Nürnberg Now & Then - Episode 8: Zeppelinfield | Entrance
A now & then of the Zeppelinfield (entrance of public and Nazi officials) in Nürnberg during the Reichsparteitage (1927-1938)
If video blocked:
MUSIC
George Frederic Handel - Sarabande (intro)
Robyn Miller - Gehn Speaks
Johan Johansson - Trough Falling Snow
OTHER EPISODES
Episode 1: Reichsparteitag -
Episode 2: Ehrenhalle -
Episode 3: Luitpoldarena -
Episode 4: Luitpoldhalle -
Episode 5: Kongresshalle -
Episode 6: Kaserne -
Episode 7: Zeppelinfield | The Area -
Episode 8: Zeppelinfield | Entrance -
Episode 9: Zeppelinfield | Rallies -
Episode 10: Zeppelinfield | Night -
Episode 11: Zeppelinfield | Facilities -
Episode 12: Zeppelinfield | Allies -
Episode 13: Air raids -
Episode 14: Trials | Courthouse -
Episode 15: Trials | Judgement -
FULL MOVIE VERSION
All episodes -
ALL OUR NOW & THEN SERIES
Berlin -
Graz -
München -
Nürnberg -
Obersalzberg -
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PARTY DAY AT NUREMBERG - SOUND
Elevated shot of Nazi's marching. Shot of Hitler taking salute whilst Goering stands by smiling - wearing brown shirt uniform. Close shot of Hitler saluting. Close shots of troops marching past. CU German Eagle. Troops with banners. Elevated panning shot of troops with Hitler taking salute. Squadrons of fighters fly over troops. Flypast. Tanks parade past camera. Elevated shot of troops lined up. Shots of manoeuvres - tanks - planes - guns etc, Flypast of planes of all types. Hitler looks up thru binoculars. Elevated shot of marchpast - Hitler takes salute. Troops goosestepping past with banners. Rudolf Hess is seen. SOUND. COMMENTATOR.
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German Swastika emblem is demolished at Zeppelinfeld in Nurnberg,Germany. HD Stock Footage
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German Swastika emblem is demolished at Zeppelinfeld in Nurnberg,Germany.
A huge German Swastika emblem carved in stone at the top of the Tribune at Zeppelinfeld (Zeppelin Field) in Nurnberg,Germany. American engineers place demolition charges on the Swastika emblem. A big explosion blows the emblem into pieces. Location: Nuremberg Germany. Date: April 25, 1945.
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Then & Now; Nazi Structures in Nuremberg, Germany
A look at the iconic structures at the Nazi Party Rally Grounds in Nuremberg, Germany and what they look like today.
SHOCK!! Massive NAZI Nuremberg Grandstand! As it is today!!
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Zeppelinfeld - Nürnberg Germany
The site of the Nuremberg Rallies of the 1930s. Pete and I visit the former Nazi Party Rally Grounds 46 years to the day after of the Fall of Nürnberg on April 22, 1945, Recorded on April 22, 1991.
Germany 1934 ▶ Nuremberg Party Rally Adolf Hitler - Reichsparteitag Nürnberg
Germany 1934 - Nuremberg Party Rally Adolf Hitler • Reichsparteitag Nürnberg
(5.-10. September 1934)
original unpublished footage World War II & Germany 1927-1945
The Nuremberg Rally (officially About this sound Reichsparteitag , meaning National Party Convention) was the annual rally of the Nazi Party in Germany, held from 1923 to 1938. These events were held at the Nazi party rally grounds in Nuremberg from 1933 to 1938 and are usually referred to in English as the Nuremberg Rallies.
The first Nazi Party rallies took place in 1923 in Munich and in 1926 in Weimar. From 1927 on, they took place exclusively in Nuremberg. The Party selected Nuremberg for pragmatic reasons: it was in the center of the German Reich and the local Luitpoldhain was well suited as a venue. In addition, the Nazis could rely on the well-organized local branch of the party in Franconia, then led by Gauleiter Julius Streicher.
Many films were made to commemorate them, the most famous of which is Leni Riefenstahl's Triumph of the Will and Der Sieg des Glaubens.
Each rally was given a programmatic title, which related to recent national events:
1923 – The First Party Congress took place in Munich on January 27, 1923.
1923 – The German day rally was held in Nuremberg on September 1, 1923.
1926 – The 2nd Party Congress (Refounding Congress) was held in Weimar on July 4, 1926.
1927 – The 3rd Party Congress (Day of Awakening) was held on August 20, 1927. The propaganda film Eine Symphonie des Kampfwillens was made at this rally.
