buried there, which was widely seen as a sign that the memory of the Nazi past had been "normalized" (i.e., that the Nazi period was "normal" and therefore Germans should not feel guilty).<sup id="cite_ref-:4_10-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:4-10"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>10<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> President Reagan justified laying a wreath to honor all the Germans buried at Bitburg who died fighting for Hitler, including the SS men, and his initial refusal to visit the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp under the grounds that the SS men buried at Bitburg were just as much victims of Hitler as the Jews murdered by the SS and that "They [the Germans] just have a guilt feeling that's been imposed on them and I just think it's unnecessary".<sup id="cite_ref-11" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-11"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>11<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> The ceremony at Bitburg and Reagan's remarks about the need to do away with a German "guilt feeling" about the Nazi past were widely interpreted by German conservatives as the beginning of the "normalization" of the memory of Nazi Germany.<sup id="cite_ref-:6_12-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:6-12"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>12<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> <a href="/wiki/Michael_St%C3%BCrmer" title="Michael Stürmer">Michael Stürmer</a>'s 1986 article "Land without History" questioned Germany's lack of positive history in which to take pride.<sup id="cite_ref-13" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-13"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>13<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Stürmer's position as Chancellor Kohl's advisor and speechwriter heightened the controversy.<sup id="cite_ref-14" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-14"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>14<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> At the same time, many left-wing German historians disliked what they saw as the nationalistic tone of the Kohl government. </p><p>A project that raised the ire of many on the left, and which became a central issue of the <i>Historikerstreit</i>,<sup id="cite_ref-15" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-15"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>15<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> consisted of two proposed museums celebrating modern German history, to be built in <a href="/wiki/West_Berlin" title="West Berlin">West Berlin</a> and <a href="/wiki/Bonn" title="Bonn">Bonn</a>. Many of the left-wing participants in the <i>Historikerstreit</i> claimed that the museum was meant to "exonerate" the German past and asserted that there was a connection between the proposed museum, the government, and the views of such historians as <a href="/wiki/Michael_St%C3%BCrmer" title="Michael Stürmer">Michael Stürmer</a>, <a href="/wiki/Ernst_Nolte" title="Ernst Nolte">Ernst Nolte</a>, and <a href="/wiki/Andreas_Hillgruber" title="Andreas Hillgruber">Andreas Hillgruber</a>. In October 1986, <a href="/wiki/Hans_Mommsen" title="Hans Mommsen">Hans Mommsen</a> wrote that Stürmer's assertion that he who controls the past also controls the future, his work as a co-editor of the <i>Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung</i> newspaper—which had been publishing articles by <a href="/wiki/Ernst_Nolte" title="Ernst Nolte">Ernst Nolte</a> and <a href="/wiki/Joachim_Fest" title="Joachim Fest">Joachim Fest</a> denying the "singularity" of the Holocaust—and his work as an advisor to Chancellor Kohl should cause "concern" among historians.<sup id="cite_ref-16" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-16"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>16<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="Overview">Overview</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=2" title="Edit section: Overview"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="Participants">Participants</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=3" title="Edit section: Participants"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>On one side were the philosopher and historian <a href="/wiki/Ernst_Nolte" title="Ernst Nolte">Ernst Nolte</a>, the journalist <a href="/wiki/Joachim_Fest" title="Joachim Fest">Joachim Fest</a>, and the historians <a href="/wiki/Andreas_Hillgruber" title="Andreas Hillgruber">Andreas Hillgruber</a>, <a href="/wiki/Klaus_Hildebrand" title="Klaus Hildebrand">Klaus Hildebrand</a>, <a href="/wiki/Rainer_Zitelmann" title="Rainer Zitelmann">Rainer Zitelmann</a>, <a href="/wiki/Hagen_Schulze" title="Hagen Schulze">Hagen Schulze</a>, and <a href="/wiki/Michael_St%C3%BCrmer" title="Michael Stürmer">Michael Stürmer</a>. Opposing them were the philosopher <a href="/wiki/J%C3%BCrgen_Habermas" title="Jürgen Habermas">Jürgen Habermas</a> and the historians <a href="/wiki/Hans-Ulrich_Wehler" title="Hans-Ulrich Wehler">Hans-Ulrich Wehler</a>, <a href="/wiki/J%C3%BCrgen_Kocka" title="Jürgen Kocka">Jürgen Kocka</a>, <a href="/wiki/Hans_Mommsen" title="Hans Mommsen">Hans Mommsen</a>, <a href="/wiki/Martin_Broszat" title="Martin Broszat">Martin Broszat</a>, <a href="/wiki/Heinrich_August_Winkler" title="Heinrich August Winkler">Heinrich August Winkler</a>, <a href="/wiki/Eberhard_J%C3%A4ckel" title="Eberhard Jäckel">Eberhard Jäckel</a>, and <a href="/wiki/Wolfgang_Mommsen" title="Wolfgang Mommsen">Wolfgang Mommsen</a>. <a href="/wiki/Karl_Dietrich_Bracher" title="Karl Dietrich Bracher">Karl Dietrich Bracher</a> and <a href="/wiki/Richard_L%C3%B6wenthal" title="Richard Löwenthal">Richard Löwenthal</a> argued for some compromise; they said that comparing different totalitarian systems was a valid intellectual exercise, but they insisted that the Holocaust should not be compared to other genocides.<sup class="noprint Inline-Template Template-Fact" style="white-space:nowrap;">[<i><a href="/wiki/Wikipedia:Citation_needed" title="Wikipedia:Citation needed"><span title="This claim needs references to reliable sources. (December 2019)">citation needed</span></a></i>]</sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="Issues">Issues</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=4" title="Edit section: Issues"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>The views of <a href="/wiki/Ernst_Nolte" title="Ernst Nolte">Ernst Nolte</a> and <a href="/wiki/J%C3%BCrgen_Habermas" title="Jürgen Habermas">Jürgen Habermas</a> were at the center of the debate, conducted almost exclusively through articles and <a href="/wiki/Letter_to_the_editor" title="Letter to the editor">letters to the editor</a> in the newspapers <i><a href="/wiki/Die_Zeit" title="Die Zeit">Die Zeit</a></i> and the <i><a href="/wiki/Frankfurter_Allgemeine_Zeitung" title="Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung">Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung</a></i>. People in West Germany followed the debate with interest.<sup class="noprint Inline-Template Template-Fact" style="white-space:nowrap;">[<i><a href="/wiki/Wikipedia:Citation_needed" title="Wikipedia:Citation needed"><span title="This claim needs references to reliable sources. (February 2024)">citation needed</span></a></i>]</sup> The debate was noted for its vitriolic and aggressive tone, with the participants often engaging in <i>ad hominem</i> attacks.<sup id="cite_ref-17" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-17"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>17<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In Hillgruber's 1986 book, <i>Zweierlei Untergang</i> ("Two Kinds of Downfall: The Smashing of the German Reich and the End of European Jewry"), he lamented the mass expulsions of <a href="/wiki/Ethnic_Germans" class="mw-redirect" title="Ethnic Germans">ethnic Germans</a> from Czechoslovakia and Poland at the end of World War II and compared the suffering of the <i><a href="/wiki/Heimatvertriebene" class="mw-redirect" title="Heimatvertriebene">Heimatvertriebene</a></i> ("those expelled from their native land") to that of victims of the Holocaust.<sup class="noprint Inline-Template Template-Fact" style="white-space:nowrap;">[<i><a href="/wiki/Wikipedia:Citation_needed" title="Wikipedia:Citation needed"><span title="This claim needs references to reliable sources. (February 2024)">citation needed</span></a></i>]</sup> Hillgruber had not supported Nolte, but the controversy over <i>Zweierlei Untergang</i> became linked with Nolte's views when Habermas and Wehler characterized both men as conservatives trying to minimize Nazi crimes.<sup class="noprint Inline-Template Template-Fact" style="white-space:nowrap;">[<i><a href="/wiki/Wikipedia:Citation_needed" title="Wikipedia:Citation needed"><span title="This claim needs references to reliable sources. (February 2024)">citation needed</span></a></i>]</sup> </p><p>The debate centered on four questions:<sup class="noprint Inline-Template Template-Fact" style="white-space:nowrap;">[<i><a href="/wiki/Wikipedia:Citation_needed" title="Wikipedia:Citation needed"><span title="This claim needs references to reliable sources. (February 2024)">citation needed</span></a></i>]</sup> </p> <ul><li>Were the crimes of <a href="/wiki/Nazi_Germany" title="Nazi Germany">Nazi Germany</a> uniquely evil or were other crimes, such as those of <a href="/wiki/Joseph_Stalin" title="Joseph Stalin">Joseph Stalin</a> in the <a href="/wiki/Soviet_Union" title="Soviet Union">Soviet Union</a>, comparably so? Were other <a href="/wiki/Genocide" title="Genocide">genocides</a> comparable to the Holocaust? Many scholars believed that such comparisons trivialized the Holocaust. Others maintained that the Holocaust could best be understood in the context of other crimes.</li> <li>Did German history follow a "special path" (<i><a href="/wiki/Sonderweg" title="Sonderweg">Sonderweg</a></i>) leading inevitably to <a href="/wiki/Nazism" title="Nazism">Nazism</a>?</li> <li>Were the crimes of the Nazis a reaction to Soviet crimes under Stalin?</li> <li>Should the German people bear a special burden of guilt for Nazi crimes, or can new generations of Germans find sources of pride in their history?</li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="Immediate_background">Immediate background</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=5" title="Edit section: Immediate background"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""Between_Myth_and_Revisionism""><span id=".22Between_Myth_and_Revisionism.22"></span>"Between Myth and Revisionism"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=6" title="Edit section: "Between Myth and Revisionism""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>In 1980, the <i><a href="/wiki/Frankfurter_Allgemeine_Zeitung" title="Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung">Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung</a></i> newspaper published a <i><a href="/wiki/Feuilleton" title="Feuilleton">feuilleton</a></i> "Between Myth and Revisionism: The Third Reich In the Perspective of the 1980s", where Nolte sketched out many of the same ideas that later appeared in his 1986 essay "The Past That Will Not Go Away". The essay "Between Myth and Revisionism" was also published in English in the 1985 book <i>Aspects of the Third Reich</i> by the Anglo-German historian H. W. Koch, where it was billed incorrectly as an essay written for <i>Aspects of the Third Reich</i>. It was the 1985 version of "Between Myth and Revisionism" that Habermas noticed and referred to in his essay "On Damage Control".<sup class="noprint Inline-Template Template-Fact" style="white-space:nowrap;">[<i><a href="/wiki/Wikipedia:Citation_needed" title="Wikipedia:Citation needed"><span title="This claim needs references to reliable sources. (February 2024)">citation needed</span></a></i>]</sup> </p><p>According to Nolte in “Between Myth and Revisionism”, during the <a href="/wiki/Industrial_Revolution" title="Industrial Revolution">Industrial Revolution</a> in Britain, the shock of the replacement of the old craft economy by an industrialized, mechanized economy led to various radicals starting to advocate what Nolte calls “annihilation therapy” as the solution to social problems.<sup id="cite_ref-18" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-18"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>18<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In Nolte's views, the roots of communism can be traced back to 18th and 19th century radicals like <a href="/wiki/Thomas_Spence" title="Thomas Spence">Thomas Spence</a>, John Gray, William Benbow, Bronterre O’Brian, and <a href="/wiki/Fran%C3%A7ois-No%C3%ABl_Babeuf" title="François-Noël Babeuf">François-Noël Babeuf</a>.<sup id="cite_ref-19" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-19"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>19<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte has argued that the <a href="/wiki/French_Revolution" title="French Revolution">French Revolution</a> began the practice of “group annihilation” as state policy, but not until the Russian Revolution did the theory of “annihilation therapy” reach its logical conclusion and culmination.<sup id="cite_ref-20" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-20"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>20<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> He asserts that much of the European Left saw social problems as being caused by “diseased” social groups, and sought “annihilation therapy” as the solution, thus leading naturally to the <a href="/wiki/Red_Terror" title="Red Terror">Red Terror</a> and the <i><a href="/wiki/Yezhovshchina" class="mw-redirect" title="Yezhovshchina">Yezhovshchina</a></i> in the Soviet Union.<sup id="cite_ref-21" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-21"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>21<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte suggests that the Right mirrored the Left, with “annihilation therapy” advocated by such figures as <a href="/wiki/John_Robison_(physicist)" title="John Robison (physicist)">John Robison</a>, <a href="/wiki/Augustin_Barruel" title="Augustin Barruel">Augustin Barruel</a>, and <a href="/wiki/Joseph_de_Maistre" title="Joseph de Maistre">Joseph de Maistre</a>; <a href="/wiki/Malthusianism" title="Malthusianism">Malthusianism</a> and the Prussian strategy of utter destruction of one's enemies during the <a href="/wiki/Napoleonic_Wars" title="Napoleonic Wars">Napoleonic Wars</a> also suggest sources and influences for National Socialism.<sup id="cite_ref-22" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-22"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>22<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Ultimately, in Nolte's view, the Holocaust was just a “copy” of Communist “annihilation therapy”, albeit one that was more terrible and sickening than the “original”.<sup id="cite_ref-Nolte_in_Koch_1985_p._36_23-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Nolte_in_Koch_1985_p._36-23"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>23<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="Bitburg_controversy">Bitburg controversy</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=7" title="Edit section: Bitburg controversy"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <style data-mw-deduplicate="TemplateStyles:r1236090951">.mw-parser-output .hatnote{font-style:italic}.mw-parser-output div.hatnote{padding-left:1.6em;margin-bottom:0.5em}.mw-parser-output .hatnote i{font-style:normal}.mw-parser-output .hatnote+link+.hatnote{margin-top:-0.5em}@media print{body.ns-0 .mw-parser-output .hatnote{display:none!important}}</style><div role="note" class="hatnote navigation-not-searchable">Main article: <a href="/wiki/Bitburg_controversy" title="Bitburg controversy">Bitburg controversy</a></div> <p>In 1984, the West German Chancellor <a href="/wiki/Helmut_Kohl" title="Helmut Kohl">Helmut Kohl</a> invited the U.S. President <a href="/wiki/Ronald_Reagan" title="Ronald Reagan">Ronald Reagan</a> to mark the 40th anniversary of the end of World War II in Europe by attending a memorial service at a military cemetery in Bitburg.<sup id="cite_ref-FS430_24-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-FS430-24"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>24<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Reagan accepted the offer, unaware that members of the <i>Waffen-SS</i> were buried in the Bitburg cemetery, and when this was reported in early 1985, many Americans urged Reagan to cancel the planned visit to Bitburg under the grounds it was offensive for president of the United States to lay a memorial wreath honoring those SS men who died fighting for Hitler.<sup id="cite_ref-FS430_24-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-FS430-24"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>24<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Kohl insisted that if Reagan snubbed the Bitburg ceremony that it would be the end of his chancellorship, saying the majority of Germans would find it offensive.<sup id="cite_ref-FS430_24-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-FS430-24"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>24<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Reagan, arguing that placing a memorial wreath at Bitburg was no different from doing so at Auschwitz, stated that <i>Waffen-SS</i> men who died fighting for Hitler were just as much victims of Hitler as the Jews exterminated in the death camps.<sup id="cite_ref-25" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-25"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>25<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> This clumsy attempt at public relations damage control only increased the controversy, with both veterans' groups and Jewish groups in the United States being adamantly opposed to Reagan attending the Bitburg ceremony.<sup id="cite_ref-:3_26-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:3-26"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>26<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Reagan also refused to visit a concentration camp to balance out the visit to the Bitburg cemetery by saying the Germans "have a guilt feeling that's been imposed on them, and I just think it's unnecessary".<sup id="cite_ref-:3_26-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:3-26"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>26<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> The Franco-Romanian Holocaust survivor and writer Elie Wiesel issued a public letter to Reagan saying: "That place, Mr. President, is not your place. Your place is with the victims of the SS".<sup id="cite_ref-:3_26-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:3-26"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>26<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> After Wiesel's letter, which helped to crystallize opposition in the United States to the Bitburg service, Reagan and Kohl very reluctantly agreed to visit the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp to honor the memory of who died there, though both Reagan and Kohl went out their way to insist the visit to Bergen-Belsen should not be the cause for Germans to have any "guilt feelings" about the Nazi past.<sup id="cite_ref-:3_26-3" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:3-26"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>26<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>The Bitburg ceremony was widely interpreted in Germany as the beginning of the "normalization" of the Nazi past, namely the viewpoint that the Germans had a "normal" history that would not cause shame or guilt, and instead inspire pride in being German.<sup id="cite_ref-:4_10-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:4-10"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>10<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> The Christian Democratic politician and Second World War veteran <a href="/wiki/Alfred_Dregger" title="Alfred Dregger">Alfred Dregger</a>, in a public letter published on 20 April 1985 and written to a group of 53 U.S. senators opposed to the Bitburg service, stated for Reagan to not attend the Bitburg service would be an insult both to himself and to his brother who had been killed fighting the Red Army in 1945.<sup id="cite_ref-RE55_27-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-RE55-27"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>27<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Dregger stated that he was proud to have served in the <i>Wehrmacht</i> and to have fought the Red Army in Silesia in 1945, insisting he and his brother had fought in World War II in an effort to save Europe from Communism.<sup id="cite_ref-RE55_27-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-RE55-27"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>27<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Finally, Dregger linked Nazi Germany's war against the Soviet Union to the Cold War, arguing that all of the men buried in Bitburg, whatever they were in the <i>Wehrmacht</i> or the <i>Waffen-SS</i>, had died fighting nobly and honorably against the Soviet Union, which was just as much the enemy in 1985 as it had been in 1945.<sup id="cite_ref-RE55_27-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-RE55-27"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>27<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Bringing up a point later made by <a href="/wiki/Andreas_Hillgruber" title="Andreas Hillgruber">Andreas Hillgruber</a>, Dregger emphasized Red Army atrocities against German civilians in 1945, insisting he and everybody else served on the German side in the Eastern Front had waged an "honorable" fight to protect German civilians from the Red Army.<sup id="cite_ref-RE55_27-3" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-RE55-27"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>27<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Dregger called Hitler and his regime a small criminal clique that had nothing to do with the honorable and noble war waged by the <i>Wehrmacht</i> to "defend" Germany from the Red Army, arguing that the battles and campaigns to protect German civilians from the Red Army was an episode in Germany worthy of the utmost admiration, and should be honored with Reagan attending the Bitburg memorial service.<sup id="cite_ref-RE55_27-4" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-RE55-27"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>27<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Amid much controversy, on 8 May 1985, Kohl and Reagan visited the Bitburg cemetery and placed memorial wreaths to honor all of the <i>Wehrmacht</i> and <i>Waffen-SS</i> men buried there.<sup id="cite_ref-FS430_24-3" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-FS430-24"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>24<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> The American historian Fritz Stern wrote that Kohl and Reagan were engaging in "symbolic politics" with the Bitburg ceremony, to suggest the memory of the Nazi past should to a certain extent be exorcised with the idea to honor those who died fighting in the <i>Waffen</i>-SS as victims of Hitler, but instead the immense controversy caused by the Bitburg ceremony caused shown that the Nazi past could not be "normalized" as they had wished.<sup id="cite_ref-FS430_24-4" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-FS430-24"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>24<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>On the same day as the Bitburg ceremony, the West German president <a href="/wiki/Richard_von_Weizs%C3%A4cker" title="Richard von Weizsäcker">Richard von Weizsäcker</a> delivered a speech in Bonn which was an "implicit rebuke" to the Bitburg ceremony where he stated the Jews exterminated in the Holocaust were much more victims of Hitler than those Germans who died fighting for Hitler.<sup id="cite_ref-FS4312_28-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-FS4312-28"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>28<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In the same speech, Weizsäcker also stated the memory of the Nazi past could not be "normalized" and the memory of the Nazi era would always be a source of shame for Germans.<sup id="cite_ref-FS4312_28-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-FS4312-28"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>28<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> The contrasting reactions to the Bitburg controversy and to Weizsäcker's speech brought to the fore the question of whether Germans should still feel shame at the Nazi past forty years later or not.<sup id="cite_ref-FS4312_28-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-FS4312-28"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>28<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> On one side, there were those who insist that West Germany was a "normal" country that should have a "normal" history that would inspire national pride in being German, and on the other there were those who insisted the memory of the Nazi era could not be "normalized" and be a source of national pride.<sup id="cite_ref-FS4302_29-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-FS4302-29"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>29<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> The debate was not entirely along left-right lines as Weizsäcker was a Second World War veteran and a conservative.<sup id="cite_ref-:5_30-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:5-30"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>30<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>The intense controversy caused by the Bitburg memorial service with its suggestion that the Nazi era was a "normal" period led those who were in favor of "normalization" to redouble their efforts.<sup id="cite_ref-:6_12-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:6-12"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>12<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> The <i>Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung</i> newspaper published an opinion piece in early 1986 saying that the Jews needed to be "tactful" in dealing with Germans and should not be bringing up the Holocaust as that would insult German sensitivities.<sup id="cite_ref-:5_30-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:5-30"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>30<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> The minister-president of Bavaria, Franz Josef Strauss, complained that the Germans had spent too long "on their knees" and needed to learn how to "walk tall again", arguing that 40 years of guilt had been quite enough.<sup id="cite_ref-:7_31-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:7-31"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>31<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> As part of his "walk tall" speech, Strauss argued that West Germany needed to "become a normal nation again", saying "German history cannot be presented as an endless chain of mistakes and crimes", and that Germans should be proud to be German.<sup id="cite_ref-:7_31-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:7-31"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>31<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Strauss's reference to the Germans "kneeling" in his "walk tall" speech was to the <i><a href="/wiki/Kniefall_von_Warschau" title="Kniefall von Warschau">Kniefall von Warschau</a></i> when in 1970 the West German chancellor Willy Brandt had knelt before a memorial to the Warsaw Ghetto, saying as a German he felt ashamed of what had happened. Strauss's "walk tall" speech, with its implicit criticism of Brandt kneeling in guilt before the site of the Warsaw Ghetto, was very polarizing.<sup class="noprint Inline-Template Template-Fact" style="white-space:nowrap;">[<i><a href="/wiki/Wikipedia:Citation_needed" title="Wikipedia:Citation needed"><span title="This claim needs references to reliable sources. (August 2023)">citation needed</span></a></i>]</sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""History_In_A_Land_Without_History""><span id=".22History_In_A_Land_Without_History.22"></span>"History In A Land Without History"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=8" title="Edit section: "History In A Land Without History""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>In a<i> <a href="/wiki/Feuilleton" title="Feuilleton">feuilleton</a></i> published in the <i>Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung</i> on 25 April 1986, the German historian <a href="/wiki/Michael_St%C3%BCrmer" title="Michael Stürmer">Michael Stürmer</a> complained that most Germans lacked pride in their history, which he felt threatened the future. Stürmer wrote "...that in a land without history, the future is controlled by those who determine the content of memory, who coin concepts and interpret the past". Stürmer warned that with most Germans lacking pride in their history that this a destabilizing factor that nobody could predict where it would end.<sup id="cite_ref-Sturmer1993p16_32-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Sturmer1993p16-32"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>32<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p> Stürmer felt that the left had too much power in regards to the memory of the past, complaining that the Social Democrats were still concerned 40 years after 1945 with "battling the social foundations of fascism in the Federal Republic".<sup id="cite_ref-Sturmer1993p17_33-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Sturmer1993p17-33"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>33<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Stürmer wanted for historians to find the "lost history" that would inspire national pride in being German.<sup id="cite_ref-Sturmer1993p16_32-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Sturmer1993p16-32"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>32<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Stürmer wrote that Germany's allies were becoming concerned with the German lack of pride in their history, stating:</p><blockquote><p>"the Federal Republic has political and economic responsibility in the world. It is the centerpiece of European defense within the Atlantic system...It is also becoming evident that the technocratic underestimation of history by the political Right and the progressive strangulation of history by the Left is seriously damaging the political culture of the country. The search for a lost past is not an abstract striving for culture and education. It is morally legitimate and politically necessary".<sup id="cite_ref-Sturmer1993p17_33-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Sturmer1993p17-33"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>33<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="Zweierlei_Untergang"><i>Zweierlei Untergang</i></h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=9" title="Edit section: Zweierlei Untergang"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>In May 1986, a book by <a href="/wiki/Andreas_Hillgruber" title="Andreas Hillgruber">Andreas Hillgruber</a>, <i>Zweierlei Untergang: Die Zerschlagung des Deutschen Reiches und das Ende des europäischen Judentums</i> (<i>Two Kinds of Ruin: The Smashing of the German Reich and the End of European Jewry</i>), was published in Berlin. The book consisted of two essays by Hillgruber, in which he argued the end of Germany as a great power in 1945 and the Holocaust were morally equivalent tragedies.<sup id="cite_ref-34" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-34"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>34<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Much of the controversy generated by <i>Zweierlei Untergang</i> was due to the essay <i>Der Zusammenbruch im Osten 1944/45</i> (<i>The Collapse in the East 1944/45</i>) in which Hillgruber presented an account of the Eastern Front in 1944–45 and mourned the end of "the German east". Hillgruber had been born and grew up in the town of Angerburg (modern Węgorzewo, Poland) in what was then East Prussia and often wrote nostalgically about his lost <i>Heimat</i>. Hillgruber expressed much anger in <i>Zweierlei Untergang</i> about the Oder-Neisse line, the expulsions of the Germans from Eastern Europe and the partitioning of Germany, all of which he used to argue that the policies of the Allies towards the Germans during and after World War II were just as horrific as the Holocaust.<sup id="cite_ref-:8_35-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:8-35"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>35<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>In particular, Hillgruber accused Winston Churchill and the rest of the <a href="/wiki/Government_of_the_United_Kingdom" title="Government of the United Kingdom">British government</a> of being obsessed with anti-German and anti-Prussian prejudices going back to at least 1907, and maintained it was always Britain's goal to "smash" the German <i>Reich</i>. Hillgruber accused the British of holding "a negative image of Prussia, exaggerated to the point of becoming a myth", which according to Hillgruber led them to seek the complete dismantlement of the Prussian-German state in World War II and blinded them to the fact that only a strong Central European state led by Prussia could have prevented the "flooding" of Central Europe by the Red Army.<sup id="cite_ref-36" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-36"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>36<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Hillgruber in <i>Der Zusammenbruch im Osten 1944/45</i> was also concerned with the "justified" last stand of the <i>Wehrmacht</i> on the Eastern Front in 1944–45, giving a lengthy account of Red Army war crimes against German civilians. Hillgruber argued that the <i>Wehrmacht</i> in 1944-1945 was fighting "for a centuries-old area of German settlement, for the home of millions of Germans who lived in a core of the German <i>Reich</i> - namely in eastern Prussia, in the provinces of East Prussia, West Prussia, Silesia, East Brandenburg and Pomerania".<sup id="cite_ref-:8_35-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:8-35"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>35<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p> Hillgruber wrote: </p><blockquote><p>"If the historian gazes on the winter catastrophe of 1944–45, only one position is possible...he must identify himself with the concrete fate of the German population in the East and with the desperate and sacrificial exertions of the German Army of the East and the German Baltic navy, which sought to defend the population from the orgy of revenge of the Red Army, the mass rapine, the arbitrary killing, and the compulsory deportations."<sup id="cite_ref-37" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-37"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>37<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote><p> Besides for his call for historians to "identify" with the <i>Wehrmacht</i>, Hillgruber condemned the <i>putsch</i> of 20 July 1944 as irresponsible and wrong and praised those <i>Wehrmacht</i> officers who stayed loyal to Hitler as making the correct moral choice.<sup id="cite_ref-:9_38-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:9-38"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>38<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hillgruber argued that the need to protect German civilians from the Red Army should have been the overriding concern of all <i>Wehrmacht</i> officers, which required remaining loyal to Hitler.<sup id="cite_ref-:9_38-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:9-38"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>38<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="Historikerstreit_begins,_June_1986"><span id="Historikerstreit_begins.2C_June_1986"></span><i>Historikerstreit</i> begins, June 1986</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=10" title="Edit section: Historikerstreit begins, June 1986"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""The_Past_That_Will_Not_Pass""><span id=".22The_Past_That_Will_Not_Pass.22"></span>"The Past That Will Not Pass"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=11" title="Edit section: "The Past That Will Not Pass""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>Nolte launched the <i>Historikerstreit</i> ("Historians' Dispute") on 6 June 1986 with an article in the <i><a href="/wiki/Frankfurter_Allgemeine_Zeitung" title="Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung">Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung</a></i>: <i>Vergangenheit, die nicht vergehen will: Eine Rede, die geschrieben, aber nicht mehr gehalten werden konnte</i> ("<i>The Past That Will Not Pass: A Speech That Could Be Written but Not Delivered</i>") . His <i>feuilleton</i> was a distillation of ideas he had first introduced in lectures delivered in 1976 and in 1980.<sup class="noprint Inline-Template Template-Fact" style="white-space:nowrap;">[<i><a href="/wiki/Wikipedia:Citation_needed" title="Wikipedia:Citation needed"><span title="This claim needs references to reliable sources. (February 2024)">citation needed</span></a></i>]</sup> Earlier in 1986, Nolte had planned to deliver a speech before the Frankfurt Römerberg Conversations (an annual gathering of intellectuals), but he had claimed that the organizers of the event withdrew their invitation.<sup id="cite_ref-39" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-39"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>39<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In response, an editor and co-publisher of the <i>Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung</i>, <a href="/wiki/Joachim_Fest" title="Joachim Fest">Joachim Fest</a>, allowed Nolte to have his speech printed as a <i>feuilleton</i> in his newspaper.<sup id="cite_ref-m30_40-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-m30-40"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>40<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> One of Nolte's leading critics, British historian <a href="/wiki/Richard_J._Evans" title="Richard J. Evans">Richard J. Evans</a>, claims that the organizers of the Römerberg Conversations had not withdrawn their invitation, and that Nolte had just refused to attend.<sup id="cite_ref-41" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-41"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>41<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Nolte began his <i>feuilleton</i> by remarking that it was necessary in his opinion to draw a "line under the German past".<sup id="cite_ref-n19_42-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n19-42"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>42<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte argued that the memory of the Nazi era was "a bugaboo, as a past that in the process of establishing itself in the present or that is suspended above the present like an executioner's sword".<sup id="cite_ref-n18_43-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n18-43"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>43<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte used as an example of the problem of the "Past That Will Not Go Away" that in Nazi Germany, the "mania of masculinity" was "full of provocative self-confidence", but now German men were afraid to be manly because German feminists had made National Socialism the "present enemy".<sup id="cite_ref-n18_43-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n18-43"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>43<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In the same way, Nolte charged that Germans were being forced to live under the fear of being labelled anti-semitic; Nolte wrote based on his viewing of the film <i>Shoah</i> it was clear that the SS guards of the death camps were "victims of a sort and that among the Polish victims of National Socialism there was virulent anti-Semitism".<sup id="cite_ref-n20_44-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n20-44"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>44<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Nolte complained that excessive present-day interest in the Nazi period had the effect of drawing "attention away from the pressing questions of the present-for example, the question of "unborn life" or the presence of genocide yesterday in Vietnam and today in Afghanistan".<sup id="cite_ref-n19_42-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n19-42"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>42<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte argued that the furor in 1985 over the visit of the American president <a href="/wiki/Ronald_Reagan" title="Ronald Reagan">Ronald Reagan</a> to the <a href="/wiki/Bitburg" title="Bitburg">Bitburg</a> cemetery reflected in his view the unhealthy effects of an obsession with the memory of the Nazi era.<sup id="cite_ref-n20_44-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n20-44"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>44<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte suggested that, during <a href="/wiki/West_German" class="mw-redirect" title="West German">West German</a> Chancellor <a href="/wiki/Konrad_Adenauer" title="Konrad Adenauer">Konrad Adenauer</a>'s visit to the United States in 1953, if he had failed to visit <a href="/wiki/Arlington_National_Cemetery" title="Arlington National Cemetery">Arlington National Cemetery</a> a storm of controversy would have ensued.<sup id="cite_ref-n20_44-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n20-44"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>44<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte argued that since some of the men buried at Arlington had in his view "participated in terror attacks on the German civilian population", there was no moral difference between Reagan visiting the Bitburg cemetery, with its graves of <a href="/wiki/Waffen_SS" class="mw-redirect" title="Waffen SS">Waffen SS</a> dead, and Adenauer visiting Arlington with its graves of American airmen.<sup id="cite_ref-n20_44-3" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n20-44"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>44<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte complained that because of the "past that would not pass", it was controversial for Reagan to visit Bitburg, but it was not controversial for Adenauer to visit Arlington.<sup id="cite_ref-n20_44-4" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n20-44"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>44<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte cited the Bitburg controversy as an example of the power exerted by historical memory of the Nazi past.<sup id="cite_ref-n20_44-5" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n20-44"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>44<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte concluded that there was excessive contemporary interest in the Holocaust because it served the concerns of those descended from the victims of Nazism, and placed them in a "permanent status of privilege".<sup id="cite_ref-n19_42-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n19-42"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>42<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte argued that Germans had an unhealthy obsession with guilt for Nazi crimes, and called for an end to this "obsession".<sup id="cite_ref-mai39_45-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-mai39-45"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>45<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte's opinion was that there was no moral difference between German self-guilt over the Holocaust, and Nazi claims of Jewish collective guilt for all the world's problems.<sup id="cite_ref-mai39_45-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-mai39-45"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>45<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> He called for an end to the maintaining of the memory of the Nazi past as fresh and current, and suggested a new way of viewing the Nazi past that would allow Germans to be free of the "past that will not pass".<sup id="cite_ref-n20_44-6" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n20-44"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>44<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>In his <i>feuilleton</i>, Nolte offered a new way of understanding German history which sought to break free of the "past that will not pass", by contending that Nazi crimes were only the consequence of a defensive reaction against Soviet crimes.<sup id="cite_ref-ev28_46-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev28-46"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>46<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In Nolte's view, National Socialism had only arisen in response to the "class genocide" and "Asiatic barbarism" of the <a href="/wiki/Bolsheviks" title="Bolsheviks">Bolsheviks</a>.<sup id="cite_ref-47" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-47"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>47<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup><sup id="cite_ref-48" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-48"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>48<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte cited as example the early Nazi <a href="/wiki/Ludwig_Maximilian_Erwin_von_Scheubner-Richter" class="mw-redirect" title="Ludwig Maximilian Erwin von Scheubner-Richter">Max Erwin von Scheubner-Richter</a>, who during <a href="/wiki/World_War_I" title="World War I">World War I</a> had been the German consul in <a href="/wiki/Erzerum" class="mw-redirect" title="Erzerum">Erzerum</a>, <a href="/wiki/Turkey" title="Turkey">Turkey</a>, where he was appalled by the <a href="/wiki/Armenian_genocide" title="Armenian genocide">genocide of the Armenians</a>.<sup id="cite_ref-n21-22_49-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n21-22-49"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>49<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In Nolte's view, the fact that Scheubner-Richter later became a Nazi shows that something must have changed his values, and in Nolte's opinion it was the <a href="/wiki/Russian_Revolution_of_1917" class="mw-redirect" title="Russian Revolution of 1917">Russian Revolution</a> and such alleged Bolshevik practices as the "rat cage" <a href="/wiki/Torture" title="Torture">torture</a> (said by Russian émigré authors to be a favorite torture by <a href="/wiki/China" title="China">Chinese</a> serving in the <a href="/wiki/Cheka" title="Cheka">Cheka</a> during the <a href="/wiki/Russian_Civil_War" title="Russian Civil War">Russian Civil War</a>) that led to the change.<sup id="cite_ref-n21_50-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n21-50"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>50<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup><sup id="cite_ref-51" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-51"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>51<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte used the example of the "rat cage" torture in <a href="/wiki/George_Orwell" title="George Orwell">George Orwell</a>'s 1948 novel <a href="/wiki/Nineteen_Eighty-Four" title="Nineteen Eighty-Four"><i>1984</i></a> to argue that the knowledge of the "rat cage" torture was widespread throughout the world.<sup id="cite_ref-n21_50-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n21-50"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>50<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte wrote about the horrors perpetuated by the "Chinese Cheka" as showing the "Asiatic" nature of the Bolsheviks.<sup id="cite_ref-n21_50-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n21-50"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>50<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Furthermore, Nolte argues that the <a href="/wiki/Rat_torture" title="Rat torture">"rat cage" torture</a> was an ancient torture long practiced in <a href="/wiki/China" title="China">China</a>, which in his opinion further establishes the "Asiatic barbarism" of the Bolsheviks.<sup id="cite_ref-52" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-52"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>52<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte cited a statement by Hitler after the <a href="/wiki/Battle_of_Stalingrad" title="Battle of Stalingrad">Battle of Stalingrad</a> that Field Marshal <a href="/wiki/Friedrich_Paulus" title="Friedrich Paulus">Friedrich Paulus</a> would be soon sent to the “rat cage” in the <a href="/wiki/Lubyanka_(KGB)" class="mw-redirect" title="Lubyanka (KGB)">Lubyanka</a> as proof that Hitler had an especially vivid fear of the “rat cage” torture.<sup id="cite_ref-n21_50-3" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n21-50"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>50<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Along the same lines, Nolte argued that the Holocaust, or "racial genocide" as Nolte prefers to call it, was an understandable if excessive response on the part of <a href="/wiki/Adolf_Hitler" title="Adolf Hitler">Adolf Hitler</a> to the Soviet threat and the "class genocide" with which the German middle class was said to be threatened.<sup id="cite_ref-m30_40-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-m30-40"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>40<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In Nolte's view, Soviet mass murders were <i>Vorbild</i> (the terrifying example that inspired the Nazis) and <i>Schreckbild</i> (the terrible model for the horrors perpetrated by the Nazis).<sup id="cite_ref-b5_53-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-b5-53"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>53<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte labeled the Holocaust an "<i>überschießende Reaktion</i>" (overshooting reaction) to Bolshevik crimes, and to alleged Jewish actions in support of Germany's enemies.<sup id="cite_ref-b5_53-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-b5-53"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>53<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In Nolte's opinion, the essence of National Socialism was <a href="/wiki/Anti-Communism" class="mw-redirect" title="Anti-Communism">anti-Communism</a>, and <a href="/wiki/Anti-Semitism" class="mw-redirect" title="Anti-Semitism">anti-Semitism</a> was only a subordinate element to anti-Bolshevism in Nazi ideology.<sup id="cite_ref-ev28_46-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev28-46"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>46<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte argued that because "the mighty shadow of events in Russia fell most powerfully" on Germany, that the most extreme reaction to the Russian Revolution took place there, thus establishing the "causal nexus" between Communism and fascism.<sup id="cite_ref-ev28_46-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev28-46"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>46<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte asserted that the core of National Socialism was </p> <blockquote><p>"neither in criminal tendencies nor in anti-Semitic obsessions as such. The essence of National Socialism [was to be found] in its relation to Marxism and especially to Communism in the form which this had taken on through the Bolshevik victory in the Russian Revolution".<sup id="cite_ref-ev28_46-3" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev28-46"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>46<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote> <p>In Nolte's view, Nazi anti-communism was "understandable and up to a certain point, justified".<sup id="cite_ref-ev28_46-4" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev28-46"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>46<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> For Nolte, the "racial genocide" as he calls the Holocaust was a "punishment and preventive measure" on the part of the Germans for the "class genocide" of the Bolsheviks.<sup id="cite_ref-54" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-54"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>54<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> American historian Peter Baldwin noted parallels between Nolte's views and those of American Marxist historian <a href="/wiki/Arno_J._Mayer" title="Arno J. Mayer">Arno J. Mayer</a>:.<sup id="cite_ref-55" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-55"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>55<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Both Nolte and Mayer perceive the interwar period as one of intense ideological conflict between the forces of the Right and Left, positing World War II as the culmination of this conflict, with the Holocaust a byproduct of the German-Soviet war.<sup id="cite_ref-56" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-56"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>56<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Baldwin distinguished Nolte from Mayer in that Nolte considered the Soviets aggressors who essentially got what they deserved in the form of <a href="/wiki/Operation_Barbarossa" title="Operation Barbarossa">Operation Barbarossa</a>, whereas Mayer considered the Soviets to be victims of German aggression.<sup id="cite_ref-57" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-57"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>57<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Operation Barbarossa, in Nolte's thinking, was a "preventive war" forced on Hitler by an alleged impending Soviet attack.<sup id="cite_ref-ev28_46-5" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev28-46"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>46<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte wrote that Hitler's view of the Russian people as barbarians was an "exaggeration of an insight which was basically right in its essence" and that Hitler "understood the invasion of the Soviet Union as a preventive war" as the Soviet desire to bring Communism to the entire world "must be seen as mental acts of war, and one may even ask whether a completely isolated and heavily armed country did not constitute a dangerous threat to its neighbors on these grounds alone".<sup id="cite_ref-ev42_58-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev42-58"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>58<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>The crux of Nolte's thesis was presented when he wrote: </p> <blockquote><p>"It is a notable shortcoming of the literature about National Socialism that it does not know or does not want to admit to what degree all the deeds—with the sole exception of the technical process of gassing—that the National Socialists later committed had already been described in a voluminous literature of the early 1920s: mass deportations and shootings, torture, death camps, extermination of entire groups using strictly objective selection criteria, and public demands for the annihilation of millions of guiltless people who were thought to be "enemies". <br /><br /> It is probable that many of these reports were exaggerated. It is certain that the “<a href="/wiki/White_Terror_(Russia)" title="White Terror (Russia)">White Terror</a>” also committed terrible deeds, even though its program contained no analogy to the “extermination of the bourgeoisie”. Nonetheless, the following question must seem permissible, even unavoidable: Did the National Socialists or Hitler perhaps commit an “Asiatic” deed merely because they and their ilk considered themselves to be the potential victims of an “Asiatic” deed? Wasn't the '<a href="/wiki/Gulag_Archipelago" class="mw-redirect" title="Gulag Archipelago">Gulag Archipelago</a>' more original than Auschwitz? Was the Bolshevik murder of an entire class not the logical and factual <i>prius</i> of the "racial murder" of National Socialism? Cannot Hitler's most secret deeds be explained by the fact that he had <i>not</i> forgotten the rat cage? Did Auschwitz in its root causes not originate in a past that would not pass?"<sup id="cite_ref-n21-22_49-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n21-22-49"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>49<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote><p> Nolte wrote the principal problem "for the coming generations...must be liberation from collectivist thinking", which Nolte claimed dominated scholarship on Nazi Germany.<sup id="cite_ref-59" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-59"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>59<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte ended his essay with calling for a "more comprehensive debate" about the memory of Nazi Germany that would allow for "the past that will not go away" to finally go away "as is suitable for every past".<sup id="cite_ref-60" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-60"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>60<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><figure class="mw-default-size" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Birkenau_gate.JPG" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/e8/Birkenau_gate.JPG/220px-Birkenau_gate.JPG" decoding="async" width="220" height="165" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/e8/Birkenau_gate.JPG/330px-Birkenau_gate.JPG 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/e8/Birkenau_gate.JPG/440px-Birkenau_gate.JPG 2x" data-file-width="3264" data-file-height="2448" /></a><figcaption>Nolte called the Auschwitz death camp and the other German death camps of World War II a "copy" of the Soviet Gulag camps.</figcaption></figure> <p>Nolte subsequently presented a 1940 book by American author <a href="/wiki/Theodore_N._Kaufman" title="Theodore N. Kaufman">Theodore N. Kaufman</a> entitled <i><a href="/wiki/Germany_Must_Perish!" title="Germany Must Perish!">Germany Must Perish!</a></i>. The text contends that all German men should be sterilized, evidencing, according to Nolte, the alleged "Jewish" desire to "annihilate" Germans prior to the Holocaust.<sup id="cite_ref-koch27-28_61-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-koch27-28-61"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>61<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> An August 1941 appeal to the world by a group of Soviet Jews seeking support against Germany was also cited by Nolte as evidence of Jewish determination to thwart the <i>Reich</i>.<sup id="cite_ref-ker176_62-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ker176-62"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>62<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte argued that the Nazis felt forced to undertake the Holocaust by Hitler's conclusion that the entire Jewish population of the world had <a href="/wiki/Jewish_war_conspiracy_theory" title="Jewish war conspiracy theory">declared war on Germany</a>.<sup id="cite_ref-koch27-28_61-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-koch27-28-61"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>61<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> From Nolte's point of view, the Holocaust was an act of “Asiatic barbarism” forced on the Germans by the fear of what <a href="/wiki/Joseph_Stalin" title="Joseph Stalin">Joseph Stalin</a>, whom Nolte believed to have significant Jewish support, might do to them. Nolte contends that the U.S. <a href="/wiki/Internment_of_Japanese_Americans" title="Internment of Japanese Americans">internment of Japanese Americans</a> in the wake of the <a href="/wiki/Pearl_Harbor_attack" class="mw-redirect" title="Pearl Harbor attack">Pearl Harbor attack</a> provides a parallel to the German "internment" of the Jewish population of Europe in <a href="/wiki/Concentration_camps" class="mw-redirect" title="Concentration camps">concentration camps</a>, in light of what Nolte alleges was the "Jewish" declaration of war on Germany in 1939 which Weizmann's letter allegedly constitutes.<sup id="cite_ref-Nolte_in_Koch_1985_p._28_63-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Nolte_in_Koch_1985_p._28-63"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>63<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Subsequently, Nolte expanded upon these views in his 1987 book <i>Der europäische Bürgerkrieg, 1917–1945</i> (<i>The European Civil War, 1917–1945</i>) in which he claimed that the entire 20th century was an age of <a href="/wiki/Genocide" title="Genocide">genocide</a>, <a href="/wiki/Totalitarianism" title="Totalitarianism">totalitarianism</a>, and <a href="/wiki/Tyranny" class="mw-redirect" title="Tyranny">tyranny</a>, and that the Holocaust had been merely one chapter in the age of violence, terror and population displacement. Nolte claimed that this age had started with the <a href="/wiki/Armenian_genocide" title="Armenian genocide">genocide of the Armenians</a> during World War I, and also included the <a href="/wiki/Great_Purge" title="Great Purge">Stalinist terror</a> in the Soviet Union, the <a href="/wiki/Expulsion_of_Germans_after_World_War_II" class="mw-redirect" title="Expulsion of Germans after World War II">expulsion of ethnic Germans</a> from Eastern Europe, Maoist terror in China as manifested in such events as the <a href="/wiki/Great_Leap_Forward" title="Great Leap Forward">Great Leap Forward</a> and the <a href="/wiki/Cultural_Revolution" title="Cultural Revolution">Cultural Revolution</a>, <a href="/wiki/Exchange_of_populations_between_Greece_and_Turkey" class="mw-redirect" title="Exchange of populations between Greece and Turkey">compulsory population exchanges</a> between Greece and Turkey from 1922 to 1923, American war crimes in the <a href="/wiki/Vietnam_War" title="Vietnam War">Vietnam War</a>, the <a href="/wiki/Cambodian_genocide" title="Cambodian genocide">Khmer Rouge genocide</a> in <a href="/wiki/Cambodia" title="Cambodia">Cambodia</a>, and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.<sup id="cite_ref-L211_64-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-L211-64"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>64<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In particular, Nolte argued that the <a href="/wiki/Expulsion_of_Germans_after_World_War_II" class="mw-redirect" title="Expulsion of Germans after World War II">expulsion of ethnic Germans</a> from Eastern Europe in 1945–46 was "to be categorized...under the concept of genocide".<sup id="cite_ref-65" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-65"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>65<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> As part of this argument, Nolte cited the 1979 book of the American historian <a href="/wiki/Alfred-Maurice_de_Zayas" title="Alfred-Maurice de Zayas">Alfred-Maurice de Zayas</a>, <a href="/wiki/The_Wehrmacht_War_Crimes_Bureau,_1939-1945" class="mw-redirect" title="The Wehrmacht War Crimes Bureau, 1939-1945"><i>Die Wehrmacht Untersuchungsstelle</i></a>, which argues that the Allies were just as guilty of war crimes as the Germans as the "happy evidence of the will to objectivity on the part of a foreigner"<sup id="cite_ref-ev162_66-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev162-66"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>66<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In Nolte's opinion, Hitler was a "European citizen" who fought in defence of the values of the West against "Asiatic" Bolshevism, but due to his "total egocentrism" waged this struggle with unnecessary violence and brutality<sup id="cite_ref-ev56_67-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev56-67"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>67<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Since in Nolte's view, the <i><a href="/wiki/Shoah" class="mw-redirect" title="Shoah">Shoah</a></i> was not a unique crime, there is no reason to single out Germans for special criticism for the Holocaust.<sup id="cite_ref-ev27_68-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev27-68"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>68<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup><sup id="cite_ref-L211_64-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-L211-64"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>64<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>In addition, Nolte sees his work as the beginning of a much-needed revisionist treatment to end the "negative myth" of Nazi Germany that dominates contemporary perceptions.