Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany> ?p ?o }
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany abstract "At the outbreak of World War Two, the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) had some 1700 members in the German Reich, divided into three provinces: Eastern, Lower and Upper Germany. Nazi leaders had some admiration for the discipline of the Jesuit Order, but opposed its principles. Of the 152 Jesuits murdered by the Nazis across Europe, 27 died in captivity or its results, and 43 in the concentration camps. Hitler was anticlerical and had particular disdain for the Jesuits. The Jesuit Provincial, Augustin Rosch, ended the war on death row for his role in the July Plot to overthrow Hitler. The Catholic Church faced persecution in Nazi Germany and persecution was particularly severe in Poland. The Superior General of the Jesuits at the outbreak of War was Wlodzimierz Ledochowski, a Pole. Vatican Radio, which spoke out against Axis atrocities, was run by the Jesuit Filippo Soccorsi.Jesuits made up the largest contingent of clergy imprisoned in the Priest Barracks of Dachau Concentration Camp, where some 30 Jesuits died. Several Jesuits were prominent in the small German Resistance, including the influential martyr Alfred Delp of the Kreisau Circle. The German Jesuit Robert Leiber acted as intermediary between Pius XII and the German Resistance. Among the Jesuit victims of the Nazis, Germany's Rupert Mayer, has been beatified. Among twelve Jesuit \"Righteous Gentiles\" recognised by Yad Vashem is Belgium's Jean-Baptiste Janssens, who was appointed Superior General of the Jesuits after the War.".
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany thumbnail ARösch.jpg?width=300.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageID "48751969".
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageLength "32709".
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageOutDegree "108".
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageRevisionID "707085636".
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink 20_July_plot.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Adam_Kozłowiecki.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Adam_Sztark.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Adolf_Hitler.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Alan_Bullock.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Alfred_Delp.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Alfred_Jodl.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Alfred_Rosenberg.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Alphonse_Lambrette.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Anti-clericalism.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Augustin_Rösch.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Bernhard_Letterhaus.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Category:Catholic_resistance_to_Nazi_Germany.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Category:Nazi_persecution_of_the_Catholic_Church.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Category:Society_of_Jesus.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Catholic_Church_and_Nazi_Germany.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Catholic_resistance_to_Nazi_Germany.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Claus_von_Stauffenberg.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Clemens_August_Graf_von_Galen.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Dachau_concentration_camp.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Elisabeth_von_Thadden.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Emile_Gessler.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Emile_Planckaert.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink File:ARösch.jpg.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Filippo_Soccorsi.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Friedrich_Erxleben.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink German_resistance_to_Nazism.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Hans_Bernd_Gisevius.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Henri_Revol.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Henri_Van_Oostayen.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Henri_de_Lubac.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Ian_Kershaw.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Ioannes_Marangas.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Jacob_Raile.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Jakob_Kaiser.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Jakob_Notges.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Jean-Baptiste_De_Coster_(Jesuit).
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Jean-Baptiste_Janssens.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Jean_Fleury,_Jesuit.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Joachim_Fest.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Josef_Müller_(CSU_politician).
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Joseph_Goebbels.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Karl_Ludwig_Freiherr_von_und_zu_Guttenberg.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Kirchenkampf.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Kreisau_Circle.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Lothar_König.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Martin_Bormann.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Martin_Gilbert.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Massacre_in_the_Jesuit_monastery_on_Rakowiecka_Street_in_Warsaw_(1944).
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Michael_Phayer.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Molotov–Ribbentrop_Pact.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Natural_law.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Nazi_Party.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Nazi_euthanasia_and_the_Catholic_Church.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Nazi_persecution_of_the_Catholic_Church_in_Germany.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Nazi_persecution_of_the_Catholic_Church_in_Poland.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Nazism.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Nuremberg_trials.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Otto_Kiep.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Pierre-Marie_Gerlier.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Pierre_Chaillet.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Pius_XII_and_the_German_Resistance.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Polish_areas_annexed_by_Nazi_Germany.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Priest_Barracks_of_Dachau_Concentration_Camp.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Raffaele_de_Chantuz_Cube.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Richard_J._Evans.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Robert_Leiber.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Rupert_Mayer.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Sachsenhausen_concentration_camp.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Society_of_Jesus.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Solf_Circle.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Superior_General_of_the_Society_of_Jesus.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink The_Holocaust.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Vatican_Radio.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink William_L._Shirer.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Wlodimir_Ledóchowski.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink Yad_Vashem.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink File:Alfred_Delp_Mannheim.jpg.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink File:Kosibowicz.jpg.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink File:RupertMayer.jpg.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLink File:Wlodimir_Ledochowski.JPG.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageWikiLinkText "Jesuits and Nazi Germany".
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Expand_section.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Main.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Portal.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany subject Category:Catholic_resistance_to_Nazi_Germany.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany subject Category:Nazi_persecution_of_the_Catholic_Church.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany subject Category:Society_of_Jesus.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany comment "At the outbreak of World War Two, the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) had some 1700 members in the German Reich, divided into three provinces: Eastern, Lower and Upper Germany. Nazi leaders had some admiration for the discipline of the Jesuit Order, but opposed its principles. Of the 152 Jesuits murdered by the Nazis across Europe, 27 died in captivity or its results, and 43 in the concentration camps. Hitler was anticlerical and had particular disdain for the Jesuits.".
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany label "Jesuits and Nazi Germany".
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany sameAs Q22115497.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany sameAs Q22115497.
- Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany wasDerivedFrom Jesuits_and_Nazi_Germany?oldid=707085636.