1929 – The 4th Party Congress, known as the Day of Composure, was held on August 2, 1929. The propaganda film Der Nürnberger Parteitag der NSDAP was made at this rally.
1933 – The 5th Party Congress was held in Nuremberg, August 30 – September 3, 1933. It was called the Rally of Victory (Reichsparteitag des Sieges). The term victory relates to the Nazi seizure of power and the victory over the Weimar Republic. The Leni Riefenstahl film Der Sieg des Glaubens was made at this rally. Hitler announced that from now on all Rallies would take place in Nuremberg.
1934 – The 6th Party Congress was held in Nuremberg, September 5–10, 1934, which was attended by about 700,000 Nazi Party supporters. Initially it did not have a theme. Later it was labeled the Rally of Unity and Strength (Reichsparteitag der Einheit und Stärke), Rally of Power (Reichsparteitag der Macht), or Rally of Will (Reichsparteitag des Willens). The Leni Riefenstahl film Triumph des Willens was made at this rally. This rally was particularly notable due to Albert Speer's Cathedral of light: 152 searchlights that cast vertical beams into the sky around the Zeppelin Field to symbolise the walls of a building
1935 – The 7th Party Congress was held in Nuremberg, September 10–16, 1935. It was called the Rally of Freedom (Reichsparteitag der Freiheit). Freedom referred to the reintroduction of compulsory military service and thus the German liberation from the Treaty of Versailles. Leni Riefenstahl made the film Tag der Freiheit: Unsere Wehrmacht at this rally, and the Nazis introduced the Nuremberg Laws.
1936 – The 8th Party Congress was known as the Rally of Honour (Reichsparteitag der Ehre, September 8–14). The remilitarization of the demilitarized Rhineland in March 1936 constituted the restoration of German honour in the eyes of many Germans. The film Festliches Nürnberg incorporated footage shot at this rally, as well as the rally of 1937.
1937 – The 9th Party Congress was called the Rally of Labour (Reichsparteitag der Arbeit, September 6–13). It celebrated the reduction of unemployment in Germany since the Nazi rise to power.
1938 – The 10th Party Congress was named the Rally of Greater Germany (Reichsparteitag Großdeutschland, September 5–12).[5] This was due to the annexation of Austria to Germany that had taken place earlier in the year.
1939 – The 11th Party Congress was given the name Rally of Peace (Reichsparteitag des Friedens). It was meant to reiterate the German desire for peace, both to the German population and to other countries. It was cancelled at short notice, as one day before the planned date, on September 1, Germany began its offensive against Poland (which along with the Soviet Union's invasion of Poland ignited World War II).
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Nuremberg - City of the Nazi Party Rally
Nuremberg held great significance during the Nazi Germany era. Because of the city's relevance to the Holy Roman Empire and its position in the centre of Germany, the Nazi Party chose the city to be the site of huge Nazi Party conventions -- the Nuremberg rallies. The rallies were held 1927, 1929 and annually 1933-1938 in Nuremberg. After Adolf Hitler's rise to power in 1933 the Nuremberg rallies became huge Nazi propaganda events, a centre of Nazi ideals. At the 1935 rally, Hitler specifically ordered the Reichstag to convene at Nuremberg to pass the anti-Semitic Nuremberg Laws which revoked German citizenship for all Jews. A number of premises were constructed solely for these assemblies, some of which were not finished. Today many examples of Nazi architecture can still be seen in the city.
I have been toying with the idea of doing this video for almost two years. After I had made my Welthauptstadt Germania video ( youtube.com/watch?v=dOXmrVR00RI ) in August 2011, it was the obvious, logical step to do a video about my hometown Nuremberg and the Nazi Party Rally. I thought I would do this after I had completed several other videos, I've started but alas time and leisure doing so, are always a problem. Nevertheless things became more concrete when I got the book Bauen in Nürnberg by Michael Diefenbacher for Christmas. It revealed the whole scale of the Nazi's construction plans for Nuremberg, especially the changes in and around the medieval downtown which was rather surprising for me.
I didn't go deeper into the organisation since this would have elongated my still very long video and it would have slowed down the pacing and therefore might have caused boredom. After all I still want to inform and entertain. And I wanted to complete this video before I lose my drive as I did with my other unfinished projects. I didn't include the transfer of the Imperial Regalia and Leni Riefenstahl's movies on purpose, the first one because it is simply a footnote, the second one because this subject would demand for an own video. But, since I didn't just want to list up buildings and their data, I also included a small history of the rallies, e.g. background, course of action, necessities and atrocities connected to it. The latter one was a personal necessity for me because I wanted to show that next to the bright veneer of the Third Reich, there is also the barbaric, inhumane reality of the war, forced labour and the extermination of humans considered to be subhuman. People far too often overlook the connection to this greater context.