<sup id="cite_ref-69" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-69"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>69<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte took the view that the principal problem of German history was this "negative myth" of Nazi Germany, which cast the Nazi era as the <i>ne plus ultra</i> of evil.<sup id="cite_ref-70" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-70"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>70<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte wrote that after the <a href="/wiki/American_Civil_War" title="American Civil War">American Civil War</a>, the defeated South was cast as the symbol of total evil by the victorious North, but later “revisionism” became the dominant historical interpretation against the “negative myth” of the South, which led to a more balanced history of the Civil War with a greater understanding of the “motives and way of life of the defeated Southern states”, and led to the leaders of the <a href="/wiki/Confederate_States_of_America" title="Confederate States of America">Confederacy</a> becoming great American heroes.<sup id="cite_ref-71" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-71"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>71<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte urged that a similar "revisionism" destroy the "negative myth" of Nazi Germany.<sup id="cite_ref-72" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-72"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>72<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte argued that the Vietnam War, the Khmer Rouge genocide, the expulsion of "boat people" from Vietnam, the Islamic revolution in Iran, and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan meant the traditional picture of Nazi Germany as the ultimate in evil was no longer tenable, and proved the need for "revisionism" to put an end to the "negative myth" of Nazi Germany.<sup id="cite_ref-n5_73-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n5-73"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>73<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In Nolte's view, the first efforts at revisionism of the Nazi period failed because <a href="/wiki/A._J._P._Taylor" title="A. J. P. Taylor">A. J. P. Taylor</a>'s 1961 book <i>The Origins of the Second World War</i> was only a part of the "anti-German literature of indictment" while <a href="/wiki/David_Hoggan" class="mw-redirect" title="David Hoggan">David Hoggan</a> in <i>Der erzwugnene Krieg</i>, by only seeking to examine why World War II broke out in 1939, "cut himself off from the really decisive questions".<sup id="cite_ref-n5_73-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n5-73"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>73<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Then the next revisionist efforts Nolte cites were the Italian historian <a href="/w/index.php?title=Domenico_Settembrini&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Domenico Settembrini (page does not exist)">Domenico Settembrini</a>'s favorable treatment of Fascism for saving Italy from Communism, and the British historian <a href="/wiki/Timothy_Mason" title="Timothy Mason">Timothy Mason</a>'s studies in working class German history.<sup id="cite_ref-74" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-74"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>74<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> The best of the revisionists according to Nolte is <a href="/wiki/David_Irving" title="David Irving">David Irving</a>, with whom Nolte finds some fault, although "not all of Irving's theses and points can be dismissed with such ease".<sup id="cite_ref-75" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-75"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>75<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte praises Irving as the first to understand that <a href="/wiki/Jewish_war_conspiracy_theory" title="Jewish war conspiracy theory">Weizmann's letter to Chamberlain</a> was a "Jewish declaration of war" on Germany that justified the "interning" of the Jews of Europe.<sup id="cite_ref-n8-9_76-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n8-9-76"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>76<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte went on to praise Irving for putting the Holocaust "in a more comprehensive perspective" by comparing it to the <a href="/wiki/Bombing_of_Hamburg_in_World_War_II" title="Bombing of Hamburg in World War II">Allied bombing of Hamburg</a> in 1943, which Nolte views as just much of an act of genocide as the "Final Solution".<sup id="cite_ref-n8-9_76-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n8-9-76"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>76<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> The sort of revisionism needed to end the "negative myth" of Nazi Germany is, in Nolte's opinion, an examination of the impact of the Russian Revolution on Germany.<sup id="cite_ref-77" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-77"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>77<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Nolte contends that the great decisive event of the 20th century was the <a href="/wiki/Russian_Revolution_of_1917" class="mw-redirect" title="Russian Revolution of 1917">Russian Revolution of 1917</a>, which plunged all of Europe into a long-simmering civil war that lasted until 1945. To Nolte, fascism, Communism's twin, arose as a desperate response by the threatened middle classes of Europe to what Nolte has often called the “Bolshevik peril”.<sup id="cite_ref-ev28_46-6" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev28-46"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>46<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> He suggests that if one wishes to understand the Holocaust, one should begin with the industrial revolution in Britain, and then understand the rule of the <a href="/wiki/Khmer_Rouge" title="Khmer Rouge">Khmer Rouge</a> in <a href="/wiki/Cambodia" title="Cambodia">Cambodia</a>.<sup id="cite_ref-n9_78-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n9-78"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>78<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte then proceeds to argue that one should consider what happened in the Soviet Union in the interwar period by reading the work of <a href="/wiki/Aleksandr_Solzhenitsyn" title="Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn">Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn</a>.<sup id="cite_ref-n9_78-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n9-78"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>78<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In a marked change from the views expressed in <i>The Three Faces of Fascism</i>, in which Communism was a stream of “transcendence”, Nolte now classified communism together with fascism as both rival streams of the “resistance to transcendence”.<sup id="cite_ref-m86-87_79-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-m86-87-79"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>79<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> The “metapolitical phenomenon” of Communism in a Hegelian dialectic led to the “metapolitical phenomenon” of fascism, which was both a copy of and the most ardent opponent of Marxism.<sup id="cite_ref-80" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-80"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>80<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> As an example of his thesis, Nolte cited an article written in 1927 by <a href="/wiki/Kurt_Tucholsky" title="Kurt Tucholsky">Kurt Tucholsky</a> calling for middle-class Germans to be gassed, which he argued was much more deplorable than the celebratory comments made by some right-wing newspapers about the assassination of the German Foreign Minister <a href="/wiki/Walther_Rathenau" title="Walther Rathenau">Walther Rathenau</a> in 1922.<sup id="cite_ref-81" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-81"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>81<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> <a href="/wiki/Richard_J._Evans" title="Richard J. Evans">Richard J. Evans</a>, <a href="/wiki/Ian_Kershaw" title="Ian Kershaw">Ian Kershaw</a> and Otto Dov Kulka all claimed that Nolte took Tucholsky's sardonic remark about <a href="/wiki/Chemical_warfare" title="Chemical warfare">chemical warfare</a> out of context.<sup id="cite_ref-ker176_62-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ker176-62"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>62<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup><sup id="cite_ref-82" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-82"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>82<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup><sup id="cite_ref-83" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-83"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>83<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Kershaw further protested the implication of moral equivalence between a remark by Tucholsky and the actual gassing of Jews by Nazis, which Kershaw suggests is an idea which originates in neo-Nazi pamphleteering.<sup id="cite_ref-ker176_62-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ker176-62"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>62<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>In his 1987 book <i>Der europäische Bürgerkrieg, 1917–1945</i>, Nolte argued in the interwar period, Germany was Europe's best hope for progress.<sup id="cite_ref-ev99_84-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev99-84"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>84<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte wrote that "if Europe was to succeed in establishing itself as a world power on an equal footing [with the United States and the Soviet Union], then Germany had to be the core of the new 'United States'".<sup id="cite_ref-ev99_84-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev99-84"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>84<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte claimed if Germany had to continue to abide by Part V of the <a href="/wiki/Treaty_of_Versailles" title="Treaty of Versailles">Treaty of Versailles</a>, which had disarmed Germany, then Germany would have been destroyed by aggression from her neighbors sometime later in the 1930s, and with Germany's destruction, there would have been no hope for a "United States of Europe".<sup id="cite_ref-ev99_84-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev99-84"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>84<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> The British historian <a href="/wiki/Richard_J._Evans" title="Richard J. Evans">Richard J. Evans</a> accused Nolte of engaging in a geopolitical fantasy.<sup id="cite_ref-85" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-85"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>85<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""A_Kind_of_Damage_Control""><span id=".22A_Kind_of_Damage_Control.22"></span>"A Kind of Damage Control"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=12" title="Edit section: "A Kind of Damage Control""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>The philosopher <a href="/wiki/J%C3%BCrgen_Habermas" title="Jürgen Habermas">Jürgen Habermas</a> in an article entitled "A Kind of Damage Control: On Apologetic Tendencies In German History Writing" in the <i><a href="/wiki/Die_Zeit" title="Die Zeit">Die Zeit</a></i> of 11 July 1986 strongly criticized Nolte, along with <a href="/wiki/Andreas_Hillgruber" title="Andreas Hillgruber">Andreas Hillgruber</a> and <a href="/wiki/Michael_St%C3%BCrmer" title="Michael Stürmer">Michael Stürmer</a>, for engaging in what Habermas called “apologetic” history writing in regards to the Nazi era, and for seeking to “close Germany's opening to the West” that in Habermas's view has existed since 1945.<sup id="cite_ref-:36_86-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:36-86"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>86<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Habermas criticized Stürmer for his essay "History in a land without history" as engaging in "damage control" with German history and wrote that Hillgruber and Nolte were putting his theories into practice.<sup id="cite_ref-87" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-87"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>87<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Habermas criticized Hillgruber for demanding historians "identify" with the <i>Wehrmacht</i><span class="nowrap" style="padding-left:0.1em;">'</span>s last stand on the Eastern Front as being purely "selective".<sup id="cite_ref-88" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-88"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>88<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Habermas charged that as long as the <i>Wehrmacht</i> held out, the Holocaust continued, but that Hillgruber's approach which emphasized the war on the Eastern Front from the viewpoint of the ordinary German soldier and the "desperate civilian population" serves to sever the "Final Solution of the Jewish Question" from history.<sup id="cite_ref-:10_89-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:10-89"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>89<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Habermas charged that Hillgruber had much sympathy with the German soldiers who found a "picture of horror of raped and murdered women and children" at Nemmersdorf, but his way of "identifying" with the <i>Wehrmacht</i> meant the Holocaust went unmentioned.<sup id="cite_ref-:10_89-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:10-89"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>89<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Habermas wrote in the second part of his essay, Hillgruber who previously insisted on a "bird's eye" view of the Eastern Front from the viewpoint of the ordinary German soldier now used the perspective of a historian to argue the Allies were always planning on destroying Germany and it was wrong for the Allies to impose the Oder-Neisse line as the new eastern frontier of Germany, which Habermas felt to be a double standard.<sup id="cite_ref-:10_89-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:10-89"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>89<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Habermas wrote Hillgruber had failed as a historian, stating: "Hillgruber is most deeply appalled by the high proportion of university-trained men who participated [in the Holocaust]-as if there were not a completely plausible explanation for that. In short, the phenomenon that a civilized populace let these horrible things happen is one that Hillguber removes from the technical competence of the overburdened historian and blithely pushes off into the dimension of the generally human".<sup id="cite_ref-90" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-90"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>90<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Habermas called Nolte the "officious-conservative narrator" who presented a version of history in which the "annihilation of the Jews appears as a regrettable, but perfectly understandable result".<sup id="cite_ref-:2_91-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:2-91"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>91<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Habermas criticized Nolte for claiming that Chaim Weizmann declared war on Germany in 1939 which "was supposed to <i>justify</i> Hitler in treating German Jews as prisoners of war-and then in deporting them".<sup id="cite_ref-:2_91-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:2-91"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>91<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Habermas wrote: </p> <blockquote><p>“The culture section of <i>Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung</i>, June 6, 1986 included a militant article by Ernst Nolte. It was published, by the way, under a hypocritical pretext with the heading “the talk that could not be delivered”. (I say this with knowledge of the exchange of letters between the presumably disinvited Nolte and the organizers of the conference). When the Nolte article was published Stürmer also expressed solidarity. In it Nolte reduces the singularity of the annihilation of the Jews to “the technical process of gassing”. He supports his thesis about the Gulag Archipelago is “primary” to Auschwitz with the rather abstruse example of the Russian Civil War. The author gets little more from the film <i>Shoah</i> by <a href="/wiki/Claude_Lanzmann" title="Claude Lanzmann">Lanzmann</a> than the idea that “the SS troops in the concentration camps might themselves have been victims of a sort and that among the Polish victims of National Socialism there was virulent anti-Semitism”. These unsavoury samples show that Nolte puts someone like <a href="/wiki/Rainer_Werner_Fassbinder" title="Rainer Werner Fassbinder">Fassbinder</a> in the shade by a wide margin. If the <i>Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung</i> was justifiably drawn to oppose the planned performance of Fassbinder's play, then why did it choose to publish Nolte's letter [A reference to the play <i>The Garbage, the City, and Death</i> by Rainer Werner Fassbinder about an unscrupulous Jewish businessman who exploits German guilt over the Holocaust that many see as anti-Semitic]...The Nazi crimes lose their singularity in that they are at least made comprehensible as an answer to the (still extant) Bolshevist threats of annihilation. The magnitude of Auschwitz shrinks to the format of technical innovation and is explained on the basis of the “Asiatic” threat from an enemy that still stands at our door”.<sup id="cite_ref-92" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-92"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>92<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote><p> In particular, Habermas took Nolte to task for suggesting a moral equivalence between the Holocaust and the <a href="/wiki/Khmer_Rouge" title="Khmer Rouge">Khmer Rouge</a> genocide. In Habermas's opinion, since Cambodia was a backward, Third World agrarian state and Germany a modern, First World industrial state, there was no comparison between the two genocides.<sup id="cite_ref-Low_p._474_93-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Low_p._474-93"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>93<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Habermas then linked what he called the revisionism of Nolte, Hillgruber and Stürmer with the planned German Historical Museum in Berlin and the House of History in Bonn, which he criticized for a nationalistic view of German history.<sup id="cite_ref-94" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-94"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>94<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Habermas accused Stürmer of subordinating history to politics and of attempting to strangle the emergence of individualistic society with his demand for "historical consciousness as vicarious religion".<sup id="cite_ref-95" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-95"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>95<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Habermas wrote: "The unconditional opening of the Federal Republic to the political culture of the West is the greatest intellectual achievement of our postwar period; my generation should be especially proud of this. This event cannot and should not be stabilized by a kind of NATO philosophy colored with German nationalism. The opening of the Federal Republic has been achieved precisely by overcoming the ideology of Central Europe that our revisionists are trying to warm up for us with their geopolitical drumbeat about `"the old geographically central position of the Germans in Europe" (Stürmer) and "the reconstruction of the destroyed European Center" (Hillgruber). The only patriotism that will not estrange us from the West is a constitutional patriotism."<sup id="cite_ref-:36_86-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:36-86"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>86<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""The_New_Myth_of_State""><span id=".22The_New_Myth_of_State.22"></span>"The New Myth of State"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=13" title="Edit section: "The New Myth of State""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>The sub-title of Hillgruber's book drew controversy with the Swiss historian <a href="/wiki/Micha_Brumlik" title="Micha Brumlik">Micha Brumlik</a> in an essay entitled "New Myth of State" first published in <i>Die Tagezeitung</i> newspaper on 12 July 1986, commenting that the use of the word <i>Zerschlagung</i> (destruction) for the Germans indicated that an act of extreme violence was committed against the Germans while the Jews were assigned only the neutral term <i>Ende</i> (end) to describe the Holocaust.<sup id="cite_ref-Brumlik,_Micha_pages_45-49_96-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Brumlik,_Micha_pages_45-49-96"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>96<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Brumlik argued that in his view, Hillgruber by his use of the word "End" to label the Holocaust implied that the <i>Shoah</i> was just something terrible that happened to the Jews of Europe, but it was not anybody's fault.<sup id="cite_ref-Brumlik,_Micha_pages_45-49_96-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Brumlik,_Micha_pages_45-49-96"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>96<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Brumlik accused Hillgruber of reducing German history down to the level of <i>Landserheft</i> (a type of comics in Germany glorifying war).<sup id="cite_ref-97" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-97"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>97<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Brumlik argued that Hillgruber's thesis about the Holocaust as one of many genocides, instead of a unique event, was a form of "psychological repression" to avoid dealing with guilt over the Holocaust.<sup id="cite_ref-98" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-98"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>98<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Brumlik wrote: "Even if we do not look into Stalinist totalitarianism and its murderous work camps, the expansionism of the Soviet Union since 1945, the irresponsible foreign policy adventures of the Soviet Union and its thoroughly repressive regime, it now is becoming clear what role <a href="/wiki/Anticommunism" class="mw-redirect" title="Anticommunism">anticommunism</a> played and plays in the political culture of psychological repression...Only if this equation is made; only if is further insinuated that the Soviet Union wanted to exterminate the Germans; other than does it seem legitimate that the nation conducting the war protected the annihilation camps".<sup id="cite_ref-Brumlik,_Micha_pages_45-49_96-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Brumlik,_Micha_pages_45-49-96"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>96<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Brumlik wrote that Hillgruber was clearly trying to suggest that the Soviet Union was waging genocide against the Germans, which made the war effort of Nazi Germany in the East to be as Hillgruber would have it a "justified" defense of German civilians even as at the same time the defensive efforts of the <i>Wehrmacht</i> allowed the Holocaust to continue.<sup id="cite_ref-Brumlik,_Micha_pages_45-49_96-3" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Brumlik,_Micha_pages_45-49-96"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>96<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Brumlik wrote though <i>Zweierlei Untergang</i> only covered the period from June 1944 to May 1945, it did serve to implicitly to turn what was a war of conquest on the part of Germany into a defensive struggle to protect Germans while pushing the Jews being exterminated by the <i>Reich</i> into the background.<sup id="cite_ref-Brumlik,_Micha_pages_45-49_96-4" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Brumlik,_Micha_pages_45-49-96"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>96<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Brumlik wrote that Hillgruber in <i>Zweierlei Untergang</i> had played up the role of Germans as victims in World War II at the expense of Germans as perpetrators.<sup id="cite_ref-99" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-99"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>99<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> The American historian <a href="/wiki/Gordon_A._Craig" title="Gordon A. Craig">Gordon A. Craig</a> expressed the view that Hillgruber's choice of the word <i>Ende</i> for the Holocaust suggested that the Holocaust was "something that just sort of happened".<sup id="cite_ref-100" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-100"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>100<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""The_Age_of_Tyrants""><span id=".22The_Age_of_Tyrants.22"></span>"The Age of Tyrants"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=14" title="Edit section: "The Age of Tyrants""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>In response to Habermas's essay, <a href="/wiki/Klaus_Hildebrand" title="Klaus Hildebrand">Klaus Hildebrand</a> came to the defence of Nolte. Hildebrand in an essay entitled "The Age of Tyrants" first published in the <i>Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung</i> on July 31, 1986, went on to praise Nolte for daring to open up new questions for research.<sup id="cite_ref-101" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-101"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>101<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hildebrand wrote that Habermas had done a "bad service to politics and denies scholarship outright".<sup id="cite_ref-102" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-102"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>102<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hildebrand accused Habermas of fabricating the sentence in which Hillgruber had praised the "tried and true higher-ups of the NSDAP", noting that Hillgruber wrote a long sentence in which Habermas had selectively quoted from without ellipsis.<sup id="cite_ref-103" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-103"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>103<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hildebrand wrote that Hillgruber had understood history as a tragedy and "... this fact escaped Habermas, perhaps due to a lack of expertise, perhaps also due to an unfamiliarity with historical research".<sup id="cite_ref-104" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-104"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>104<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hildebrand wrote that Hillgruber was not trying to glorify the Wehmarcht as Habermas was charging; instead maintaining Hillgruber approach in writing history from the viewpoint of the average German soldier on the Eastern Front in 1944–45 was "legitimate and necessary".<sup id="cite_ref-:11_105-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:11-105"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>105<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hildebrand praised Hillgruber for his new approach to the Eastern Front and accused Habermas of having a "simplistic image of history... without regard to new sources, new realizations, and new questions".<sup id="cite_ref-:11_105-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:11-105"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>105<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hildebrand ended his essay with the remarking that Habermas should have just remained silent as he nothing intelligent to say as he was suffering from a "loss of reality and Manichaenism".<sup id="cite_ref-106" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-106"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>106<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="Nolte's_letter_to_Die_Zeit,_1_August_1986"><span id="Nolte.27s_letter_to_Die_Zeit.2C_1_August_1986"></span>Nolte's letter to <i>Die Zeit</i>, 1 August 1986</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=15" title="Edit section: Nolte's letter to Die Zeit, 1 August 1986"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>Nolte for his part, started to write a series of letters to various newspapers such as <i><a href="/wiki/Die_Zeit" title="Die Zeit">Die Zeit</a></i> and <i><a href="/wiki/Frankfurter_Allgemeine_Zeitung" title="Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung">Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung</a></i> attacking his critics; for an example, in a letter to <i>Die Zeit</i> on 1 August 1986, Nolte complained that his critic <a href="/wiki/J%C3%BCrgen_Habermas" title="Jürgen Habermas">Jürgen Habermas</a> was attempting to censor him for expressing his views, and accused Habermas of being the one responsible for blocking him from attending the Römerberg Conversations.<sup id="cite_ref-107" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-107"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>107<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In the same letter, Nolte described himself as the unnamed historian whose views on the reasons for the Holocaust had at dinner party in May 1986 in Bonn had caused <a href="/wiki/Saul_Friedl%C3%A4nder" title="Saul Friedländer">Saul Friedländer</a> to walk out in disgust that Habermas had alluded to an earlier letter<sup id="cite_ref-108" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-108"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>108<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="Habermas's_letter_to_the_FAZ,_11_August_1986"><span id="Habermas.27s_letter_to_the_FAZ.2C_11_August_1986"></span>Habermas's letter to the <i>FAZ</i>, 11 August 1986</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=16" title="Edit section: Habermas's letter to the FAZ, 11 August 1986"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>Responding to the essay "The Age of Tyrants: History and Politics" by <a href="/wiki/Klaus_Hildebrand" title="Klaus Hildebrand">Klaus Hildebrand</a> defending Nolte and Hillgruber, Habermas wrote that Hillgruber's approach "perhaps would be a legitimate point of view for the memoirs of a veteran-but not for a historian writing from the distance of four decades".<sup id="cite_ref-109" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-109"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>109<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Habermas wrote: </p> <blockquote><p>"In his essay Ernst Nolte treats the 'so-called' annihilation of the Jews (in H.W. Koch, ed. <i>Aspects of the Third Reich</i>, London, 1985). Chaim Weizmann's declaration in the beginning of September 1939 that the Jews of the world would fight on the side of England, 'justified' – so opinioned Nolte – Hitler to treat the Jews as prisoners of war and to intern them. Other objections aside, I cannot distinguish between the insinuation that world Jewry is a subject of international law and the usual anti-Semitic projections. And if it had at least stopped with deportation. All this does not stop Klaus Hildebrand in the <i>Historische Zeitschrift</i> from commending Nolte's 'pathfinding essay', because it 'attempts to project exactly the seeming unique aspects of the history of the Third Reich onto the backdrop of the European and global development'. Hildebrand is pleased that Nolte denies the singularity of the Nazi atrocities."<sup id="cite_ref-110" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-110"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>110<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="Stürmer's_letter_to_the_FAZ,_16_August_1986"><span id="St.C3.BCrmer.27s_letter_to_the_FAZ.2C_16_August_1986"></span>Stürmer's letter to the <i>FAZ</i>, 16 August 1986</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=17" title="Edit section: Stürmer's letter to the FAZ, 16 August 1986"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>Stürmer in a letter to the editor of <i>Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung</i> published on 16 August 1986 accused Habermas of "sloppy research with patched-together quotes in an attempt to place historians on his blacklist".<sup id="cite_ref-:12_111-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:12-111"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>111<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Stürmer wrote that was attempting to answer the "German question" by working for the "affirmation and development of the Atlantic and European ties of our country" and denied seeking to "endow history with a higher meaning".<sup id="cite_ref-:12_111-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:12-111"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>111<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Stürmer ended his letter with the remark: "What should one think of an indictment that even fabricates its own sources?... It's a shame about this man [Habermas] who once had something to say".<sup id="cite_ref-112" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-112"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>112<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""Encumbered_Remembrance""><span id=".22Encumbered_Remembrance.22"></span>"Encumbered Remembrance"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=18" title="Edit section: "Encumbered Remembrance""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div><p> Fest in an essay entitled "Encumbered Remembrance" first published in the <i>Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung</i> on August 29, 1986, claimed that Nolte's argument that Nazi crimes were not singular was correct.<sup id="cite_ref-113" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-113"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>113<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Fest accused Habermas of "academic dyslexia" and "character assassination" in his attacks against Nolte.<sup id="cite_ref-114" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-114"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>114<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In response to Habermas's claim that the Holocaust was not comparable to the Khmer Rouge genocide because Germany was a First World nation and Cambodia a Third World nation, Fest, who was one of Nolte's leading defenders, called Habermas a racist for suggesting that it was natural for Cambodians to engage in genocide while unnatural for Germans.<sup id="cite_ref-115" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-115"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>115<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Fest argued against the "singularity" of the Holocaust under the grounds that:</p><blockquote><p>"The gas chambers with which the executors of the annihilation of the Jews went to work without a doubt signal a particularly repulsive form of mass murder, and they have justifiably become a symbol for the technicized barbarism of the Hitler regime. But can it really be said that the mass liquidations by a bullet to the back of the neck, as was common practice during the years of the Red Terror, are qualitatively different? Isn't, despite all the differences, the comparable element stronger?... The thesis of the singularity of Nazi crimes is finally also placed in question by the consideration that Hitler himself frequently referred to the practices of his revolutionary opponents of the Left as lessons and models. But he did more than just copy them. Determined to be more radical than his most bitter enemy, he also outdid them"<sup id="cite_ref-116" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-116"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>116<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote><p> Moreover, Fest argued in his defence of Nolte that in the overheated atmosphere in <a href="/wiki/Munich" title="Munich">Munich</a> following the overthrow of the <a href="/wiki/Bavarian_Soviet_Republic" title="Bavarian Soviet Republic">Bavarian Soviet Republic</a> in 1919 "... gave Hitler's extermination complexes a real background", writing that Nolte was indeed correct that reports of Bolshevik atrocities in the Russian Civil War together with a number of Jews serving in the Bavarian Soviet Republic inspired Hitler to exterminate the Jews.<sup id="cite_ref-117" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-117"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>117<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Fest defended Nolte's point about Poles being "virulently anti-semitic" by mentioning the Kielce pogrom of July 1946 as proving that the Polish people were indeed murderously anti-semitic, writing that historians should take account of this.<sup id="cite_ref-118" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-118"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>118<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Finally, Fest wrote as part of his attack on the "singularity" of the Holocaust that:</p><blockquote><p>"There are questions upon questions, but no answer can be offered here. Rather, it is a matter of rousing doubt in the monumental simplicity and one-sidedness of the prevailing ideas about the particularity of the Nazi crimes that supposedly had no model and followed no example. All in all, this thesis stands on weak ground. And it is less surprising that, as Habermas incorrectly suggests in reference to Nolte, it is being questioned. It is far more astonishing that this has not seriously taken place until now. For that also means that the countless other victims, in particular, but not exclusively those of Communism, are no longer part of our memory. Arno Borst once declared in a different context that no group in today's society has been ruthlessly oppressed as the dead. That is especially true for the millions of dead of this century, from the Armenians all the way to the victims of the Gulag Archipelago or the Cambodians who were and still being murdered before all of our eyes-but who have still been dropped from the world's memory"<sup id="cite_ref-119" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-119"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>119<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote> <figure class="mw-default-size mw-halign-right" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Choeungek2.JPG" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/9c/Choeungek2.JPG/220px-Choeungek2.JPG" decoding="async" width="220" height="165" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/9c/Choeungek2.JPG/330px-Choeungek2.JPG 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/9c/Choeungek2.JPG/440px-Choeungek2.JPG 2x" data-file-width="1280" data-file-height="960" /></a><figcaption>Skulls of Khmer Rouge victims. Nolte's admirer <a href="/wiki/Joachim_Fest" title="Joachim Fest">Joachim Fest</a> was to defend Nolte by arguing that Habermas was a racist for arguing that it was natural for Cambodians to practice genocide and unnatural for Germans.</figcaption></figure> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="Bracher's_letter_to_the_FAZ,_6_September_1986"><span id="Bracher.27s_letter_to_the_FAZ.2C_6_September_1986"></span>Bracher's letter to the <i>FAZ</i>, 6 September 1986</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=19" title="Edit section: Bracher's letter to the FAZ, 6 September 1986"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>In a letter to the editor of <i>Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung</i> published on September 6, 1986, <a href="/wiki/Karl_Dietrich_Bracher" title="Karl Dietrich Bracher">Karl Dietrich Bracher</a> that nothing new was being presented by either side.<sup id="cite_ref-Bracher_pages_72-73_120-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Bracher_pages_72-73-120"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>120<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Bracher wrote that he approved of <a href="/wiki/Joachim_Fest" title="Joachim Fest">Joachim Fest</a>'s essay “Encumbered Remembrance“ about the moral equivalence of Nazi and Communist crimes, though he remained pointedly silent about Fest's support for the theory of <a href="/wiki/Ernst_Nolte" title="Ernst Nolte">Ernst Nolte</a> of a “causal nexus” with German National Socialism as an extreme, but understandable response to Soviet Communism.<sup id="cite_ref-Bracher_pages_72-73_120-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Bracher_pages_72-73-120"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>120<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Bracher argued that "...the "totalitarian" force of these two ideologies [Communism and National Socialism] seized the whole human and seduced and enslaved him".<sup id="cite_ref-Bracher_pages_72-73_120-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Bracher_pages_72-73-120"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>120<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Bracher accused both <a href="/wiki/J%C3%BCrgen_Habermas" title="Jürgen Habermas">Jürgen Habermas</a> and <a href="/wiki/Ernst_Nolte" title="Ernst Nolte">Ernst Nolte</a> of both "...tabooing the concept of totalitarianism and inflating the formula of fascism".<sup id="cite_ref-Bracher_pages_72-73_120-3" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Bracher_pages_72-73-120"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>120<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Bracher complained about the "politically polarized" dispute that was blinding historians to the "comparability" of Communism and National Socialism<sup id="cite_ref-Bracher_pages_72-73_120-4" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Bracher_pages_72-73-120"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>120<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Bracher ended his letter by writing that neither National Socialism nor Communism lost none of "...their respective "singular" inhumanity by comparisons. Neither a national nor a socialist apologetic can be supported on that basis".<sup id="cite_ref-Bracher_pages_72-73_120-5" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Bracher_pages_72-73-120"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>120<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""The_Impoverished_Practice_of_Insinuation""><span id=".22The_Impoverished_Practice_of_Insinuation.22"></span>"The Impoverished Practice of Insinuation"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=20" title="Edit section: "The Impoverished Practice of Insinuation""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>The historian <a href="/wiki/Eberhard_J%C3%A4ckel" title="Eberhard Jäckel">Eberhard Jäckel</a> in an essay first published in the <i>Die Zeit</i> newspaper on September 12, 1986, argued that Nolte's theory was ahistorical on the grounds that Hitler held the Soviet Union in contempt, and could not have felt threatened as Nolte claimed.<sup id="cite_ref-121" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-121"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>121<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Jäckel wrote, in an essay entitled "The Impoverished Practice of Insinuation: The Singular Aspect of National-Socialist Crimes Cannot Be Denied", </p> <blockquote><p>"Hitler often said why he wished to remove and kill the Jews. His explanation is a complicated and structurally logical construct that can be reproduced in great detail. A rat cage, the murders committed by the Bolsheviks, or a special fear of these are not mentioned. On the contrary, Hitler was always convinced that Soviet Russia, precisely because it was ruled by Jews, was a defenseless colossus standing on clay feet. Aryans had no fear of Slavic or Jewish subhumans. The Jew, Hitler wrote in 1926 in <i>Mein Kampf</i>, "is not an element of an organization, but a ferment of decomposition. The gigantic empire in the East is ripe for collapse". Hitler still believed this in 1941 when he had his soldiers invade Russia without winter equipment."<sup id="cite_ref-122" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-122"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>122<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote> <p>Jäckel attacked Nolte's statement that Hitler had an especially intense fear of the Soviet "rat cage" torture by arguing that Hitler's statement of February 1, 1943 to his generals about captured German officers going off to the "rat cage" clearly meant the <a href="/wiki/Lubyanka_(KGB)" class="mw-redirect" title="Lubyanka (KGB)">Lubyanka</a> prison, and this is not as Nolte was arguing to be interpreted literally.<sup id="cite_ref-j77_123-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-j77-123"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>123<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Jäckel went on to argue that Nolte had done nothing to establish what the remarks about the "rat cage" had to do with the Holocaust.<sup id="cite_ref-j77_123-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-j77-123"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>123<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Jäckel accused Nolte of engaging in a <a href="/wiki/Post_hoc_ergo_propter_hoc" title="Post hoc ergo propter hoc"><i>post hoc, ergo propter hoc</i></a> argument to establish the "causal nexus" between Hitler's supposed fear of the "rat cage" torture, and the Holocaust.<sup id="cite_ref-j77_123-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-j77-123"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>123<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Against Nolte's claim that the Holocaust was not unique but rather one among many genocides, Jäckel rejected the assertion of Nolte and his supporters, such as <a href="/wiki/Joachim_Fest" title="Joachim Fest">Joachim Fest</a>: </p> <blockquote><p>"I, however claim (and not for the first time) that the National Socialist murder of the Jews was unique because never before had a nation with the authority of its leader decided and announced that it would kill off as completely as possible a particular group of humans, including old people, women, children and infants, and actually put this decision into practice, using all the means of governmental power at its disposal. This idea is so apparent and so well known that is quite astonishing that it could have escaped Fest's attention (the massacres of the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire during the First World War were, according to all we know, more like murderous deportations than planned genocide)".<sup id="cite_ref-124" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-124"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>124<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote> <p>Jäckel later described Nolte's methods as a "game of confusion", comprising dressing hypotheses up as questions, and then attacking critics who demanded evidence for his assertions as seeking to block one from asking questions.<sup id="cite_ref-125" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-125"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>125<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""The_Morality_of_History”"><span id=".22The_Morality_of_History.E2.80.9D"></span>"The Morality of History”</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=21" title="Edit section: "The Morality of History”"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>The philosopher Helmut Fleischer in an essay first published in the <i>Nürnberger Zeitung</i> newspaper on September 20, 1986, defended Nolte against Habermas under the grounds that Nolte was only seeking to place the Holocaust into a wider political context of the times.<sup id="cite_ref-:13_126-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:13-126"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>126<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Fleischer wrote the dispute was really "about the <i>moral</i> judgement of the Nazi past".<sup id="cite_ref-:13_126-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:13-126"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>126<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Flesicher wrote in defense of Hillgruber that he had the moral case for justifying the <i>Wehrmacht</i><span class="nowrap" style="padding-left:0.1em;">'</span>s last stand on the Eastern Front as necessary to protect German civilians from the Red Army.<sup id="cite_ref-:13_126-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:13-126"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>126<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Fleischer accused Habermas of seeking to impose a left-wing moral understanding on the Nazi period on Germans and of creating a "moral" <i><a href="/wiki/Sondergericht" title="Sondergericht">Sondergericht</a></i> (Special Court).<sup id="cite_ref-127" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-127"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>127<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Fleischer argued that Nolte was only seeking the "historicization" of National Socialism that Martin Broszat had called for in a 1985 essay by trying to understand what caused National Socialism, with a special focus on the fear of Communism.<sup id="cite_ref-128" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-128"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>128<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="Historikerstreit,_autumn_1986"><span id="Historikerstreit.2C_autumn_1986"></span><i>Historikerstreit</i>, autumn 1986</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=22" title="Edit section: Historikerstreit, autumn 1986"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""Hitler_Should_Not_Be_Repressed_By_Stalin_and_Pol_Pot""><span id=".22Hitler_Should_Not_Be_Repressed_By_Stalin_and_Pol_Pot.22"></span>"Hitler Should Not Be Repressed By Stalin and Pol Pot"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=23" title="Edit section: "Hitler Should Not Be Repressed By Stalin and Pol Pot""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>The German historian <a href="/wiki/J%C3%BCrgen_Kocka" title="Jürgen Kocka">Jürgen Kocka</a> in an essay first published in <i>Die Zeit</i> on September 26, 1986, contended against Nolte that the Holocaust was indeed a “singular” event because it had been committed by an advanced Western nation, and argued that Nolte's comparisons of the Holocaust with similar mass killings in <a href="/wiki/Pol_Pot" title="Pol Pot">Pol Pot</a>'s <a href="/wiki/Cambodia" title="Cambodia">Cambodia</a>, <a href="/wiki/Joseph_Stalin" title="Joseph Stalin">Joseph Stalin</a>'s <a href="/wiki/Soviet_Union" title="Soviet Union">Soviet Union</a>, and <a href="/wiki/Idi_Amin" title="Idi Amin">Idi Amin</a>'s <a href="/wiki/Uganda" title="Uganda">Uganda</a> were invalid because of the backward nature of those societies.<sup id="cite_ref-129" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-129"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>129<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Kocka dismissed Fest's claims that Habermas was a racist for rejecting comparisons with Cambodia, writing "it has to do with historical knowledge about the connection between economic development and the possibilities of sociopolitical organization, and also with taking seriously the European tradition, in consideration of which the Enlightenment, human rights and the constitutional state cannot be simply ignored".<sup id="cite_ref-:14_130-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:14-130"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>130<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Kocka went to criticize Nolte's view of the Holocaust as "a not altogether incomprehensible reaction to the prior threat of annihilation, as whose potential or real victims Hitler and the National Socialists allegedly were justified in seeing themselves".<sup id="cite_ref-:14_130-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:14-130"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>130<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Kocka wrote that: </p> <blockquote><p>"The real causes of anti-Semitism in Germany are to be found neither in Russia nor the World Jewish Congress. And how can one, in light of the facts, interpret the National Socialist annihilation of the Jews as a somewhat logical, if premature, means of defense against the threats of annihilation coming from the Soviet Union, with which Germany had made a pact in 1939, and which it then subsequently attacked? Here the sober historical inquiry into real historical connections, into causes, and consequences, and about real motives and their conditions would suffice to protect the writer and the reader from abstruse speculative interpretations. Nolte fails to ask such questions. If a past "that is capable of being agreed on" can be gained by intellectual gymnastics of this sort, then we should renounce it."<sup id="cite_ref-131" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-131"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>131<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote><p> Kocka argued against Stürmer that "Geography is not destiny".<sup id="cite_ref-132" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-132"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>132<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Kocka argued there other countries in "the middle" like Poland, Switzerland and Germany itself prior to 1871 did not evolve in the same way that Germany did after 1871, stating that Stürmer's argument that Bismark needed to impose an authoritarian government because of geography was simply wrong.<sup id="cite_ref-133" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-133"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>133<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""Questions_We_Have_To_Face""><span id=".22Questions_We_Have_To_Face.22"></span>"Questions We Have To Face"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=24" title="Edit section: "Questions We Have To Face""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p><a href="/wiki/Hagen_Schulze" title="Hagen Schulze">Hagen Schulze</a> in an essay first published in <i>Die Zeit</i> on September 26, 1986, defended Nolte, together with <a href="/wiki/Andreas_Hillgruber" title="Andreas Hillgruber">Andreas Hillgruber</a>, and argued Habermas was acting from "incorrect presuppositions" in attacking Nolte and Hillgruber for denying the "singularity" of the Holocaust.<sup id="cite_ref-s94_134-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-s94-134"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>134<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Schulze argued that Habermas's attack on Nolte was flawed because he never provided any proof that the Holocaust was unique, and argued there were many "aspects" of the Holocaust that were "common" with other historical occurrences.<sup id="cite_ref-s94_134-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-s94-134"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>134<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In Schulze's opinion:</p><blockquote><p>"For the discipline of history, singularity and comparability of historical events are thus not mutually exclusive alternatives. They are complementary concepts. A claim that historians such as Ernst Nolte or Andreas Hillgruber deny the uniqueness of Auschwitz because they are looking for comparisons stems from incorrect presuppositions. Of course, Nolte and Hillgruber can be refuted if their comparisons rest on empirically or logically false assumptions. But Habermas never provided such proof."<sup id="cite_ref-s94_134-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-s94-134"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>134<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote><p> Schulze defended Stürmer's call for the historians to explore the "German question", writing that it was "important" for historians to "make the national identity of the Germans an object of their research".<sup id="cite_ref-135" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-135"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>135<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Schulze dismissed Habermas's call for "constitutional patriotism" under the grounds a form of national identity grounded in loyalty to the Basic Law of 1949 was too dry to work, and the German people needed a national identity that was more emotional to work.<sup id="cite_ref-136" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-136"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>136<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""A_Searching_Image_of_the_Past""><span id=".22A_Searching_Image_of_the_Past.22"></span>"A Searching Image of the Past"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=25" title="Edit section: "A Searching Image of the Past""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>The Swiss journalist Hanno Helbling in an essay first published in the <i>Neu Zuricher Zeitung</i> newspaper on September 26, 1986, accused Nolte and his allies of working to destroy "the 'negative myth' of Nazi Germany, not only by revising our inevitable understanding of this reign of terror, but also by restoring the national past."<sup id="cite_ref-:15_137-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:15-137"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>137<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nelbling complained: "Revisionists who gloss over the evils of National Socialism and deny its atrocities have raised a ruckus latterly. What they claim is without scholarly substance and cannot influence our understanding of history in the long term".<sup id="cite_ref-:15_137-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:15-137"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>137<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Helbling wrote about Nolte's comment about the problem of a "negative myth of the Third Reich" that Nolte wrote "as if myths were necessary to make our understanding of National Socialism negative... Or can take refuge in countermyths of the negative kind and thus come close to a leveling strategy, just as announcements of horrors from the distant past are not suited to proving that back then, too, murderous deeds were committed. And what about the recent past: "Didn't Stalin..."; in Cambodia, didn't they..." These are sad calcuations [<i><a href="/wiki/Sic" title="Sic">sic</a>?</i>], which in a strange way have propagated themselves into the political view of the present".<sup id="cite_ref-138" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-138"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>138<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""The_Search_for_the_'Lost_History'?""><span id=".22The_Search_for_the_.27Lost_History.27.3F.22"></span>"The Search for the 'Lost History'?"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=26" title="Edit section: "The Search for the 'Lost History'?""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p><a href="/wiki/Hans_Mommsen" title="Hans Mommsen">Hans Mommsen</a> in an essay first published in the September 1986 edition of <a href="/wiki/Merkur_(journal)" class="mw-redirect" title="Merkur (journal)"><i>Merkur</i></a> accused Nolte of attempting to "relativize" Nazi crimes within the broader framework of the 20th century.<sup id="cite_ref-m108_139-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-m108-139"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>139<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Mommsen asserted that by describing Lenin's Red Terror in Russia as an "Asiatic deed" threatening Germany, Nolte was arguing that all actions directed against Communism, no matter how morally repugnant, were justified by necessity.<sup id="cite_ref-m108_139-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-m108-139"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>139<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Mommsen wrote that the problem with German conservatives after 1945 was lack of a "reservoir of conservative values to which it could connect without interruption".<sup id="cite_ref-140" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-140"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>140<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Mommsen wrote the theory of totalitarianism served Cold War needs so "that could not only decorate itself with the epithet "anti-Fascist" but could also rule out and criminalize leftist efforts" and for the "bracketing out the period of the Third Reich from the continuity of German history".<sup id="cite_ref-141" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-141"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>141<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Mommsen argued this "bracketing out" was necessary because of the continuity of the German bureaucracy from the Weimar to Nazi to post-war periods, which required a "psychological repression of the criminal politics of the Third Reich".<sup id="cite_ref-:35_142-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:35-142"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>142<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In this regard, Mommsen wrote: "It is significant that the Weimar Republic was viewed in the years immediately following 1945 as an experiment failed from the onset; not until the success of the chancellor democracy did this image brighten. Then the Weimar experience could be trotted out for the additional legitimization of the Federal Republic and the fundamental superiority the Federal Republic assured".<sup id="cite_ref-:35_142-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:35-142"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>142<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Mommsen wrote that the Bitburg controversy of 1985 had "made surprisingly clear that the burdens of the Second World War now as before possess traumatic meaning. These burdens disturbed the dramaturgy of the Bitburg spectacle, which, under the fiction of final reconciliation among friends, was supposed to replace the idea of a crusade by the Allies against the Hitler dictatorship with the idea of a crusade against Communist world dictatorship".<sup id="cite_ref-143" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-143"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>143<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Mommsen wrote it was a reaction to the Bitburg controversy that led historians like Michael Stürmer to insist that the Germans needed a positive history to end what Stürmer called the "collective obsession with guilt".<sup id="cite_ref-:16_144-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:16-144"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>144<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Mommsen praised what Stümer deplored, writing the "prevailing mistrust in the Federal Republic, independent of every party affiliation of any cult of community, organized by the state, of appeals for national willingness to make sacrifices and of sentiment against national pathos and national emblems has its roots in the political sobering up that arose from the experiences of the Third Reich. Whoever wants to see in this a lack of patriotic sentiment should be clear once and for all that there is no lack of willingness for democratic participation, although this frequently takes place outside of the corrupt apparatus of the large parties... It is therefore absurd to want to rehabilitate older authoritarian attitudes through historical relativizing. It is a mistake to characterize as a wrong path the consequences of action inferred from the flawed developments of the period between the wars".