Germany Timeline

Map of modern-day Germany
Modern-day Germany.

1918

Myth arises that Germany was stabbed in the back by a conspiracy of specifically Jews, socialists, and republican politicians.

9 November

The Weimar Republic is proclaimed. The new democratic government grants Jews full legal and political equality

1918–1923

Antisemtism is a feature of this period of political unrest

1920

The Nazi Party (NSDAP) is founded and publishes its 25-point program, which calls for the stripping of Jewish citizenship.

1922

Foreign Minister Walther Rathenau, a prominent Jewish industrialist and politician, is assassinated by right-wing extremists. 

1933

30 January 

Adolf Hitler is appointed Chancellor of Germany.

22 March

Dachau concentration camp opens.

1 April 

Boycott of Jewish shops and businesses.

7 April 

Jewish people are barred from holding civil service, university, and state positions.

14 July  

Naturalised Jewish immigrants stripped of their German citizenship.

1934

2 August

Hitler proclaims himself Führer and Reich Chancellor. Armed forces must now swear allegiance to him.

1935

May

Jewish people are barred from serving in the German armed forces.

September 

The Nuremberg Laws are declared

1936

7 March

Germany occupies the Rhineland demilitarised in the Treaty of Versailles.

August  

Four Year Plan Memorandum sets the German economy on a war footing.

1938

3 March 

Austria is incorporated into the Third Reich.

26 April 

Mandatory registration of all Jewish property over 5,000 Reichsmarks.

30 September

Munich Conference. Britain and France agree to German occupation of the Sudetenland.

5 October 

Germans mark all Jewish passports with a letter ‘J’ at the request of the Swiss authorities.

27 October

17,000 Polish Jews living in Germany are expelled.

9-10 November 

Kristallnacht a nation-wide anti-Jewish pogrom organised by the Nazis takes place throughout Germany, Austria and the Sudetenland region of Czechoslovakia.

12 November 

Jewish Germans are forced to transfer businesses to Aryan owners.

15 November

Jewish pupils are expelled from German schools.

1939

30 January

Hitler says ‘if war erupts it will mean the Vernichtung (extermination) of European Jews’.

15 March 

Germany occupies Czechoslovakia, which is dismembered.

April

Law Concerning Jewish Tenants removes housing protections for Jews. It allows their concentration in exclusively ‘Jewish houses.’

23 August

Nazi-Soviet Pact signed.

1 September

Germany invades Poland.

1940

10 May

Germany invades the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg and France.

October

Mass deportations began with the expulsion of over 6,500 Jews from Baden and Saarpfalz in southwestern Germany to the Gurs internment camp in Vichy, France.

1941

22 June

Germany invades the Soviet Union.

August

Massacres of Jews in territories occupied by German forces, The persecution of the Jews becomes genocidal.

1 September 

Reinhard Heydrich decreed that all Jews within the Reich, aged six and older, had to wear a yellow Star of David.

15-17 September

Hitler orders the deportation of German Jews to ghettos in the east prompting the mass murder of those Jews already living in the ghettos.

October

Jewish emigration from Germany banned.

November

Theresienstadt (Terezín) ghetto established. Many German Jews are deported here.

7 December 

Japan attacks Pearl Harbour.

11 December

Germany declares war on the USA.

1942

20 January 

Wannsee Conference.

1 March

Auschwitz II-Birkenau begins operation.

June

Mass transports begin moving German Jews directly to the Theresienstadt Ghetto.

July 

Direct transports from the German Reich to the Auschwitz-Birkenau and Sobibor extermination camps commence. By late 1944, more than 70,000 Jews from the Greater German Reich are deported directly to Auschwitz

November 

Allied victory in North Africa.

1943

February

Germany surrenders at Stalingrad.

February–March

The Gestapo rounds up and deports the final remaining Jewish laborers working in German armaments factories, primarily targeting Berlin.

1 June

Berlin is officially declared Judenrein, free of Jews.

1944

Summer 

The massive Soviet offensive prompts SS chief Heinrich Himmler to order prisoners in all concentration camps and sub-camps be forcibly evacuated toward the interior of the Reich.

Winter  

SS authorities increasingly evacuate concentration camp prisoners from both east and west on foot.

1945

27 January

Auschwitz is liberated by the Red Army.

British Army liberates Bergen-Belsen.

29 April  

Dachau is liberated by the American Army.

8 May

Germany surrenders. End of the Third Reich. Liberation of Theresienstadt.

May onwards

Germany becomes a hub for Jewish survivors.

October 

The second group of the Boys leaves Germany.

1952

The majority of Displaced Persons camps in Germany are closed.

Photograph of book burning in Opernplatz in Berlin during the Nazi era.
Photograph of the Gas Chamber at the Buchenwald Memorial Museum, Weimar, Germany.
Photograph of a Memorial at the former Kaufering concentration camp in Bavaria, Germany.
Photograph of Stolpersteine for the Rowelski Family in Berlin.
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