Making this video was surprisingly quick. The script of 10 pages was written within two weeks - with interruptions of course. I have a life, too! Damned!
My work was simplified by dividing the text into several units of meaning for which I searched specific pictures which I built into a segment for this video, e.g. one segment solely about the course of action of the rallies (05:26 -- 07:42 ) with the next segment solely about the refurbishment of downtown Nuremberg added to the preceding one ( 07:42 -- 11:38 ). With this method, the video was completed within another two weeks - with interruptions of course.
The music was quickly chosen, too, since Wagner conducted by Hans Knappertsbusch worked pretty well for my Germania video.
And finally I want to thank German television for its dull, unimaginative and painful program which gave me the strength and time to execute this project.
I hope you enjoy the result
The Nazi Party Rally Grounds, Nuremberg: Grandstand and Zeppelin Field.
I have wanted to visit Nuremberg for many years and I wasn't disappointed. Although what happened here is clearly not something anyone would want to remember, the city has respectfully maintained the site and added a very worthwhile and informative Documentation Centre (similar ones exist in Munich, Berlin and Berchtesgaden).
In this video I take a long look at the grandstand and Zeppelin field. I was surprised to learn that the stand is still using for a touring car race every year because it isn't in very good condition.
For the first time in many trips to historical places I did feel a bit weird while standing on the spot Hitler stood (I had a similar feeling a few days later on the Eagles Nest).
With hindsight, I didn't dedicate enough time to the site which is truly enormous. The Rally Grounds are quite extensive and even with a vehicle difficult to see in one day. It didn't help that due to the apparently never ending building works (which seem to be a German thing), lots of roads were blocked and re-routed so getting around is quite difficult.
Nürnberg Now & Then - Episode 9: Zeppelinfield | Rallies
A now & then of the Zeppelinfield (Rallies) in Nürnberg during the Reichsparteitage (1927-1938)
If video blocked:
MUSIC
George Frederic Handel - Sarabande (intro)
Hans Zimmer - Ronin
Two Steps from Hell - Hypnotica
OTHER EPISODES
Episode 1: Reichsparteitag -
Episode 2: Ehrenhalle -
Episode 3: Luitpoldarena -
Episode 4: Luitpoldhalle -
Episode 5: Kongresshalle -
Episode 6: Kaserne -
Episode 7: Zeppelinfield | The Area -
Episode 8: Zeppelinfield | Entrance -
Episode 9: Zeppelinfield | Rallies -
Episode 10: Zeppelinfield | Night -
Episode 11: Zeppelinfield | Facilities -
Episode 12: Zeppelinfield | Allies -
Episode 13: Air raids -
Episode 14: Trials | Courthouse -
Episode 15: Trials | Judgement -
FULL MOVIE VERSION
All episodes -
ALL OUR NOW & THEN SERIES
Berlin -
Graz -
München -
Nürnberg -
Obersalzberg -
MORE WW2
Playlist -
SUBSCRIBE
Just click here -
OFFICIAL WEBSITES
Facebook -
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Nürnberg (Nuremberg), Germany - Zeppelinfeld, Dutzenreich, & Kongresshalle (Nazi Party Grounds)
This clip is from my visit to Nürnberg (Nuremberg), Germany, in June 2010. After arriving via S-Bahn at the Frankenstadion stop (refer my other videos), I first visited the Zeppelinfeld, site of the Nazi party rallies of the 1930s, and made famous by the propaganda movie Triumph Of The Will. The area was preparing for motor racing, so the field was partly obscured, but not so much that you couldn't get a view from Hitler's podium. The clip shows the main tribune both from the roadside below, and also from the tribune itself.
Following the tour of the Zeppelinfeld, I walked around the Dutzenreich, the large lake that dominates the area, and briefly walk up the Große Straße, which was designed by Albert Speer as a place to hold parades.
Finally, I walk around the immense Kongresshalle, the huge NSDAP congress centre that was never completed by the Nazis. This is the largest Nazi structure that is left standing today.
Merrell Barracks Nuremberg,Germany
A video about people that live or worked around Merrell Barracks Nuremberg,Germany
Night in Nuremberg.
(17 Sep 1936) Night in Nuremberg.
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Minecraft - Bringing Nürnberg Zeppelinfeld back [Creative Mode][PC]
This is the nuremberg zeppelin field back in 1930's. I tried to do it exactly how it was. I made this for the architecture value, please keep politics and all those things out of here. Hope you enjoy the work.