<sup id="cite_ref-:16_144-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:16-144"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>144<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Mommsen accused the Kohl government of seeking to revive German nationalism "via a detour" of "strengthening national consciousness" through the planned German Historical Museum in West Berlin.<sup id="cite_ref-145" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-145"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>145<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Mommsen wrote the purposes of the German Historical Museum together with the House of History in Bonn was to "make us forget the Holocaust and Operation Barbarossa under the slogan of "normalizing". This intention has nothing to do with the understanding of history that has grown stepwise in postwar Germany, an understanding that has come about apart from the classical monumental history and frequently independently of the scholarly discipline".<sup id="cite_ref-146" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-146"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>146<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""The_New_Historical_Consciousness""><span id=".22The_New_Historical_Consciousness.22"></span>"The New Historical Consciousness"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=27" title="Edit section: "The New Historical Consciousness""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div><p> In another essay first published in the <i>Blätter für deutsche und internationale Politik</i> magazine in October 1986, Mommsen was to call Nolte's claim of a "causal nexus" between National Socialism and Communism "not simply methodologically untenable, but also absurd in it premises and conclusions".<sup id="cite_ref-147" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-147"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>147<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Mommsen wrote in his opinion that Nolte's use of the Nazi era phrase "Asiatic hordes" to describe Red Army soldiers, and his use of the word "<a href="/wiki/Asia" title="Asia">Asia</a>" as a byword for all that is horrible and cruel in the world reflected racism.<sup id="cite_ref-148" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-148"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>148<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Mommsen wrote:</p><blockquote><p>"In contrast to these irrefutable conditioning factors, Nolte's derivation based on personalities and the history of ideas seems artificial, even for the explanation of Hitler's anti-Semitism…If one emphasizes the indisputably important connection in isolation, one should not then force a connection with Hitler's <i>weltanschauung</i>, which was in no ways original itself, in order to derive from it the existence of Auschwitz. The battle line between the political right in Germany and the Bolsheviks had achieved its aggressive contour before Stalinism employed methods that led to the death of millions of people. Thoughts about the extermination of the Jews had long been current, and not only for Hitler and his satraps. Many of these found their way to the NSDAP from the <a href="/wiki/Deutschv%C3%B6lkischer_Schutz_und_Trutzbund" class="mw-redirect" title="Deutschvölkischer Schutz und Trutzbund"><i>Deutschvölkisch Schutz-und Trutzbund</i></a> [German Racial Union for Protection and Defiance], which itself had been called into life by the <a href="/wiki/Alldeutscher_Verband" class="mw-redirect" title="Alldeutscher Verband">Pan-German Union</a>. Hitler's step from verbal anti-Semitism to practical implementation would then have happened without knowledge of and in reaction to the atrocities of the Stalinists. And thus one would have to overturn Nolte's construct, for which he cannot bring biographical evidence to bear. As a Hitler biographer, Fest distanced himself from this kind of one-sidedness by making reference to "the Austrian-German Hitler's earlier fears of and phantasies of being overwhelmed". It is not completely consistent that Fest admits that the reports of the terrorist methods of the Bolsheviks had given Hitler's "extermination complexes" a "real background". Basically, Nolte's proposal in its one-sidedness is not very helpful for explaining or evaluating what happened. The anti-Bolshevism garnished with anti-Semitism had the effect, in particular for the dominant elites, and certainly not just the National Socialists, that Hitler's program of racial annihilation met with no serious resistance. The leadership of the Wehrmacht rather willingly made themselves into accomplices in the policy of extermination. It did this by generating the "criminal orders" and implementing them. By no means did they merely passively support the implementation of their concept, although there was a certain reluctance for reasons of military discipline and a few isolated protests. To construct a "causal nexus" over all this amounts in fact to steering away from the decisive responsibility of the military leadership and the bureaucratic elites."<sup id="cite_ref-149" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-149"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>149<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote> <p>Mommsen wrote it was no accident that Stürmer sat on the editorial board of the <i>Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung</i>, the same newspaper that run the essays by Nolte and Fest denying the "singularity" of the Holocaust given that Stürmer's self-proclaimed mission was to give Germans a history that would inspire national pride.<sup id="cite_ref-150" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-150"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>150<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Mommsen wrote: "What is taking place at present is no conspiracy. A better description would be that national sentiments, long dammed up and visible only in marginal literature, are coming together in an unholy alliance and seeking new shores".<sup id="cite_ref-151" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-151"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>151<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Mommsen wrote the question of the "singularity" of the Holocaust was legitimate, but the motives of Hildebrand and Stürmer were political rather than scholarly, to end the "German obsession with guilt".<sup id="cite_ref-152" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-152"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>152<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Mommsen wrote" "To accept with resignation the acts of screaming injustice and to psychologically repress their social prerequisites by calling attention to similar events elsewhere and putting the blame on the Bolshevist world threat recalls the thought patterns that made it possible to implement genocide".<sup id="cite_ref-:17_153-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:17-153"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>153<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Mommsen that when in the spring of 1943 the graves of the Polish officers massacred by the NKVD were discovered in Katyn Wood, the massacre was given massive publicity in Germany as a symbol of Soviet terror, going on to note those Germans opposed to the Nazi regime continue to view the Nazi regime as something worse despite all the publicity about the Katyn Wood massacre in Germany.<sup id="cite_ref-:17_153-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:17-153"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>153<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Mommsen wrote the present campaign was a form of "psychological repression" intended to end any guilt over the Holocaust.<sup id="cite_ref-154" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-154"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>154<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>In another essay entitled "Reappraisal and Repression The Third Reich In West German Historical Consciousness", Mommsen wrote that: </p> <blockquote><p> "Nolte's superficial approach which associates things that do not belong together, substitutes analogies for causal arguments, and – thanks to his taste for exaggeration – produces a long outdated interpretation of the Third Reich as the result of a single factor. His claims are regarded in professional circles as a stimulating challenge at best, hardly as a convincing contribution to an understanding of the crisis of twentieth-century capitalist society in Europe. The fact that Nolte has found eloquent supporters both inside and outside the historical profession has little to do with the normal process of research and much to do with the political implications of the relativization of the Holocaust that he has insistently championed for so long... The fundamentally apologetic character of Nolte's argument shines through most clearly when he concedes Hitler's right to deport, through not to exterminate, the Jews in response to the supposed "declaration of war" issued by the World Jewish Congress; or when he claims that the activities of the SS <i>Einsatzgruppen</i> can be justified, at least subjectively, as operations aimed against partisans fighting the German Army."<sup id="cite_ref-155" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-155"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>155<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote> <p>Mommsen was later in a 1988 book review entitled "Resentment as Social Science" to call Nolte's book, <i>Der Europäische Bürgerkrieg</i>, a "regression back to the brew of racist-nationalistic ideology of the interwar period".<sup id="cite_ref-156" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-156"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>156<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""Where_the_Roads_Part""><span id=".22Where_the_Roads_Part.22"></span>"Where the Roads Part"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=28" title="Edit section: "Where the Roads Part""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p><a href="/wiki/Martin_Broszat" title="Martin Broszat">Martin Broszat</a> in an essay first published in <i>Die Zeit</i> on October 3, 1986, labeled Nolte an obnoxious crank<sup class="noprint Inline-Template Template-Fact" style="white-space:nowrap;">[<i><a href="/wiki/Wikipedia:Citation_needed" title="Wikipedia:Citation needed"><span title="This claim needs references to reliable sources. (December 2019)">citation needed</span></a></i>]</sup> and a Nazi apologist who making "offensive" statements about the Holocaust.<sup id="cite_ref-b126-127_157-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-b126-127-157"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>157<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Regarding Nolte's claim that Weizmann on behalf of world Jewry had declared war on Germany in 1939, Broszat wrote that Weizmann's letter to Chamberlain promising the support of the Jewish Agency in World War II was not a "declaration of war", nor did Weizmann have the legal power to declare war on anyone.<sup id="cite_ref-b126-127_157-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-b126-127-157"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>157<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Broszat commented, "These facts may be overlooked by a right-wing publicist with a dubious educational background, but not by the university professor Ernst Nolte."<sup id="cite_ref-b126-127_157-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-b126-127-157"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>157<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Broszat observed that when Hildebrand organized a conference of right-wing German historians under the auspices of the Schleyer Foundation in West Berlin in September 1986, he did not invite Nolte, whom Broszat observed lived in Berlin.<sup id="cite_ref-Broszat,_Martin_pages_123–129_158-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Broszat,_Martin_pages_123–129-158"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>158<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Broszat suggested that this was Hildebrand's way of trying to separate himself from Nolte, whose work Hildebrand had praised so strongly in a review the <i>Historische Zeitschrift</i> in April 1986.<sup id="cite_ref-Broszat,_Martin_pages_123–129_158-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Broszat,_Martin_pages_123–129-158"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>158<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Broszat wrote that Stürmer was trying to create an "ersatz religion" that was more appropriate for the pre-modern era than 1986, charging that Stürmer seemed torn between his commitment to democracy, NATO and Atlanticism vs. his call for history to serve as a unifying force for society.<sup id="cite_ref-Broszat,_Martin_pages_123–129_158-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Broszat,_Martin_pages_123–129-158"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>158<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Broszat wrote that "Here the roads part", and argued that no self-respecting historian could associate himself with the effort to "drive the shame out of the Germans".<sup id="cite_ref-b129_159-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-b129-159"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>159<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Broszat ended his essay with the remark that such "perversions" of German history must be resisted in order to ensure the German people a better future.<sup id="cite_ref-b129_159-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-b129-159"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>159<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""The_New_Auschwitz_Lie""><span id=".22The_New_Auschwitz_Lie.22"></span>"The New Auschwitz Lie"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=29" title="Edit section: "The New Auschwitz Lie""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div><p> The journalist <a href="/wiki/Rudolf_Augstein" title="Rudolf Augstein">Rudolf Augstein</a>, the publisher of the <i><a href="/wiki/Der_Spiegel" title="Der Spiegel">Der Spiegel</a></i> news journal accused Nolte of creating the "New Auschwitz Lie" in an essay first published in the October 6, 1986 edition of <i>Der Spiegel</i>.<sup id="cite_ref-a133-134_160-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-a133-134-160"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>160<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Augstein questioned just why Nolte referred to the Holocaust as the "so-called annihilation of the Jews".<sup id="cite_ref-a131_161-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-a131-161"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>161<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Augstein agreed with Nolte that the Israelis were “blackmailing” the Germans over the Holocaust, but argued that given the magnitude of the Holocaust, the Germans had nothing to complain about.<sup id="cite_ref-a131_161-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-a131-161"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>161<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Augstein wrote in opposition to Nolte that:</p><blockquote><p>"Not for nothing did Nolte let us know that the annihilation of the kulaks, the peasant middle class, had taken place from 1927 to 1930, <i>before</i> Hitler seized power, and that the destruction of the Old Bolsheviks and countless other victims of Stalin's insanity had happened between 1934 and 1938, <i>before</i> the beginning of Hitler's war. But Stalin's insanity was, in contrast to Hitler's insanity, a realist's insanity. After all this drivel comes one thing worth discussing: whether Stalin pumped up Hitler and whether Hitler pumped up Stalin. This can be discussed, but the discussion does not address the issue. It is indeed possible that Stalin was pleased by how Hitler treated his bosom buddy Ernst Röhm and the entire SA leadership in 1934. It is, not possible that Hitler began his war against Poland because he felt threatened by Stalin's regime... One does not have to agree in everything with Konrad Adenauer. But in the light of the crass tendency to deny the co-responsibility of the Prussian-German Wehrmacht ("The oath! The oath!") ones gains an understanding for the point of the view of the nonpatriot Adenauer that Hitler's <i>Reich</i> was the continuation of the Prussian-German regime"<sup id="cite_ref-a133-134_160-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-a133-134-160"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>160<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote><p> In same essay, Augstein called Hillgruber "a constitutional Nazi".<sup id="cite_ref-Augstein_pages_131-134_162-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Augstein_pages_131-134-162"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>162<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Augstein went on to call for Hillgruber to be fired from his post at the University of Cologne for being a "constitutional Nazi", and argued that there was no moral difference between Hillgruber and <a href="/wiki/Hans_Globke" title="Hans Globke">Hans Globke</a>.<sup id="cite_ref-Augstein_pages_131-134_162-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Augstein_pages_131-134-162"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>162<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="Thirty-Sixth_Conference_of_German_Historians,_Trier,_October_8,_1986"><span id="Thirty-Sixth_Conference_of_German_Historians.2C_Trier.2C_October_8.2C_1986"></span>Thirty-Sixth Conference of German Historians, Trier, October 8, 1986</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=30" title="Edit section: Thirty-Sixth Conference of German Historians, Trier, October 8, 1986"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>The classicist Christian Meier, who was president of the German Historical Association at the time gave a speech on October 8, 1986, before that body, in which he criticized Nolte by declaring that the Holocaust was a “singular” event that “qualitatively surpassed" Soviet terror.<sup id="cite_ref-163" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-163"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>163<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Referring to Nolte's claims of being censored, Meier stated that Nolte had every right to ask questions, and that “no taboos will be established”.<sup id="cite_ref-m139_164-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-m139-164"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>164<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Meier went to say: </p> <blockquote><p>“But the way Nolte poses these questions must be rejected simply because one should not reduce the impact of so elementary a truth: because German historical scholarship cannot be allowed to fall back into producing mindless nationalist apologies; and because it is important for a country to not deceive itself in such sensitive—ethically sensitive—areas of its history.”<sup id="cite_ref-m139_164-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-m139-164"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>164<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote><p> Meier wrote that question of comparing Hitler to Stalin was "not at all illegitimate" and should be studied before saying. "Even if our crimes were not singular, how would that be advantageous for us and our position in the world?"<sup id="cite_ref-m139_164-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-m139-164"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>164<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Meier in an attempt to cool down an increasingly heated debate argued that both sides were unable to listen to one another and German historians needed a "good dose of humor".<sup id="cite_ref-:18_165-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:18-165"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>165<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Meier argued that it was unacceptable for historians to refuse to shake hands because of their disagreements over the <i>Historikerstreit</i>, saying this lack of civility and outright hatred was poisoning the profession of history in Germany.<sup id="cite_ref-:18_165-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:18-165"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>165<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Meier stated that historians had to explain events that they may disapprove of to the best of their abilities, saying that not all scholarship was political.<sup id="cite_ref-:18_165-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:18-165"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>165<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Meier used as an example that intentionist historians did not benefit conservatism, arguing the willingness of "power elites" to obey Hitler's orders does not support a conservative position.<sup id="cite_ref-:19_166-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:19-166"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>166<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Meier defended Hillgruber, saying that the criticism of him by Habermas as a Nazi sympathizer was "nonsensical".<sup id="cite_ref-:19_166-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:19-166"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>166<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Meier ended his speech with a call for German historians to continue to study the past in a professional manner, and argued that pluralism was necessary for the historians' craft.<sup id="cite_ref-167" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-167"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>167<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""Under_the_Domination_of_Suspicion""><span id=".22Under_the_Domination_of_Suspicion.22"></span>"Under the Domination of Suspicion"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=31" title="Edit section: "Under the Domination of Suspicion""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>The conservative German historian Thomas Nipperdey in an essay first published in <i>Die Zeit</i> on October 17, 1986, accused Habermas of unjustly smearing Nolte and other right-wing historians via unscholarly and dubious methods.<sup id="cite_ref-168" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-168"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>168<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nipperdey argued that Habermas had crossed a line in his criticism of Hillgruber, Nolte, Hildebrand and Stürmer.<sup id="cite_ref-169" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-169"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>169<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nipperdey wrote that historians often revise the past and blasted the "critical" historians for their "moralizing" which did more to hinder than help understand German history.<sup id="cite_ref-170" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-170"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>170<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nipperdey accused those historians "critical" of the German past of making that the "monopolistic claim" that its "damning judgments" of the German past were the only acceptable version of history.<sup id="cite_ref-171" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-171"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>171<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nipperdey defended Stürmer's thesis that "there is a political right to memory" as it was a "simple fact".<sup id="cite_ref-172" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-172"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>172<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nippedery wrote their history rested on the basis of "secured knowledge" with "stronger and weaker perspectives, more objective and less objective portrayals".<sup id="cite_ref-:20_173-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:20-173"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>173<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nipperdey concluded that the "great debate" started by Habermas was "unfortunate" and should not have been started.<sup id="cite_ref-:20_173-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:20-173"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>173<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""Auschwitz,_an_Asiatic_Deed""><span id=".22Auschwitz.2C_an_Asiatic_Deed.22"></span>"Auschwitz, an Asiatic Deed"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=32" title="Edit section: "Auschwitz, an Asiatic Deed""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>In letter to the editor of <i>Der Spiegel</i> on October 20, 1986, Imanuel Geiss accused Augstein and Habermas of trying to silence Nolte and Hillgruber.<sup id="cite_ref-:0_174-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:0-174"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>174<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Geiss wrote that revision of history is "normal" and did not justify Augstein's essay.<sup id="cite_ref-:0_174-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:0-174"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>174<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Geiss accused Augstein and Habermas of threatening "our scholarly and political pluralism".<sup id="cite_ref-:0_174-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:0-174"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>174<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Geiss argued that it necessary for historians to reexamine the past, and that Nolte should be allowed to ask questions, saying that people "who desire to defend liberal values in this country must also practice with them in dealing with dissenters".<sup id="cite_ref-175" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-175"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>175<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""Standing_Things_On_Their_Head""><span id=".22Standing_Things_On_Their_Head.22"></span>"Standing Things On Their Head"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=33" title="Edit section: "Standing Things On Their Head""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div><p> In another <i>feuilleton</i> entitled "Standing Things On Their Heads" first published in <i>Die Zeit</i> on October 31, 1986, Nolte dismissed criticism of him by Habermas and Jäckel under the grounds that their writings were no different from what could find in an East German newspaper.<sup id="cite_ref-n153_176-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n153-176"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>176<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte contended that criticism over his use of the phrase “rat cage” was unwarranted since he was only using the phrase “rat cage” as an embodiment of the “Asiatic” horror he alleges Hitler felt about the Bolsheviks.<sup id="cite_ref-177" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-177"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>177<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte wrote he was not trying to reintroduce the Nazi concept of “<a href="/wiki/Jewish_Bolshevism" title="Jewish Bolshevism">Jewish Bolshevism</a>” and that “…even for the uninformed reader, the reference to the Chinese Cheka…" should have made clear that he was writing about overblown fears in Germany of the Bolsheviks instead of an objective reality.<sup id="cite_ref-n153_176-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n153-176"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>176<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In reply to the criticism of Habermas and Jäckel, Nolte wrote:</p><blockquote><p>“The Gulag Archipelago is primary to Auschwitz precisely because the Gulag was in the mind of the originator of Auschwitz; Auschwitz was not in the minds of the originators of the Gulag…If Jäckel proves his own definition for the singularity of the Final Solution, then I think that his concept simply elaborates what can be more briefly expressed with the term "racial murder". If, however, he wants to say that the German state, through the mouth of its <i>Führer</i>, unambiguously and publicly announced the decision that even Jewish women, children and infants were to be killed, then he has illustrated with one short phrase all that does not have to be demonstrated in the current intellectual climate, but can be "imputed". Hitler was certainly the most powerful man that has ever lived in Germany. But he was not powerful enough to ever publicly equate Bolshevism and Christianity, as he often did in his dinner conversations. He also not powerful enough to publicly demand or to justify, as Himmler often did in his circle of friends and associates, the murder of women and children. That, of course, is not proof of Hitler's "humanity", but rather of the remnants of the liberal system. The "extermination of the bourgeoisie" and the "liquidation of the kulaks" were, in contrast proclaimed quite publicly. And I am amazed at the coldheartedness with which Eberhard Jäckel says that not every single bourgeois was killed. Habermas's “expulsion of the kulaks” speaks for itself"<sup id="cite_ref-178" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-178"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>178<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="Interview_with_Andreas_Hillgruber,_31_October_1986"><span id="Interview_with_Andreas_Hillgruber.2C_31_October_1986"></span>Interview with Andreas Hillgruber, 31 October 1986</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=34" title="Edit section: Interview with Andreas Hillgruber, 31 October 1986"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>Hillgruber defended his call for the identification with the German troops fighting on the Eastern Front in an interview with the <i><a href="/wiki/Rheinischer_Merkur" title="Rheinischer Merkur">Rheinischer Merkur</a></i> newspaper on 31 October 1986, on the ground that he was only trying "…to experience things from the perspective of the main body of the population".<sup id="cite_ref-:1_179-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:1-179"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>179<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In the same 1986 interview, Hillgruber said it was necessary for a more nationalistic version of German history to be written because the East German government was embarking upon a more nationalist history, and if West German historians did not keep up with their East German counterparts in terms of German nationalism, it was inevitable that Germans would come to see the East German regime as the legitimate German state.<sup id="cite_ref-180" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-180"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>180<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hillgruber was most furious with Augstein's "constitutional Nazi" line, and stated that he was considering suing Augstein for libel.<sup id="cite_ref-:1_179-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:1-179"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>179<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p> Replying to the interviewer's question about whether he thought the Holocaust was unique, Hillgruber stated:</p><blockquote><p>...that the mass murder of the kulaks in the early 1930s, the mass murder of the leadership cadre of the Red Army in 1937–38, and the mass murder of the Polish officers who in September 1939 fell into Soviet hands are not qualitatively different in evaluation from the mass murder in the Third Reich.<sup id="cite_ref-:1_179-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:1-179"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>179<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote><p> In response to the interviewer's question about whatever he was a "revisionist" (by which the interviewer clearly meant <a href="/wiki/Historical_revisionism_(negationism)" class="mw-redirect" title="Historical revisionism (negationism)">negationist</a>), Hillgruber stated that: </p><blockquote><p>Revision of the results of scholarship is, as I said, in itself the most natural thing in the world. The discipline of history lives, like every discipline, on the revision through research of previous conceptualizations...Here I would like to say that in principle since the mid-1960s substantial revisions of various kinds have taken place and have rendered absurd the clichéd "image" that Habermas as a nonhistorian obviously possesses.<sup id="cite_ref-181" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-181"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>181<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote><p> Replying to the interviewer's question about whether he wanted to see the revival of the original concept of the <i><a href="/wiki/Sonderweg" title="Sonderweg">Sonderweg</a>,</i> that is of the idea of Germany as a great Central European power equally opposed to both the West and the East, Hillgruber denied that German history since 1945 had been that "golden", and claimed that his conception of the Central European identity he wanted to see revived was cultural, not political.<sup id="cite_ref-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_155-161_182-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_155-161-182"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>182<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hillgruber called the idea of Germany as great power that would take on and being equally opposed to the United States and the <a href="/wiki/Soviet_Union" title="Soviet Union">Soviet Union</a> as: </p><blockquote><p>...historically hopeless because of the way the Second World War ended. To want to develop such a projection now would mean to bring the powers in the East and the West together against the Germans. I cannot imagine that anyone is earnestly striving for that. Reminiscences of good cooperation between the Germans and Slavic peoples in the middle of Europe before the First World War, and in part also still between the wars, are awakened whenever journalists or historians travel to Poland, Czechoslovakia, or Hungary. In that atmosphere it seems imperative to express how closely one feels connected to representatives of these nations. This is understandable, but it cannot all merge into a notion of "Central Europe" that could be misunderstood as taking up the old concept again, which is, as I have said, no longer realizable. In a word, I think the effort to latch on to the connections torn apart in 1945, because of the outcome of the war, and then in turn because of the Cold War, is a sensible political task, especially for West Germans.<sup id="cite_ref-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_155-161_182-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_155-161-182"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>182<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""On_the_Public_Use_of_History""><span id=".22On_the_Public_Use_of_History.22"></span>"On the Public Use of History"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=35" title="Edit section: "On the Public Use of History""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>In another essay first published in the <i>Die Zeit</i> newspaper on 7 November 1986, Habermas wrote the central question about the memory of the Nazi past was: "<i>In which way</i> is the Nazi period going to be understood in the public consciousness?"<sup id="cite_ref-183" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-183"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>183<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Habermas wrote the Bitburg ceremony was meant to create nationalist feelings and a certain rehabilitation of the Nazi era with President Reagan and Chancellor Kohl laying wreaths at the cemetery to honor the <i>Waffen-SS</i> men buried there, but that for Nolte "Bitburg did not open the floodgates widely enough".<sup id="cite_ref-184" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-184"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>184<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Habermas wrote that: "This longing for the unframed memories from the perspective of the veterans can now be satisfied by reading Andreas Hillgruber's presentation of the events on the Eastern Front in 1944–45. The 'problem of identification', something that is unusual for an historian, poses itself to the author only because he wants to incorporate the perspective of the fighting troops and the affected civilian population".<sup id="cite_ref-185" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-185"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>185<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Habermas argued that "we in Germany...must, undisguisedly and not simply intellectually, keep awake the memory of the suffering of those murdered at German hands".<sup id="cite_ref-186" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-186"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>186<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Habermas accused Nolte, Hildebrand and Fest of engaging in personal attacks instead of debating him.<sup id="cite_ref-187" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-187"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>187<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> About Nolte's criticism over the line "expulsion of the kulaks", Habermas wrote: "I accept the criticism that, "annihilation", not "expulsion" of the kulaks is the appropriate description of this barbaric event. Enlightenment is a mutual undertaking. But the public settling of accounts by Nolte and Fest does not serve the end of enlightenment. They affect the political morality of a community that-after being liberated by Allied troops and without doing anything itself-has been established in the spirit of occidental conception of freedom, responsibility and self-determination".<sup id="cite_ref-188" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-188"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>188<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""Eternally_in_the_Shadow_of_Hitler?""><span id=".22Eternally_in_the_Shadow_of_Hitler.3F.22"></span>"Eternally in the Shadow of Hitler?"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=36" title="Edit section: "Eternally in the Shadow of Hitler?""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <figure class="mw-default-size" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Bundesarchiv_Bild_183-S33882,_Adolf_Hitler_retouched.jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/10/Bundesarchiv_Bild_183-S33882%2C_Adolf_Hitler_retouched.jpg/220px-Bundesarchiv_Bild_183-S33882%2C_Adolf_Hitler_retouched.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="348" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/10/Bundesarchiv_Bild_183-S33882%2C_Adolf_Hitler_retouched.jpg/330px-Bundesarchiv_Bild_183-S33882%2C_Adolf_Hitler_retouched.jpg 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/10/Bundesarchiv_Bild_183-S33882%2C_Adolf_Hitler_retouched.jpg/440px-Bundesarchiv_Bild_183-S33882%2C_Adolf_Hitler_retouched.jpg 2x" data-file-width="505" data-file-height="799" /></a><figcaption><a href="/wiki/Adolf_Hitler" title="Adolf Hitler">Adolf Hitler</a>. The German historian <a href="/wiki/Heinrich_August_Winkler" title="Heinrich August Winkler">Heinrich August Winkler</a> wrote: "No German historian has ever accorded Hitler such a sympathetic treatment” as did Nolte.</figcaption></figure> <p>In an essay first published in the <i>Frankfurter Rundschau</i> newspaper on November 14, 1986, <a href="/wiki/Heinrich_August_Winkler" title="Heinrich August Winkler">Heinrich August Winkler</a> wrote of Nolte's essay "The Past That Will Not Pass" that: </p> <blockquote><p>“Those who read the <i>Frankfurter Allgemine</i> all the way through to the culture section were able to read something under the title “The Past That Will Not Pass” that no German historian to date had noticed: that Auschwitz was only a copy of a Russian original-the Stalinist Gulag Archipelago. For fear of the Bolsheviks’ Asiatic will to annihilate, Hitler himself committed an “Asiatic deed”. Was the annihilation of the Jews a kind of putative self-defence? Nolte's speculation amounts to that.”<sup id="cite_ref-w173_189-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-w173-189"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>189<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote> <p>Writing of Nolte's claim that Weizmann's letter was a “Jewish declaration of war”, Winkler stated that “No German historian has ever accorded Hitler such a sympathetic treatment”.<sup id="cite_ref-w173_189-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-w173-189"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>189<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Winkler wrote the current controversy over the memory of the Nazi past was caused by the controversy over Bitburg ceremony, writing that just as American had learned to forget about the My Lai massacre, the Bitburg ceremony was meant to allow German "to be able to feel an unbroken sense of pride".<sup id="cite_ref-190" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-190"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>190<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Winkler charged the editors of the <i>Frankurter Allgemeine Zeitung</i> in response to the Bitburg controversy had started a campaign meant to end any sense of guilt over the Nazi past.<sup id="cite_ref-191" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-191"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>191<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Winkler asked what was the point of these comparisons of Nazi Germany to the Soviet Union and Cambodia, writing: "Culturally, Germany is a country of the West. It participated in the European Enlightenment and in a long tradition of the rule of law. That is not the case for Russia and certainly not for Cambodia. The crimes of Stalin and the Khmer Rouge are in no way excused by this fact. But Hitler and his helpers must be judged by our Western norms. In this historical context, the systematic genocide of the Jews ordered by the German state-but also the murder of Sinti and Roma-is the greatest crime of the twentieth century, in fact of world history".<sup id="cite_ref-192" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-192"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>192<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""Not_A_Concluding_Remark""><span id=".22Not_A_Concluding_Remark.22"></span>"Not A Concluding Remark"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=37" title="Edit section: "Not A Concluding Remark""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>In a later newspaper <i>feuilleton</i> first published in the <i>Frankurter Allgemeine Zeitung</i> on November 20, 1986, Meier again asserted that the Holocaust was a “singular” occurrence, but wrote that: </p> <blockquote><p>“It is to be hoped that Ernst Nolte's suggestion that we should remain more keenly aware of the various million-fold mass murders of this century bears fruit. When one seeks orientation about this-and about the role of mass murder in history-one is surprised by how difficult it is to find. This would appear to be an area that historical research should look into. By pursuing these questions, one can recognize more precisely the peculiarity of our century-and certain similarities in its “liquidations”. But Nolte's hope to be able to attenuate this distressing aspect of our Nazi past will probably not succeed. If we, and much speaks for this, to prevent National Socialist history from becoming an enduring negative myth about absolute evil, then we will have to seek other paths”.<sup id="cite_ref-m178_193-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-m178-193"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>193<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote> <p>Meier praised Nolte in his article “Standing Things On Their Head” for speaking to “modify” the thesis that he had introduced in “The Past That Will Not Pass” about the “causal nexus” by claiming the “causal nexus” only existed in Hitler's mind”.<sup id="cite_ref-m178_193-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-m178-193"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>193<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Meier expressed his approval of Jäckel's argument for the "singularity" of the Holocaust, writing that "industrial extermination" by Nazi Germany was a "qualitative leap".<sup id="cite_ref-m178_193-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-m178-193"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>193<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In response to Fest's argument that it was racist not to compare Germany with Cambodia, Meier stated that Germany by being a First World nation had "duties" that a Third World nation like Cambodia did not.<sup id="cite_ref-m178_193-3" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-m178-193"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>193<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Meier wrote the <i>Historikerstreit</i> was really about the future, namely how to "live with a past that is so deeply anchored in our consciousness?".<sup id="cite_ref-194" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-194"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>194<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Meier wrote that historians are always influenced by the present and historians "should also be able to discern uncomfortable truths".<sup id="cite_ref-195" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-195"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>195<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> About Stürmer's call for history as an unifying force to hold together West German society for the Cold War, Meier wrote that Habermas had the right to challenge him, but did not understand the Atlanticist Stürmer was not an advocate of Germany as a Central European power as he alleged.<sup id="cite_ref-:21_196-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:21-196"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>196<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Meier called Stürmer's theories as "probably not...illegitimate" but argued that a democratic society was always going to have diverse opinions.<sup id="cite_ref-:21_196-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:21-196"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>196<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Meier ended his essay that the problems faced by Germans was: "How are going to live with this history and what conclusions can we draw from it?...We will make no progress if we use the Nazi past as a club in partisan disputes...But it is to be wished that the center, especially will be strong, for in the past, the political middle has always been capable of providing reasonable solutions, results and maxims."<sup id="cite_ref-197" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-197"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>197<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>In response to Meier's article, Nolte wrote in a letter to the editor of the <i>Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung</i> published on December 6, 1986, that he did not “defuse” the thesis he presented in his essay “The Past That Will Not Pass”, but merely corrected a few mistakes in his essay "Standing Things On Their Head".<sup id="cite_ref-198" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-198"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>198<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="“Makeup_Artists_are_Creating_a_New_Identity”"><span id=".E2.80.9CMakeup_Artists_are_Creating_a_New_Identity.E2.80.9D"></span>“Makeup Artists are Creating a New Identity”</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=38" title="Edit section: “Makeup Artists are Creating a New Identity”"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>The political scientist Kurt Sontheimer in an essay first published in the <i>Rheinischer Merkur</i> newspaper on November 21, 1986, accused Nolte and company of attempting to create a new “national consciousness” meant to sever the Federal Republic's “intellectual and spiritual ties to the West”.<sup id="cite_ref-199" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-199"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>199<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Sontheimer accused Hillgruber of being guilty of "revisionism" (by which Sontheimer clearly meant <a href="/wiki/Historical_revisionism_(negationism)" class="mw-redirect" title="Historical revisionism (negationism)">negationism</a>) in his writings on German history.<sup id="cite_ref-:22_200-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:22-200"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>200<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Sontheimer wrote it was impossible for historians to claim "pure and strict scholarly research" while at the same time engaging in a political project like attempting to shape national identity.<sup id="cite_ref-:22_200-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:22-200"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>200<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Sontheimer wrote the political basis of the Federal Republic founded in 1949 was in the Western tradition of liberal democracy and without mentioning Stürmer by name declared that the search for some basis in German national identity in the Imperial period to provide a "unified an understanding of history as possible" was "dubious" because there was "so little to be found there" and "because every attempt to provide political meaning via our predemocratic national history threatens to end the consensus of the postwar era".<sup id="cite_ref-:23_201-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:23-201"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>201<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Sonthemier wrote that the great achievements of German historians since 1945 was seeking to understand why the Weimar Republic failed and how Nazi Germany came to be, stating:"We were attempting to overcome the past, not to invoke it...I cannot see what better lesson those who are struggling to provide meaning through history can offer us".<sup id="cite_ref-:23_201-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:23-201"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>201<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""He_Who_Wants_To_Escape_The_Abyss""><span id=".22He_Who_Wants_To_Escape_The_Abyss.22"></span>"He Who Wants To Escape The Abyss"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=39" title="Edit section: "He Who Wants To Escape The Abyss""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>In another <i>feuilleton</i> entitled "He Who Wants to Escape the Abyss" first published in <i><a href="/wiki/Die_Welt" title="Die Welt">Die Welt</a></i> on November 22, 1986, Hildebrand argued in defense of Nolte that the Holocaust was one of out a long sequence of genocides in the 20th century, and asserted that Nolte was only attempting the "historicization" of National Socialism that Broszat had called for<sup id="cite_ref-202" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-202"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>202<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hildebrand accused Habermas of engaging in "scandalous" attacks on Hillgruber.<sup id="cite_ref-Hildebrand,_Klaus_pages_188-195_203-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Hildebrand,_Klaus_pages_188-195-203"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>203<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hildebrand claimed that "Habermas's criticism is based in no small part on quotations that unambiguously falsify the matter".<sup id="cite_ref-Hildebrand,_Klaus_pages_188-195_203-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Hildebrand,_Klaus_pages_188-195-203"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>203<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hildebrand wrote the historian are engaged in a continuous search for the truth, which always involves revision and the historiography of the Third Reich was no different.<sup id="cite_ref-204" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-204"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>204<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hildebrand wrote that Habermas with support from Mommsen and Broszat was attempting to stop the normal course of scholarship for political reasons.<sup id="cite_ref-205" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-205"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>205<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hildebrand wrote that it was "incomprehensible" that Meier found it a matter of secondary concern that Habermas had selectively quoted Hillgruber, writing that Habermas was a highly dishonest man.<sup id="cite_ref-206" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-206"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>206<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hildebrand wrote: "Every student who treated literature in the "Habermas way" would fail his exam!"<sup id="cite_ref-Hildebrand,_Klaus_pages_188-195_203-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Hildebrand,_Klaus_pages_188-195-203"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>203<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Hildebrand wrote the question of the "singularity" of the Holocaust needed to be questioned and complained of a "one-sidedness" that led historians to see Nazi Germany as the greater evil.<sup id="cite_ref-Hildebrand,_Klaus_pages_188-195_203-3" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Hildebrand,_Klaus_pages_188-195-203"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>203<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hildebrand wrote the "intensity of annihilation" in Nazi policies "appears comparable with the Soviet Union of Stalin".<sup id="cite_ref-:24_207-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:24-207"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>207<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hildebrand argued that the Hitler and Stalin regimes belonged to the "epochal" movements of the 20th century and should be studied together to fill in the "gaps".<sup id="cite_ref-:24_207-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:24-207"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>207<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hildebrand argued the Holocaust was both "singular" and belonged to a broad sweep of history beginning with the Armenian genocide and ending with the "regime of terror of Cambodian Stone Age Communism".<sup id="cite_ref-208" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-208"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>208<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hildebrand wrote that scholars like himself were merely trying to begin the "historization" of National Socialism that Broszat had called for, and were being attacked because they threatened the "intellectual hegemony" of Habermas.<sup id="cite_ref-209" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-209"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>209<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hildebrand wrote that Habermas did not really practice philosophy, but instead "sophistry", having a "limited" understanding of the world, which caused him to start a debate "without sufficient reason".<sup id="cite_ref-:25_210-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:25-210"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>210<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hildebrand added that he it was wrong to historians like Mommsen and Broszat to support Habermas.<sup id="cite_ref-:25_210-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:25-210"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>210<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""How_Much_History_Weighs""><span id=".22How_Much_History_Weighs.22"></span>"How Much History Weighs"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=40" title="Edit section: "How Much History Weighs""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>In an essay entitled "How Much History Weighs" published in the <i>Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung</i> on November 26, 1986, Stürmer wrote that <a href="/wiki/France" title="France">France</a> was a major power in the world because the French had a history to be proud of, and claimed that West Germany could only play the same role in the world if only they had the same national consensus about pride in their history as did the French.<sup id="cite_ref-Stürmer_pages_196-197_211-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Stürmer_pages_196-197-211"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>211<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Stürmer wrote French leaders from de Gaulle onward wanted the Germans to be a proud and self-confident people in order to play their proper role in the Franco-German alliance that dominated the European Economic Community, asking why so many Germans found that so difficult.<sup id="cite_ref-Stürmer_pages_196-197_211-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Stürmer_pages_196-197-211"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>211<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Citing a novel by a French industrialist Alain Minic, <i>Le Syndrome Finlandais</i>, Stürmer warned that German "ecological pacifism" would lead to West Germany and hence all of Western Europe being "Finlandized" if the Germans did not have a national identity that inspired pride in being German.<sup id="cite_ref-Stürmer_pages_196-197_211-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Stürmer_pages_196-197-211"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>211<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>As the example of the sort of history that he wanted to see written in Germany, Stürmer used <a href="/wiki/Fernand_Braudel" title="Fernand Braudel">Fernand Braudel</a>'s <i>The Identity of France</i> volumes.<sup id="cite_ref-Stürmer_pages_196-197_211-3" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Stürmer_pages_196-197-211"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>211<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Stürmer wrote that Braudel and the other historians of the <a href="/wiki/Annales_School" class="mw-redirect" title="Annales School">Annales School</a> had made geography the centre of their studies of French and European history while at the same time promoting a sense of French identity that gave the French a history to be proud of.<sup id="cite_ref-Stürmer_pages_196-197_211-4" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Stürmer_pages_196-197-211"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>211<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Stürmer went on to argue that the German people had not had a really positive view of their past since the end of the Holy Roman Empire, and this lack of a German identity to be proud of was responsible for all of the disasters of German history since then.<sup id="cite_ref-Stürmer_pages_196-197_211-5" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Stürmer_pages_196-197-211"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>211<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Stürmer asserted "All of our interpretations of Germany had collapsed".<sup id="cite_ref-Stürmer_pages_196-197_211-6" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Stürmer_pages_196-197-211"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>211<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> As a result, he claimed that at present, the German people were living in historical "rubble", and that the Federal Republic was doomed unless the Germans once again had a sense of history that provided the necessary sense of national identity and pride<sup id="cite_ref-Stürmer_pages_196-197_211-7" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Stürmer_pages_196-197-211"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>211<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Stürmer warned that the West Germans would face a "Communist future" if the German people did not have a history that provided for a self-confident national identity.<sup id="cite_ref-Stürmer_pages_196-197_211-8" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Stürmer_pages_196-197-211"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>211<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="Hillgruber's_letter_to_the_FAZ,_29_November_1986"><span id="Hillgruber.27s_letter_to_the_FAZ.2C_29_November_1986"></span>Hillgruber's letter to the <i>FAZ</i>, 29 November 1986</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=41" title="Edit section: Hillgruber's letter to the FAZ, 29 November 1986"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div><p> Responding to Meier's comment about what why he chose to "identify" with German troops in a letter to the editor of the <i>Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung</i> on 29 November 1986, Hillgruber wrote:</p><blockquote><p>Is it really so difficult for a German historian (even if he is, like Meier, a specialist in ancient history) to realize why the author of an essay about the collapse in the East in 1944–45 identifies with the efforts of the German populace? I identified with the German efforts not only in East Prussia, but also in Silesia, East Brandenburg and Pomerania (Meier's homeland) to protect themselves from what threatened them and to save as many people as possible.<sup id="cite_ref-212" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-212"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>212<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="Löwenthal's_letter_to_the_FAZ,_29_November_1986"><span id="L.C3.B6wenthal.27s_letter_to_the_FAZ.2C_29_November_1986"></span>Löwenthal's letter to the <i>FAZ</i>, 29 November 1986</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=42" title="Edit section: Löwenthal's letter to the FAZ, 29 November 1986"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div><p> The German political scientist <a href="/wiki/Richard_L%C3%B6wenthal" title="Richard Löwenthal">Richard Löwenthal</a> noted that news of Soviet dekulakization and the <i><a href="/wiki/Holodomor" title="Holodomor">Holodomor</a></i> did not reach Germany until 1941, so that Soviet atrocities could not possibly have influenced the Germans as Nolte claimed.<sup id="cite_ref-b9_213-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-b9-213"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>213<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Löwenthal argued in a letter to the editor of the <i>Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung</i> on 29 November 1986 for the "fundamental difference" in mass murder in Germany and the Soviet Union, and against the "balancing" out of various crimes in the 20th century.<sup id="cite_ref-L199_214-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-L199-214"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>214<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Löwenthal contended that comparisons between Hitler and Stalin were appropriate, but comparisons between Hitler and Lenin were not.<sup id="cite_ref-L199_214-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-L199-214"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>214<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> For Löwenthal, the decisive factor that governed Lenin's conduct was that right from the onset when he took power, he was involved in civil wars within Russia<sup id="cite_ref-L199_214-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-L199-214"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>214<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Löwenthal argued that “Lenin's battle to hold on to power” did not comprise “one-sided mass annihilation of defenceless people”<sup id="cite_ref-L199_214-3" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-L199-214"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>214<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Speaking of the <a href="/wiki/Russian_Civil_War" title="Russian Civil War">Russian Civil War</a>, Löwenthal argued that “In all these battles there were heavy losses on both sides and horrible torture and murders of prisoners” <sup id="cite_ref-215" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-215"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>215<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Speaking of the differences between Lenin and Stalin, Löwenthal argued that “What Stalin did from 1929 on was something entirely different”<sup id="cite_ref-L200_216-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-L200-216"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>216<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Löwenthal argued that with <a href="/wiki/Dekulakization" title="Dekulakization">dekulakization</a>, the so-called “kulaks” were to destroyed by the Soviet state as:</p><blockquote><p>a hindrance to forced collectivization. They were not organized. They had not fought. They were shipped to far-away concentration camps and in general were not killed right away, but were forced to suffer conditions that led in the course of time to a miserable death <sup id="cite_ref-L200_216-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-L200-216"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>216<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote><p> Löwenthal wrote that: </p><blockquote><p>What Stalin did from 1929 both against peasants and against various other victims, including leading Communists... and returned soldiers, was in fact historically new in its systematic inhumanity, and to this extent comparable with the deeds of Hitler. Certainly, Hitler, like all his contemporaries, had a preconception of the civil wars of Lenin's time. Just as certainly his own ideas about the total annihilation of the Jews, the Gypsies, the “unworthy of life”, and so on, were independent of Stalin's example. At any rate the idea of total annihilation of the Jews had already been developed in the last work of Hitler's mentor, <a href="/wiki/Dietrich_Eckart" title="Dietrich Eckart">Dietrich Eckart</a>, who died in 1924. For the reference to this source, which leaves no room for “balancing”, I am grateful to Ernst Nolte's first large book, which appeared in 1963, <i>Faschismus in seiner Epoche</i> [Fascism in Its Epoch] <sup id="cite_ref-217" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-217"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>217<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="Historikerstreit_in_the_winter_of_1986–87"><span id="Historikerstreit_in_the_winter_of_1986.E2.80.9387"></span><i>Historikerstreit</i> in the winter of 1986–87</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=43" title="Edit section: Historikerstreit in the winter of 1986–87"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""Neither_Denial_Nor_Forgetfulness_Will_Free_Us""><span id=".22Neither_Denial_Nor_Forgetfulness_Will_Free_Us.22"></span>"Neither Denial Nor Forgetfulness Will Free Us"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=44" title="Edit section: "Neither Denial Nor Forgetfulness Will Free Us""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>Hans Mommsen's twin brother, <a href="/wiki/Wolfgang_Mommsen" title="Wolfgang Mommsen">Wolfgang Mommsen</a>, in an essay entitled "Neither Denial nor Forgetfulness Will Free Us" (<i>Frankfurter Rundschau</i>, 1 December 1986), argued that the debate about the planned German Historical Museum in West Berlin—which was to cover German history from antiquity to the present—and the planned House of History in Bonn—which was to cover the Federal Republic from 1949 to the present—showed the German people were deeply interested in their history.<sup id="cite_ref-218" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-218"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>218<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>In Mommsen's view, the decisive issue was whether the Federal Republic was a continuation of the <i>Reich</i> that had existed from 1871 to 1945 or not. He argued that at first the continuity thesis dominated, as shown by the lavish celebrations of the 150th anniversary of Bismarck's birthday in 1965, but as a younger generation came of age, a more critical attitude towards the past emerged.<sup id="cite_ref-Mommsen1993p205_219-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Mommsen1993p205-219"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>219<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> He wrote further that German reunification "would presume the collapse of the Soviet empire, a premise unthinkable at the time".<sup id="cite_ref-Mommsen1993p206_220-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Mommsen1993p206-220"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>220<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> As a result, since German reunification was impossible in the 1950s–60s, together with the resumption of Germany as a great power, led West Germans to embrace the idea of integration into the European Economic Community and NATO as the best substitutes. Adenauer's policies of integration into the EEC and NATO suggested that the only role possible for the Federal Republic was at best as a middle-size world power whose influence stemmed from working with other Western powers. The policies of Western integration caused the idea of a continuity of German history to lose its appeal to the younger generation of West Germans, he wrote, leading to the idea popular by the late 1960s that the state founded in 1949 represented discontinuity.<sup id="cite_ref-Mommsen1993p207_221-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Mommsen1993p207-221"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>221<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Finally, Mommsen maintained that the discontinuity thesis led to the younger generation of West Germans to become more critical of the old <i>Reich</i> that had existed from 1871 to 1945.<sup id="cite_ref-:28_222-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:28-222"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>222<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Mommsen argued that for those nationalists still attached to the idea of national continuity, these were painful developments, noting that an article by Nolte in <i>Die Zeit</i> had its title "Against Negative Nationalism in Interpreting History" where Nolte lashed out against historians critical of the German past.<sup id="cite_ref-:28_222-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:28-222"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>222<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Mommsen argued much of the writing by Nolte, Hildebrand, and Stürmer was clearly aiming to provide for a version of history that celebrated the continuities of German history while trying to get around the more unpleasant aspects of the <a href="/wiki/German_Empire" title="German Empire">German Empire</a> and even more so <a href="/wiki/Nazi_Germany" title="Nazi Germany">Nazi Germany</a>.<sup id="cite_ref-223" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-223"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>223<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Mommsen wrote that Nolte, Hildebrand, Stürmer and Hillgruber were in different ways seeking a version of history that allowed for the continuity of German history to be celebrated despite the Nazi era. Mommsen argued that the Nazi period, was however painful and distasteful, part of German history and the memory of which was something all Germans had to face.<sup id="cite_ref-:29_224-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:29-224"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>224<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Mommsen wrote the Bitburg ceremony of 1985 was intended to "be a kind of line drawn under that segment of German history. But it turned out that, at least in terms of intellectual honesty, that cannot be done, and that no matter what we do, other peoples will not be willing to accept such an act from us".<sup id="cite_ref-:29_224-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:29-224"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>224<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p> Mommsen charged that Nolte was attempting to egregiously whitewash the German past.<sup id="cite_ref-225" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-225"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>225<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Mommsen argued that Nolte was attempting a "justification" of Nazi crimes and making "inappropriate" comparisons of the Holocaust with other genocides.<sup id="cite_ref-m209_226-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-m209-226"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>226<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Mommsen wrote that Nolte intended to provide the sort of history that would allow Germans to feel good about being Germans by engaging in “…an explanatory strategy that…will be seen as a justification of National Socialist crimes by all those who are still under the influence of the extreme anti-Soviet propaganda of National Socialism".<sup id="cite_ref-m209_226-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-m209-226"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>226<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Mommsen wrote about Hillgruber's demands that historians identified with the "justified" German defence of the Eastern Front that:</p><blockquote><p>Andreas Hillgruber recently attempted to accord a relative historical justification to the Wehrmacht campaign in the East and the desperate resistance of the army in the East after the summer of 1944. He argued that the goal was to prevent the German civilian population from falling into the hands of the Red Army. However, the chief reason, he argued, was that the defense of German cities in the East had become tantamount to defending Western civilization. In light of the Allied war goals, which, independent of Stalin's final plans, envisioned breaking up Prussia and destroying the defensive position of a strong, Prussian-led Central European state that could serve as a bulwark against Bolshevism, the continuation of the war in the East was justified from the viewpoint of those involved. It was, as Hillgruber's argument would have it, also justified even from today's standpoint, despite the fact that prolonging the war in the East meant that the gigantic murder machinery of the Holocaust would be allowed to continue to run. All this, the essay argued, was justified as long as the fronts held. Hillgruber's essay is extremely problematic when viewed from the perspective of a democratically constituted community that orients itself towards Western moral and political standards.</p><div class="paragraphbreak" style="margin-top:0.5em"></div><p>There is no getting around the bitter truth that the defeat of National Socialist Germany was not only in the interest of the peoples who were bulldozed by Hitler's war and of the peoples who were selected by his henchmen for annihilation or oppression or exploitation – it was also in the interest of the Germans. Accordingly, parts of the gigantic scenery of the Second World War were, at least as far as we were concerned, totally senseless, even self-destructive. We cannot escape this bitter truth by assigning partial responsibility to other partners who took part in the war.<sup id="cite_ref-227" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-227"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>227<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote><p> Mommsen wrote the attempts to "strengthen" the Federal Republic by writing nationalistic histories that meant to end any sense of German shame would in fact have the extract opposite effect.<sup id="cite_ref-228" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-228"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>228<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Also in an essay published in the December 1, 1986 edition of <i>The New Republic</i>, the American historian <a href="/wiki/Charles_S._Maier" title="Charles S. Maier">Charles S. Maier</a> rejected Nolte's claim of moral equivalence between the actions of the Soviet Communists and German Nazis under the grounds that while the former were extremely brutal, the latter sought the total extermination of a people, namely the Jews.<sup id="cite_ref-229" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-229"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>229<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""What_May_Not,_Cannot_Be""><span id=".22What_May_Not.2C_Cannot_Be.22"></span>"What May Not, Cannot Be"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=45" title="Edit section: "What May Not, Cannot Be""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div><p> The German historian Horst Möller in an essay entitled "What May Not Be, Cannot Be" first published in the December 1986 edition of <i>Beiträge zur Konfliktforschung</i> magazine argued that Nolte was not attempting to "excuse" Nazi crimes by comparing it with other crimes of others, but was instead trying to explain the Nazi war-crimes.<sup id="cite_ref-mo218_230-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-mo218-230"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>230<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Möller wrote that Habermas was highly prejudiced by his left-wing beliefs and did not really understand the work of Nolte, Hillgruber and Hildebrand, whom Möller wrote were all serious historians.<sup id="cite_ref-231" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-231"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>231<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Möller argued that Nolte was only attempting to explain "irrational" events rationally, and that the Nazis really did believe that they were confronted with a world Jewish-Bolshevik conspiracy that was out to destroy Germany.<sup id="cite_ref-mo218_230-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-mo218-230"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>230<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Möller asserted that all historical events are unique and thus "singular".<sup id="cite_ref-mo218_230-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-mo218-230"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>230<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Möller defended Hillgruber by arguing that: </p><blockquote><p>Hillgruber comes to the conclusion, on the basis of British files that were declassified in the meantime, that the destruction of the German <i>Reich</i> was planned before the mass murder of the Jews became known - and that the mass murder does not explain the end of the <i>Reich</i> ... It is hardly disputable that the attempt to hold the Eastern Front as long as possible against the Red Army meant protection for the German civilian populace in the eastern provinces against murders, rapes, plundering and expulsions by Soviet troops. It was not simply Nazi propaganda against these "Asiatic hordes" that caused this climate of fear. It was the concrete examples of Nemmersdorf in October 1944, mentioned by Hillgruber, that had brought the horror of the future occupation into view.<sup id="cite_ref-232" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-232"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>232<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote><p> Möller argued that Habermas was guilty to trying to justify Soviet crimes by writing of the "expulsion of the kulaks".<sup id="cite_ref-mo218_230-3" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-mo218-230"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>230<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Möller wrote that Habermas was either "ignorant or shameless" in accusing Nolte, Hillgruber and Hildebrand of being Nazi apologists.<sup id="cite_ref-233" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-233"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>233<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Möller wrote that Hans Mommsen and Martin Broszat were the real "revisionists" by arguing for a functionalist theories.<sup id="cite_ref-:30_234-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:30-234"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>234<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Möller ended his essay that the Nolte, Hillgruber and Hildebrand had made "essential contributions" to the historiography of the Third Reich and should not be the victims of "character assassination" as he alleged Habermas was guilty of.<sup id="cite_ref-:30_234-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:30-234"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>234<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""Jürgen_Habermas,_Karl-Heinz_Janßen,_and_the_Enlightenment_in_the_Year_1986""><span id=".22J.C3.BCrgen_Habermas.2C_Karl-Heinz_Jan.C3.9Fen.2C_and_the_Enlightenment_in_the_Year_1986.22"></span>"Jürgen Habermas, Karl-Heinz Janßen, and the Enlightenment in the Year 1986"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=46" title="Edit section: "Jürgen Habermas, Karl-Heinz Janßen, and the Enlightenment in the Year 1986""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>In an essay meant to reply to Habermas's criticism entitled "Jürgen Habermas, Karl-Heinz Janßen, and the Enlightenment in the Year 1986" first published in the right-wing <i>Geschichte in Wissenschaft und Unterricht</i> (History In Academics and Instruction) magazine in December 1986, Hillgruber accused Habermas of engaging in "scandalous" methods of attack.<sup id="cite_ref-ReferenceC_235-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ReferenceC-235"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>235<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hillgruber lent Nolte support by commenting that what was going on in the Soviet Union in the early 1920s may had influenced Hitler's thinking on the Jews<sup id="cite_ref-236" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-236"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>236<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In answer to Habermas's criticism of the sub-title of his book, Hillgruber argued that the title of his Holocaust essay, "Der geschichtliche Ort der Judenvernichtung" (The Historical Locus Of The Annihilation Of The Jews) and the first sentence of his book, in which he spoke of the "murder of the Jews in the territory controlled by National Socialist Germany", disproved Habermas's point.<sup id="cite_ref-237" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-237"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>237<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In particular, Hillgruber was highly furious over the sentence about "tried and true higher-ups of the NSDAP" that Habermas had created by selective editing of Hillgruber's book.<sup id="cite_ref-238" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-238"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>238<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hillgruber claimed that Habermas was waging a "campaign of character assassination against Michael Stürmer, Ernst Nolte, Klaus Hildebrand and me in the style of the all-too-familiar APO pamphlets of the late 1960s" [Hillgruber was attempting to associate Habermas with the <a href="/wiki/Au%C3%9Ferparlamentarische_Opposition" title="Außerparlamentarische Opposition">APO</a> here].<sup id="cite_ref-239" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-239"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>239<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hillgruber described Habermas as a kind of left-wing literary hit-man who had asked to "take apart" <i>Zweierlei Untergang</i> by Karl-Heinz Janßen, the editor of the culture section of the <i><a href="/wiki/Die_Zeit" title="Die Zeit">Die Zeit</a></i> newspaper.<sup id="cite_ref-240" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-240"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>240<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p> Reacting to Habermas's criticism that in the Holocaust essay in <i>Zweierlei Untergang</i> that his use of the word "could" in a sentence where Hillgruber wrote that Hitler believed only through genocide of the Jews could Germany become a great power, which Habermas claimed might have indicated that Hillgruber shared Hitler's viewpoint, Hillgruber took much umbrage to Habermas's claim. Hillgruber stated that what he wrote in his Holocaust essay was that the German leadership in 1939 was divided into three factions. One, centred on the Nazi Party and the SS, saw the war as a chance to carry out the "racial reorganization" of Europe via mass expulsions and German colonization, whose roots Hillgruber traced to the war aims of the <a href="/wiki/Alldeutscher_Verband" class="mw-redirect" title="Alldeutscher Verband">Pan-German League</a> in the First World War.<sup id="cite_ref-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_222-236_241-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_222-236-241"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>241<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Another faction comprised the traditional German elites in the military, the diplomatic service and the bureaucracy, who saw the war as a chance to destroy the settlement established by the Treaty of Versailles and to establish the world dominance that Germany had sought in the First World War.<sup id="cite_ref-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_222-236_241-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_222-236-241"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>241<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> And finally, there was Hitler's "race" program, which sought the genocide of the Jews as the only way to ensure that Germany would be a world power.<sup id="cite_ref-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_222-236_241-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_222-236-241"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>241<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hillgruber insisted that he was only describing Hitler's beliefs, and did not share them.<sup id="cite_ref-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_222-236_241-3" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_222-236-241"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>241<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hillgruber argued that only by reading his second essay about the Holocaust in <i>Zweierlei Untergang</i> could one understand the first essay about the "collapse" on the Eastern Front.<sup id="cite_ref-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_222-236_241-4" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_222-236-241"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>241<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hillgruber compared the feelings of Germans about the lost eastern territories to the feelings of the French about their lost colonies in Indochina.<sup id="cite_ref-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_222-236_241-5" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_222-236-241"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>241<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hillgruber claimed that, when writing about the end of the "German East" in 1945, to understand the "sense of tragedy" that surrounded the matter one had to take the side of the German civilians who were menaced by the Red Army, and the German soldiers fighting to protect them.<sup id="cite_ref-242" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-242"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>242<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hillgruber went on to write that Habermas was seeking to censor him by criticizing him for taking the German side when discussing the last days of the Eastern Front.<sup id="cite_ref-243" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-243"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>243<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Replying to Habermas's charge that he was a "neo-conservative", Hillgruber wrote:</p><blockquote><p>How does he come to come categorize my work as having so-called neoconservative tendencies? For decades I have never made any bones about my basic conservative position. Deeply suspicious as I am of all "leftist" and other world-improving utopias, I will gladly let the label "conservative" apply to me, meant though it is as a defamation. But what is the meaning of the prefix "neo"? No one "challenges" this new "battle" label, so often seen these days, in order to turn this APO jargon against the inventor of the label.<sup id="cite_ref-244" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-244"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>244<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote><p> Hillgruber argued that there was a contradiction in Habermas's claim that he was seeking to revive the original concept of the <i><a href="/wiki/Sonderweg" title="Sonderweg">Sonderweg</a>,</i> that is, the ideology of Germany as a great Central European power that was neither of the West or the East which would mean closing Germany off to the culture of the West while at the same time accusing him of trying to create a "NATO philosophy".<sup id="cite_ref-245" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-245"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>245<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Hillgruber took the opportunity to once more restate his belief that there was no moral difference between the actions of the German Nazis and the Soviet Communists, and questioned whether the Holocaust was a "singular" event.<sup id="cite_ref-246" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-246"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>246<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Finally, Hillgruber accused Habermas of being behind the "agitation and psychic terror" suffered by non-Marxist professors in the late 1960s, and warned him that if he was trying to bring back "...that unbearable atmosphere that ruled in those years at West German universities, then he is deluding himself".<sup id="cite_ref-247" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-247"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>247<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""The_Nazi_Era-A_Case_of_Normal_Tyranny?""><span id=".22The_Nazi_Era-A_Case_of_Normal_Tyranny.3F.22"></span>"The Nazi Era-A Case of Normal Tyranny?"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=47" title="Edit section: "The Nazi Era-A Case of Normal Tyranny?""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>In an essay entitled "The Nazi Era-A Case of Normal Tyranny?" first published in <i>Die neue Gesellschaft</i> magazine in late 1986, the political scientist Walter Euchner wrote that Nolte was wrong when he wrote of Hitler's alleged terror of the Austrian Social Democratic Party parades before 1914, and argued that Social Democratic parties in both Germany and Austria were fundamentally humane and pacifistic, instead of the terrorist-revolutionary entities that Nolte alleged them to be.<sup id="cite_ref-e240_248-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-e240-248"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>248<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Euchner wrote that: </p> <blockquote><p>"Politicians like <a href="/wiki/Karl_Kautsky" title="Karl Kautsky">Karl Kautsky</a> and <a href="/wiki/Eduard_Bernstein" title="Eduard Bernstein">Eduard Bernstein</a> certainly did not inspire anyone to phantasies about annihilation. For these Hitler needed neither prewar Marxism nor the Gulag Archipelago. They were in fact a product of his insanity."<sup id="cite_ref-e240_248-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-e240-248"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>248<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote> <p>Euchner went to argue that there was no comparison of German and Soviet crimes in his view because Germany had had an "outstanding intellectual heritage" and the Nazis had carried out a policy of genocide with the "voluntary support of a substantial part of the traditional elites".<sup id="cite_ref-e240_248-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-e240-248"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>248<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Eulchner wrote that Hildebrand's claim that the Allied powers had "horrifying" war aims was meant to show there everyone was equally evil in World War II and no one had the right "to point his finger at others", which Euchner wrote was clearly meant to end any reason for to see the Holocaust as special.<sup id="cite_ref-e238_249-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-e238-249"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>249<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""Only_by_Facing_the_Past_Can_We_Be_Free""><span id=".22Only_by_Facing_the_Past_Can_We_Be_Free.22"></span>"Only by Facing the Past Can We Be Free"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=48" title="Edit section: "Only by Facing the Past Can We Be Free""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>The journalist Robert Leicht in an essay first published in <i>Die Zeit</i> on December 26, 1986, asserted that Nolte was attempting to end the German shame over the Holocaust by making "absurd" arguments.<sup id="cite_ref-L246_250-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-L246-250"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>250<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Leicht argued that Stalin was not the "real" cause of the Holocaust as Nolte alleged, and that because the Holocaust was without precedent in German history, it was indeed "singular".<sup id="cite_ref-L246_250-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-L246-250"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>250<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Leicht complained about the apologist effect of lines like evil "done in the German name" as making it sound as if "the Germans had not done these things themselves but had hired a subcontractor".<sup id="cite_ref-L246_250-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-L246-250"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>250<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Leicht argued that Germans "cannot erect straight genealogical trees" with regards to their history as the Nazi period could not be a source of pride, meaning there was always going to be a "broken relationship" with their history.<sup id="cite_ref-:31_251-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:31-251"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>251<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Leicht asserted that the Nazi era was a part of the German past that justifiably inspired shame, and there was nothing that historians and politicians could do to end this shame, as the <i>Historikerstreit</i> and the Bitburg controversy had just proved.<sup id="cite_ref-252" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-252"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>252<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Leicht argued that aspects of German history that made Hitler possible could not be celebrated today, that the "historiczation" of National Socialism as suggested by Broszat was necessary, and that Germans should resist the appeal of myths intended to make the shame caused by the Nazi era go away.<sup id="cite_ref-:31_251-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:31-251"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>251<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Leicht ended his essay by writing "we also stand in the shadow of a history that we can no longer heal. And thus the imperative of the Enlightenment is all the more pressing".<sup id="cite_ref-253" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-253"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>253<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id=""Those_Who_Refused_to_Go_Along""><span id=".22Those_Who_Refused_to_Go_Along.22"></span>"Those Who Refused to Go Along"</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=49" title="Edit section: "Those Who Refused to Go Along""><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>The political scientist Joachim Perels in an essay first published in the <i>Frankfurter Rundschau</i> newspaper on December 27, 1986, argued that Nolte's bias could be seen in that Nolte was full of fury against the "permanent status of privilege" that he alleged that those who were descendants of Nazi victims were said to enjoy while at the same time having the utmost sympathy for Hitler and his alleged terror of Bolshevik "Asiatic deeds".<sup id="cite_ref-254" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-254"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>254<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Perels thought it was outrageous for Hillgruber to praise those German officers who stayed loyal to Hitler during the July 20th <i>putsch</i> as making the right moral choice, and felt that Hillgruber had slandered those Germans who chose to resist the Nazi regime as traitors who let down their country in its hour of need.<sup id="cite_ref-255" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-255"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>255<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Perels wrote that Hillgruber's identification with those <i>Wehrmacht</i> officers who stayed loyal to Hitler with Germany meant excluding all of the Germans suffering in the concentration camps in 1944–45 from history.<sup id="cite_ref-:32_256-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:32-256"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>256<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In the same way, Perels wrote that Meier had praised those Germans who joined the <i>Wehrmacht</i> as doing their duty to the Fatherland which Perels felt disparaged those Germans who refused to join the <i>Wehrmacht</i> and were sent to concentration camps.<sup id="cite_ref-257" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-257"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>257<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Perels felt that both Meier and even more so Hillgruber with his call for historians to "identify" with the <i>Wehrmacht</i> had equated Germany with those who fought for Hitler, charging this way of writing history excluded those Germans opposed to Hitler.<sup id="cite_ref-:32_256-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:32-256"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>256<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Perels used as an example of what he arguing against that in 1956 the West German Supreme Court upheld the death sentences handed down to Lutheran pastor <a href="/wiki/Dietrich_Bonhoeffer" title="Dietrich Bonhoeffer">Dietrich Bonhoeffer</a> and the lawyer <a href="/wiki/Hans_von_Dohn%C3%A1nyi" class="mw-redirect" title="Hans von Dohnányi">Hans von Dohnányi</a> as legal, under the grounds that Hitler was the legal leader of Germany and Bonhoeffer and Dohnayi were guilty of treason by working for his overthrow, meaning their executions by the SS were lawful and the judge and prosecutor in their case did nothing wrong.<sup id="cite_ref-:33_258-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:33-258"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>258<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Perels wrote that Hillgruber's book <i>Zweierlei Untergang</i> which praised those German officers who stayed to Hitler as making the correct ethical choice served to put him in the same moral camp as the judges of the Supreme Court who regarded Bonhoeffer and Dohnányi as traitors who were properly executed. Perels argued it was time for historians to have a "serious discussion about the hereditary encumbrance of National Socialism".<sup id="cite_ref-259" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-259"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>259<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In this regard, Perels argued that far being "The Past That Will Not Go Away", that the memory of the Nazi period was a subject that the Germans were only tentatively even in the 1980s starting to explore.<sup id="cite_ref-:33_258-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:33-258"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>258<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="“On_the_Historikerstreit”"><span id=".E2.80.9COn_the_Historikerstreit.E2.80.9D"></span>“On the <i>Historikerstreit</i>”</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=50" title="Edit section: “On the Historikerstreit”"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>In an essay first published in the <i>Evangelische Kommentare</i> magazine in February 1987, Geiss called Nolte's claim about Weizmann's letter being a Jewish “declaration of war” as “hair-raising nonsense”<sup id="cite_ref-260" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-260"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>260<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Geiss wrote that both essays in <i>Zweierlei Untergang</i> were "respectable", but that it was "irritating" and ill-advised on the part of Hillgruber to publish them together, with the implied moral equivalence between the expulsion of the Germans from Eastern Europe, and the genocide of the Jews.<sup id="cite_ref-Geiss_pages_254-258_261-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Geiss_pages_254-258-261"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>261<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Geiss accused Habermas of engaging in a "malicious insinuation" in his attacks on Hillgruber.<sup id="cite_ref-Geiss_pages_254-258_261-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Geiss_pages_254-258-261"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>261<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Geiss wrote that Hillgruber's demand that historians had to side with German troops fighting on the Eastern Front was problematic, but it did "...not justify the merciless severity, almost in the tone of an Old Testament prophet with which Habermas goes after this dissident historian".<sup id="cite_ref-Geiss_pages_254-258_261-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Geiss_pages_254-258-261"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>261<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="Habermas's_Note_of_23_February_1987"><span id="Habermas.27s_Note_of_23_February_1987"></span>Habermas's Note of 23 February 1987</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=51" title="Edit section: Habermas's Note of 23 February 1987"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>Habermas in "Note" of 23 February 1987 responded to the criticism of Hillgruber and Hildebrand of dishonesty by noting a small error in his article "Damage Control in German History" that both Hillgruber and Hildebrand ignored.<sup id="cite_ref-:34_262-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:34-262"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>262<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Habermas responded to the criticism of Stürmer denying that he was seeking "endow history with meaning" by citing his remark from his 1986 book <i>Dissonanzen des Fortschritts</i>: "It appears necessary to abandon the merely apparent difference between social history and cultural history and to understand that at the end of the twentieth century humans residing in industrial cultures must more than ever before seek and comprehend their historical identity in order not to lose themselves".<sup id="cite_ref-:34_262-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:34-262"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>262<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> About the line of "true and tried" Nazi officials, Habermas justified the procedure under the grounds that in general Hillgruber spoke warmly of the role that Nazi Party officials played in helping to sustain the "justified" defense in eastern Germany in <i>Zweierlei Untergang</i>, writing that Hillgruber's approach to the subject is one where the war effort of Nazi Germany is applauded.<sup id="cite_ref-:34_262-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-:34-262"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>262<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Habermas went on to argue that: "And in any case, this ridiculous dispute about words and secondary virtues just confirms Hillgruber's lack of objectivity about this entire sphere. This a case of praising the fire department that set the fire".<sup id="cite_ref-Habermas_pages_260-262_263-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Habermas_pages_260-262-263"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>263<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Habermas ended his article with the remark that Hillgruber was an extremely shoddy historian, claiming that Hillgruber's charge that he was a leading 60s radical who was behind "...the agitation unleashed by extreme leftists at West German universities and on the psychic terror aimed at individual non-Marxist colleagues" was simply not supported by the facts, and told Hillgruber to read one of his own books about his actions in the late 1960s before making such claims.<sup id="cite_ref-Habermas_pages_260-262_263-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Habermas_pages_260-262-263"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>263<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="Nolte's_Note_of_15_April_1987"><span id="Nolte.27s_Note_of_15_April_1987"></span>Nolte's Note of 15 April 1987</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=52" title="Edit section: Nolte's Note of 15 April 1987"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>Nolte in his "Note" of 15 April 1987 wrote his principal objection to the subtitle to Piper's book<sup class="noprint Inline-Template" style="margin-left:0.1em; white-space:nowrap;">[<i><a href="/wiki/Wikipedia:Please_clarify" title="Wikipedia:Please clarify"><span title="The text near this tag may need clarification or removal of jargon. (August 2023)">clarification needed</span></a></i>]</sup>, saying he wanted it to be the "Documentation of the Controversy Surrounding the Preconditions and the Character of the 'Final Solution of the Jewish Question'" instead of "The Documentation of the Controversy Concerning the Singularity of the National Socialist Annihilation of the Jews".<sup id="cite_ref-264" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-264"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>264<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="Fest_Postscript,_21_April_1987"><span id="Fest_Postscript.2C_21_April_1987"></span>Fest Postscript, 21 April 1987</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=53" title="Edit section: Fest Postscript, 21 April 1987"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div><p> Nolte's admirer <a href="/wiki/Joachim_Fest" title="Joachim Fest">Joachim Fest</a> was later to argue in his "Postscript" of April 21, 1987 that Nolte was motivated by purely scholarly concerns, and was only attempting the "historicization" of National Socialism that <a href="/wiki/Martin_Broszat" title="Martin Broszat">Martin Broszat</a> called for<sup id="cite_ref-f265_265-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-f265-265"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>265<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Fest wrote that in his view:</p><blockquote><p>"In its substance, the dispute was initiated by Ernst Nolte's question whether Hitler's monstrous will to annihilate the Jews, judging from its origin, came from early Viennese impressions or, what is more likely, from later Munich experiences, that is, whether Hitler was an originator or simply being reactive. Despite all the consequences that arose from his answer, Nolte's question was, in fact, a purely academic exercise. The conclusions would probably not have caused as much controversy if they had been accompanied by special circumstances"<sup id="cite_ref-266" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-266"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>266<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote><p> Fest accused Habermas and his allies of attempting to silence those whose views they disliked. Fest wrote that:</p><blockquote><p>"Standing on the one side, to simplify, are those who want to preserve Hitler and National Socialism as a kind of antimyth that can be used for political intentions—the theory of a conspiracy on the part of the political right, to which Nolte, Stürmer, and Hillgruber are linked. This becomes evident in the defamatory statements and the expansion of the dispute to the historical museums. It is doubtless no coincidence that Habermas, Jäckel, Mommsen and others become involved in the recent election campaign in this way. Many statements in favor of the pluralistic character of scholarship and in favor of an ethos representing a republic of learned men reveal themselves as merely empty phrases to the person who has an overview of these things"<sup id="cite_ref-f265_265-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-f265-265"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>265<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote><p> Fest argued that:</p><blockquote><p>"Strictly speaking, Nolte did nothing but take up the suggestion by Broszat and others that National Socialism be historicized. It was clear to anyone with any sense for the topic-and Broszat's opening article made it evident that he too had recognized it-that this transition would be beset with difficulties. But that the most incensed objections would come from those who from the beginning were the spokesmen of historicization-this was no less surprising then the recognition that yesterday's enlighteners are today's intolerant mythologues, people who want to forbid questions from being posed"<sup id="cite_ref-f265_265-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-f265-265"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>265<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote><p> Fest predicated that scholarship in the future will vindicate Nolte and called Habermas and his allies "the advocates of a hopeless cause".<sup id="cite_ref-f265_265-3" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-f265-265"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>265<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="The_controversy_over_Nolte's_thesis"><span id="The_controversy_over_Nolte.27s_thesis"></span>The controversy over Nolte's thesis</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=54" title="Edit section: The controversy over Nolte's thesis"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>These views ignited a firestorm of controversy. Most historians in West Germany and virtually all historians outside Germany condemned Nolte's interpretation as factually incorrect, and as coming dangerously close to justifying the Holocaust.<sup id="cite_ref-ker173_267-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ker173-267"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>267<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Many historians, such as <a href="/wiki/Steven_T._Katz" title="Steven T. Katz">Steven T. Katz</a>, claimed that Nolte's “Age of Genocide” concept “trivialized” the Holocaust by reducing it to one of just many 20th century genocides.<sup id="cite_ref-268" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-268"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>268<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> A common line of criticism were that Nazi crimes, above all the Holocaust, were singularly and uniquely evil, and could not be compared to the crimes of others. Some historians such as <a href="/wiki/Hans-Ulrich_Wehler" title="Hans-Ulrich Wehler">Hans-Ulrich Wehler</a> were most forceful in arguing that the sufferings of the “kulaks” deported during the Soviet “dekulakization” campaign of the early 1930s were in no way analogous to the suffering of the Jews deported in the early 1940s. Many were angered by Nolte's claim that "the so-called annihilation of the Jews under the Third Reich was a reaction or a distorted copy and not a first act or an original", with many such as <a href="/wiki/Ian_Kershaw" title="Ian Kershaw">Ian Kershaw</a> wondering why Nolte spoke of the "so-called annihilation of the Jews" in describing the Holocaust.<sup id="cite_ref-ker173_267-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ker173-267"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>267<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Some of the historians who denounced Nolte's views included <a href="/wiki/Hans_Mommsen" title="Hans Mommsen">Hans Mommsen</a>, <a href="/wiki/J%C3%BCrgen_Kocka" title="Jürgen Kocka">Jürgen Kocka</a>, <a href="/wiki/Detlev_Peukert" title="Detlev Peukert">Detlev Peukert</a>, <a href="/wiki/Martin_Broszat" title="Martin Broszat">Martin Broszat</a>, <a href="/wiki/Hans-Ulrich_Wehler" title="Hans-Ulrich Wehler">Hans-Ulrich Wehler</a>, <a href="/wiki/Michael_Wolffsohn" title="Michael Wolffsohn">Michael Wolffsohn</a>, <a href="/wiki/Heinrich_August_Winkler" title="Heinrich August Winkler">Heinrich August Winkler</a>, <a href="/wiki/Wolfgang_Mommsen" title="Wolfgang Mommsen">Wolfgang Mommsen</a>, <a href="/wiki/Karl_Dietrich_Bracher" title="Karl Dietrich Bracher">Karl Dietrich Bracher</a> and <a href="/wiki/Eberhard_J%C3%A4ckel" title="Eberhard Jäckel">Eberhard Jäckel</a>. Much (though not all) of the criticism of Nolte came from historians who favored either the <i><a href="/wiki/Sonderweg" title="Sonderweg">Sonderweg</a></i> (<i>Special Way</i>) and/or <a href="/wiki/Functionalism_versus_intentionalism" class="mw-redirect" title="Functionalism versus intentionalism">intentionalist/functionalist</a> interpretations of German history. From the advocates of the <i>Sonderweg</i> approach came the criticism that Nolte's views had totally externalized the origins of the National Socialist dictatorship to the post-1917 period, whereas in their view, the roots of the Nazi dictatorship can be traced back to the 19th century <a href="/wiki/German_Empire" title="German Empire">German Empire</a>.<sup id="cite_ref-Low_p._474_93-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Low_p._474-93"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>93<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In particular, it was argued that within the virulently and ferociously anti-Semitic <a href="/wiki/V%C3%B6lkisch_movement" title="Völkisch movement">Völkisch movement</a>, which first arose in the latter half of the 19th century, the ideological seeds of the <i>Shoah</i> were already planted.<sup id="cite_ref-Low_p._474_93-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Low_p._474-93"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>93<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> From both functionalist and intentionist historians came the similar criticism that the motives and momentum for the "Final Solution to the Jewish Question" came primarily from within Germany, not as the result of external events. Intentionalists argued that Hitler did not need the Russian Revolution to provide him with a genocidal mindset, while functionalists argued it was the unstable power structure and bureaucratic rivalries of the Third Reich, which led to genocide of the Jews. Another line of criticism centered around Nolte refusal to say just precisely when he believes the Nazis decided upon genocide, and have pointed out that at various times, Nolte has implied the decision for genocide was taken in the early 1920s, or the early 1930s or the 1940s. </p><p>Coming to Nolte's defence were the journalist <a href="/wiki/Joachim_Fest" title="Joachim Fest">Joachim Fest</a>, the philosopher Helmut Fleischer, and the historians' <a href="/wiki/Klaus_Hildebrand" title="Klaus Hildebrand">Klaus Hildebrand</a>, <a href="/wiki/Rainer_Zitelmann" title="Rainer Zitelmann">Rainer Zitelmann</a>, <a href="/wiki/Hagen_Schulze" title="Hagen Schulze">Hagen Schulze</a>, Thomas Nipperdey and <a href="/wiki/Imanuel_Geiss" title="Imanuel Geiss">Imanuel Geiss</a>. The latter was unusual amongst Nolte's defenders as Geiss was normally identified with the left, while the rest of Nolte's supporters were seen as either on the right or holding centrist views. In response to Wehler's book, Geiss later published a book entitled <i>Der Hysterikerstreit. Ein unpolemischer Essay</i> (<i>The Hysterical Dispute An Unpolemical Essay</i>) in which he largely defended Nolte against Wehler's criticisms. Geiss wrote Nolte's critics had "taken in isolation" his statements and were guilty of being "hasty readers"<sup id="cite_ref-269" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-269"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>269<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Further adding to the controversy was a statement by Nolte in June 1987 that Adolf Hitler "created the state of Israel", and that "the Jews would eventually come to appreciate Hitler as the individual who contributed more than anyone else to the creation of the state of Israel".<sup id="cite_ref-IHR_Newsletter_#51_270-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-IHR_Newsletter_#51-270"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>270<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> As a result of that remark, Nolte was sacked from his position as chief editor of the German language edition of <a href="/wiki/Theodore_Herzl" class="mw-redirect" title="Theodore Herzl">Theodore Herzl</a>'s letters by the <i>Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft</i> (German Research Community), the group that was responsible for the financing of the Herzl papers project.<sup id="cite_ref-IHR_Newsletter_#51_270-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-IHR_Newsletter_#51-270"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>270<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Another controversial claim by Nolte was his statement that massacres of the <i><a href="/wiki/Volksdeutsch" class="mw-redirect" title="Volksdeutsch">Volksdeutsch</a></i> minority in Poland after the German invasion of 1939 were an act of genocide by the Polish government, and thereby justified the German aggression as part of an effort to save the German minority.<sup id="cite_ref-ev56_67-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev56-67"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>67<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Another contentious set of claims by Nolte was his argument that the film <a href="/wiki/Shoah_(film)" title="Shoah (film)"><i>Shoah</i></a> showed that it was "probable" that the <a href="/wiki/Schutzstaffel" title="Schutzstaffel">SS</a> were just as much victims of the Holocaust as were the Jews, and the Polish victims of the Germans were just as much anti-Semites as the Nazis, thereby proving it was unjust to single out Germans for criticism.<sup id="cite_ref-n20_44-7" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n20-44"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>44<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup><sup id="cite_ref-ev31_271-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev31-271"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>271<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup><sup id="cite_ref-L214_272-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-L214-272"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>272<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte claimed that more “Aryans” than Jews were murdered at Auschwitz, a fact overlooked because most Holocaust research comes “to an overwhelming degree from Jewish authors”.<sup id="cite_ref-L214_272-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-L214-272"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>272<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Likewise, Nolte has implied that the atrocities committed by the Germans in Poland and the Soviet Union were justified by earlier Polish and Soviet atrocities.<sup id="cite_ref-273" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-273"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>273<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In response, Nolte's critics have argued that though there were massacres of ethnic Germans in Poland in 1939 (about 4,000 to 6,000 being killed after the German invasion), these were not part of a genocidal program on the part of the Poles, but were rather the <i>ad hoc</i> reaction of panic-stricken Polish troops to (sometimes justified) rumors of <a href="/wiki/Fifth_column" title="Fifth column">fifth column</a> activities on the part of the <i>volksdeutsch</i>, and can not in any way be compared to the more systematic brutality of the German occupiers towards the Poles, which led to a 25% population reduction in Poland during the war.<sup id="cite_ref-274" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-274"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>274<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Another contentious statement by Nolte was his argument that the <a href="/wiki/Wannsee_Conference" title="Wannsee Conference">Wannsee Conference</a> of 1942 never occurred.<sup id="cite_ref-L214_272-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-L214-272"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>272<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte wrote that too many Holocaust historians were "biased" Jewish historians, whom Nolte strongly hinted manufactured the minutes of the Wannsee conference.<sup id="cite_ref-ev83_275-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev83-275"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>275<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> The British historian <a href="/wiki/Richard_J._Evans" title="Richard J. Evans">Richard J. Evans</a> was highly offended by Nolte's claims that German massacres of Soviet Jews carried out by the <i><a href="/wiki/Einsatzgruppen" title="Einsatzgruppen">Einsatzgruppen</a></i> and the <i>Wehrmacht</i> were a legitimate "preventive security" measure that was not a <a href="/wiki/War_crime" title="War crime">war crime</a>.<sup id="cite_ref-ev82_276-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev82-276"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>276<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte wrote that during <a href="/wiki/World_War_I" title="World War I">World War I</a>, the Germans would have been justified in exterminating the entire Belgian people as an act of "preventive security" because of <i><a href="/wiki/Francs-tireurs" title="Francs-tireurs">franc-tireur</a></i> attacks, and thus the <a href="/wiki/Rape_of_Belgium" title="Rape of Belgium">Rape of Belgium</a> was an act of German restraint; similarly, Nolte wrote that because many <a href="/wiki/Soviet_partisans" title="Soviet partisans">Soviet partisans</a> were Jews, the Germans were within their rights in seeking to kill every single Jewish man, women and child they encountered in Russia as an act of "preventive security".<sup id="cite_ref-ev82_276-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev82-276"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>276<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>In particular, controversy centered on an argument of Nolte's 1985 essay “Between Myth and Revisionism” from the book <i>Aspects of the Third Reich</i>, first published in German as <i>"Die negative Lebendigkeit des Dritten Reiches"</i> (<i>"The Negative Legend of the Third Reich"</i>) as an opinion piece in the <i>Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung</i> on 24 July 1980, but which did not attract widespread attention until 1986 when <a href="/wiki/J%C3%BCrgen_Habermas" title="Jürgen Habermas">Jürgen Habermas</a> criticized the essay in a <i>feuilleton</i> piece.<sup id="cite_ref-277" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-277"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>277<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte had delivered a lecture at the Siemans-Sitftung in 1980, and excerpts from his speech were published in the <i>Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung</i> without attracting controversy.<sup id="cite_ref-278" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-278"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>278<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In his essay, Nolte argued that if the <a href="/wiki/Palestine_Liberation_Organization" title="Palestine Liberation Organization">PLO</a> were to destroy Israel, then the subsequent history written in the new Palestinian state would portray the former Israeli state in the blackest of colors with no references to any of the positive features of the defunct state.<sup id="cite_ref-koch21_279-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-koch21-279"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>279<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In Nolte's opinion, a similar situation of history written only by the victors exists in regards to the history of Nazi Germany.<sup id="cite_ref-koch21_279-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-koch21-279"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>279<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Many historians, such as British historian <a href="/wiki/Richard_J._Evans" title="Richard J. Evans">Richard J. Evans</a>, have asserted that, based on this statement, Nolte appears to believe that the only reason why Nazism is regarded as evil is because Germany lost World War II, with no regard for the Holocaust.<sup id="cite_ref-280" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-280"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>280<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> <a href="/wiki/Klaus_Hildebrand" title="Klaus Hildebrand">Klaus Hildebrand</a> called in a review in the <i>Historische Zeitschrift</i> journal on 2 April 1986 called Nolte's essay "Between Myth and Revisionism" “trailbrazing”.<sup id="cite_ref-L213_281-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-L213-281"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>281<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In the same review of Nolte's essay "Between Myth and Revisionism", Hildebrand argued Nolte had in a praiseworthy way sought: </p> <blockquote><p>"to incorporate in historicizing fashion that central element for the history of National Socialism and of the "Third Reich" of the annihilatory capacity of the ideology and of the regime, and to comprehend this totalitarian reality in the interrelated context of Russian and German history".<sup id="cite_ref-282" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-282"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>282<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="Entsorgung_der_deutschen_Vergangenheit?_(1988)"><span id="Entsorgung_der_deutschen_Vergangenheit.3F_.281988.29"></span><i>Entsorgung der deutschen Vergangenheit?</i> (1988)</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=55" title="Edit section: Entsorgung der deutschen Vergangenheit? (1988)"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p><a href="/wiki/Hans-Ulrich_Wehler" title="Hans-Ulrich Wehler">Hans-Ulrich Wehler</a> was so enraged by Nolte's views that he wrote a book <i>Entsorgung der deutschen Vergangenheit?: ein polemischer Essay zum "Historikerstreit"</i> (<i>Exoneration of the German Past?: A Polemical Essay about the "Historikerstreit"</i>) in 1988, a lengthy polemic attacking every aspect of Nolte's views. Wehler described the <i>Historikerstreit</i> as a "political struggle" for the historical understanding of the German past between "a cartel devoted to repressing and excusing" the memory of the Nazi years, of which Nolte was the chief member, against "the representatives of a liberal-democratic politics, of an enlightened, self-critical position, of a rationality which is critical of ideology".