Nürnberg Now & Then - Episode 4: Luitpoldhalle
A now & then of the Luitpoldhalle in Nürnberg during the Reichsparteitage (1927-1938).
If video blocked:
MUSIC
George Frederic Handel - Sarabande (intro)
Stephan Zacharias - Hoffnung Am Ende Der Welt
OTHER EPISODES
Episode 1: Reichsparteitag -
Episode 2: Ehrenhalle -
Episode 3: Luitpoldarena -
Episode 4: Luitpoldhalle -
Episode 5: Kongresshalle -
Episode 6: Kaserne -
Episode 7: Zeppelinfield | The Area -
Episode 8: Zeppelinfield | Entrance -
Episode 9: Zeppelinfield | Rallies -
Episode 10: Zeppelinfield | Night -
Episode 11: Zeppelinfield | Facilities -
Episode 12: Zeppelinfield | Allies -
Episode 13: Air raids -
Episode 14: Trials | Courthouse -
Episode 15: Trials | Judgement -
FULL MOVIE VERSION
All episodes -
ALL OUR NOW & THEN SERIES
Berlin -
Graz -
München -
Nürnberg -
Obersalzberg -
MORE WW2
Playlist -
SUBSCRIBE
Just click here -
OFFICIAL WEBSITES
Facebook -
YouTube -
Zeppelin Field. Former Nazi Party Rally Grounds. Nuremberg 2014
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Aren't these Nazi Party Buildings in Nuremberg still scary? - A German Life #6
We visited some buildings built by the nazis in Nuremberg, Germany and the exhibition at the Dokumentationszentrum inside the congress hall.
Don't let anything like this happen again. If you want to read up on some of the history, here are some links.
Nazi party rally grounds in Nuremberg
Beer hall putsch (Hitlerputsch)
Reichstag fire (Reichstagsbrand)
Nazi book burnings (Bücherverbrennung)
Plus, you can search YouTube for videos of Triumph of the will or Sieg des Glaubens
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Also watch the video of the classic open air at the Luitpoldhain (which is also mentioned as a former nazi site in the video)
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Nürnberg, Germany: Nazi History Sites
More info about travel to Nürnberg: The city of Nürnberg, Germany, was a favorite of Adolf Hitler's. A short tram ride from the center is a collection of important Nazi sites, including Zeppelin Field, Nazi Congress Hall and Nazi Documentation Center.
At you'll find money-saving travel tips, small-group tours, guidebooks, TV shows, radio programs, podcasts, and more on this destination.
Places to see in ( Nuremberg - Germany ) Zeppelinfeld
Places to see in ( Nuremberg - Germany ) Zeppelinfeld
The Nazi party rally grounds covered about 11 square kilometres in the southeast of Nuremberg, Germany. Six Nazi party rallies were held there between 1933 and 1938. Very historic area to visit. This place however doesn't quite look like the photos since a few areas were torn down/demolished following the war. One can however stand at the spot where Hitler stood to give his speeches.
Although this area is free to visit I would recommend visiting the Dokumentationszentrum first to remind yourself of he context. The museum also contains lots of propaganda footage shot here. The intent and scale of this is quite shocking just as a physical manifestation of.
The site is named to commemorate Zeppelin landing his first massive airship nearby. Take time to visit this key area of the surrounding Nazi rally grounds and documents museum. The whole Rally Grounds are worth spending several hours walking around, but the Zepplinfeld's are about the most interesting part, giving really good understanding of the true size of what the Nazi's were looking to achieve in Nuremberg.
( Nuremberg - Germany ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Nuremberg . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Nuremberg - Germany
Join us for more :
Nazi Parade Ground and the Stink of German Urine
I've left England and have made my way to Germany, where I'm filming new TV shows for our upcoming season. And my first stop is a beautiful town with some sinister connections: Nürnberg.
Hitler had a warm place in his cold heart for Nürnberg. Within sight of the castle of the Holy Roman Emperor, who ruled the First Reich, Hitler held his massive rallies to pump up the Third Reich. It’s amazing how much actually survives of the place where he threw mammoth propaganda spectacles to build community.
As we filmed this, we wondered if the word community was too positive — but Nazism was community, in both the inclusive sense and in the exclusive sense. With a classic fascist stance, Hitler made it clear: Either you were with him, or you were against him. Today, the rust and the stink of urine at his former tribune is a reminder of what present-day Germans think of this place.
At you'll find money-saving travel tips, small-group tours, guidebooks, TV shows, radio programs, podcasts, and more on this destination.