<sup id="cite_ref-mu40_283-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-mu40-283"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>283<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In another essay, Wehler declared: </p><blockquote><p>"Hitler supposedly believed in the reality of this danger [of the Soviet Union threatening Germany]. Moreover, his dread of being overwhelmed by the "Asiatic" Bolsheviks was allegedly the prime motivating force behind his policies and personality. Nolte restated his axiom-one which perhaps reflects the naiveté of an historian who has devoted his life's work to the power of ideologies-in a blunter, more pointed form than ever before in the fall of 1987: "To view Hitler as a German politician rather the anti-Lenin", he reproved hundreds of knowledgeable historians, "strikes me as a proof of a regrettable myopia and narrowness". Starting from his premise, and falling under the sway of the very fears and phobias he himself has played up, Nolte once again defiantly insisted: "If Hitler was a person fundamentally driven by fears-by among others a fear of the "rat cage"-and if this renders "his motivations more understandable", then the war against the Soviet Union was not only "the greatest war ever of destruction and enslavement", but also "in spite of this, objectively speaking [!], a preemptive war".<br /><br />While Nolte may like to describe his motive as the purely scientific interest of (as he likes to put it) a solitary thinker in search of a supposedly more complex, more accurate understanding of the years between 1917 and 1945, a number of political implications are clearly present. The basic tendency of Nolte's reinterpretation is to unburden German history by relativizing the Holocaust. Nolte claims the Nazi mass murder was modeled on and instigated by the excesses of the Russian Revolution, the Stalinist regime and the Gulag; that it countered this "Asiatic" danger by imitating and surpassing it. This new localization of "absolute evil" in Nolte's <a href="/wiki/Political_theology" title="Political theology">political theology</a> leads away from Hitler, National Socialism and German history. It shifts the real origins of fascist barbarism onto the Marxist postulate-and the Bolshevik practice-of extermination. Once again the classic mechanism of locating the source of evil outside one's own history is at work. The German war of destruction certainly remains inhuman. But because its roots supposedly lie in the Marxist theory and Bolshevik class warfare, the German perpetrator is now seen to be reacting in defensive, understandable panic to the "original" inhumanity of the East. From there, it is only one more step to the astounding conclusion that Hitler's invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941 and the war of conquest and extermination that followed were "objectively speaking"-one can hardly believe one's eyes-"a preemptive war".<sup id="cite_ref-284" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-284"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>284<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="Der_europäische_Bürgerkrieg_(1987)"><span id="Der_europ.C3.A4ische_B.C3.BCrgerkrieg_.281987.29"></span><i>Der europäische Bürgerkrieg</i> (1987)</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=56" title="Edit section: Der europäische Bürgerkrieg (1987)"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>Another area of controversy was Nolte's 1987 book <i>Der europäische Bürgerkrieg</i> and some accompanying statements, in which Nolte appeared to flirt with <a href="/wiki/Holocaust_denial" title="Holocaust denial">Holocaust denial</a> as a serious historical argument.<sup id="cite_ref-ev83_275-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev83-275"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>275<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In a letter to Otto Dov Kulka of 8 December 1986 Nolte criticized the work of French Holocaust denier <a href="/wiki/Robert_Faurisson" title="Robert Faurisson">Robert Faurisson</a> on the ground that the Holocaust did in fact occur, but went on to argue that Faurisson's work was motivated by admirable motives, in the form of sympathy for Palestinians and opposition to Israel.<sup id="cite_ref-285" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-285"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>285<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In <i>Der europäische Bürgerkrieg</i>, Nolte claimed that the intentions of Holocaust deniers are "often honorable", and that some of their claims are "not obviously without foundation".<sup id="cite_ref-L214_272-3" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-L214-272"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>272<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup><sup id="cite_ref-ev83_275-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev83-275"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>275<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Kershaw has argued that Nolte was operating on the borderlines of Holocaust denial with his implied claim that the "negative myth" of Nazi Germany was created by Jewish historians, his allegations of the domination of Holocaust scholarship by Jewish historians, and his statements that one should withhold judgment on Holocaust deniers, whom Nolte insists are not exclusively Germans or fascists.<sup id="cite_ref-ker176_62-3" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ker176-62"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>62<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In Kershaw's opinion, Nolte is attempting to imply that perhaps Holocaust deniers are on to something.<sup id="cite_ref-ker176_62-4" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ker176-62"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>62<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>In <i>Der europäische Bürgerkrieg</i>, Nolte made five different arguments as a way of criticizing the uniqueness of the <i>Shoah</i> thesis. There were: </p> <ul><li>There were other equally horrible acts of violence in the 20th century.<sup id="cite_ref-286" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-286"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>286<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Some of the examples Nolte cited were the <a href="/wiki/Armenian_genocide" title="Armenian genocide">Armenian genocide</a>, Soviet <a href="/wiki/Population_transfer_in_the_Soviet_Union" title="Population transfer in the Soviet Union">deportation</a> of the so-called “traitor nations” like the <a href="/wiki/Crimean_Tatars" title="Crimean Tatars">Crimean Tatars</a> and the <a href="/wiki/Volga_Germans" title="Volga Germans">Volga Germans</a>, Allied “<a href="/wiki/Strategic_bombing_during_World_War_II" title="Strategic bombing during World War II">area bombing</a>” in World War II, and American war crimes in the Vietnam War.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_81_287-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_81-287"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>287<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></li> <li>Nazi genocide was only a copy of Soviet genocide, and thus can in no way can be considered unique.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_81_287-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_81-287"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>287<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In support of this, Nolte claimed that Lenin had “exterminated” the Russian <i>intelligentsia</i>, and used Hitler's remark at press conference of November 10, 1938 where he commented he might have to “exterminate” the German <i>intelligentsia</i> as an example how he feels that Hitler had merely copied Lenin.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_81_287-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_81-287"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>287<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></li> <li>Nolte argued that the vast majority of Germans had no knowledge of the <i>Shoah</i> while it was going on<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_81_287-3" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_81-287"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>287<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte claimed that the genocide of the Jews was Hitler's personal pet project, and the Holocaust was the work of only a few Germans entirely unrepresentative of German society<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_81_287-4" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_81-287"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>287<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Against the American historian <a href="/wiki/Raul_Hilberg" title="Raul Hilberg">Raul Hilberg</a>, who claimed that hundreds of thousands of Germans were complicit in the <i>Shoah</i> from high-ranking bureaucrats to railway clerks and locomotive conductors, Nolte argued that the functional division of labour in a modern society meant that most people in Germany had no idea of how they were assisting in genocide.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_82_288-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_82-288"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>288<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In support of this, Nolte cited the voluminous memoirs of German generals and Nazi leaders like <a href="/wiki/Albert_Speer" title="Albert Speer">Albert Speer</a> who claimed to have no idea that their country was engaging in genocide during World War II.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_82_288-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_82-288"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>288<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></li> <li>Nolte maintained that to a certain degree, Nazi anti-Semitic policies were justified responses to Jewish actions against Germany such as Weizmann's alleged 1939 “declaration of war” on Germany.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_82_288-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_82-288"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>288<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></li> <li>Finally, Nolte hinted that perhaps the Holocaust never happened at all.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_83_289-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_83-289"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>289<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte claimed that the <a href="/wiki/Wannsee_Conference" title="Wannsee Conference">Wannsee Conference</a> never happened, and argues that most Holocaust scholarship is flawed because most Holocaust historians are Jewish, and thus “biased” against Germany and in favour of the idea that there was a Holocaust.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_83_289-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_83-289"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>289<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></li></ul> <p>In <i>Der europäische Bürgerkrieg</i>, Nolte wrote that in 1939 Germany was a "liberal" country compared with the Soviet Union.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_156_290-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_156-290"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>290<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte argued that most German citizens provided that there were "Aryans" and were not politically active had little to fear from the <a href="/wiki/Gestapo" title="Gestapo">Gestapo</a> whereas in the Soviet Union at the same time millions were being arrested, tortured and executed by the <a href="/wiki/NKVD" title="NKVD">NKVD</a>.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_156_290-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_156-290"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>290<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Likewise, Nolte argued that the death rate in the German <a href="/wiki/Nazi_concentration_camps" title="Nazi concentration camps">concentration camps</a> was lower those in the Soviet <a href="/wiki/Gulag" title="Gulag">Gulag</a> camps, and used Hitler's long-running dispute with the German judiciary over the "correct" sentences to hand down as an example of how 1939 Germany was a "normal" country compared to the Soviet Union since Stalin did not have the same trouble with his judges over the "correct" sentences to hand out.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_156_290-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_156-290"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>290<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> The British historian <a href="/wiki/Richard_J._Evans" title="Richard J. Evans">Richard J. Evans</a> wrote that Nolte was taking Hitler's dispute with the judiciary out of context, and that differences between German judges and Hitler were of a degree, not of kind.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_156_290-3" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_156-290"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>290<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Another controversial statement by Nolte in <i>Der europäische Bürgerkrieg</i> was his comment that the <i><a href="/wiki/Kristallnacht" title="Kristallnacht">Kristallnacht</a></i> pogrom was not that bad as <a href="/wiki/Anti-Jewish_pogroms_in_the_Russian_Empire" class="mw-redirect" title="Anti-Jewish pogroms in the Russian Empire">pogroms</a> in Imperial Russia killed far more Jews than those killed in <i>Kristallnacht</i>, and that further more people were in being killed in the Soviet Union during the <a href="/wiki/Great_Purge" title="Great Purge">Great Terror</a> at the same time than were killed in the <i>Kristallnacht</i>.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_155_291-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_155-291"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>291<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Likewise, Nolte argued that Nazi anti-Semitic laws had hardly affected Jewish participation in the German economy.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_155_291-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_155-291"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>291<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In this respect, Nolte favourably cited the remarks by Sir <a href="/wiki/Sir_Horace_Rumbold,_9th_Baronet" title="Sir Horace Rumbold, 9th Baronet">Horace Rumbold</a>, the British Ambassador to Germany 1928–33 who claimed that the “ostentatious kind of lifestyle of Jewish bankers and monied people inevitably aroused envy, as unemployment spread generally” and who spoke of “the sins of the Russian and Galician Jews” who came to Germany after 1918.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_155_291-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_155-291"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>291<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> The British historian <a href="/wiki/Richard_J._Evans" title="Richard J. Evans">Richard J. Evans</a> accused Nolte of engaging in “comparative trivialization” with his statements about <i>Kristallnacht</i> and through admitting that Nolte was correct about the higher death toll in Russian pogroms and the Great Terror argued that was irrelevant to the horrors of <i>Kristallnacht</i>.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_155_291-3" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_155-291"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>291<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Evans went on to write that Nolte appeared to be ignorant of the effects of various anti-Semitic laws in 1930s Germany which forbid Jews from engaging in professions like the law, medicine, the civil service while the “<a href="/wiki/Aryanization_(Nazism)" class="mw-redirect" title="Aryanization (Nazism)">Aryanization</a>” campaign saw mass expropriations of Jewish businesses.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_155_291-4" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_155-291"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>291<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>A further controversial claim was Nolte's statement that violence in the defence of the social order is always preferable to violence aiming at the destruction of the social order.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_29_292-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_29-292"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>292<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Thus, Nolte argued that the notorious lenience of judges in the <a href="/wiki/Weimar_Republic" title="Weimar Republic">Weimar Republic</a> towards perpetrators of violence from the right while imposing stiff sentences on perpetrators of violence from the left was justified.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_29_292-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_29-292"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>292<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In this way, Nolte maintained that the very harsh sentences given to the leaders of the <i>Rote Ocktober</i> (Red October) <i>putsch</i> attempt in <a href="/wiki/Hamburg" title="Hamburg">Hamburg</a> of October 1923 were justified while the light sentences that Hitler and the other Nazi leaders received for the <a href="/wiki/Munich" title="Munich">Munich</a> <a href="/wiki/Beer_Hall_Putsch" title="Beer Hall Putsch">Beer Hall Putsch</a> of November 1923 were also completely warranted because Nolte claimed that the Nazis were only attempting to overthrow the Weimar Republic in order to save the social order.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_29_292-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_29-292"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>292<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte claimed that the German Communists were seeking the "social destruction of the bourgeoisie" in the interests of the Soviet Union, which "physically exterminated these classes" while the Nazis sought only the destruction of the "Versailles system".<sup id="cite_ref-293" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-293"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>293<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>In 1988, the German historian <a href="/wiki/Eckhard_Jesse" title="Eckhard Jesse">Eckhard Jesse</a> called <i>Der europäische Bürgerkrieg</i> a "great and bold work" that "the time is not yet ripe" for.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_177_294-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_177-294"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>294<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Jesse claimed that it would take decades for historians to fully appreciate Nolte's achievement with <i>Der europäische Bürgerkrieg</i>.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_177_294-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_177-294"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>294<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> The British historian <a href="/wiki/Richard_J._Evans" title="Richard J. Evans">Richard J. Evans</a> called Jesse's remarks the most inane remark anyone made during the entire <i>Historikerstreit</i>.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_177_294-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_177-294"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>294<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Nolte's critic, the British historian <a href="/wiki/Richard_J._Evans" title="Richard J. Evans">Richard J. Evans</a> accused Nolte of taking too seriously the work of Holocaust deniers, whom Evans called cranks, not historians.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_83_289-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_83-289"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>289<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Likewise, Evans charged that Nolte was guilty of making assertions not supported by the evidence as claiming that the SS massacres of Russian Jews was a form of counterinsurgency or taking at face value the self-justifying claims of German generals who professed to be ignorant of the <i>Shoah</i>.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_83_289-3" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_83-289"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>289<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Evans wrote that it was not enough for Nolte to cite the claim of a functional division of labour in modern society as a way of rebutting Hilburg, instead arguing that as a historian Nolte should have found evidence that most people in Germany did not know of the "Final Solution" rather than just quoting a sociological theory.<sup id="cite_ref-295" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-295"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>295<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Evans wrote that most of Nolte's claims were either <i>Der europäische Bürgerkrieg</i> rested either on speculation and/or were based on a slight base of evidence often taken wildly out of context.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_85_296-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_85-296"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>296<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Moreover, Evans claimed that the bibliography of <i>Der europäische Bürgerkrieg</i> suggested that Nolte was not aware of much of the vast secondary sources on German and Soviet history.<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_85_296-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_85-296"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>296<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Perhaps the most extreme response to Nolte's thesis occurred on 9 February 1988, when his car was burned by leftist extremists in <a href="/wiki/Berlin" title="Berlin">Berlin</a>.<sup id="cite_ref-ev177_297-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev177-297"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>297<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte called the case of arson "terrorism", and maintained that the attack was inspired by his opponents in the <i>Historikerstreit</i>.<sup id="cite_ref-ev177_297-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev177-297"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>297<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="Views_from_outside_Germany">Views from outside Germany</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=57" title="Edit section: Views from outside Germany"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="Contemporaneous_views">Contemporaneous views</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=58" title="Edit section: Contemporaneous views"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div><p> Criticism from abroad came from <a href="/wiki/Ian_Kershaw" title="Ian Kershaw">Ian Kershaw</a>, <a href="/wiki/Gordon_A._Craig" title="Gordon A. Craig">Gordon A. Craig</a>, <a href="/wiki/Richard_J._Evans" title="Richard J. Evans">Richard J. Evans</a>, <a href="/wiki/Saul_Friedl%C3%A4nder" title="Saul Friedländer">Saul Friedländer</a>, <a href="/wiki/John_Lukacs" title="John Lukacs">John Lukacs</a>, <a href="/wiki/Michael_Marrus" title="Michael Marrus">Michael Marrus</a>, and <a href="/wiki/Timothy_Mason" title="Timothy Mason">Timothy Mason</a>. Mason wrote against Nolte in a call for the sort of theories of generic fascism that Nolte himself had once championed: </p><blockquote><p>“If we can do without much of the original contents of the concept of ‘fascism’, we cannot do without comparison. “Historicization” may easily become a recipe for provincialism. And the moral absolutes of Habermas, however politically and didactically impeccable, also carry a shadow of provincialism, as long as they fail to recognize that fascism was a continental phenomenon and that Nazism was a peculiar part of something much larger. Pol Pot, the rat torture and the fate of the Armenians are all extraneous to any serious discussion of Nazism; Mussolini's Italy is not.”<sup id="cite_ref-298" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-298"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>298<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote><p> Anson Rabinbach accused Nolte of attempting to erase German guilt for the Holocaust.<sup id="cite_ref-299" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-299"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>299<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> <a href="/wiki/Ian_Kershaw" title="Ian Kershaw">Ian Kershaw</a> wrote that Nolte was claiming that the Jews had essentially brought the Holocaust down on themselves, and were the authors of their own misfortunes in the <i>Shoah</i>.<sup id="cite_ref-300" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-300"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>300<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> <a href="/wiki/Elie_Wiesel" title="Elie Wiesel">Elie Wiesel</a> called Nolte, together with <a href="/wiki/Klaus_Hildebrand" title="Klaus Hildebrand">Klaus Hildebrand</a>, <a href="/wiki/Andreas_Hillgruber" title="Andreas Hillgruber">Andreas Hillgruber</a>, and <a href="/wiki/Michael_St%C3%BCrmer" title="Michael Stürmer">Michael Stürmer</a>, one of the “four bandits” of German <a href="/wiki/Historiography" title="Historiography">historiography</a>.<sup id="cite_ref-301" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-301"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>301<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> American historian <a href="/w/index.php?title=Jerry_Muller&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Jerry Muller (page does not exist)">Jerry Muller</a> called Nolte an anti-Semitic for suggesting that the only reason people kept the memory of the Nazi past alive was to place those descended from the victims of National Socialism in a "privileged" position.<sup id="cite_ref-302" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-302"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>302<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Muller accused Nolte of writing "pseudo-history" in <i>Der Europäische Bürgerkrieg</i>.<sup id="cite_ref-mu40_283-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-mu40-283"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>283<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> <a href="/wiki/Deborah_Lipstadt" title="Deborah Lipstadt">Deborah Lipstadt</a> argued in her 1993 book <i>Denying the Holocaust</i> that there was no comparison between the Khmer Rouge genocide and the Holocaust because the former had emerged as part of the aftermath of a war that destroyed Cambodia whereas the latter was part of a systematic attempt at genocide committed only because of ideological beliefs.<sup id="cite_ref-303" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-303"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>303<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> The American historian <a href="/wiki/Charles_S._Maier" title="Charles S. Maier">Charles S. Maier</a> rejected Nolte's claims regarding the moral equivalence of the Holocaust and Soviet terror on the grounds that while the latter was extremely brutal, it did not seek the physical annihilation of an entire people as a state policy.<sup id="cite_ref-304" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-304"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>304<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> The American historian Donald McKale blasted Nolte together with <a href="/wiki/Andreas_Hillgruber" title="Andreas Hillgruber">Andreas Hillgruber</a> for their statements that the Allied strategic bombing offensives were just as much acts of genocide as was the Holocaust, writing that that was just the sort of nonsense one would expect from Nazi apologists like Nolte and Hillgruber.<sup id="cite_ref-305" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-305"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>305<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>In response to Nolte's article "Between Myth and Revisionism", Israeli historian <a href="/wiki/Otto_Dov_Kulka" title="Otto Dov Kulka">Otto Dov Kulka</a> in a letter to Nolte on November 24, 1985, criticized Nolte for abandoning the view that he expressed in <i>The Three Faces of Fascism</i> that the Holocaust was a "singular" event, and asked "Which of the two Ernst Noltes should we regard as the authentic one?"<sup id="cite_ref-306" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-306"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>306<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In his reply, Nolte told Kulka to read his up-coming book <i>Der europäische Bürgerkrieg</i> to better understand his "shift of emphasis".<sup id="cite_ref-307" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-307"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>307<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In a reply of May 16, 1986, Kulka accused Nolte of engaging in a "shift of responsibility" with the Holocaust as a "preventive measure" forced on the Germans by the "Jewish provocation" of Weizmann's letter to Chamberlain.<sup id="cite_ref-k154_308-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-k154-308"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>308<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In a letter to Nolte on July 18, 1986, Kulka wrote in defense of the "singularity" of the Holocaust that: "The uniqueness of the National Socialist mass murder of the Jews must be understood in the world-historical sense attributed to it-as an attempt to bring about a change in the course of universal history and its goals. Thus, National Socialist anti-Semitism must be regarded as an expression of perhaps the most dangerous crisis of Western civilization with the potentially gravest consequences for the history of mankind..."<sup id="cite_ref-309" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-309"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>309<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In a letter to Kulka on October 22, 1986, Nolte wrote: "If I pursed my thinking from 1963 on, it was in a way along the line <i>that an overexaggerated right can be equally an evil, and that an overexaggerated (historical) evil can again, in some way, be right</i>" (emphasis in the original).<sup id="cite_ref-k154_308-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-k154-308"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>308<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Kulka accused Nolte of advancing "monocausal, retrospective explanations of universal history" and of engaging in "totalitarian thinking".<sup id="cite_ref-k154_308-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-k154-308"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>308<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>The Anglo-German historian <a href="/w/index.php?title=H.W._Koch&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="H.W. Koch (page does not exist)">H.W. Koch</a> accepted Nolte's argument that Weizmann's letter to Chamberlain was indeed a “Jewish declaration of war”, with the oblivious implication since all Jews were now enemies of the <i>Reich</i>, the Germans were entitled to treat the Jews whatever way they wanted to.<sup id="cite_ref-310" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-310"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>310<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> From abroad came support from <a href="/wiki/Norberto_Ceresole" title="Norberto Ceresole">Norberto Ceresole</a> and <a href="/wiki/Alfred-Maurice_de_Zayas" title="Alfred-Maurice de Zayas">Alfred-Maurice de Zayas</a>.<sup id="cite_ref-ev162_66-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev162-66"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>66<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>In a 1987 essay, the Austrian-born Israeli historian <a href="/w/index.php?title=Walter_Grab&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Walter Grab (page does not exist)">Walter Grab</a> accused Nolte of engaging in an “apologia” for Nazi Germany.<sup id="cite_ref-Grab,_Walter_pp._273-278_311-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Grab,_Walter_pp._273-278-311"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>311<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Grab called Nolte's claim that Weizmann's letter to Chamberlain was a "Jewish declaration of war" that justified the Germans "interning" European Jews a "monstrous theses" that was not supported by the facts.<sup id="cite_ref-Grab,_Walter_pp._273-278_311-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Grab,_Walter_pp._273-278-311"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>311<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Grab accused Nolte of ignoring the economic impoverishment and the total lack of civil rights that the Jewish community in Germany lived under in 1939.<sup id="cite_ref-Grab,_Walter_pp._273-278_311-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Grab,_Walter_pp._273-278-311"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>311<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Grab wrote that Nolte "mocks" the Jewish victims of National Socialism with his "absolutely infamous" statement that it was Weizmann's with his letter that caused all of the Jewish death and suffering during the Holocaust.<sup id="cite_ref-Grab,_Walter_pp._273-278_311-3" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Grab,_Walter_pp._273-278-311"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>311<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>One of Nolte's letters created another controversy in late 1987, when <a href="/wiki/Otto_Dov_Kulka" title="Otto Dov Kulka">Otto Dov Kulka</a> complained that a letter he wrote to Nolte criticizing his views was edited by Nolte to make him appear rather sympathetic to Nolte's arguments, and then released to the press.<sup id="cite_ref-ker171_312-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ker171-312"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>312<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In 1987, Nolte wrote an entire book responding to his critics both German and foreign, <i>Das Vergehen der Vergangenheit: Antwort an meine Kritiker im sogenannten Historikerstreit</i> (<i>The Offense Of The Past: Answer At My Critics In The So-Called Historians' Dispute</i>), which again attracted controversy because Nolte reprinted the edited version of Kulka's letters, despite the latter's objections to their inclusion in the book in their truncated form.<sup id="cite_ref-ker171_312-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ker171-312"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>312<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In <i>Das Vergehen der Vergangenheit</i>, Nolte declared that the <i>Historikerstreit</i> should have begun 25 years earlier because "everything which has provoked such excitement in the course of this dispute had already been spelled out in those books [Nolte's earlier work]" and that "<i>the simple scheme 'perpetrators-victims' reduces the complexities of history too much</i>" (emphasis in the original).<sup id="cite_ref-k154_308-3" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-k154-308"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>308<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In <i>Das Vergehen der Vergangenheit</i>, Nolte appeared to backtrack from some of his theories, writing that after Weizmann's letter, European Jews should be treated as "civil internees" rather as "prisoners of war".<sup id="cite_ref-ev152_313-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev152-313"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>313<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Evans wrote that the sole purpose of <i>Das Vergehen der Vergangenheit</i> appeared to be to obscure the issues by making confusing statements about what he actually said and wrote, and that Nolte's real purpose to justify the <i>Shoah</i> as there is not other reason why Nolte should have been making these arguments.<sup id="cite_ref-ev152_313-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev152-313"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>313<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> When an anthology was published about the <i>Historikerstreit</i>, Nolte objected to the subtitle “The Documentation of the Controversy Concerning the Singularity of the National Socialist Annihilation of the Jews”, and instead demanded that the subtitle be “Documentation of the Controversy Surrounding the Preconditions and the Character of the “Final Solution of the Jewish Question”.<sup id="cite_ref-n263_314-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n263-314"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>314<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Only when it became clear that the book could not be published, did Nolte yield on his demands.<sup id="cite_ref-n263_314-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-n263-314"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>314<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p> The <i>Historikerstreit</i> attracted much <a href="/wiki/Mass_media" title="Mass media">media</a> attention in <a href="/wiki/West_Germany" title="West Germany">West Germany</a>, where historians enjoy a higher public profile than is the case in the English-speaking world, and as a result, both Nolte and his opponents became frequent guests on West German <a href="/wiki/Radio" title="Radio">radio</a> and <a href="/wiki/Television" title="Television">television</a>.<sup id="cite_ref-ker170_315-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ker170-315"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>315<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> The <i>Historikerstreit</i> was characterized by a highly vitriolic tone, with both Nolte and his supporters and their opponents often resorting to vicious personal attacks on each other.<sup id="cite_ref-316" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-316"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>316<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In particular, the <i>Historikerstreit</i> marked the first occasion since the “<a href="/wiki/Fischer_Controversy" class="mw-redirect" title="Fischer Controversy">Fischer Controversy</a>” of the early 1960s when German historians refused to shake hands with each other.<sup id="cite_ref-317" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-317"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>317<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Abroad, the <i>Historikerstreit</i> garnered Nolte some fame, to a somewhat lesser extent.<sup id="cite_ref-ker170_315-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ker170-315"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>315<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Outside of Austria, foreign press coverage tended to be hostile towards Nolte, with the fiercest criticism coming from Israel.<sup id="cite_ref-ker170_315-2" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ker170-315"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>315<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> In 1988, an entire edition of <i>Yad Vashem Studies</i>, the journal of the <a href="/wiki/Yad_Vashem" title="Yad Vashem">Yad Vashem</a> Institute in <a href="/wiki/Jerusalem" title="Jerusalem">Jerusalem</a>, was devoted to the <i>Historikerstreit</i>. A year earlier, in 1987, concerns about some of the claims being made by both sides in the <i>Historikerstreit</i> led to a conference being called in <a href="/wiki/London" title="London">London</a> that was attended by some of the leading British, American, Israeli, and German specialists in both Soviet and German history. Among those who attended included Sir <a href="/wiki/Ralf_Dahrendorf" title="Ralf Dahrendorf">Ralf Dahrendorf</a>, Sir <a href="/wiki/Isaiah_Berlin" title="Isaiah Berlin">Isaiah Berlin</a>, <a href="/wiki/George_Weidenfeld" class="mw-redirect" title="George Weidenfeld">Lord Weidenfeld</a>, <a href="/wiki/Harold_James_(historian)" title="Harold James (historian)">Harold James</a>, Carol Gluck, <a href="/wiki/Noel_Annan,_Baron_Annan" title="Noel Annan, Baron Annan">Lord Annan</a>, <a href="/wiki/Fritz_Stern" title="Fritz Stern">Fritz Stern</a>, <a href="/wiki/Gordon_A._Craig" title="Gordon A. Craig">Gordon A. Craig</a>, <a href="/wiki/Robert_Conquest" title="Robert Conquest">Robert Conquest</a>, Samuel Ettinger, <a href="/wiki/J%C3%BCrgen_Kocka" title="Jürgen Kocka">Jürgen Kocka</a>, Sir <a href="/wiki/Nicholas_Henderson" title="Nicholas Henderson">Nicholas Henderson</a>, <a href="/wiki/Eberhard_J%C3%A4ckel" title="Eberhard Jäckel">Eberhard Jäckel</a>, <a href="/wiki/Hans_Mommsen" title="Hans Mommsen">Hans Mommsen</a>, <a href="/wiki/Michael_St%C3%BCrmer" title="Michael Stürmer">Michael Stürmer</a>, <a href="/wiki/Joachim_Fest" title="Joachim Fest">Joachim Fest</a>, <a href="/wiki/Hagen_Schulze" title="Hagen Schulze">Hagen Schulze</a>, Christian Maier, <a href="/wiki/Wolfgang_Mommsen" title="Wolfgang Mommsen">Wolfgang Mommsen</a>, <a href="/wiki/Hugh_Trevor-Roper" title="Hugh Trevor-Roper">Hugh Trevor-Roper</a>, <a href="/wiki/Saul_Friedl%C3%A4nder" title="Saul Friedländer">Saul Friedländer</a>, <a href="/wiki/Felix_Gilbert" title="Felix Gilbert">Felix Gilbert</a>, <a href="/wiki/Norman_Stone" title="Norman Stone">Norman Stone</a>, Julius Schoeps, and <a href="/wiki/Charles_S._Maier" title="Charles S. Maier">Charles S. Maier</a>.<sup id="cite_ref-318" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-318"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>318<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Nolte was invited to the conference, but declined, citing scheduling conflicts. The Israeli historian <a href="/w/index.php?title=Samuel_Ettinger&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Samuel Ettinger (page does not exist)">Samuel Ettinger</a> described Nolte as someone who wrote about Soviet history despite not being a Soviet specialist.<sup id="cite_ref-319" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-319"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>319<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Ettinger went to say about Nolte:</p><blockquote><p>“Quotations from <a href="/wiki/Martin_Latsis" title="Martin Latsis">Latsis</a>, who was First Cheka Chief; Tucholsky, the satirist and journalist, and Theodore Kaufmann (who knows who Theodore Kaufmann was?) were used as historical sources. Can an assorted collection of this kind serve as a basis for serious scholarly analysis, the starting point for the claim that poor Hitler was so frightened by the “Asiatic deeds” of the Bolsheviks that he started to exterminate Jewish children? All this without taking into account the historical development of the relationship between Germany and the Soviet Union, the military co-operation during the twenties which as well known to the German General Staff and to Hitler, <a href="/wiki/Mikhail_Tukhachevsky" title="Mikhail Tukhachevsky">Tukhachevsky</a>'s speech in 1935 was applauded at a meeting of the General Staff of Germany for its anti-Western remarks. Then there are the negotiations between Stalin and Hitler from ’36 and ’37 onwards which brought a rapprochement and led to the dismissal of Jewish diplomats and other public officials until the division of Poland in 1939”.<sup id="cite_ref-320" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-320"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>320<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote><p> The Anglo-American historian of Stalin's terror, <a href="/wiki/Robert_Conquest" title="Robert Conquest">Robert Conquest</a> was quoted as saying about Nolte's theories:</p><blockquote><p>“I think we all accept the proposition that Nazi crimes were unique and uniquely horrible, that they were a reaction against the Communist terrors seems untenable. It is conceivable that <i>support</i> for the National Socialists may largely have come as a reaction to Lenin's international civil war launched in 1918, but the actual crimes of the Holocaust are of a totally different nature from Stalin's crimes and I see no connection whatever. But although there is no causative connection, comparisons can still be made”.<sup id="cite_ref-321" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-321"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>321<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote> <p><a href="/wiki/Noel_Annan,_Baron_Annan" title="Noel Annan, Baron Annan">Lord Annan</a> was quoted as saying "Nolte's article may have been sinister, even malevolent, but we have had a great example of an informed debate, of great heart-searching and of a profound examination of the nature of Germany's past and present"”.<sup id="cite_ref-322" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-322"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>322<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> The German historian Julius Schoeps stated:</p><blockquote><p>"I would like stress a seminal factor in the <i>Historikerstreit</i>: The historians who caused this dispute are men in their sixties, that is, men who were old enough to be in the Hitler Youth, <i>Hitlerjugend</i>; men who were perhaps soldiers in the war; men for whom the collapse of the Third Reich turned into a trauma which is inextricably linked to the key terms Holocaust and Auschwitz. Nolte's reaction is, I think, typical of this generation of scholars. Contrary to some historians who assert that Germans should not ask such questions at all, I believe that Germans must ask them. But there is no need for slanted questions and ambiguous statements which whitewash German history. Unfortunately, questions of this kind were posed in the <i>Historikerstreit</i>; such assertions were made. If historians are suggesting today that Hitler had the right to intern the Jews, they may be tempted to suggest tomorrow that he had the right to kill the Jews. That is why it is crucial to discuss such moral, political, ethical lies".<sup id="cite_ref-323" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-323"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>323<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote><p> During the course of the debate, <a href="/wiki/Eberhard_J%C3%A4ckel" title="Eberhard Jäckel">Eberhard Jäckel</a> and <a href="/wiki/Joachim_Fest" title="Joachim Fest">Joachim Fest</a> again clashed over the question of the "singularity" of the Holocaust with Fest accusing Jäckel of presenting a "caricature" of his opponents.<sup id="cite_ref-324" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-324"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>324<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Writing in 1989, the British historian <a href="/wiki/Richard_J._Evans" title="Richard J. Evans">Richard J. Evans</a> declared that:</p><blockquote><p>"Finally, Nolte's attempts to establish the comparability of Auschwitz rest in part upon an extension of the concept of "genocide" to actions which cannot plausibly justify being described in this way. However much one might wish to criticize the Allied strategic-bombing offensive against German cities, it cannot be termed genocidal because there was no intention to exterminate the entire German people. Dresden was bombed after Coventry, not the other way around, and it is implausible to suggest that the latter was a response to the former; on the contrary, there was indeed an element of retaliation and revenge in the strategic bombing offensive, which is precisely one of the grounds on which it has often been criticized. There is no evidence to support Nolte's speculation that the ethnic Germans in Poland would have been entirely exterminated had the Nazis not completed their invasion quickly. Neither the Poles nor the Russians had any intention of exterminating the German people as a whole. At this point, it is useful to recall the conclusion of the German historian and Hitler specialist Eberhard Jäckel that "the Nazi murder of the Jews was unique because never before had a state decided and announced, on the authority of its responsible leader, that it intended to kill in its entirety, as far as possible, a particular group of human beings, including its old people, women, children and infants, and then put this decision into action with every possible instrument of power available to the state".<br /><br />The attempts undertaken by Nolte, Hillgruber, Fest and other neoconservative historians to get around this fact are all ultimately unconvincing. It requires a considerable degree of myopia to regard the policies of the USA in Vietnam in the 1960s and early 1970s or the occupation of Afghanistan by the USSR in the 1980s as "genocide". However much one may deplore the conduct of the occupying armies, there is no evidence of any deliberate policy of exterminating the inhabitants of the countries in question. The terrible massacres of the Armenians by the Turks in 1915 were more deliberate, on a wider scale and concentrated into a far shorter time, then the destruction of human life in Vietnam and Afghanistan, and they were not carried out as part of a military campaign, although they did occur in wartime. But these atrocities were committed as part of a brutal policy of expulsion and resettlement; they did not constitute an attempt to exterminate a whole people. Similar things may be said of the forcible removal of Greeks from Asia Minor during the 1920s, although this has not, in contrast to the events of 1915, generally been regarded as genocide.<br /><br />The Pol Pot regime in Cambodia witnessed the horrific spectacle of a nation's rulers turning upon their own people, in a manner comparable to that of the Ugandan dictator Idi Amin a few years previously. The victims, whose numbers exceeded a million, were killed, not on racial grounds, but as part of a deliberate policy of terror to subdue opposition and revenge against those thought to have collaborated with the American enemy during the previous hostilities. Moreover, the barbarities inflicted on the Cambodian people by the Pol Pot regime were to a considerable extent the result of a brutalizing process that had accompanied a terrible war, during which vast quantities of bombs were dropped on the country, destroying a large part of the moral and physical basis of Cambodian society in the process. This in no way excuses the murderous policies of the Khmer Rouge. But it does show up, once more, the contrast with the Nazi genocide of the Jews, which, as we have seen, was a gratuitous act carried out by a prosperous, advanced industrial nation at the height of its power.".<sup id="cite_ref-Evans,_pp._85–87_325-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Evans,_pp._85–87-325"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>325<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup></p></blockquote><p> Evans criticized Nolte for crediting the remark about the Armenian genocide as an "Asiatic deed" to Scheubner-Richter, when in fact, it came from a 1938 biography of Scheubner-Richter.<sup id="cite_ref-ev35_326-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev35-326"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>326<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Moreover, Evans maintained that there is no evidence to support Nolte's claim that because <a href="/wiki/Ludwig_Maximilian_Erwin_von_Scheubner-Richter" class="mw-redirect" title="Ludwig Maximilian Erwin von Scheubner-Richter">Max Scheubner-Richter</a> was opposed to the Armenian genocide, that proved that Hitler thought the same way in 1915.<sup id="cite_ref-ev35_326-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev35-326"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>326<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Citing <i><a href="/wiki/Mein_Kampf" title="Mein Kampf">Mein Kampf</a></i>, Evans argued that Hitler was an anti-Semitic long before 1914 and that it was the moderate left <a href="/wiki/Social_Democratic_Party_of_Germany" title="Social Democratic Party of Germany">SPD</a>, not the Bolsheviks that Hitler regarded as his main enemies<sup id="cite_ref-327" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-327"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>327<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>Nolte's opponents have expressed intense disagreement with his evidence for a Jewish "war" on <a href="/wiki/Germany" title="Germany">Germany</a>. They argue that Weizmann's letter to Chamberlain was written in his capacity as head of the World Zionist Organization, not on behalf of the entire Jewish people of the world,<sup id="cite_ref-ev38_328-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev38-328"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>328<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> and that Nolte's views are based on the spurious idea that all Jews comprised a distinct "nationality" who take their marching orders from Jewish organizations.<sup id="cite_ref-ev38_328-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ev38-328"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>328<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Lipstadt criticized Nolte's thesis on the grounds that first, Weizmann had no army in 1939 to wage “war” against Germany with, and that Nolte had totally ignored the previous six years of Nazi persecution of the Jews, making it sound like as if Weizmann had struck a low blow against Germany for no apparent reason in 1939.<sup id="cite_ref-L213_281-1" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-L213-281"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>281<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Furthermore, it has been contended that there is no evidence that Hitler ever heard of Weizmann's letter to Chamberlain, and that it was natural for Weizmann, a British Jew, to declare his support for his country against a fiercely anti-Semitic regime.<sup id="cite_ref-329" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-329"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>329<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p><p>As for Kaufman's book, the Nazis were certainly aware of it; during the war, <i>Germany Must Perish!</i> was translated into <a href="/wiki/German_language" title="German language">German</a> and widely promoted as an example of what Jews thought about Germans. But most historians contended that the radical views of one American Jew can in no way be taken as typical of what all European Jews were thinking, and to put the call for the forced <a href="/wiki/Sterilization_(medicine)" title="Sterilization (medicine)">sterilization</a> of Germans that was never carried out as Allied policy in the same league as the Holocaust shows a profound moral insensitivity.<sup id="cite_ref-330" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-330"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>330<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Moreover, it has been shown that there is no indication that Kaufman's book ever played any role in the decision-making process that led to the Holocaust.<sup id="cite_ref-ker176_62-5" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-ker176-62"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>62<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> Finally, it has been contended that Nolte's comparison of the Holocaust with the <a href="/wiki/Japanese_American_internment" class="mw-redirect" title="Japanese American internment">internment of Japanese Americans</a> is false, because the Jews of Europe were sent to <a href="/wiki/Death_camps" class="mw-redirect" title="Death camps">death camps</a> rather than internment camps, and the U.S. government did not attempt to exterminate the Japanese Americans in the internment camps.<sup id="cite_ref-331" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-331"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>331<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="Later_views">Later views</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=59" title="Edit section: Later views"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p>The British historian <a href="/wiki/Norman_Davies" title="Norman Davies">Norman Davies</a> argued in 2006 that revelations made after the <a href="/wiki/Revolutions_of_1989" title="Revolutions of 1989">Revolutions of 1989</a> resulting in the fall of Communism in Eastern Europe after 1989–91 about Soviet crimes had discredited the left-wing position taken in the 1980s during the <i>Historikerstreit</i> debate.<sup id="cite_ref-Davies2006_332-0" class="reference"><a href="#cite_note-Davies2006-332"><span class="cite-bracket">[</span>332<span class="cite-bracket">]</span></a></sup> </p> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="See_also">See also</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=60" title="Edit section: See also"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Catechism_debate" title="Catechism debate">Catechism debate</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Australian_history_wars" title="Australian history wars">History wars</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/New_Historians" title="New Historians">New Historians</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Secondary_antisemitism" title="Secondary antisemitism">Secondary antisemitism</a></li> <li><i><a href="/wiki/Vergangenheitsbew%C3%A4ltigung" title="Vergangenheitsbewältigung">Vergangenheitsbewältigung</a></i></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Victim_theory" class="mw-redirect" title="Victim theory">Victim theory</a></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="References">References</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=61" title="Edit section: References"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <style data-mw-deduplicate="TemplateStyles:r1239543626">.mw-parser-output .reflist{margin-bottom:0.5em;list-style-type:decimal}@media screen{.mw-parser-output .reflist{font-size:90%}}.mw-parser-output .reflist .references{font-size:100%;margin-bottom:0;list-style-type:inherit}.mw-parser-output .reflist-columns-2{column-width:30em}.mw-parser-output .reflist-columns-3{column-width:25em}.mw-parser-output .reflist-columns{margin-top:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .reflist-columns ol{margin-top:0}.mw-parser-output .reflist-columns li{page-break-inside:avoid;break-inside:avoid-column}.mw-parser-output .reflist-upper-alpha{list-style-type:upper-alpha}.mw-parser-output .reflist-upper-roman{list-style-type:upper-roman}.mw-parser-output .reflist-lower-alpha{list-style-type:lower-alpha}.mw-parser-output .reflist-lower-greek{list-style-type:lower-greek}.mw-parser-output .reflist-lower-roman{list-style-type:lower-roman}</style><div class="reflist"> <div class="mw-references-wrap mw-references-columns"><ol class="references"> <li id="cite_note-1"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-1">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">The German word <i><a href="https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Streit#German" class="extiw" title="wikt:Streit">Streit</a></i> translates variously as "quarrel", "dispute", or "conflict". The most common translation of <i>Historikerstreit</i> in English-language academic discourse is "historians' dispute", although the German term is often used.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-2"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-2">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Kattago, Siobhan. <i>Ambiguous Memory: The Nazi Past and German National Identity</i>, Westport: Praeger, 2001, pp. 56–58.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-3"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-3">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Kattago 2001, pp. 61–62.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Pakier-4"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-Pakier_4-0">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text"><style data-mw-deduplicate="TemplateStyles:r1238218222">.mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit;word-wrap:break-word}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"\"""\"""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation:target{background-color:rgba(0,127,255,0.133)}.mw-parser-output .id-lock-free.id-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/65/Lock-green.svg")right 0.1em center/9px no-repeat}.mw-parser-output .id-lock-limited.id-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .id-lock-registration.id-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg")right 0.1em center/9px no-repeat}.mw-parser-output .id-lock-subscription.id-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg")right 0.1em center/9px no-repeat}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg")right 0.1em center/12px no-repeat}body:not(.skin-timeless):not(.skin-minerva) .mw-parser-output .id-lock-free a,body:not(.skin-timeless):not(.skin-minerva) .mw-parser-output .id-lock-limited a,body:not(.skin-timeless):not(.skin-minerva) .mw-parser-output .id-lock-registration a,body:not(.skin-timeless):not(.skin-minerva) .mw-parser-output .id-lock-subscription a,body:not(.skin-timeless):not(.skin-minerva) .mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background-size:contain;padding:0 1em 0 0}.mw-parser-output .cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:none;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;color:var(--color-error,#d33)}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{color:var(--color-error,#d33)}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#085;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right{padding-right:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .citation .mw-selflink{font-weight:inherit}@media screen{.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{color:#18911f}}@media screen and (prefers-color-scheme:dark){html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{color:#18911f}}</style><cite id="CITEREFPakier,_MałgorzataStråth,_Bo2010" class="citation book cs1">Pakier, Małgorzata; Stråth, Bo (2010). <i>A European Memory?: Contested Histories and Politics of Remembrance</i>. Berghahn Books. p. 264.</cite><span title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&rft.genre=book&rft.btitle=A+European+Memory%3F%3A+Contested+Histories+and+Politics+of+Remembrance&rft.pages=264&rft.pub=Berghahn+Books&rft.date=2010&rft.au=Pakier%2C+Ma%C5%82gorzata&rft.au=Str%C3%A5th%2C+Bo&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fen.wikipedia.org%3AHistorikerstreit" class="Z3988"></span></span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Kattago,_Siobhan_Ambiguous_Memory_page_62-5"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-Kattago,_Siobhan_Ambiguous_Memory_page_62_5-0">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Kattago 2001, p. 62.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-6"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-6">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Stern, Fritz. <i>Five Germanys I Have Known</i>, New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2006, pp. 430–432.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-7"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-7">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text"><link rel="mw-deduplicated-inline-style" href="mw-data:TemplateStyles:r1238218222"><cite id="CITEREFCaplan2008" class="citation book cs1">Caplan, Jane (2008). <i>Nazi Germany</i>. OUP Oxford. p. 10. <a href="/wiki/ISBN_(identifier)" class="mw-redirect" title="ISBN (identifier)">ISBN</a> <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/978-0-19-164774-1" title="Special:BookSources/978-0-19-164774-1"><bdi>978-0-19-164774-1</bdi></a>.</cite><span title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&rft.genre=book&rft.btitle=Nazi+Germany&rft.pages=10&rft.pub=OUP+Oxford&rft.date=2008&rft.isbn=978-0-19-164774-1&rft.aulast=Caplan&rft.aufirst=Jane&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fen.wikipedia.org%3AHistorikerstreit" class="Z3988"></span></span> </li> <li id="cite_note-8"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-8">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text"><a href="#CITEREFCohen2000">Cohen 2000</a>.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-9"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-9">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text"><a href="/wiki/Ian_Kershaw" title="Ian Kershaw">Ian Kershaw</a>, <i>Hitler: A Profile in Power</i>, in particular the introduction (London, 1991, rev. 2001).</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:4-10"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:4_10-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:4_10-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Kattago, Siobhan <i>Ambiguous Memory The Nazi Past and German National Identity</i>, Westport: Praeger, 2001, p. 50</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-11"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-11">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Kattago, Siobhan <i>Ambiguous Memory The Nazi Past and German National Identity</i>, Westport: Praeger, 2001 p. 49.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:6-12"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:6_12-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:6_12-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Kattago, Siobhan <i>Ambiguous Memory The Nazi Past and German National Identity</i>, Westport: Praeger, 2001 pp. 49–50.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-13"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-13">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Stürmer, Michael "History In a Land Without History", pp. 16–17, in <i>Forever In The Shadow of Hitler?</i> edited Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands: Humanities Press, 1993</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-14"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-14">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Wicke, Christian <i>Helmut Kohl's Quest for Normality: His Presentation of the German Nation and Himself</i> Berghahn: New York, 2015 pp. 185–186</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-15"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-15">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Habermas, Jürgen "A Kind of Settlement of Damages On Apologetic Tendencies In German History Writing" pp. 34–44 from <i>Forever In the Shadow of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Humanities Press, Atlantic Highlands, 1993 p. 41; Maier, Charles <i>The Unmasterable Past</i> Harvard University Press: Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1988 pp. 121–159; Mommsen, Hans "Search for the 'Lost History'?" pp. 101–113 from <i>Forever In The Shadow of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Humanities Press, Atlantic Highlands, 1993 p. 110; Mommsen, Wolfgang J. "Neither Denial nor Forgetfulness Will Free Us" pp. 202–215 from <i>Forever In The Shadow of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Humanities Press, Atlantic Highlands, 1993 pp. 204–205.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-16"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-16">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen, Hans "The New Historical Consciousness" pp. 114–124 from <i>Forever In The Shadow of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Humanities Press, Atlantic Highlands, 1993 p. 115.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-17"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-17">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, Richard J. <i>In Hitler's Shadow</i>, New York: Pantheon Books, 1989, pp. 116–117</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-18"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-18">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Koch (1985) p. 31</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-19"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-19">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Koch (1985) pp. 30–31</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-20"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-20">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Koch (1985) p. 32</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-21"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-21">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Koch (1985) pp. 33–34</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-22"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-22">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Koch (1985) p. 33</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Nolte_in_Koch_1985_p._36-23"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-Nolte_in_Koch_1985_p._36_23-0">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Koch (1985) p. 36</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-FS430-24"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-FS430_24-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-FS430_24-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-FS430_24-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-FS430_24-3"><sup><i><b>d</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-FS430_24-4"><sup><i><b>e</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Stern, Fritz <i>Five Germanys I Have Known</i>, New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2006, p. 430.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-25"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-25">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, Richard <i>In Hitler's Shadow</i>, New York: Pantheon, 1989 p. 16.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:3-26"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:3_26-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:3_26-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:3_26-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:3_26-3"><sup><i><b>d</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, Richard <i>In Hitler's Shadow</i>, New York: Pantheon, 1989 p. 17</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-RE55-27"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-RE55_27-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-RE55_27-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-RE55_27-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-RE55_27-3"><sup><i><b>d</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-RE55_27-4"><sup><i><b>e</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans 1989, p. 55</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-FS4312-28"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-FS4312_28-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-FS4312_28-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-FS4312_28-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Stern, Fritz <i>Five Germanys I Have Known</i>, New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2006, pp. 431–432.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-FS4302-29"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-FS4302_29-0">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Stern, Fritz <i>Five Germanys I Have Known</i>, New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2006 pp. 430–432.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:5-30"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:5_30-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:5_30-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans 1989, p. 18</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:7-31"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:7_31-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:7_31-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans 1989, p. 19</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Sturmer1993p16-32"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-Sturmer1993p16_32-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Sturmer1993p16_32-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Stürmer, Michael "History in a Land Without History" from <i>Forever in the Shadow of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, 1993, p. 16.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Sturmer1993p17-33"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-Sturmer1993p17_33-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Sturmer1993p17_33-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Stürmer 1993, p. 17.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-34"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-34">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">McKale, Donald, <i>Hitler's Shadow War</i>, New York: CooperSquare Press, 2002, p. 445</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:8-35"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:8_35-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:8_35-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, Richard <i>In Hitler's Shadow</i> (1989), pp. 50–51.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-36"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-36">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hirschfeld, Gerhard, "Erasing the Past?", pp. 8–10 in History Today, vol. 37, August 1987, p. 8.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-37"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-37">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hillgruber in Maier, Charles <i>The Unmasterable Past</i>, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1988 p. 21.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:9-38"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:9_38-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:9_38-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Lukacs <i>The Hitler of History</i>, 1997, p. 236.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-39"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-39">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Maier (1988) p. 29</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-m30-40"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-m30_40-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-m30_40-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Maier (1988) p. 30</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-41"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-41">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, pp. 148–149</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-n19-42"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-n19_42-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-n19_42-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-n19_42-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper (1993) p. 19</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-n18-43"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-n18_43-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-n18_43-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper (1993) p. 18</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-n20-44"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-n20_44-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-n20_44-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-n20_44-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-n20_44-3"><sup><i><b>d</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-n20_44-4"><sup><i><b>e</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-n20_44-5"><sup><i><b>f</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-n20_44-6"><sup><i><b>g</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-n20_44-7"><sup><i><b>h</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper (1993) p. 20</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-mai39-45"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-mai39_45-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-mai39_45-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Maier (1986) p. 39</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-ev28-46"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-ev28_46-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ev28_46-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ev28_46-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ev28_46-3"><sup><i><b>d</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ev28_46-4"><sup><i><b>e</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ev28_46-5"><sup><i><b>f</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ev28_46-6"><sup><i><b>g</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, p. 28</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-47"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-47">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Koch (1985) pp. 35–36</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-48"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-48">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper (1993) p. 22</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-n21-22-49"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-n21-22_49-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-n21-22_49-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper (1993) pp. 21–22</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-n21-50"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-n21_50-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-n21_50-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-n21_50-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-n21_50-3"><sup><i><b>d</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper (1993) p. 21</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-51"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-51">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, pp. 37–38; Evans disputes Nolte's evidence for the "rat cage" torture being a common Bolshevik practice</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-52"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-52">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, pp. 31–32</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-b5-53"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-b5_53-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-b5_53-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Baldwin in Baldwin (1990) p. 5</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-54"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-54">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Kershaw, p. 175</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-55"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-55">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Baldwin in Baldwin (1990) p. 25</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-56"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-56">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Baldwin in Baldwin (1990) pp. 25–26</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-57"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-57">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Baldwin in Baldwin (1990) p. 26</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-ev42-58"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-ev42_58-0">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, p. 42</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-59"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-59">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper, pp. 22-23.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-60"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-60">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper, p. 23.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-koch27-28-61"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-koch27-28_61-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-koch27-28_61-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Koch (1985) pp. 27–28</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-ker176-62"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-ker176_62-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ker176_62-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ker176_62-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ker176_62-3"><sup><i><b>d</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ker176_62-4"><sup><i><b>e</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ker176_62-5"><sup><i><b>f</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Kershaw, p. 176</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Nolte_in_Koch_1985_p._28-63"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-Nolte_in_Koch_1985_p._28_63-0">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Koch (1985) p. 28</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-L211-64"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-L211_64-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-L211_64-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Lipstadt, p. 211</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-65"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-65">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, p. 94</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-ev162-66"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-ev162_66-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ev162_66-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, p. 162</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-ev56-67"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-ev56_67-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ev56_67-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, p. 56</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-ev27-68"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-ev27_68-0">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, p. 27</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-69"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-69">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper (1993) pp. 4–5</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-70"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-70">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper (1993) pp. 3–4</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-71"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-71">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper (1993) p. 4</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-72"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-72">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper (1993) pp. 4, 14–15</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-n5-73"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-n5_73-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-n5_73-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper (1993) p. 5</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-74"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-74">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper (1993) pp. 6–7</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-75"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-75">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper (1993) p. 8</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-n8-9-76"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-n8-9_76-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-n8-9_76-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper (1993) pp. 8–9</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-77"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-77">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper (1993) pp. 9–10</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-n9-78"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-n9_78-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-n9_78-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper (1993) p. 9</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-m86-87-79"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-m86-87_79-0">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Maier (1988) pp. 86–87</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-80"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-80">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Baldwin in Baldwin (1990) pp. 9–10</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-81"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-81">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper (1993) p. 152</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-82"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-82">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, p. 37</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-83"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-83">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Kulka in Baldwin (1990) p. 152</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-ev99-84"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-ev99_84-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ev99_84-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ev99_84-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, p. 99</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-85"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-85">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, pp. 99–100</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:36-86"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:36_86-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:36_86-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Habermas in Piper (1993) p. 43</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-87"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-87">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Habermas in Piper (1993) pp. 34–35</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-88"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-88">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Habermas in Piper (1993) p. 35</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:10-89"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:10_89-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:10_89-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:10_89-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Habermas in Piper (1993) pp. 35–36</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-90"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-90">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Habermas in Piper (1993) p. 38</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:2-91"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:2_91-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:2_91-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Habermas in Piper (1993) p. 39</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-92"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-92">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Habermas in Piper (1993) pp. 40–41</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Low_p._474-93"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-Low_p._474_93-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Low_p._474_93-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Low_p._474_93-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Low, Alfred "Historikerstreit" p. 474 from <i>Modern Germany</i>, Volume 1 A-K, edited by Dieter Buse and Jürgen Doerr, Garland Publishing, New York, United States of America, 1998</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-94"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-94">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Habermas in Piper (1993) p. 41</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-95"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-95">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Habermas in Piper (1993) p. 42</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Brumlik,_Micha_pages_45-49-96"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-Brumlik,_Micha_pages_45-49_96-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Brumlik,_Micha_pages_45-49_96-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Brumlik,_Micha_pages_45-49_96-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Brumlik,_Micha_pages_45-49_96-3"><sup><i><b>d</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Brumlik,_Micha_pages_45-49_96-4"><sup><i><b>e</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Brumlik, Micha, "New Myth of State" pp. 45–49 from <i>Forever In The Shadow of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Humanities Press, Atlantic Highlands, NJ, 1993 p. 48.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-97"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-97">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Brumlik, Micha, "New Myth of State" pp. 45–49 from <i>Forever In The Shadow of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Humanities Press, Atlantic Highlands, NJ, 1993 p. 45.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-98"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-98">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Brumlik, Micha, "New Myth of State" pp. 45–49 from <i>Forever In The Shadow of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Humanities Press, Atlantic Highlands, New Jersey, 1993 p. 46.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-99"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-99">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Brumlik, Micha, "New Myth of State" pp. 45–49 from <i>Forever In The Shadow of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Humanities Press, Atlantic Highlands, New Jersey, 1993 pp. 47–49.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-100"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-100">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Aschheim, Steven "History, Politics and National Memory" pp. 222-238 from <i>Survey of Jewish Affairs: 1988</i> edited by William Frankel, Fairleigh Dickinson University Press 1989 p. 232.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-101"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-101">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hildebrand in Piper (1993) pp. 54–55</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-102"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-102">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hildebrand in Piper (1993) p. 50</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-103"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-103">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hildebrand in Piper (1993) p. 51</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-104"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-104">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hildebrand in Piper (1993) p. 52</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:11-105"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:11_105-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:11_105-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Hildebrand in Piper (1993) p. 53</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-106"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-106">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hildebrand in Piper (1993) p. 55</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-107"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-107">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper (1993) pp. 56–57</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-108"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-108">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper (1993) p. 56</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-109"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-109">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hildebrand in Piper (1993) p. 59</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-110"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-110">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Habermas in Piper (1993) p. 59</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:12-111"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:12_111-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:12_111-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Habermas in Piper (1993) p. 61</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-112"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-112">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Habermas in Piper (1993) pp. 61–62</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-113"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-113">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Fest in Piper (1993) pp. 64–65</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-114"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-114">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Fest in Piper (1993) p. 64</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-115"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-115">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Fest in Piper (1993) p. 66</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-116"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-116">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Fest in Piper (1993) pp. 65–66</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-117"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-117">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Fest in Piper (1993) p. 67</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-118"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-118">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Fest in Piper (1993) pp. 69–70</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-119"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-119">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Fest in Piper (1993) pp. 68–69</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Bracher_pages_72-73-120"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-Bracher_pages_72-73_120-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Bracher_pages_72-73_120-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Bracher_pages_72-73_120-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Bracher_pages_72-73_120-3"><sup><i><b>d</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Bracher_pages_72-73_120-4"><sup><i><b>e</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Bracher_pages_72-73_120-5"><sup><i><b>f</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Bracher, Karl Dietrich "Letter to the Editor of the <i>Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung</i>, September 6, 1986" pp. 72–73 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, N.J.: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 72</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-121"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-121">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Jäckel in Piper (1993) pp. 77–78</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-122"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-122">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Jäckel in Piper (1993) p. 78</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-j77-123"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-j77_123-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-j77_123-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-j77_123-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Jäckel in Piper (1993) p. 77</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-124"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-124">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Jäckel in Piper (1993) p. 76</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-125"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-125">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hirschfeld, Gerhard "Erasing the Past?" pp. 8–10 from <i>History Today</i> Volume 37, Issue 8, August 1987 p. 9</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:13-126"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:13_126-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:13_126-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:13_126-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Fleischer in Piper (1993) p. 80</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-127"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-127">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Fleischer in Piper (1993) pp. 80, 83</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-128"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-128">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Fleischer in Piper (1993) pp. 81–83</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-129"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-129">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Kocka, pp. 86–87</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:14-130"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:14_130-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:14_130-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Kocka, p. 87</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-131"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-131">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Kocka, p. 88</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-132"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-132">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Kocka, p. 91.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-133"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-133">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Kocka, pp. 90-91</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-s94-134"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-s94_134-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-s94_134-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-s94_134-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Schulze in Piper (1993) p. 94</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-135"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-135">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Schulze in Piper, p. 96</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-136"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-136">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Schulze in Piper, p. 97</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:15-137"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:15_137-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:15_137-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Helbling in Piper (1993) p. 99</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-138"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-138">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Helbling in Piper (1993) pp. 98–99</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-m108-139"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-m108_139-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-m108_139-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen in Piper (1993) p. 108</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-140"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-140">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen in Piper (1993) p. 102</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-141"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-141">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen in Piper (1993) p. 103</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:35-142"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:35_142-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:35_142-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen in Piper (1993) p. 104</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-143"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-143">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen in Piper (1993) p. 105</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:16-144"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:16_144-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:16_144-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen in Piper (1993) pp. 110–111</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-145"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-145">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen in Piper (1993) pp. 111–112</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-146"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-146">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen in Piper (1993) p. 112</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-147"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-147">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen in Piper (1993) p. 120</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-148"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-148">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen in Piper (1993) p. 122</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-149"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-149">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen in Piper (1993) pp. 120–121</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-150"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-150">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen in Piper (1993) pp. 115–116</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-151"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-151">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen in Piper (1993) p. 116</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-152"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-152">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen in Piper (1993) p. 117</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:17-153"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:17_153-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:17_153-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen in Piper (1993) p. 119</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-154"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-154">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen in Piper (1993) pp. 123–124</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-155"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-155">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen in Baldwin (1990) pp. 178–179</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-156"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-156">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen, Hans “Das Ressentiment Als Wissenschaft: Ammerkungen zu Ernst Nolte's <i>Der Europäische Bürgrkrieg 1917–1945: Nationalsozialimus und Bolschewismus</i>” pp. 495–512 from <i>Geschichte und Gesellschaft</i>, Volume 14, Issue #4 1988 p. 512</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-b126-127-157"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-b126-127_157-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-b126-127_157-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-b126-127_157-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Broszat in Piper (1993) pp. 126–127</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Broszat,_Martin_pages_123–129-158"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-Broszat,_Martin_pages_123–129_158-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Broszat,_Martin_pages_123–129_158-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Broszat,_Martin_pages_123–129_158-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Broszat, Martin "Where the Roads Part: History Is Not A Suitable Substitute for a Religion of Nationalism" pp. 123–129 from <i>Forever In The Shadow of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Humanities Press, Atlantic Highlands, 1993 p. 127</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-b129-159"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-b129_159-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-b129_159-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Broszat in Piper (1993) p. 129</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-a133-134-160"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-a133-134_160-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-a133-134_160-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Augstein in Piper (1993) pp. 133–134</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-a131-161"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-a131_161-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-a131_161-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Augstein in Piper (1993) p. 131</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Augstein_pages_131-134-162"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-Augstein_pages_131-134_162-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Augstein_pages_131-134_162-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Augstein, Rudolf "The New Auschwitz Lie" pp. 131–134 from <i>Forever In The Shadow of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Humanities Press, Atlantic Highlands, New Jersey, 1993 p. 131.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-163"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-163">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Meier in Piper (1993) p. 136</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-m139-164"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-m139_164-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-m139_164-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-m139_164-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Meier in Piper (1993) p. 139</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:18-165"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:18_165-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:18_165-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:18_165-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Meier in Piper (1993) p. 137</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:19-166"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:19_166-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:19_166-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Meier in Piper (1993) p. 138</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-167"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-167">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Meier in Piper (1993) p. 142</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-168"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-168">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nipperdey in Piper (1993) pp. 143–144</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-169"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-169">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nipperdey in Piper (1993) p. 143</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-170"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-170">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nipperdey in Piper (1993) pp. 144-145</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-171"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-171">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nipperdey in Piper (1993) p. 145</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-172"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-172">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nipperdey in Piper (1993) pp. 145–146</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:20-173"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:20_173-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:20_173-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Nipperdey in Piper (1993) p. 146</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:0-174"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:0_174-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:0_174-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:0_174-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Geiss in Piper (1993) p. 147</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-175"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-175">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Geiss in Piper (1993) p. 148</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-n153-176"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-n153_176-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-n153_176-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper (1993) p. 153</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-177"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-177">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper (1993) p. 151</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-178"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-178">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper (1993) pp. 151, 153</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:1-179"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:1_179-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:1_179-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:1_179-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Hillgruber, Andreas, "No Questions are Forbidden to Research" pp. 155–161 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 157.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-180"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-180">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hillgruber, Andreas "No Questions are Forbidden to Research" pp. 155–161 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 160.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-181"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-181">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hillgruber, Andreas "No Questions are Forbidden to Research" pp. 155–161 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 156.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_155-161-182"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_155-161_182-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_155-161_182-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Hillgruber, Andreas, "No Questions are Forbidden to Research", pp. 155–161 in <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 pp. 159–160.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-183"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-183">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Habermas, Jurgen "On the Public Use of History: The Official Self-Understanding of the Federal Republic Is Breaking Up" pp. 162–170 from <i>Forever In The Shadow of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Humanities Press, Atlantic Highlands, 1993 p. 162.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-184"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-184">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Habermas, Jurgen "On the Public Use of History: The Official Self-Understanding of the Federal Republic Is Breaking Up" pp. 162–170 from <i>Forever In The Shadow of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Humanities Press, Atlantic Highlands, 1993 p. 163.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-185"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-185">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Habermas, Jurgen "On the Public Use of History: The Official Self-Understanding of the Federal Republic Is Breaking Up" pp. 162–170 from <i>Forever In The Shadow of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Humanities Press, Atlantic Highlands, 1993 p. 164.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-186"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-186">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Habermas, Jurgen "On the Public Use of History: The Official Self-Understanding of the Federal Republic Is Breaking Up" pp. 162–170 from <i>Forever In The Shadow of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Humanities Press, Atlantic Highlands, 1993 p. 165.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-187"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-187">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Habermas, Jurgen "On the Public Use of History: The Official Self-Understanding of the Federal Republic Is Breaking Up" pp. 162–170 from <i>Forever In The Shadow of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Humanities Press, Atlantic Highlands, 1993 p. 194.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-188"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-188">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Habermas, Jurgen "On the Public Use of History: The Official Self-Understanding of the Federal Republic Is Breaking Up" pp. 162–170 from <i>Forever In The Shadow of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Humanities Press, Atlantic Highlands, 1993 p. 170.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-w173-189"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-w173_189-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-w173_189-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Winkler in Piper (1993) p. 173</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-190"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-190">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Winkler in Piper, p. 171.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-191"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-191">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Winkler in Piper, pp. 172–173.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-192"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-192">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Winkler in Piper, p. 174.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-m178-193"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-m178_193-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-m178_193-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-m178_193-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-m178_193-3"><sup><i><b>d</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Meier in Piper (1993) p. 178</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-194"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-194">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Meier in Piper (1993) p. 179</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-195"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-195">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Meier in Piper (1993) p. 180</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:21-196"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:21_196-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:21_196-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Meier in Piper (1993) p. 181</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-197"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-197">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Meier in Piper (1993) p. 183</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-198"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-198">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper (1993) p. 243</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-199"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-199">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Sontheimer in Piper (1993) p. 184</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:22-200"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:22_200-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:22_200-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Sontheimer, Kurt, "Makeup Artists Are Creating a New Identity" pp. 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href="#cite_ref-Hildebrand,_Klaus_pages_188-195_203-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Hildebrand,_Klaus_pages_188-195_203-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Hildebrand,_Klaus_pages_188-195_203-3"><sup><i><b>d</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Hildebrand, Klaus "He Who Wants to Escape the Abyss" pp. 188-195 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 191.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-204"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-204">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hildebrand, Klaus "He Who Wants to Escape the Abyss" pp. 188-195 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 188.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-205"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-205">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hildebrand, Klaus "He Who Wants to Escape the Abyss" pp. 188-195 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 190.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-206"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-206">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hildebrand, Klaus "He Who Wants to Escape the Abyss" pp. 188-195 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 192.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:24-207"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:24_207-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:24_207-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Hildebrand, Klaus "He Who Wants to Escape the Abyss" pp. 188-195 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 193.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-208"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-208">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hildebrand, Klaus "He Who Wants to Escape the Abyss" pp. 188–195 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 194.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-209"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-209">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hildebrand, Klaus "He Who Wants to Escape the Abyss" pp. 188-195 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 pp. 194–195.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:25-210"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:25_210-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:25_210-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Hildebrand, Klaus "He Who Wants to Escape the Abyss" pp. 188-195 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 195.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Stürmer_pages_196-197-211"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-Stürmer_pages_196-197_211-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Stürmer_pages_196-197_211-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Stürmer_pages_196-197_211-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Stürmer_pages_196-197_211-3"><sup><i><b>d</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Stürmer_pages_196-197_211-4"><sup><i><b>e</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Stürmer_pages_196-197_211-5"><sup><i><b>f</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Stürmer_pages_196-197_211-6"><sup><i><b>g</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Stürmer_pages_196-197_211-7"><sup><i><b>h</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Stürmer_pages_196-197_211-8"><sup><i><b>i</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text"><link rel="mw-deduplicated-inline-style" href="mw-data:TemplateStyles:r1238218222"><cite id="CITEREFStürmer1993" class="citation book cs1">Stürmer, 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"How Much History Weighs". In Piper, Ernst (ed.). <i>Forever In The Shadow of Hitler?</i>. 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class="reference-text">Mommsen, Wolfgang "Neither Denial nor Forgetfulness Will Free Us" pp. 202–215 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 208.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-223"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-223">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen, Wolfgang "Neither Denial nor Forgetfulness Will Free Us" pp. 202–215 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 209.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:29-224"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:29_224-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:29_224-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen, Wolfgang "Neither Denial nor Forgetfulness Will Free Us" pp. 202–215 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 211</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-225"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-225">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen in Piper (1993) pp. 208–209</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-m209-226"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-m209_226-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-m209_226-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen in Piper (1993) p. 209</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-227"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-227">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen, Wolfgang "Neither Denial nor Forgetfulness Will Free Us" pp. 202–215 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 212.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-228"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-228">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Mommsen, Wolfgang "Neither Denial nor Forgetfulness Will Free Us" pp. 202-215 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 215.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-229"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-229">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Maier, Charles "Immoral Equivalence" pp. 36–41 from <i>The New Republic</i>, volume 195, issue #2, 750, 1 December 1986, p. 40.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-mo218-230"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-mo218_230-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-mo218_230-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-mo218_230-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-mo218_230-3"><sup><i><b>d</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Möller in Piper (1993) p. 218</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-231"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-231">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Möller, Horst "What May Not Be, Cannot Be" pp. 216–221 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 pp. 216.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-232"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-232">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Möller, Horst "What May Not Be, Cannot Be" pp. 216-221 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 pp. 218-219.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-233"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-233">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Möller, Horst "What May Not Be, Cannot Be" pp. 216-221 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 220</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:30-234"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:30_234-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:30_234-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Möller, Horst "What May Not Be, Cannot Be" pp. 216-221 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 221</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-ReferenceC-235"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-ReferenceC_235-0">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hillgruber, Andreas "Jürgen Habermas, Karl-Heinz Janßen, and the Enlightenment in the Year 1986" pp. 222–236 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 223.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-236"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-236">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hillgruber in Piper (1993) p. 233</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-237"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-237">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hillgruber, Andreas "Jürgen Habermas, Karl-Heinz Janßen, and the Enlightenment in the Year 1986" pp. 222-236 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 224.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-238"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-238">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hillgruber, Andreas "Jürgen Habermas, Karl-Heinz Janßen, and the Enlightenment in the Year 1986" pp. 222–236 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 pp. 228–229.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-239"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-239">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hillgruber, Andreas "Jürgen Habermas, Karl-Heinz Janßen, and the Enlightenment in the Year 1986" pp. 222–236 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 222.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-240"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-240">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hillgruber, Andreas "Jürgen Habermas, Karl-Heinz Janßen, and the Enlightenment in the Year 1986" pp. 222–236 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 pp. 222–223.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_222-236-241"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_222-236_241-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_222-236_241-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_222-236_241-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_222-236_241-3"><sup><i><b>d</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_222-236_241-4"><sup><i><b>e</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Hillgruber,_Andreas_pages_222-236_241-5"><sup><i><b>f</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Hillgruber, Andreas "Jürgen Habermas, Karl-Heinz Janßen, and the Enlightenment in the Year 1986" pp. 222-236 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 237.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-242"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-242">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hillgruber, Andreas "Jürgen Habermas, Karl-Heinz Janßen, and the Enlightenment in the Year 1986" pp. 222-236 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 pp. 237-238.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-243"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-243">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hillgruber, Andreas "Jürgen Habermas, Karl-Heinz Janßen, and the Enlightenment in the Year 1986" pp. 222-236 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 238.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-244"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-244">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hillgruber, Andreas "Jürgen Habermas, Karl-Heinz Janßen, and the Enlightenment in the Year 1986" pp. 222-236 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 230.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-245"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-245">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hillgruber, Andreas "Jürgen Habermas, Karl-Heinz Janßen, and the Enlightenment in the Year 1986" pp. 222-236 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 pp. 230-231.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-246"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-246">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hillgruber, Andreas "Jürgen Habermas, Karl-Heinz Janßen, and the Enlightenment in the Year 1986" pp. 222–236 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 pp. 232–233.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-247"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-247">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Hillgruber, Andreas "Jürgen Habermas, Karl-Heinz Janßen, and the Enlightenment in the Year 1986" pp. 222–236 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 234.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-e240-248"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-e240_248-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-e240_248-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-e240_248-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Euchner in Piper (1993) p. 240</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-e238-249"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-e238_249-0">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Euchner in Piper (1993) p. 238</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-L246-250"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-L246_250-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-L246_250-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-L246_250-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Leicht in Piper (1993) p. 246</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:31-251"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:31_251-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:31_251-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Leicht in Piper (1993) p. 247</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-252"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-252">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Leicht in Piper (1993) p. 245</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-253"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-253">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Leicht in Piper (1993) p. 248</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-254"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-254">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Perels in Piper (1993) p. 251</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-255"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-255">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Perels, Joachim "Those Who Refused to Go Along" pp. 249–253 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 pp. 250–251.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:32-256"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:32_256-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:32_256-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Perels, Joachim "Those Who Refused to Go Along" pp. 249–253 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 pp. 251–252.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-257"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-257">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Perels, Joachim "Those Who Refused to Go Along" pp. 249–253 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 251</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:33-258"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:33_258-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:33_258-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Perels, Joachim "Those Who Refused to Go Along" pp. 249–253 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 pp. 252-253.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-259"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-259">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Perels, Joachim "Those Who Refused to Go Along" pp. 249-253 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 253.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-260"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-260">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Geiss in Piper (1993) p. 255</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Geiss_pages_254-258-261"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-Geiss_pages_254-258_261-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Geiss_pages_254-258_261-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Geiss_pages_254-258_261-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Geiss, Imanuel "On the <i>Historikerstreit</i>" pp. 254–258 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 256.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-:34-262"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-:34_262-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:34_262-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-:34_262-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Habermas in Piper, p. 260.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Habermas_pages_260-262-263"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-Habermas_pages_260-262_263-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Habermas_pages_260-262_263-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Habermas, Jürgen "Note, 23 February 1987 pp. 260-262 from <i>Forever In The Shadow Of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1993 p. 261.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-264"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-264">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper, p. 263.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-f265-265"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-f265_265-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-f265_265-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-f265_265-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-f265_265-3"><sup><i><b>d</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Fest in Piper (1993) p. 265</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-266"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-266">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Fest in Piper (1993) p. 264</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-ker173-267"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-ker173_267-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ker173_267-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Kershaw, p. 173</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-268"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-268">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Katz, Steven <i>The Holocaust in Historical Context</i> Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994 pp. 23–24</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-269"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-269">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, p. 33</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-IHR_Newsletter_#51-270"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-IHR_Newsletter_#51_270-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-IHR_Newsletter_#51_270-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text"><link rel="mw-deduplicated-inline-style" href="mw-data:TemplateStyles:r1238218222"><cite class="citation web cs1"><a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.codoh.com/thoughtcrimes/8706nolt.html">"ThoughtCrime: 06/25/87 Ernst Nolte Dismissed"</a>. IHR Newsletter #51. August 1987<span class="reference-accessdate">. Retrieved <span class="nowrap">2007-07-14</span></span>.</cite><span title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&rft.genre=unknown&rft.btitle=ThoughtCrime%3A+06%2F25%2F87+Ernst+Nolte+Dismissed&rft.pub=IHR+Newsletter+%2351&rft.date=1987-08&rft_id=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.codoh.com%2Fthoughtcrimes%2F8706nolt.html&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fen.wikipedia.org%3AHistorikerstreit" class="Z3988"></span></span> </li> <li id="cite_note-ev31-271"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-ev31_271-0">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, p. 31</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-L214-272"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-L214_272-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-L214_272-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-L214_272-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-L214_272-3"><sup><i><b>d</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Lipstadt, p. 214</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-273"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-273">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, pp. 56–57</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-274"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-274">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, p. 57</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-ev83-275"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-ev83_275-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ev83_275-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ev83_275-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, p. 83</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-ev82-276"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-ev82_276-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ev82_276-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, p. 82</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-277"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-277">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, pp. 152–153</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-278"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-278">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Piper in Piper (1993) p. 272</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-koch21-279"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-koch21_279-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-koch21_279-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Koch (1985) p. 21</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-280"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-280">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, pp. 32–33</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-L213-281"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-L213_281-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-L213_281-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Lipstadt, p. 213</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-282"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-282">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Kershaw, p. 232; original remarks appeared in <i>Historische Zeitschrift</i>, Volume 242, 1986, p. 465</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-mu40-283"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-mu40_283-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-mu40_283-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Muller, p. 40</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-284"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-284">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Wehler in Baldwin (1990) pp. 218–219</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-285"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-285">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Maier (1988) p. 190</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-286"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-286">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, Richard <i>In Hitler's Shadow</i>, New York: Pantheon, 1989 pp. 80–81.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_81-287"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_81_287-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_81_287-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_81_287-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_81_287-3"><sup><i><b>d</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_81_287-4"><sup><i><b>e</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, Richard <i>In Hitler's Shadow</i>, New York: Pantheon, 1989 p. 81.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_82-288"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_82_288-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_82_288-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_82_288-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, Richard <i>In Hitler's Shadow</i>, New York: Pantheon, 1989 p. 82.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_83-289"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_83_289-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_83_289-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_83_289-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_83_289-3"><sup><i><b>d</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, Richard <i>In Hitler's Shadow</i>, New York: Pantheon, 1989 p. 83.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_156-290"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_156_290-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_156_290-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_156_290-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_156_290-3"><sup><i><b>d</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, Richard <i>In Hitler's Shadow</i>, New York: Pantheon, 1989 p. 156.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_155-291"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_155_291-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_155_291-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_155_291-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_155_291-3"><sup><i><b>d</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_155_291-4"><sup><i><b>e</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, Richard <i>In Hitler's Shadow</i>, New York: Pantheon, 1989 p. 155.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_29-292"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_29_292-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_29_292-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_29_292-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, Richard <i>In Hitler's Shadow</i>, New York: Pantheon, 1989, p. 29.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-293"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-293">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, Richard <i>In Hitler's Shadow</i>, New York: Pantheon, 1989 p. 30.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_177-294"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_177_294-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_177_294-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_177_294-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, Richard <i>In Hitler's Shadow</i>, New York: Pantheon, 1989 p. 177.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-295"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-295">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, Richard <i>In Hitler's Shadow</i>, New York: Pantheon, 1989 p. 84.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Evans,_Richard_page_85-296"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_85_296-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_Richard_page_85_296-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, Richard <i>In Hitler's Shadow</i>, New York: Pantheon, 1989 p. 85.</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-ev177-297"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-ev177_297-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ev177_297-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, p. 177</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-298"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-298">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Mason, Timothy “Whatever Happened to ‘Fascism’?” pp. 253- 263 from <i>Reevaluating the Third Reich</i> edited by Jane Caplan and Thomas Childers, Holmes & Meier, 1993 p. 260</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-299"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-299">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Rabinbach in Baldwin (1990) p. 65</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-300"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-300">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Kershaw, pp. 175–176</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-301"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-301">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Lukacs, John <i>The Hitler of History</i> p. 238</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-302"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-302">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Muller, pp. 37–38</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-303"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-303">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Lipstadt, p. 212</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-304"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-304">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Maier (1988) p. 82</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-305"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-305">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">McKale, Donald <i>Hitler's Shadow War</i>, New York: CooperSquare Press, 2002 p. 445</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-306"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-306">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Kulka in Baldwin (1990) p. 153</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-307"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-307">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Kulka in Baldwin (1990) pp. 153–154</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-k154-308"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-k154_308-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-k154_308-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-k154_308-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-k154_308-3"><sup><i><b>d</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Kulka in Baldwin (1990) p. 154</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-309"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-309">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Kulka in Baldwin (1990) p. 166</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-310"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-310">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Koch, H.W. “Introduction” from <i>Aspects of the Third Reich</i> pp. 378–379</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Grab,_Walter_pp._273-278-311"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-Grab,_Walter_pp._273-278_311-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Grab,_Walter_pp._273-278_311-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Grab,_Walter_pp._273-278_311-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-Grab,_Walter_pp._273-278_311-3"><sup><i><b>d</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Grab, Walter “German Historians And The Trivialization of Nazi Criminality” pp. 273–278 from <i>The Australian Journal Of Politics and History</i>, Volume 33, Issue #3, 1987 p. 274</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-ker171-312"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-ker171_312-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ker171_312-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Kershaw, p. 171</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-ev152-313"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-ev152_313-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ev152_313-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, p. 152</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-n263-314"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-n263_314-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-n263_314-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Nolte in Piper (1993) p. 263</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-ker170-315"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-ker170_315-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ker170_315-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ker170_315-2"><sup><i><b>c</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Kershaw, p. 170</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-316"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-316">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, pp. 116–117</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-317"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-317">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, p. 22</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-318"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-318">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Thomas, pp. vii–viii</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-319"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-319">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Thomas, p. 27</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-320"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-320">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Thomas, pp. 27–28</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-321"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-321">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Thomas, p. 48</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-322"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-322">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Thomas, p. 39</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-323"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-323">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Thomas, p. 29</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-324"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-324">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Thomas, p. 87</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Evans,_pp._85–87-325"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-Evans,_pp._85–87_325-0">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, pp. 85–87</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-ev35-326"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-ev35_326-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ev35_326-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, p. 35</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-327"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-327">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, pp. 35–36</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-ev38-328"><span class="mw-cite-backlink">^ <a href="#cite_ref-ev38_328-0"><sup><i><b>a</b></i></sup></a> <a href="#cite_ref-ev38_328-1"><sup><i><b>b</b></i></sup></a></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, p. 38</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-329"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-329">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Lukacs, John <i>The Hitler of History</i> New York: Vintage Books, 1997, 1998 pp. 180–181</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-330"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-330">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Vidal-Naquet, Pierre <i>Assassins of Memory</i>, New York: Columbia University Press, 1992 p. 126</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-331"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-331">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text">Evans, pp. 38–39</span> </li> <li id="cite_note-Davies2006-332"><span class="mw-cite-backlink"><b><a href="#cite_ref-Davies2006_332-0">^</a></b></span> <span class="reference-text"><link rel="mw-deduplicated-inline-style" href="mw-data:TemplateStyles:r1238218222"><cite id="CITEREFDavies,_Norman2006" class="citation book cs1">Davies, Norman (2006). <i><a href="/wiki/Europe_at_War_1939%E2%80%931945:_No_Simple_Victory" title="Europe at War 1939–1945: No Simple Victory">Europe at War 1939–1945: No Simple Victory</a></i>. London: Penguin Books. p. 470.</cite><span title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&rft.genre=book&rft.btitle=Europe+at+War+1939%E2%80%931945%3A+No+Simple+Victory&rft.place=London&rft.pages=470&rft.pub=Penguin+Books&rft.date=2006&rft.au=Davies%2C+Norman&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fen.wikipedia.org%3AHistorikerstreit" class="Z3988"></span></span> </li> </ol></div></div> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="Bibliography">Bibliography</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=62" title="Edit section: Bibliography"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <ul><li>Aly, Götz. 2006. <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.signandsight.com/features/800.html">The logic of horror</a>, June 12, 2006 <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.zeit.de/2006/23/Holocaust-Forschung_xml">German original in <i>Die Zeit</i></a> on June 1, 2006.</li> <li>Augstein, Rudolf, et al. 1993 [1987]. <i>Forever in the shadow of Hitler? – original documents of the Historikerstreit, the controversy concerning the singularity of the Holocaust</i>. Atlantic Highlands, N.J. Humanities Press. (English language edition of <i>"Historikerstreit": Die Dokumentation der Kontroverse um die Einzigartigkeit der nationalsozialistschen Judenvernichtung</i>, Munich: Piper.)</li> <li>Baldwin, Peter. 1990. <i>Hitler, the Holocaust and the Historians Dispute</i>. Boston, MA: Beacon Press.</li> <li><link rel="mw-deduplicated-inline-style" href="mw-data:TemplateStyles:r1238218222"><cite id="CITEREFCohen2000" class="citation news cs1">Cohen, Roger (June 21, 2000). <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9406E4D61331F932A15755C0A9669C8B63">"Hitler Apologist Wins German Honor, and a Storm Breaks Out"</a>. <i>New York Times</i>.</cite><span title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=New+York+Times&rft.atitle=Hitler+Apologist+Wins+German+Honor%2C+and+a+Storm+Breaks+Out&rft.date=2000-06-21&rft.aulast=Cohen&rft.aufirst=Roger&rft_id=https%3A%2F%2Fquery.nytimes.com%2Fgst%2Ffullpage.html%3Fres%3D9406E4D61331F932A15755C0A9669C8B63&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fen.wikipedia.org%3AHistorikerstreit" class="Z3988"></span></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Gordon_A._Craig" title="Gordon A. Craig">Craig, Gordon</a>. 1987. The War of the German Historians. <i>New York Review of Books</i>, February 15, 1987, 16–19.</li> <li>Eley, Geoff. 1988. Nazism, Politics and the Image of the Past: Thoughts on the West German Historikerstreit 1986–1987. <i>Past and Present</i>, 1988 November, 121: 171–208.</li> <li><a href="/wiki/Richard_J._Evans" title="Richard J. Evans">Evans, Richard</a>. 1989. <i>In Hitler's Shadow: West German Historians and the Attempt to Escape the Nazi Past</i>, New York, NY: Pantheon.</li> <li>Habermas, Jürgen. 1986. <i>Eine Art Schadensabwicklung: Die apologetischen Tendenzen in der deutschen Zeitgeschichtsschreibung</i> [free translation: A kind of canceling out of damages: the apologistic tendencies in German writing on postwar history]. <i>Die Zeit</i>, 18 July 1986.</li> <li>Habermas, Jürgen. 1987. Eine Art Schadensabwicklung: kleine politische Schriften VI. Frankfurt a.M: Suhrkamp.</li> <li>Hillgruber, Andreas. 1986. <i>Zweierlei Untergang: Die Zerschlagung des Deutschen Reichs und das Ende des europäischen Judentums</i>. Berlin: Siedler.</li> <li>Hirschfeld, Gerhard. 1987. Erasing the Past? <i>History Today</i>, 1987 August, 37(8): 8–10.</li> <li><i>New German Critique</i>. Special Issue on the Historikerstreit. 1988 Spring - Summer, v. 44.</li> <li><link rel="mw-deduplicated-inline-style" href="mw-data:TemplateStyles:r1238218222"><cite id="CITEREFJarausch1988" class="citation journal cs1">Jarausch, Konrad H. (1988). "Removing the Nazi stain? The quarrel of the historians". <i><a href="/wiki/German_Studies_Review" title="German Studies Review">German Studies Review</a></i>. <b>11</b> (2): 285–301. <a href="/wiki/Doi_(identifier)" class="mw-redirect" title="Doi (identifier)">doi</a>:<a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="https://doi.org/10.2307%2F1429974">10.2307/1429974</a>. <a href="/wiki/JSTOR_(identifier)" class="mw-redirect" title="JSTOR (identifier)">JSTOR</a> <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="https://www.jstor.org/stable/1429974">1429974</a>.</cite><span title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=German+Studies+Review&rft.atitle=Removing+the+Nazi+stain%3F+The+quarrel+of+the+historians&rft.volume=11&rft.issue=2&rft.pages=285-301&rft.date=1988&rft_id=info%3Adoi%2F10.2307%2F1429974&rft_id=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.jstor.org%2Fstable%2F1429974%23id-name%3DJSTOR&rft.aulast=Jarausch&rft.aufirst=Konrad+H.&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fen.wikipedia.org%3AHistorikerstreit" class="Z3988"></span></li> <li>Kershaw, Ian. 1989. <i>The Nazi Dictatorship: Problems and Perspectives of Interpretations</i>, London: Arnold.</li> <li>Kühnl, Reinhard (editor). 1987. <i>Vergangenheit, die nicht vergeht: Die "Historikerdebatte": Darstellung, Dokumentation, Kritik</i>. Cologne: Pahl-Rugenstein.</li> <li><link rel="mw-deduplicated-inline-style" href="mw-data:TemplateStyles:r1238218222"><cite id="CITEREFLukacs1991" class="citation journal cs1"><a href="/wiki/John_Lukacs" title="John Lukacs">Lukacs, John</a> (1991). "<i>Reworking the Past</i> by Peter Baldwin, ed". <i>History: Reviews of New Books</i>. <b>19</b> (14): 174. <a href="/wiki/Doi_(identifier)" class="mw-redirect" title="Doi (identifier)">doi</a>:<a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="https://doi.org/10.1080%2F03612759.1991.9949377">10.1080/03612759.1991.9949377</a>.</cite><span title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=History%3A+Reviews+of+New+Books&rft.atitle=Reworking+the+Past+by+Peter+Baldwin%2C+ed.&rft.volume=19&rft.issue=14&rft.pages=174&rft.date=1991&rft_id=info%3Adoi%2F10.1080%2F03612759.1991.9949377&rft.aulast=Lukacs&rft.aufirst=John&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fen.wikipedia.org%3AHistorikerstreit" class="Z3988"></span></li> <li>Maier, Charles. 1988. <i>The Unmasterable Past: History, Holocaust and German National Identity</i>, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.</li> <li>Muller, Jerry. 1989. German Historians at War. <i>Commentary</i>, 1989 May, 87(5): 33–42.</li> <li>Nolte, Ernst. 1985. Between myth and revisionism. In H. W. Koch (ed.), <i>Aspects of the Third Reich</i>. London: Macmillan.</li> <li>Nolte, Ernst. 1986. Die Vergangenheit, die nicht vergehen will. <i>Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung</i>, June 6, 1986.</li> <li>Nolte, Ernst. 1987. <i>Das Vergehen der Vergangenheit: Antwort an meine Kritiker im sogenannten Historikerstreit</i>, Berlin: Ullstein.</li> <li>Peter, Jürgen. 1995. <i>Historikerstreit und die Suche nach einer nationalen Identität der achtziger Jahre</i>, European University Studies, Political Science Vol. 288, Frankfurt am Main, New York: Peter Lang</li> <li><a href="/wiki/Alfred_Sohn-Rethel" title="Alfred Sohn-Rethel">Alfred Sohn-Rethel</a>. 1978. <i>Economy and Class Structure of German Fascism</i>, London, CSE Books.</li> <li>Stürmer, Michael. 1986. Land ohne Geschichte [Land without a history], translated into English as "History in a Land without History", pp. 16–17 from <i>Forever In The Shadow of Hitler?</i> edited by Ernst Piper, Atlantic Highlands: Humanities Press, 1993.</li> <li>A. J. P. Taylor. 1980. <i>Struggle for Mastery in Europe 1848-1918</i>. Oxford University Press.</li> <li>A. J. P. Taylor. 1997. <i>The Origins of the Second World War</i>. Longman</li> <li><a href="/wiki/Hans-Ulrich_Wehler" title="Hans-Ulrich Wehler">Wehler, Hans-Ulrich</a>. 1988. <i>Entsorgung der deutschen Vergangenheit? Ein polemischer Essay zum "Historikerstreit"</i> Munich: C.H. Beck.</li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="External_links">External links</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historikerstreit&action=edit&section=63" title="Edit section: External links"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <ul><li><link rel="mw-deduplicated-inline-style" href="mw-data:TemplateStyles:r1238218222"><cite id="CITEREFNolte1986" class="citation news cs1"><a href="/wiki/Ernst_Nolte" title="Ernst Nolte">Nolte, Ernst</a> (6 June 1986). <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="https://web.archive.org/web/20140219012727/http://www.hdg.de/lemo/html/dokumente/NeueHerausforderungen_redeNolte1986/">"<i>Die Vergangenheit, die nicht vergehen will. Eine Rede, die geschrieben, aber nicht gehalten werden konnte</i>"</a>. <i>Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung</i>. Archived from <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.dhm.de/lemo/html/dokumente/NeueHerausforderungen_redeNolte1986/">the original</a> on 19 February 2014.</cite><span title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Frankfurter+Allgemeine+Zeitung&rft.atitle=Die+Vergangenheit%2C+die+nicht+vergehen+will.+Eine+Rede%2C+die+geschrieben%2C+aber+nicht+gehalten+werden+konnte&rft.date=1986-06-06&rft.aulast=Nolte&rft.aufirst=Ernst&rft_id=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.dhm.de%2Flemo%2Fhtml%2Fdokumente%2FNeueHerausforderungen_redeNolte1986%2F&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fen.wikipedia.org%3AHistorikerstreit" class="Z3988"></span> Nolte's article in FAZ, republished by the German government's German Historical Museum.</li></ul> <div class="navbox-styles"><style data-mw-deduplicate="TemplateStyles:r1129693374">.mw-parser-output .hlist dl,.mw-parser-output .hlist ol,.mw-parser-output .hlist ul{margin:0;padding:0}.mw-parser-output .hlist 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style="font-size:114%;margin:0 4em"><a href="/wiki/Historical_source" title="Historical source">Historical sources</a></div></th></tr><tr><td colspan="2" class="navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"></div><table class="nowraplinks navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">Types</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Primary_source" title="Primary source">Primary sources</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Secondary_source" title="Secondary source">Secondary sources</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Tertiary_source" title="Tertiary source">Tertiary sources</a></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">Sources</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-even" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Annals" title="Annals">Annals</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Archive" title="Archive">Archives</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Artifact_(archaeology)" title="Artifact (archaeology)">Artifacts</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Archaeological_site" title="Archaeological site">Archaeological site</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Chronicle" title="Chronicle">Chronicles</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Codex" title="Codex">Codices</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Deed" title="Deed">Deeds</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Facsimile" title="Facsimile">Facsimiles</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Feature_(archaeology)" title="Feature (archaeology)">Features</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Hieroglyph" class="mw-redirect" title="Hieroglyph">Hieroglyphs</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_document" title="Historical document">Historical documents</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Logbook" title="Logbook">Logbooks</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Manuscript" title="Manuscript">Manuscripts</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Illuminated_manuscript" title="Illuminated manuscript">Illuminated</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Oral_tradition" title="Oral tradition">Oral tradition</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Papyrus" title="Papyrus">Papyri</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Religious_text" title="Religious text">Religious texts</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Scroll" title="Scroll">Scrolls</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/War_diary" title="War diary">War diaries</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Service_record" title="Service record">Service records</a></li></ul></li></ul> </div></td></tr></tbody></table><div></div></td></tr></tbody></table><div></div></td></tr><tr><td colspan="2" class="navbox-list navbox-odd hlist" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"></div><table class="nowraplinks mw-collapsible mw-collapsed navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th scope="col" class="navbox-title" colspan="2"><div id="Fields_of_study" style="font-size:114%;margin:0 4em"><a href="/wiki/Auxiliary_sciences_of_history" title="Auxiliary sciences of history">Fields of study</a></div></th></tr><tr><td colspan="2" class="navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"></div><table class="nowraplinks navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">By scale</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Big_History" title="Big History">Big History</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/World_history_(field)" title="World history (field)">World history</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Human_history" title="Human history">Human history</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Local_history" title="Local history">Local history</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Microhistory" title="Microhistory">Microhistory</a></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">By source</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-even" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Archival_science" title="Archival science">Archival science</a> / <a href="/wiki/Library_and_information_science" title="Library and information science">Library and information science</a> (<a href="/wiki/Template:Libraries_and_library_science" title="Template:Libraries and library science">template</a>)</li> <li><a href="/wiki/Codicology" title="Codicology">Books</a> / <a href="/wiki/Palaeography" title="Palaeography">Writing systems</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Chorography" title="Chorography">Chorography</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Chronology" title="Chronology">Chronology</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Chronological_dating" title="Chronological dating">dating</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Diplomatics" title="Diplomatics">Diplomatics</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Encyclopaedistics" title="Encyclopaedistics">Encyclopaedistics</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Epigraphy" title="Epigraphy">Epigraphy</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Genealogy" title="Genealogy">Genealogy</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Heraldry" title="Heraldry">Heraldry</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Numismatics" title="Numismatics">Numismatics (Money)</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Onomastics" title="Onomastics">Onomastics</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Oral_history" title="Oral history">Oral history</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Oral_history_preservation" title="Oral history preservation">preservation</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Phaleristics" title="Phaleristics">Phaleristics</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Philology" title="Philology">Philology</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Philately" title="Philately">Postage stamps</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Prosopography" title="Prosopography">Prosopography</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Sigillography" title="Sigillography">Sigillography</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Toponymy" title="Toponymy">Toponymy</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Vexillology" title="Vexillology">Vexillology</a></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">By topic</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Anthropology" title="Anthropology">Anthropology</a> / <a href="/wiki/Paleoanthropology" title="Paleoanthropology">Paleoanthropology</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Cultural_history" title="Cultural history">Cultural</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_ecology" title="Historical ecology">Ecology</a> / <a href="/wiki/Environmental_history" title="Environmental history">Environment</a> / <a href="/wiki/Historical_geography" title="Historical geography">Geography</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Economic_history" title="Economic history">Economic</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Business_history" title="Business history">Business</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/History_of_capitalism" title="History of capitalism">Capitalism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Perspectives_on_capitalism_by_school_of_thought" title="Perspectives on capitalism by school of thought">Perspectives on capitalism by school of thought</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/History_of_economic_thought" title="History of economic thought">Thought</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Intellectual_history" title="Intellectual history">Intellectual</a> <ul><li><i><a href="/wiki/Geistesgeschichte" title="Geistesgeschichte">Geistesgeschichte</a></i></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_linguistics" title="Historical linguistics">Linguistics</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Medieval_ecclesiastic_historiography" title="Medieval ecclesiastic historiography">Medieval churches</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Military_historiography" class="mw-redirect" title="Military historiography">Military</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Political_history" title="Political history">Political</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Constitutional_history" title="Constitutional history">Constitutional</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Diplomatic_history" title="Diplomatic history">Diplomatic</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_sociology" title="Historical sociology">Social</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/History_of_feminism" title="History of feminism">Feminism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Gender_history" title="Gender history">Gender</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Ethnohistory" title="Ethnohistory">Indigenous</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Labor_history" title="Labor history">Labour</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/LGBTQ_history" title="LGBTQ history">LGBTQ</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Rural_history" title="Rural history">Rural</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Quantitative_history" title="Quantitative history">Quantitative</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Urban_history" title="Urban history">Urban</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Women%27s_history" title="Women's history">Women</a></li></ul></li></ul> </div></td></tr></tbody></table><div></div></td></tr></tbody></table><div></div></td></tr><tr><td colspan="2" class="navbox-list navbox-odd hlist" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"></div><table class="nowraplinks mw-collapsible mw-collapsed navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th scope="col" class="navbox-title" colspan="2"><div id="Methodology" style="font-size:114%;margin:0 4em"><a href="/wiki/Historical_method" title="Historical method">Methodology</a></div></th></tr><tr><td colspan="2" class="navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Case_study" title="Case study">Case study</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Periodization" title="Periodization">Periodization</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Category:Historical_eras" title="Category:Historical eras">Historical eras</a></li> <li><i><a href="/wiki/Tarikh" title="Tarikh">Tarikh</a></i></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Three-age_system" title="Three-age system">Three-age system</a></li></ul></li></ul> </div><table class="nowraplinks navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th id="Approaches,_schools" scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">Approaches,<br /> schools</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-even" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Annales_school" title="Annales school">Annales school</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/History_of_mentalities" title="History of mentalities">History of mentalities</a></li> <li><i><a href="/wiki/Nouvelle_histoire" title="Nouvelle histoire">Nouvelle histoire</a></i></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiometry" title="Historiometry">Historiometry</a> / <a href="/wiki/Cliometrics" title="Cliometrics">Cliometrics</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Comparative_historical_research" title="Comparative historical research">Comparative historical research</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Critical_historiography" title="Critical historiography">Critical</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Decoloniality" title="Decoloniality">Decoloniality</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Feminist_history" title="Feminist history">Feminist</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_anthropology" title="Historical anthropology">Historical anthropology</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_determinism" title="Historical determinism">Historical determinism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historism" title="Historism">Historism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_criticism" title="Historical criticism">Historical-critical method</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Humanistic_historiography" title="Humanistic historiography">Humanistic</a></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Indiscipline_of_history&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Indiscipline of history (page does not exist)">Indiscipline of history</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indisciplina_da_hist%C3%B3ria" class="extiw" title="pt:Indisciplina da história">pt</a>]</span></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Leninist_historiography" class="mw-redirect" title="Leninist historiography">Leninist</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Marxist_historiography" title="Marxist historiography">Marxist</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Historical_materialism" title="Historical materialism">Historical materialism</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Nationalist_historiography" title="Nationalist historiography">Nationalist</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Ancestral_civilisation" title="Ancestral civilisation">Ancestral civilisation</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Nationalization_of_history" title="Nationalization of history">Nationalization of history</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/People%27s_history" title="People's history">People's history</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Subaltern_Studies" title="Subaltern Studies">Subaltern Studies</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Popular_history" title="Popular history">Pop history</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Quantitative_history" title="Quantitative history">Quantitative history</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_revisionism" title="Historical revisionism">Revisionist</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Transnational_history" title="Transnational history">Transnational</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Whig_history" title="Whig history">Whig</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Great_Man_theory" class="mw-redirect" title="Great Man theory">Great Man theory</a></li></ul></li></ul> </div></td></tr></tbody></table><div> </div></td></tr></tbody></table><div></div></td></tr><tr><td colspan="2" class="navbox-list navbox-odd hlist" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"></div><table class="nowraplinks mw-collapsible mw-collapsed navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th scope="col" class="navbox-title" colspan="2"><div id="Concepts" style="font-size:114%;margin:0 4em">Concepts</div></th></tr><tr><td colspan="2" class="navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"></div><table class="nowraplinks navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">General</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Change_and_continuity" title="Change and continuity">Change and continuity</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historic_preservation" title="Historic preservation">Historic preservation</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historic_recurrence" title="Historic recurrence">Historic recurrence</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_significance" title="Historical significance">Historical significance</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historicity" title="Historicity">Historicity</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiology" class="mw-redirect" title="Historiology">Historiology</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historiolog%C3%ADa" class="extiw" title="es:Historiología">es</a>]</span> <ul><li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Theory_of_history&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Theory of history (page does not exist)">Theory of history</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theorie_der_Geschichte" class="extiw" title="de:Theorie der Geschichte">de</a>]</span></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Philosophy_of_history" title="Philosophy of history">Philosophy</a></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">Specific</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-even" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Black_legend" title="Black legend">Black legend</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Coloniality_of_knowledge" title="Coloniality of knowledge">Coloniality</a> and <a href="/wiki/Decolonization_of_knowledge" title="Decolonization of knowledge">decolonization of knowledge</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Dark_Ages_(historiography)" title="Dark Ages (historiography)">Dark Ages</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_negationism" title="Historical negationism">Historical negationism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historian%27s_fallacy" title="Historian's fallacy">Historian's fallacy</a> / <a href="/wiki/Presentism_(historical_analysis)" title="Presentism (historical analysis)">Presentism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Invented_tradition" title="Invented tradition">Invented tradition</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Modernisation_theory" class="mw-redirect" title="Modernisation theory">Modernisation theory</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Narrative_history" title="Narrative history">Narratives</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Paradigm_shift" title="Paradigm shift">Paradigm shift</a></li> <li><i><a href="/wiki/List_of_periods_of_regional_peace" title="List of periods of regional peace">Pax</a></i> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Template:Paxes" title="Template:Paxes">list</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Thirty-year_rule" title="Thirty-year rule">Thirty-year rule</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Transhistoricity" title="Transhistoricity">Transhistoricity</a></li> <li><i><a href="/wiki/Translatio_imperii" title="Translatio imperii">Translatio imperii</a></i> / <i><a href="/wiki/Translatio_studii" title="Translatio studii">Translatio studii</a></i></li> <li><i><a href="/wiki/Vaticinium_ex_eventu" title="Vaticinium ex eventu">Vaticinium ex eventu</a></i></li></ul> </div><table class="nowraplinks navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th id="Periodization_ofmodern_history" scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">Periodization of<br /><a href="/wiki/Modern_era" title="Modern era">modern history</a></th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Age_of_Discovery" title="Age of Discovery">Age of Discovery</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Age_of_Enlightenment" title="Age of Enlightenment">Age of Enlightenment</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/European_Civil_War" title="European Civil War">European Civil War</a> / <a href="/wiki/Second_Thirty_Years%27_War" title="Second Thirty Years' War">Second Thirty Years' War</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Long_eighteenth_century" title="Long eighteenth century">Long 18th</a> / <a href="/wiki/Long_nineteenth_century" title="Long nineteenth century">19th century</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Renaissance" title="Renaissance">Renaissance</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Continuity_thesis" title="Continuity thesis">Continuity thesis</a></li></ul></li></ul> </div></td></tr></tbody></table><div> </div></td></tr></tbody></table><div></div></td></tr></tbody></table><div></div></td></tr><tr><td colspan="2" class="navbox-list navbox-odd hlist" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"></div><table class="nowraplinks mw-collapsible mw-collapsed navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th scope="col" class="navbox-title" colspan="2"><div id="By_country_or_region" style="font-size:114%;margin:0 4em">By country or region</div></th></tr><tr><td colspan="2" class="navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"></div><table class="nowraplinks navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%"><a href="/wiki/African_historiography" title="African historiography">Africa</a></th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li>Egypt <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Egyptian_pyramid_construction_techniques" class="mw-redirect" title="Egyptian pyramid construction techniques">Pyramid construction techniques</a></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Black_Egypt_Thesis&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Black Egypt Thesis (page does not exist)">Black Egypt Thesis</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hip%C3%B3tesis_del_Egipto_Negro" class="extiw" title="es:Hipótesis del Egipto Negro">es</a>]</span></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Ethiopian_historiography" title="Ethiopian historiography">Ethiopia</a></li> <li>Morocco <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Greater_Morocco" title="Greater Morocco">Greater Morocco</a></li></ul></li> <li>Rwanda <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Double_genocide_theory_(Rwanda)" title="Double genocide theory (Rwanda)">Double genocide theory</a></li></ul></li> <li><i><a href="/wiki/Maafa" title="Maafa">Maafa</a></i></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">Americas</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-even" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_Canada" title="Historiography of Canada">Canada</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Metropolitan-hinterland_thesis" title="Metropolitan-hinterland thesis">Metropolitan-hinterland thesis</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Canadian_history_wars" title="Canadian history wars">Residential schools</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Staples_thesis" title="Staples thesis">Staples thesis</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Population_history_of_the_Indigenous_peoples_of_the_Americas" title="Population history of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas">Indigenous population history</a></li></ul> </div><table class="nowraplinks navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%"><a href="/wiki/Latin_American_studies" title="Latin American studies">Latin America</a></th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_Argentina" title="Historiography of Argentina">Argentina</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_the_May_Revolution" title="Historiography of the May Revolution">May Revolution</a> / <a href="/wiki/Causes_of_the_May_Revolution" title="Causes of the May Revolution">Causes</a></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historical_revisionism_in_Argentina&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Historical revisionism in Argentina (page does not exist)">Revisionist</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revisionismo_hist%C3%B3rico_en_Argentina" class="extiw" title="es:Revisionismo histórico en Argentina">es</a>]</span></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historiography_of_Peru&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Historiography of Peru (page does not exist)">Peru</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Iquicha_War_of_1825%E2%80%931828#Historiography" title="Iquicha War of 1825–1828">Iquicha Royalism</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_Colonial_Spanish_America" title="Historiography of Colonial Spanish America">Colonial Spanish America</a> <ul><li><i><a href="/wiki/Casta" title="Casta">Casta</a></i></li></ul></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%"><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_the_United_States" title="Historiography of the United States">United States</a></th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-even" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/African-American_history#Historiography" title="African-American history">African-American history</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Nadir_of_American_race_relations" title="Nadir of American race relations">Nadir of American race relations</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Neoabolitionism_(race_relations)" title="Neoabolitionism (race relations)">Neoabolitionism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Reconstruction_era#Legacy_and_historiography" title="Reconstruction era">Reconstruction era</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Consensus_history" title="Consensus history">Consensus history</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Cyclical_theory_(United_States_history)" title="Cyclical theory (United States history)">Cyclical theory</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Frontier_thesis" class="mw-redirect" title="Frontier thesis">Frontier thesis</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Political_history_in_the_United_States" title="Political history in the United States">Political history</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Political_eras_of_the_United_States" title="Political eras of the United States">Eras</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Progressive_historians" title="Progressive historians">Progressive-era historians</a></li></ul> </div></td></tr></tbody></table><div> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">Eurasia</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_Albania" title="Historiography of Albania">Albania</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Dealbanisation" title="Dealbanisation">Dealbanisation</a></li></ul></li> <li>Austria <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Habsburg_myth" title="Habsburg myth">Habsburg myth</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Balhae_controversies" title="Balhae controversies">Balhae</a></li> <li>Belarus <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Litvinism" title="Litvinism">Litvinism</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Bulgarian_historiography" title="Bulgarian historiography">Bulgaria</a></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Byzantine_historiography&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Byzantine historiography (page does not exist)">Byzantine Empire</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byzantinische_Geschichtsschreibung" class="extiw" title="de:Byzantinische Geschichtsschreibung">de</a>]</span> <ul><li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Early_Byzantine_historiography&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Early Byzantine historiography (page does not exist)">Early</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%A0%D0%B0%D0%BD%D0%BD%D0%B5%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B7%D0%B0%D0%BD%D1%82%D0%B8%D0%B9%D1%81%D0%BA%D0%B0%D1%8F_%D0%B8%D1%81%D1%82%D0%BE%D1%80%D0%B8%D0%BE%D0%B3%D1%80%D0%B0%D1%84%D0%B8%D1%8F" class="extiw" title="ru:Ранневизантийская историография">ru</a>]</span></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Croatian_historiography" title="Croatian historiography">Croatia</a></li> <li>Europe <ul><li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historiography_of_ancient_Europe&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Historiography of ancient Europe (page does not exist)">Ancient</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%90%D0%BD%D1%82%D0%B8%D1%87%D0%BD%D0%B0%D1%8F_%D0%B8%D1%81%D1%82%D0%BE%D1%80%D0%B8%D0%BE%D0%B3%D1%80%D0%B0%D1%84%D0%B8%D1%8F" class="extiw" title="ru:Античная историография">ru</a>]</span></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Medieval_historiography" class="mw-redirect" title="Medieval historiography">Medieval</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%A1%D1%80%D0%B5%D0%B4%D0%BD%D0%B5%D0%B2%D0%B5%D0%BA%D0%BE%D0%B2%D0%B0%D1%8F_%D0%B8%D1%81%D1%82%D0%BE%D1%80%D0%B8%D0%BE%D0%B3%D1%80%D0%B0%D1%84%D0%B8%D1%8F" class="extiw" title="ru:Средневековая историография">ru</a>]</span></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=New_Age_historiography&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="New Age historiography (page does not exist)">New Age</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%98%D1%81%D1%82%D0%BE%D1%80%D0%B8%D0%BE%D0%B3%D1%80%D0%B0%D1%84%D0%B8%D1%8F_%D0%9D%D0%BE%D0%B2%D0%BE%D0%B3%D0%BE_%D0%B2%D1%80%D0%B5%D0%BC%D0%B5%D0%BD%D0%B8" class="extiw" title="ru:Историография Нового времени">ru</a>]</span></li></ul></li> <li>Georgia <ul><li><i><a href="/wiki/Aryan_Kartli" title="Aryan Kartli">Aryan Kartli</a></i></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Hellenic_historiography" title="Hellenic historiography">Greek</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Ages_of_Man" title="Ages of Man">Ages of Man</a></li></ul></li> <li>Iran <ul><li><a href="/wiki/2,500-year_celebration_of_the_Persian_Empire" title="2,500-year celebration of the Persian Empire">2,500-year celebration</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_Japan" title="Historiography of Japan">Japan</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_Korea" title="Historiography of Korea">Korea</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Korean_nationalist_historiography" title="Korean nationalist historiography">Nationalist</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Goguryeo_controversies" title="Goguryeo controversies">Goguryeo controversies</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_in_North_Macedonia" title="Historiography in North Macedonia">North Macedonia</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_the_Philippines" title="Historiography of the Philippines">Philippines</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_early_Philippine_settlements" title="Historiography of early Philippine settlements">Early settlements</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historiograpy_of_Portugal&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Historiograpy of Portugal (page does not exist)">Portugal</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historiografia_de_Portugal" class="extiw" title="pt:Historiografia de Portugal">pt</a>]</span> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Lusotropicalism" title="Lusotropicalism">Lusotropicalism</a></li></ul></li> <li>Romania <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Great_Union" title="Great Union">Great Union</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Serbian_historiography" title="Serbian historiography">Serbia</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Kosovo_Myth" title="Kosovo Myth">Kosovo Myth</a></li></ul></li> <li>Sweden <ul><li><a href="/wiki/G%C3%B6taland_theory" title="Götaland theory">Götaland theory</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_Switzerland" title="Historiography of Switzerland">Switzerland</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/History_of_Taiwanese_historiography" title="History of Taiwanese historiography">Taiwan</a></li> <li>Ukraine <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Executed_Renaissance" title="Executed Renaissance">Executed Renaissance</a></li></ul></li> <li>Vietnam <ul><li><i><a href="/wiki/Nam_ti%E1%BA%BFn" title="Nam tiến">Nam tiến</a></i></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Tr%C6%B0ng_sisters" title="Trưng sisters">Trưng sisters</a></li></ul></li></ul> </div><table class="nowraplinks navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%"><a href="/wiki/Roman_historiography" title="Roman historiography">Ancient Rome</a></th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-even" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Catilinarian_conspiracy#Historiography" title="Catilinarian conspiracy">Catilinarian conspiracy</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_Christianization_of_the_Roman_Empire" class="mw-redirect" title="Historiography of Christianization of the Roman Empire">Christianization</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Constantinian_shift" title="Constantinian shift">Constantinian shift</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_Romanisation" title="Historiography of Romanisation">Expansion</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_the_fall_of_the_Western_Roman_Empire" title="Historiography of the fall of the Western Roman Empire">Fall of Western Rome</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Prosopography_of_ancient_Rome" title="Prosopography of ancient Rome">Prosopography</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Succession_of_the_Roman_Empire" title="Succession of the Roman Empire">Succession</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Succession_to_the_Byzantine_Empire" title="Succession to the Byzantine Empire">Byzantine succession</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Moscow,_third_Rome" title="Moscow, third Rome">Moscow, third Rome</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Ottoman_claim_to_Roman_succession" title="Ottoman claim to Roman succession">Ottoman claim</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Problem_of_two_emperors" title="Problem of two emperors">Problem of two emperors</a></li></ul></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%"><a href="/wiki/Chinese_historiography" title="Chinese historiography">China</a></th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Five_thousand_years_of_Chinese_civilization" title="Five thousand years of Chinese civilization">5000-year civilization assertion</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/History_of_Chinese_archaeology" title="History of Chinese archaeology">Archaeology</a></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Wunu_School&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Wunu School (page does not exist)">Wunu School</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E6%97%A0%E5%A5%B4%E6%B4%BE" class="extiw" title="zh:无奴派">zh</a>]</span></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Century_of_humiliation" title="Century of humiliation">Century of humiliation</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Conquest_dynasty" title="Conquest dynasty">Conquest dynasty</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Debate_on_the_Chineseness_of_the_Yuan_and_Qing_dynasties" title="Debate on the Chineseness of the Yuan and Qing dynasties">"Chineseness" debate</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/New_Qing_History" title="New Qing History">New Qing History</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Golden_ages_of_China" title="Golden ages of China">Golden ages</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Hua%E2%80%93Yi_distinction" title="Hua–Yi distinction">Hua–Yi distinction</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Four_Barbarians" title="Four Barbarians">Four Barbarians</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Sinocentrism" title="Sinocentrism">Sinocentrism</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Self-Strengthening_Movement#Evaluation" title="Self-Strengthening Movement">Self-Strengthening Movement</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Sprouts_of_capitalism" title="Sprouts of capitalism">Sprouts of capitalism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Tibetan_sovereignty_debate" title="Tibetan sovereignty debate">Tibetan sovereignty debate</a></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">France</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-even" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><i><a href="/wiki/Cordon_sanitaire_(international_relations)" title="Cordon sanitaire (international relations)">Cordon sanitaire</a></i></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Frankish_Interregnum&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Frankish Interregnum (page does not exist)">Frankish Interregnum</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interr%C3%A8gne_franc" class="extiw" title="fr:Interrègne franc">fr</a>]</span></li> <li><i><a href="/wiki/Grand_Si%C3%A8cle" title="Grand Siècle">Grand Siècle</a></i></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Legendary_Saracen_in_France&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Legendary Saracen in France (page does not exist)">Legendary Saracen</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/L%C3%A9gendaire_sarrasin_en_France" class="extiw" title="fr:Légendaire sarrasin en France">fr</a>]</span></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historiographical_debate_on_the_location_of_Al%C3%A9sia&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Historiographical debate on the location of Alésia (page does not exist)">Location of Alésia</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historiographie_du_d%C3%A9bat_sur_la_localisation_d%27Al%C3%A9sia" class="extiw" title="fr:Historiographie du débat sur la localisation d'Alésia">fr</a>]</span></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historiography_of_Lyon&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Historiography of Lyon (page does not exist)">Lyon</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historiographie_de_Lyon" class="extiw" title="fr:Historiographie de Lyon">fr</a>]</span></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%"><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_Germany" title="Historiography of Germany">Germany</a></th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><i><a href="/wiki/Alltagsgeschichte" title="Alltagsgeschichte">Alltagsgeschichte</a></i></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Borussian_myth" title="Borussian myth">Borussian myth</a></li> <li><i><a class="mw-selflink selflink">Historikerstreit</a></i></li> <li><i><a href="/wiki/Sonderweg" title="Sonderweg">Sonderweg</a></i></li> <li><i><a href="/w/index.php?title=Strukturgeschichte&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Strukturgeschichte (page does not exist)">Strukturgeschichte</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strukturgeschichte" class="extiw" title="de:Strukturgeschichte">de</a>]</span></i></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Sybel-Ficker_controversy" title="Sybel-Ficker controversy">Sybel-Ficker controversy</a></li> <li><i><a href="/wiki/Vergangenheitsbew%C3%A4ltigung" title="Vergangenheitsbewältigung">Vergangenheitsbewältigung</a></i></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%"><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_India" title="Historiography of India">India</a></th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-even" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Greater_Magadha" title="Greater Magadha">Greater Magadha</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Indocentrism" title="Indocentrism">Indocentrism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Indigenous_Aryanism" title="Indigenous Aryanism">Indigenous Aryanism</a></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%"><a href="/wiki/History_of_Ireland#Historiography" title="History of Ireland">Ireland</a></th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Great_Famine_(Ireland)#Analysis_of_the_government's_role" title="Great Famine (Ireland)">Great Famine</a></li> <li>"<a href="/wiki/More_Irish_than_the_Irish_themselves" title="More Irish than the Irish themselves">More Irish than the Irish themselves</a>"</li> <li><a href="/wiki/Revisionism_(Ireland)" title="Revisionism (Ireland)">Revisionism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Irish_revolutionary_period" title="Irish revolutionary period">Revolutionary period</a></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">Italy</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-even" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Fascist_Italy#Historiography" title="Fascist Italy">Fascist Italy</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Italian_entry_into_World_War_I" title="Italian entry into World War I">Fourth Italian War of Independence</a></li> <li><i><a href="/wiki/Historiae_Patriae_Monumenta" title="Historiae Patriae Monumenta">Historiae Patriae Monumenta</a></i></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_Series_of_the_Bank_of_Italy" title="Historical Series of the Bank of Italy">Historical Series of the Bank of Italy</a></li> <li><i><a href="/wiki/Italiani_brava_gente" title="Italiani brava gente">Italiani brava gente</a></i></li> <li><i><a href="/wiki/Rerum_italicarum_scriptores" title="Rerum italicarum scriptores">Rerum italicarum scriptores</a></i></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Revisionism_of_Risorgimento" title="Revisionism of Risorgimento">Revisionism of Risorgimento</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Southern_question" title="Southern question">Southern question</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Neo-Bourbonism" title="Neo-Bourbonism">Neo-Bourbonism</a></li></ul></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">Poland</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Golden_Liberty#Assessment" title="Golden Liberty">Golden Liberty</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Sarmatism" title="Sarmatism">Sarmatism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Deluge_(history)#In_popular_culture" title="Deluge (history)">Deluge</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Partitions_of_Poland#Reasons,_legality_and_justifications" title="Partitions of Poland">Partitions</a></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historiography_about_Polish_People%27s_Republic&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Historiography about Polish People's Republic (page does not exist)">Polish People's Republic</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historiografia_PRL" class="extiw" title="pl:Historiografia PRL">pl</a>]</span></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">Russia</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-even" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Anti-Normanism" title="Anti-Normanism">Anti-Normanism</a></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Pre-Revolution_Russian_historiography&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Pre-Revolution Russian historiography (page does not exist)">Pre-Revolutionary Russia</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%A0%D0%BE%D1%81%D1%81%D0%B8%D0%B9%D1%81%D0%BA%D0%B0%D1%8F_%D0%B4%D0%BE%D1%80%D0%B5%D0%B2%D0%BE%D0%BB%D1%8E%D1%86%D0%B8%D0%BE%D0%BD%D0%BD%D0%B0%D1%8F_%D0%B8%D1%81%D1%82%D0%BE%D1%80%D0%B8%D0%BE%D0%B3%D1%80%D0%B0%D1%84%D0%B8%D1%8F" class="extiw" title="ru:Российская дореволюционная историография">ru</a>]</span> <ul><li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Skeptic_School&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Skeptic School (page does not exist)">Skeptic School</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%A1%D0%BA%D0%B5%D0%BF%D1%82%D0%B8%D1%87%D0%B5%D1%81%D0%BA%D0%B0%D1%8F_%D1%88%D0%BA%D0%BE%D0%BB%D0%B0" class="extiw" title="ru:Скептическая школа">ru</a>]</span></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_in_the_Soviet_Union" title="Historiography in the Soviet Union">Soviet Union</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/October_Revolution#Historiography" title="October Revolution">October Revolution</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Soviet_famine_of_1930%E2%80%931933" title="Soviet famine of 1930–1933">Soviet famine of 1930–1933</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Causes_of_the_Holodomor" title="Causes of the Holodomor">Causes of the Holodomor</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Holodomor_genocide_question" title="Holodomor genocide question">Holodomor genocide question</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Holodomor_in_modern_politics" title="Holodomor in modern politics">Holodomor in modern politics</a></li></ul></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">Spain</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Black_Legend_(Spain)" class="mw-redirect" title="Black Legend (Spain)">Black legend</a> / <a href="/wiki/Black_Legend_(Spain)#White_legend" class="mw-redirect" title="Black Legend (Spain)">White legend</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Hispanism" title="Hispanism">Hispanism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_on_Carlism_during_the_Francoist_era" title="Historiography on Carlism during the Francoist era">Carlism in the Francoist era</a></li> <li><i><a href="/wiki/Convivencia" title="Convivencia">Convivencia</a></i></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Black_Legend_of_the_Spanish_Inquisition" title="Black Legend of the Spanish Inquisition">Inquisition</a></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Limpieza_de_sangre_controversy&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Limpieza de sangre controversy (page does not exist)">Limpieza de sangre controversy</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estatutos_de_limpieza_de_sangre#Los_estatutos_de_limpieza_de_sangre,_¿el_origen_del_racismo_europeo?" class="extiw" title="es:Estatutos de limpieza de sangre">es</a>]</span></li> <li><i><a href="/wiki/Reconquista" title="Reconquista">Reconquista</a></i> <ul><li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Islamic_revolution_of_Spain&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Islamic revolution of Spain (page does not exist)">Islamic revolution of Spain</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_revoluci%C3%B3n_isl%C3%A1mica_en_Occidente" class="extiw" title="es:La revolución islámica en Occidente">es</a>]</span></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Revisionism_(Spain)" title="Revisionism (Spain)">Revisionist</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Viceroyalty#Controversy_over_whether_the_American_Viceroyalties_were_Colonies_or_Provinces" title="Viceroyalty">Colonies or Provinces</a></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Spanish_decline&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Spanish decline (page does not exist)">Spanish decline</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decadencia_espa%C3%B1ola" class="extiw" title="es:Decadencia española">es</a>]</span></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Ser_de_Espa%C3%B1a&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Ser de España (page does not exist)">Ser de España</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ser_de_Espa%C3%B1a" class="extiw" title="es:Ser de España">es</a>]</span></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">Turkey</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-even" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Kemalist_historiography" title="Kemalist historiography">Kemalist</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_the_Ottoman_Empire" title="Historiography of the Ottoman Empire">Ottoman Empire</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Ghaza_thesis" title="Ghaza thesis">Ghaza thesis</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Ottoman_decline_thesis" title="Ottoman decline thesis">Decline thesis</a></li></ul></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%"><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_the_United_Kingdom" title="Historiography of the United Kingdom">United<br />Kingdom</a></th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_the_Poor_Laws" title="Historiography of the Poor Laws">Poor Laws</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_Scotland" title="Historiography of Scotland">Scotland</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Origins_of_the_Kingdom_of_Alba" title="Origins of the Kingdom of Alba">Kingdom of Alba</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Westminster_Stone_theory" title="Westminster Stone theory">Westminster Stone</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Storm_over_the_gentry" title="Storm over the gentry">Storm over the gentry</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_the_Suffragettes" title="Historiography of the Suffragettes">Suffragette Campaign</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Tudor_myth" title="Tudor myth">Tudor myth</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Ricardian_(Richard_III)" title="Ricardian (Richard III)">Ricardians</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Winter_of_Discontent#Legacy" title="Winter of Discontent">Winter of Discontent</a></li></ul> </div><table class="nowraplinks navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th id="BritishEmpire" scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%"><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_the_British_Empire" title="Historiography of the British Empire">British<br />Empire</a></th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-even" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Cambridge_School_(imperial_history)" title="Cambridge School (imperial history)">Cambridge School</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Porter%E2%80%93MacKenzie_debate" title="Porter–MacKenzie debate">Porter–MacKenzie debate</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Second_colonial_occupation" title="Second colonial occupation">Second colonial occupation</a></li></ul> </div></td></tr></tbody></table><div> </div></td></tr></tbody></table><div> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">Oceania</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Australian_history_wars" title="Australian history wars">Colonial Australia</a></li></ul> </div></td></tr></tbody></table><div></div></td></tr></tbody></table><div></div></td></tr><tr><td colspan="2" class="navbox-list navbox-odd hlist" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"></div><table class="nowraplinks mw-collapsible mw-collapsed navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th scope="col" class="navbox-title" colspan="2"><div id="By_war,_conflict" style="font-size:114%;margin:0 4em">By war, conflict</div></th></tr><tr><td colspan="2" class="navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"></div><table class="nowraplinks mw-collapsible mw-collapsed navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th scope="col" class="navbox-title" colspan="2"><div class="navbar plainlinks hlist navbar-mini"><ul><li class="nv-view"><a href="/wiki/Template:Military_historiography" title="Template:Military historiography"><abbr title="View this template">v</abbr></a></li><li class="nv-talk"><a href="/wiki/Template_talk:Military_historiography" title="Template talk:Military historiography"><abbr title="Discuss this template">t</abbr></a></li><li class="nv-edit"><a href="/wiki/Special:EditPage/Template:Military_historiography" title="Special:EditPage/Template:Military historiography"><abbr title="Edit this template">e</abbr></a></li></ul></div><div id="Military_historiography" style="font-size:114%;margin:0 4em"><a href="/wiki/Military" title="Military">Military</a> <a href="/wiki/Historiography" title="Historiography">historiography</a></div></th></tr><tr><td class="navbox-abovebelow" colspan="2"><div><div class="hlist"> <ul><li><b><a href="/wiki/Military_history" title="Military history">Military history</a></b></li> <li><b><a href="/wiki/List_of_military_museums" title="List of military museums">List of military museums</a></b></li></ul> </div></div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">Pre-18th century<br />conflicts</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd hlist" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Albigensian_Crusade#Legacy" title="Albigensian Crusade">Albigensian Crusade</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Catharism#Historical_and_current_scholarship" title="Catharism">Catharism debate</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_the_Crusades" title="Historiography of the Crusades">Crusades</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Islamic_views_on_the_crusades" title="Islamic views on the crusades">Islamic views</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_the_Eighty_Years%27_War" title="Historiography of the Eighty Years' War">Eighty Years' War</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Origins_of_the_Eighty_Years%27_War" title="Origins of the Eighty Years' War">Origins</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Fall_of_Babylon#Historiography" title="Fall of Babylon">Fall of Babylon</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Gallic_Wars#Historiography" title="Gallic Wars">Gallic Wars</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Late_Bronze_Age_collapse" title="Late Bronze Age collapse">Late Bronze Age collapse</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Dorian_invasion" title="Dorian invasion">Dorian invasion</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Sea_Peoples" title="Sea Peoples">Sea Peoples</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/History_of_the_Peloponnesian_War" title="History of the Peloponnesian War">Peloponnesian War</a></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">18th and 19th<br />century conflicts</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd hlist" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"></div><table class="nowraplinks navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th id="Coalition_Wars(1792–1815)" scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%"><a href="/wiki/French_Revolutionary_and_Napoleonic_Wars" title="French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars">Coalition Wars</a><br />(1792–1815)</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-even" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_the_French_Revolution" title="Historiography of the French Revolution">French Revolution</a> <ul><li><a href="/w/index.php?title=French_pre-revolution&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="French pre-revolution (page does not exist)">Pre-revolution</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pr%C3%A9r%C3%A9volution_fran%C3%A7aise" class="extiw" title="fr:Prérévolution française">fr</a>]</span></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Causes_of_the_French_Revolution" title="Causes of the French Revolution">Causes</a></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=New_Russian_School_(French_Revolution)&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="New Russian School (French Revolution) (page does not exist)">New Russian School</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C2%AB%D0%9D%D0%BE%D0%B2%D0%B0%D1%8F_%D1%80%D1%83%D1%81%D1%81%D0%BA%D0%B0%D1%8F_%D1%88%D0%BA%D0%BE%D0%BB%D0%B0%C2%BB_%D0%B2_%D0%B8%D1%81%D1%82%D0%BE%D1%80%D0%B8%D0%BE%D0%B3%D1%80%D0%B0%D1%84%D0%B8%D0%B8_%D0%A4%D1%80%D0%B0%D0%BD%D1%86%D1%83%D0%B7%D1%81%D0%BA%D0%BE%D0%B9_%D1%80%D0%B5%D0%B2%D0%BE%D0%BB%D1%8E%D1%86%D0%B8%D0%B8_XVIII_%D0%B2." class="extiw" title="ru:«Новая русская школа» в историографии Французской революции XVIII в.">ru</a>]</span></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/War_in_the_Vend%C3%A9e#Historiography" title="War in the Vendée">War in the Vendée</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Napoleonic_studies" title="Napoleonic studies">Napoleonic era</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/French_invasion_of_Russia#Historical_assessment" title="French invasion of Russia">Invasion of Russia</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Battle_of_Waterloo#Historical_importance" title="Battle of Waterloo">Waterloo</a></li></ul></li></ul> </div></td></tr></tbody></table><div> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Historiographic_issues_about_the_American_Civil_War" title="Historiographic issues about the American Civil War">American Civil War</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Origins_of_the_American_Civil_War" title="Origins of the American Civil War">Origins</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Turning_point_of_the_American_Civil_War" title="Turning point of the American Civil War">Turning point</a></li></ul></li> <li>Franco-Prussian War <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Causes_of_the_Franco-Prussian_War" title="Causes of the Franco-Prussian War">Causes</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_the_Paris_Commune" title="Historiography of the Paris Commune">Paris Commune</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_the_Great_Game" class="mw-redirect" title="Historiography of the Great Game">Great Game</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Indian_Rebellion_of_1857#Historiography" title="Indian Rebellion of 1857">Indian Rebellion of 1857</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Causes_of_the_Indian_Rebellion_of_1857" title="Causes of the Indian Rebellion of 1857">Causes</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_the_Paraguayan_War" title="Historiography of the Paraguayan War">Paraguayan War</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_the_War_of_1812" title="Historiography of the War of 1812">War of 1812</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Origins_of_the_War_of_1812" title="Origins of the War of 1812">Origins</a></li></ul></li> <li>War of the Pacific <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Causes_of_the_War_of_the_Pacific" class="mw-redirect" title="Causes of the War of the Pacific">Causes</a></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Myth_of_English_aid&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Myth of English aid (page does not exist)">Myth of English aid</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mito_de_la_ayuda_inglesa" class="extiw" title="es:Mito de la ayuda inglesa">es</a>]</span></li></ul></li></ul></div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%"><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_World_War_I" title="Historiography of World War I">World War I</a></th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd hlist" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_the_causes_of_World_War_I" title="Historiography of the causes of World War I">Causes</a> (<a href="/wiki/Color_book" title="Color book">Color books</a> / <a href="/wiki/Fritz_Fischer_(historian)#Fischer_thesis" title="Fritz Fischer (historian)">Fischer thesis</a>)</li> <li><a href="/wiki/Late_Ottoman_genocides" title="Late Ottoman genocides">Late Ottoman genocides</a> (<a href="/wiki/Causes_of_the_Armenian_genocide" title="Causes of the Armenian genocide">Causes of the Armenian genocide</a>)</li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Patriotic_consent&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Patriotic consent (page does not exist)">Patriotic consent</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consentement_patriotique" class="extiw" title="fr:Consentement patriotique">fr</a>]</span></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Persian_famine_of_1917%E2%80%931919" title="Persian famine of 1917–1919">Persian famine of 1917–1919</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Powder_keg_of_Europe" title="Powder keg of Europe">Powder keg of Europe</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Schlieffen_Plan#History" title="Schlieffen Plan">Schlieffen Plan</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Spirit_of_1914" title="Spirit of 1914">Spirit of 1914</a> / <a href="/wiki/Spirit_of_1917" title="Spirit of 1917">1917</a></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historiography_of_the_Treaty_of_Brest-Litovsk&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Historiography of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk (page does not exist)">Treaty of Brest-Litovsk</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%98%D1%81%D1%82%D0%BE%D1%80%D0%B8%D0%BE%D0%B3%D1%80%D0%B0%D1%84%D0%B8%D1%8F_%D0%91%D1%80%D0%B5%D1%81%D1%82%D1%81%D0%BA%D0%BE%D0%B3%D0%BE_%D0%BC%D0%B8%D1%80%D0%B0" class="extiw" title="ru:Историография Брестского мира">ru</a>]</span></li> </div><table class="nowraplinks navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th id="Treaty_ofVersailles" scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%"><a href="/wiki/Treaty_of_Versailles#Historical_assessments" title="Treaty of Versailles">Treaty of<br />Versailles</a></th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-even" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/World_War_I_reparations#Analysis" title="World War I reparations">Reparations</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/War_guilt_question" title="War guilt question">War guilt question</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Article_231_of_the_Treaty_of_Versailles" title="Article 231 of the Treaty of Versailles">Article 231</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Reichstag_inquiry_into_guilt_for_World_War_I" title="Reichstag inquiry into guilt for World War I">Reichstag inquiry</a></li></ul></li></ul> </div></td></tr></tbody></table><div> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%"><a href="/wiki/Interwar_period" title="Interwar period">Interwar period</a></th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd hlist" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Responsibility_for_the_burning_of_Smyrna" title="Responsibility for the burning of Smyrna">Burning of Smyrna</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Polish%E2%80%93Soviet_War#Aftermath_and_legacy" title="Polish–Soviet War">Polish–Soviet War</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Causes_of_the_Polish%E2%80%93Soviet_War" title="Causes of the Polish–Soviet War">Causes</a></li></ul></li> <li>Spanish Civil War <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Background_of_the_Spanish_Civil_War" title="Background of the Spanish Civil War">Background</a></li></ul></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%"><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_World_War_II" title="Historiography of World War II">World War II</a></th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-even hlist" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Causes_of_World_War_II" title="Causes of World War II">Causes</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Blitzkrieg#Post-war_controversy" title="Blitzkrieg">"Blitzkrieg" concept</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Broad_front_versus_narrow_front_controversy_in_World_War_II" title="Broad front versus narrow front controversy in World War II">Broad vs. narrow front</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_German_resistance_to_Nazism" title="Historiography of German resistance to Nazism">German resistance to Nazism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Nazi_foreign_policy_debate" title="Nazi foreign policy debate">Nazi foreign policy debate</a></li></ul> </div><table class="nowraplinks navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">Eastern Front</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Molotov%E2%80%93Ribbentrop_Pact#Postwar_commentary_on_motives_of_Stalin_and_Hitler" title="Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact">Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Soviet_offensive_plans_controversy" title="Soviet offensive plans controversy">Soviet offensive plans</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Warsaw_Uprising#Soviet_stance" title="Warsaw Uprising">Soviets and the Warsaw Uprising</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_the_massacres_of_Poles_in_Volhynia_and_Eastern_Galicia" title="Historiography of the massacres of Poles in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia">Massacres of Poles in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Aftermath_of_the_Winter_War" title="Aftermath of the Winter War">Winter War</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Background_of_the_Winter_War" title="Background of the Winter War">Background</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Spirit_of_the_Winter_War" title="Spirit of the Winter War">Spirit</a></li></ul></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%"><a href="/wiki/Holocaust_studies" title="Holocaust studies">The Holocaust</a></th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-even" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Auschwitz_bombing_debate" title="Auschwitz bombing debate">Auschwitz bombing debate</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Knowledge_of_the_Holocaust_in_Nazi_Germany_and_German-occupied_Europe" title="Knowledge of the Holocaust in Nazi Germany and German-occupied Europe">Awareness in Nazi Germany and German-occupied Europe</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Functionalism%E2%80%93intentionalism_debate" title="Functionalism–intentionalism debate">Functionalism–intentionalism debate</a></li> <li>In relation to the <a href="/wiki/Armenian_genocide_and_the_Holocaust" title="Armenian genocide and the Holocaust">Armenian genocide</a> / <a href="/wiki/The_Holocaust_and_the_Nakba" title="The Holocaust and the Nakba">Nakba</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Pope_Pius_XII_and_the_Holocaust#Historiography" title="Pope Pius XII and the Holocaust">Pope Pius XII and the Holocaust</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Pius_Wars" title="Pius Wars">Pius Wars</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/%22Polish_death_camp%22_controversy" title=""Polish death camp" controversy">"Polish death camp"</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Responsibility_for_the_Holocaust" title="Responsibility for the Holocaust">Responsibility</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_the_Holocaust_in_Slovakia" title="Historiography of the Holocaust in Slovakia">Slovakia</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Holocaust_uniqueness_debate" title="Holocaust uniqueness debate">Uniqueness</a></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">Pacific War</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Debate_over_the_atomic_bombings_of_Hiroshima_and_Nagasaki" title="Debate over the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki">Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Battle_for_Australia" title="Battle for Australia">"Battle for Australia"</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Bengal_famine_of_1943#Historiography" title="Bengal famine of 1943">Bengal famine</a></li> <li>Second Sino-Japanese War <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_the_Nanjing_Massacre" title="Historiography of the Nanjing Massacre">Nanjing Massacre</a></li></ul></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">Western Front</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-even" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_the_Battle_of_France" title="Historiography of the Battle of France">Battle of France</a></li> <li><i><a href="/wiki/Guilty_Men" title="Guilty Men">Guilty Men</a></i></li> <li><i><a href="/wiki/R%C3%A9sistancialisme" title="Résistancialisme">Résistancialisme</a></i></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historiography_of_Vichy_France&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Historiography of Vichy France (page does not exist)">Vichy France</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historiographie_du_r%C3%A9gime_de_Vichy" class="extiw" title="fr:Historiographie du régime de Vichy">fr</a>]</span></li></ul> </div></td></tr></tbody></table><div> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%"><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_the_Cold_War" title="Historiography of the Cold War">Cold War</a></th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd hlist" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Origins_of_the_Cold_War" title="Origins of the Cold War">Origins</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/1948_Palestine_war#Historiography" title="1948 Palestine war">1948 Palestine war</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Causes_of_the_1948_Palestinian_expulsion_and_flight" title="Causes of the 1948 Palestinian expulsion and flight">Palestinian expulsion and flight</a> / <a href="/wiki/Ongoing_Nakba" title="Ongoing Nakba">Ongoing Nakba</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Zionism_as_settler_colonialism" title="Zionism as settler colonialism">Zionism as settler colonialism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/New_Historians" title="New Historians">New Historians</a></li></ul></li> <li>Malayan Emergency <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Background_and_causes_of_the_Malayan_Emergency" title="Background and causes of the Malayan Emergency">Causes</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_the_Algerian_War" class="mw-redirect" title="Historiography of the Algerian War">Algerian War</a></li> <li>Six-Day War <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Origins_of_the_Six-Day_War" title="Origins of the Six-Day War">Origins</a></li></ul></li> <li>Iranian revolution <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Background_and_causes_of_the_Iranian_revolution" title="Background and causes of the Iranian revolution">Causes</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Legacy_and_memory_of_the_Iran%E2%80%93Iraq_War" title="Legacy and memory of the Iran–Iraq War">Iran–Iraq War</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Aftermath_of_the_Falklands_War" title="Aftermath of the Falklands War">Falklands War</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Falkland_Islands_sovereignty_dispute" title="Falkland Islands sovereignty dispute">Sovereignty dispute</a></li></ul></li> <li>Sri Lankan civil war <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Origins_of_the_Sri_Lankan_civil_war" title="Origins of the Sri Lankan civil war">Origins</a></li></ul></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">Post-Cold War</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-even hlist" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li>Russo-Georgian War <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Background_of_the_Russo-Georgian_War" title="Background of the Russo-Georgian War">Background</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Responsibility_for_the_Russo-Georgian_War" title="Responsibility for the Russo-Georgian War">Responsibility</a></li></ul></li> <li>Syrian revolution <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Background_and_causes_of_the_Syrian_revolution" title="Background and causes of the Syrian revolution">Causes</a></li></ul></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">Related</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd hlist" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Conflict_thesis" title="Conflict thesis">Conflict thesis</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_gunpowder_and_gun_transmission" title="Historiography of gunpowder and gun transmission">Gunpowder and gun transmission</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Torsion_mangonel_myth" title="Torsion mangonel myth">Torsion mangonel myth</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/War_and_genocide" title="War and genocide">War and genocide</a></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><td class="navbox-abovebelow" colspan="2"><div><div class="hlist"> <ul><li><span class="noviewer" typeof="mw:File"><span title="Category"><img alt="" src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/9/96/Symbol_category_class.svg/16px-Symbol_category_class.svg.png" decoding="async" width="16" height="16" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/9/96/Symbol_category_class.svg/23px-Symbol_category_class.svg.png 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/9/96/Symbol_category_class.svg/31px-Symbol_category_class.svg.png 2x" data-file-width="180" data-file-height="185" /></span></span> <a href="/wiki/Category:Military_historiography" title="Category:Military historiography">Category</a></li></ul> </div></div></td></tr></tbody></table><div></div></td></tr></tbody></table><div></div></td></tr><tr><td colspan="2" class="navbox-list navbox-odd hlist" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"></div><table class="nowraplinks mw-collapsible mw-collapsed navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th scope="col" class="navbox-title" colspan="2"><div id="By_person" style="font-size:114%;margin:0 4em">By person</div></th></tr><tr><td colspan="2" class="navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"></div><table class="nowraplinks navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">Political<br />leaders</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_Adolf_Hitler" title="Historiography of Adolf Hitler">Adolf Hitler</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_Alexander_the_Great" title="Historiography of Alexander the Great">Alexander the Great</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Amin_al-Husseini#Evaluations_of_Husseini's_historical_significance" title="Amin al-Husseini">Amin al-Husseini</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Aurangzeb#Assessments_and_legacy" title="Aurangzeb">Aurangzeb</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Legacy_of_Cato_the_Younger" title="Legacy of Cato the Younger">Cato the Younger</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Legacy_of_Che_Guevara" title="Legacy of Che Guevara">Che Guevara</a></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historiography_of_Chiang_Ching-kuo&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Historiography of Chiang Ching-kuo (page does not exist)">Chiang Ching-kuo</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E5%B0%8D%E8%94%A3%E7%B6%93%E5%9C%8B%E7%9A%84%E8%A9%95%E5%83%B9" class="extiw" title="zh:對蔣經國的評價">zh</a>]</span></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historiography_of_Chiang_Kai_Shek&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Historiography of Chiang Kai Shek (page does not exist)">Chiang Kai Shek</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E5%B0%8D%E8%94%A3%E4%B8%AD%E6%AD%A3%E7%9A%84%E8%A9%95%E5%83%B9" class="extiw" title="zh:對蔣中正的評價">zh</a>]</span></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Constantine_the_Great#Historiography" title="Constantine the Great">Constantine the Great</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Palamism#Initial_Western_reactions" title="Palamism">Gregory Palamas</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Legacy_of_Horatio_Nelson,_1st_Viscount_Nelson" title="Legacy of Horatio Nelson, 1st Viscount Nelson">Horatio Nelson</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Hypatia#Legacy" title="Hypatia">Hypatia</a></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historiography_of_Jiang_Zemin&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Historiography of Jiang Zemin (page does not exist)">Jiang Zemin</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E5%B0%8D%E6%B1%9F%E6%BE%A4%E6%B0%91%E7%9A%84%E8%A9%95%E5%83%B9" class="extiw" title="zh:對江澤民的評價">zh</a>]</span></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historiography_of_Joseph_Stalin&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Historiography of Joseph Stalin (page does not exist)">Joseph Stalin</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%A1%D1%82%D0%B0%D0%BB%D0%B8%D0%BD,_%D0%98%D0%BE%D1%81%D0%B8%D1%84_%D0%92%D0%B8%D1%81%D1%81%D0%B0%D1%80%D0%B8%D0%BE%D0%BD%D0%BE%D0%B2%D0%B8%D1%87#Мнения_и_оценки_личности_Сталина" class="extiw" title="ru:Сталин, Иосиф Виссарионович">ru</a>]</span></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Legacy_of_Jos%C3%A9_de_San_Mart%C3%ADn#Historiography" title="Legacy of José de San Martín">José de San Martín</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_Juan_Manuel_de_Rosas" title="Historiography of Juan Manuel de Rosas">Juan Manuel de Rosas</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_assessment_of_Klemens_von_Metternich" title="Historical assessment of Klemens von Metternich">Klemens von Metternich</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Legacy_of_Leonid_Brezhnev" title="Legacy of Leonid Brezhnev">Leonid Brezhnev</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_Louis_Riel" title="Historiography of Louis Riel">Louis Riel</a></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historiography_of_Mao_Zedong&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Historiography of Mao Zedong (page does not exist)">Mao Zedong</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E5%AF%B9%E4%B8%AD%E5%9B%BD%E5%85%B1%E4%BA%A7%E5%85%9A%E7%9A%84%E8%AF%84%E8%AE%BA" class="extiw" title="zh:对中国共产党的评论">zh</a>]</span></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Reception_and_legacy_of_Muammar_Gaddafi" title="Reception and legacy of Muammar Gaddafi">Muammar Gaddafi</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Legacy_of_Napoleon" title="Legacy of Napoleon">Napoleon</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Neville_Chamberlain#Legacy_and_reputation" title="Neville Chamberlain">Neville Chamberlain</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Legacy_of_Pedro_II_of_Brazil" title="Legacy of Pedro II of Brazil">Pedro II of Brazil</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Sim%C3%B3n_Bol%C3%ADvar#Legacy" title="Simón Bolívar">Simon Bolivar</a> <ul><li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Cult_of_personality_of_Sim%C3%B3n_Bol%C3%ADvar&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Cult of personality of Simón Bolívar (page does not exist)">Cult of personality</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culto_a_la_personalidad_de_Sim%C3%B3n_Bol%C3%ADvar" class="extiw" title="es:Culto a la personalidad de Simón Bolívar">es</a>]</span></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Bolivarianism" title="Bolivarianism">Bolivarianism</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Saladin#Recognition_and_legacy" title="Saladin">Saladin</a></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historiography_of_Sun_Yat_Tse&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Historiography of Sun Yat Tse (page does not exist)">Sun Yat Tse</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E5%B0%8D%E5%AD%AB%E4%B8%AD%E5%B1%B1%E7%9A%84%E8%A9%95%E5%83%B9" class="extiw" title="zh:對孫中山的評價">zh</a>]</span></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Thomas_Aquinas#Legacy,_veneration,_and_modern_reception" title="Thomas Aquinas">Thomas Aquinas</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_reputation_of_Thomas_Jefferson" title="Historical reputation of Thomas Jefferson">Thomas Jefferson</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_reputation_of_Ulysses_S._Grant" title="Historical reputation of Ulysses S. Grant">Ulysses S. Grant</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_reputation_of_Warren_G._Harding" title="Historical reputation of Warren G. Harding">Warren G. Harding</a></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historiography_of_Yuan_Shikai&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Historiography of Yuan Shikai (page does not exist)">Yuan Shikai</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E5%B0%8D%E8%A2%81%E4%B8%96%E5%87%B1%E7%9A%84%E8%A9%95%E5%83%B9" class="extiw" title="zh:對袁世凱的評價">zh</a>]</span></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historiography_of_Zhou_Enlai&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Historiography of Zhou Enlai (page does not exist)">Zhou Enlai</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E5%B0%8D%E5%91%A8%E6%81%A9%E4%BE%86%E7%9A%84%E8%A9%95%E5%83%B9" class="extiw" title="zh:對周恩來的評價">zh</a>]</span></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Historiography_of_Zhuge_Liang&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Historiography of Zhuge Liang (page does not exist)">Zhuge Liang</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E5%B0%8D%E8%AB%B8%E8%91%9B%E4%BA%AE%E7%9A%84%E8%A9%95%E5%83%B9" class="extiw" title="zh:對諸葛亮的評價">zh</a>]</span></li></ul> </div><table class="nowraplinks navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th id="Historicalrankings" scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%"><a href="/wiki/Historical_rankings_of_heads_of_government" title="Historical rankings of heads of government">Historical<br />rankings</a></th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-even" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Historical_rankings_of_prime_ministers_of_Australia" title="Historical rankings of prime ministers of Australia">Australia</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_rankings_of_prime_ministers_of_Canada" title="Historical rankings of prime ministers of Canada">Canada</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_rankings_of_chancellors_of_Germany" title="Historical rankings of chancellors of Germany">Modern Germany</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_rankings_of_prime_ministers_of_the_Netherlands" title="Historical rankings of prime ministers of the Netherlands">Netherlands</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_rankings_of_prime_ministers_of_the_United_Kingdom" title="Historical rankings of prime ministers of the United Kingdom">United Kingdom</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_rankings_of_presidents_of_the_United_States" title="Historical rankings of presidents of the United States">United States</a></li></ul> </div></td></tr></tbody></table><div> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">Others</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Cultural_impact_of_the_Beatles" title="Cultural impact of the Beatles">The Beatles</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Darwin_Industry" title="Darwin Industry">Charles Darwin</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Influence_and_reception_of_Friedrich_Nietzsche" title="Influence and reception of Friedrich Nietzsche">Friedrich Nietzsche</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Lovecraft_studies" title="Lovecraft studies">H. P. Lovecraft</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Reception_history_of_Jane_Austen" title="Reception history of Jane Austen">Jane Austen</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Muhammed" class="mw-redirect" title="Muhammed">Muhammed</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Historicity_of_Muhammad" title="Historicity of Muhammad">Historicity</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Judaism%27s_view_of_Muhammad" class="mw-redirect" title="Judaism's view of Muhammad">Judaism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Medieval_Christian_views_on_Muhammad" title="Medieval Christian views on Muhammad">Medieval Christian</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_Jesus" title="Historical Jesus">Jesus</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Historicity_of_Jesus" title="Historicity of Jesus">Historicity</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Resurrection_of_Jesus" title="Resurrection of Jesus">Resurrection</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Religious_perspectives_on_Jesus" title="Religious perspectives on Jesus">Religious perspectives</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Jesus_in_Christianity" title="Jesus in Christianity">Christianity</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Judaism%27s_view_of_Jesus" class="mw-redirect" title="Judaism's view of Jesus">Judaism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Jesus_in_Islam" title="Jesus in Islam">Islam</a></li></ul></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Tolkien_research" title="Tolkien research">J. R. R. Tolkien</a> <ul><li><i><a href="/wiki/Literary_reception_of_The_Lord_of_the_Rings" title="Literary reception of The Lord of the Rings">The Lord of the Rings</a></i></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Cultural_impact_of_Madonna" title="Cultural impact of Madonna">Madonna</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Controversies_surrounding_Robert_Falcon_Scott" title="Controversies surrounding Robert Falcon Scott">Robert Falcon Scott</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Socratic_problem" title="Socratic problem">Socrates</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Influence_and_reception_of_S%C3%B8ren_Kierkegaard" title="Influence and reception of Søren Kierkegaard">Søren Kierkegaard</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Reputation_of_William_Shakespeare" title="Reputation of William Shakespeare">William Shakespeare</a></li></ul> </div></td></tr></tbody></table><div></div></td></tr></tbody></table><div></div></td></tr><tr><td colspan="2" class="navbox-list navbox-odd hlist" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"></div><table class="nowraplinks mw-collapsible mw-collapsed navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th scope="col" class="navbox-title" colspan="2"><div id="Other_topics" style="font-size:114%;margin:0 4em">Other topics</div></th></tr><tr><td colspan="2" class="navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Bears_in_antiquity" title="Bears in antiquity">Bears in antiquity</a></li> <li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Crisis_of_historiography&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Crisis of historiography (page does not exist)">Crisis of historiography</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crise_da_historiografia" class="extiw" title="pt:Crise da historiografia">pt</a>]</span></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_feudalism" class="mw-redirect" title="Historiography of feudalism">Feudalism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Library_of_Alexandria" title="Library of Alexandria">Library of Alexandria</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Nationalism_in_the_Middle_Ages" title="Nationalism in the Middle Ages">Nationalism in the Middle Ages</a></li> <li><span class="wraplinks"><a href="/wiki/Professionalization_and_institutionalization_of_history" title="Professionalization and institutionalization of history">Professionalization and institutionalization of history</a></span></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_the_salon" title="Historiography of the salon">Salons</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Analysis_of_Western_European_colonialism_and_colonization" class="mw-redirect" title="Analysis of Western European colonialism and colonization">Western European colonialism and colonization</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Desacralization_of_knowledge" title="Desacralization of knowledge">Desacralization of knowledge</a></li></ul> </div><table class="nowraplinks navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%">Economics</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-even" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Industrial_Revolution" title="Industrial Revolution">Industrial Revolution</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Causes_of_the_Great_Recession" title="Causes of the Great Recession">Great Recession</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Causes_of_the_Great_Depression" title="Causes of the Great Depression">Great Depression</a></li> <li>School of Thoughts <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Historical_school_of_economics" title="Historical school of economics">Historical school of economics</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/English_historical_school_of_economics" title="English historical school of economics">English historical school of economics</a></li></ul></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%"><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_religion" title="Historiography of religion">Religion</a></th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Avestan_geography" title="Avestan geography">Avestan geography</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_early_Christianity" title="Historiography of early Christianity">Early Christianity</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Historical_background_of_the_New_Testament" title="Historical background of the New Testament">Background</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_reliability_of_the_Gospels" title="Historical reliability of the Gospels">Historical reliability of the Gospels</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Primacy_of_Peter" title="Primacy of Peter">Primacy of Peter</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Papal_supremacy#Opposition" title="Papal supremacy">Opposition to Papal supremacy</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Proto-orthodox_Christianity" title="Proto-orthodox Christianity">Proto-orthodox Christianity</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_early_Islam" title="Historiography of early Islam">Early Islam</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Criticism_of_the_Quran" title="Criticism of the Quran">Criticism of the Quran</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Succession_to_Muhammad" title="Succession to Muhammad">Succession to Muhammad</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Islamic_golden_age" class="mw-redirect" title="Islamic golden age">Islamic golden age</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Kharijites#Legacy" title="Kharijites">Kharijites</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Ecclesiastical_history_of_the_Catholic_Church" title="Ecclesiastical history of the Catholic Church">Ecclesiastical history of the Catholic Church</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Second_Vatican_Council#Controversies" title="Second Vatican Council">Second Vatican Council</a> <ul><li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Hermeneutics_of_Vatican_Council_II&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Hermeneutics of Vatican Council II (page does not exist)">Hermeneutics of Vatican Council II</a><span class="noprint" style="font-size:85%; font-style: normal;"> [<a href="https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ermeneutica_del_Concilio_Vaticano_II" class="extiw" title="it:Ermeneutica del Concilio Vaticano II">it</a>]</span></li></ul></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Hesychast_controversy" title="Hesychast controversy">Hesychast controversy</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Reformation#Conclusion_and_legacy" title="Reformation">Protestant Reformation</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Proto-Protestantism" title="Proto-Protestantism">Proto-Protestantism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Criticism_of_Protestantism" title="Criticism of Protestantism">Criticism of Protestantism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Protestant_work_ethic" title="Protestant work ethic">Protestant work ethic</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Jesuits#Controversies" title="Jesuits">Jesuit historiography</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Modern_Jewish_historiography" title="Modern Jewish historiography">Modern Jewish history</a> <ul><li><i><a href="/wiki/Wissenschaft_des_Judentums" title="Wissenschaft des Judentums">Wissenschaft des Judentums</a></i></li></ul></li> <li>Schools of thought <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Biblical_criticism" title="Biblical criticism">Biblical criticism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Catholic_theology" title="Catholic theology">Catholic theology</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Panbabylonism" title="Panbabylonism">Panbabylonism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Urreligion" title="Urreligion">Urreligion</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Traditionalist_School_(perennialism)" class="mw-redirect" title="Traditionalist School (perennialism)">Perennial</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/History_of_religions_school" title="History of religions school">Religionsgeschichtliche Schule</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Roman_School_(history_of_religion)" title="Roman School (history of religion)">Roman</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Revisionist_school_of_Islamic_studies" title="Revisionist school of Islamic studies">Revisionist school of Islamic studies</a></li></ul></li></ul> </div></td></tr><tr><th scope="row" class="navbox-group" style="width:1%"><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_science" title="Historiography of science">Science</a> /<br />Technology</th><td class="navbox-list-with-group navbox-list navbox-even" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Merton_thesis" title="Merton thesis">Merton thesis</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/The_Protestant_Ethic_and_the_Spirit_of_Capitalism" title="The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism">Protestant Ethic and Capitalism</a></li> <li><span class="wraplinks"><a href="/wiki/Heroic_theory_of_invention_and_scientific_development" title="Heroic theory of invention and scientific development">Heroic theory of invention and scientific development</a></span></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiography_of_gunpowder_and_gun_transmission" title="Historiography of gunpowder and gun transmission">Gunpowder and gun transmission</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Torsion_mangonel_myth" title="Torsion mangonel myth">Torsion mangonel myth</a></li></ul> </div></td></tr></tbody></table><div> </div></td></tr></tbody></table><div></div></td></tr><tr><td colspan="2" class="navbox-list navbox-odd hlist" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"></div><table class="nowraplinks mw-collapsible mw-collapsed navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th scope="col" class="navbox-title" colspan="2"><div id="Organizations,_publications" style="font-size:114%;margin:0 4em">Organizations, publications</div></th></tr><tr><td colspan="2" class="navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/List_of_heritage_registers" title="List of heritage registers">Heritage registers</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_society" title="Historical society">Historical society</a> (<a href="/wiki/List_of_historical_societies" title="List of historical societies">list</a>)</li> <li><a href="https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/History_institutes" class="extiw" title="c:History institutes">History institutes</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/List_of_history_journals" title="List of history journals">History journals</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Template:History_journals" title="Template:History journals">template</a></li></ul></li></ul> </div></td></tr></tbody></table><div></div></td></tr><tr><td colspan="2" class="navbox-list navbox-odd hlist" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"></div><table class="nowraplinks mw-collapsible mw-collapsed navbox-subgroup" style="border-spacing:0"><tbody><tr><th scope="col" class="navbox-title" colspan="2"><div id="Related" style="font-size:114%;margin:0 4em">Related</div></th></tr><tr><td colspan="2" class="navbox-list navbox-odd" style="width:100%;padding:0"><div style="padding:0 0.25em"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Commemorative_plaque" title="Commemorative plaque">Commemorative plaque</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Documentary_film" title="Documentary film">Documentary film</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Hagiography" title="Hagiography">Hagiography</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_fiction" title="Historical fiction">Historical fiction</a> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Historical_realism" class="mw-redirect" title="Historical realism">Historical realism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historiographic_metafiction" title="Historiographic metafiction">Historiographic metafiction</a></li></ul></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Historical_geographic_information_system" title="Historical geographic information system">Historical geographic information system</a></li></ul> </div></td></tr></tbody></table><div></div></td></tr><tr><td class="navbox-abovebelow" colspan="2"><div><div class="hlist"> <ul><li><span class="noviewer" typeof="mw:File"><span title="Category"><img alt="" src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/9/96/Symbol_category_class.svg/16px-Symbol_category_class.svg.png" decoding="async" 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