When Were The Jews Forced To Register
Timeline of the Holocaust: 1933-1945
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1933
| January 30 | Adolf Hitler appointed Chancellor of Deutschland |
| March 22 | Dachau concentration army camp opens |
| April ane | Boycott of Jewish shops and businesses |
| Apr 7 | Laws for Reestablishment of the Ceremonious Service barred Jews from belongings civil service, university, and land positions |
| April 26 | Gestapo established |
| May 10 | Public called-for of books written by Jews, political dissidents, and others not approved by the land |
| July xiv | Police force stripping E European Jewish immigrants of German citizenship |
1934
| August 2 | Hitler proclaims himself Führer und Reichskanzler (Leader and Reich Chancellor). Military machine must now swear allegiance to him |
1935
| May 31 | Jews barred from serving in the German armed services |
| September 15 | "Nuremberg Laws": anti-Jewish racial laws enacted; Jews no longer considered German citizens; Jews could not marry Aryans; nor could they fly the German flag |
| November 15 | Germany defines a "Jew": anyone with three Jewish grandparents; someone with two Jewish grandparents who identifies every bit a Jew |
1936
| March 3 | Jewish doctors barred from practicing medicine in German institutions |
| March 7 | Germans march into the Rhineland, previously demilitarized by the Versailles Treaty |
| June 17 | Himmler appointed the Chief of German Police |
| July | Sachsenhausen concentration military camp opens |
| October 25 | Hitler and Mussolini form Rome-Berlin Centrality |
1937
| July fifteen | Buchenwald concentration army camp opens |
1938
| March thirteen | Anschluss (incorporation of Austria): all antisemitic decrees immediately applied in Austria |
| April 26 | Mandatory registration of all belongings held by Jews within the Reich |
| July vi | Evian Conference held in Evian, French republic on the problem of Jewish refugees |
| August ane | Adolf Eichmann establishes the Office of Jewish Emigration in Vienna to increase the pace of forced emigration |
| Baronial 3 | Italy enacts sweeping antisemitic laws |
| September xxx | Munich Conference: Great Great britain and French republic agree to German occupation of the Sudetenland, previously western Czechoslovakia |
| October 5 | Post-obit request by Swiss regime, Germans marker all Jewish passports with a large letter "J" to restrict Jews from immigrating to Switzerland |
| October 28 | 17,000 Shine Jews living in Germany expelled; Poles refused to acknowledge them; 8,000 are stranded in the frontier village of Zbaszyn |
| November seven | Assassination in Paris of German language diplomat Ernst vom Rath by Herschel Grynszpan |
| November ix-10 | Kristallnacht (Dark of Cleaved Glass): anti-Jewish pogrom in Germany, Austria, and the Sudetenland; 200 synagogues destroyed; seven,500 Jewish shops looted; 30,000 male Jews sent to concentration camps (Dachau, Buchenwald, Sachsenhausen) |
| November 12 | Decree forcing all Jews to transfer retail businesses to Aryan hands |
| November xv | All Jewish pupils expelled from German schools |
| December 12 | One billion Marks fine levied confronting German Jews for the devastation of property during Kristallnacht |
1939
| January 30 | Hitler in Reichstag speech: "if state of war erupts information technology will hateful the Vernichtung (extermination) of European Jews" |
| March 15 | Germans occupy Czechoslovakia |
| August 23 | Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact signed: non-aggression pact between Soviet Spousal relationship and Germany |
| September one | Beginning of Globe War Two: Germany invades Poland |
| September 21 | Heydrich issues directives to establish ghettos in German-occupied Poland |
| October 12 | Germany begins deportation of Austrian and Czech Jews to Poland |
| October 28 | First Polish ghetto established in Piotrków |
| November 23 | Jews in German language-occupied Poland forced to wearable an arm band or yellow star |
1940
| April 9 | Germans occupy Kingdom of denmark and southern Norway |
| May 7 | Lodz Ghetto (Litzmannstadt) sealed: 165,000 people in 1.6 square miles |
| May 10 | Federal republic of germany invades the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, and France |
| May 20 | Concentration camp established at Auschwitz |
| June 22 | France surrenders |
| August viii | Battle of Britain begins |
| September 27 | Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis |
| November 16 | Warsaw Ghetto sealed: ultimately contained 500,000 people |
1941
| January 21-26 | Anti-Jewish riots in Romania, led by the Atomic number 26 Baby-sit (Romanian fascist system); hundreds of Jews butchered |
| Feb 1 | German authorities begin rounding upwards Polish Jews for transfer to Warsaw Ghetto |
| March | Adolf Eichmann appointed head of the department for Jewish affairs of the Reich Security Main Office (Gestapo), Section IV B 4. |
| April 6 | Germany attacks Yugoslavia and Hellenic republic; occupation follows |
| June 22 | Germany invades the Soviet Union |
| July 31 | Heydrich appointed by Göring to implement the "Final Solution" |
| September one | German Jews required to wear yellow star of David with the discussion "Jude" |
| September 28-29 | 34,000 Jews massacred at Babi Yar outside Kiev |
| October | Establishment of Auschwitz Ii (Birkenau) for the extermination of Jews; Gypsies, Poles, Russians, and others were also murdered at the camp |
| December 7 | Japanese assault Pearl Harbor |
| Dec 8 | Chelmno (Kulmhof) extermination camp begins operations: 340,000 Jews, twenty,000 Poles and Czechs murdered by April 1943 |
| December 11 | Us declares war on Japan and Germany |
1942
| January 20 | Wannsee Conference in Berlin: Heydrich outlines plan to murder Europe's Jews |
| March 17 | Extermination begins in Belzec; by finish of 1942 600,000 Jews murdered |
| May | Extermination by gas begins in Sobibor killing eye; by October 1943, 250,000 Jews murdered |
| June | Jewish partisan units established in the forests of Byelorussia and the Baltic States |
| July 22 | Germans establish Treblinka concentration camp |
| Summer | Displacement of Jews to killing centers from Kingdom of belgium, Republic of croatia, France, the Netherlands, and Poland; armed resistance by Jews in ghettos of Kletzk, Kremenets, Lakhva, Mir, Tuchin, and Weisweiz |
| Winter | Displacement of Jews from Germany, Greece and Norway to killing centers; Jewish partisan motility organized in forests near Lublin |
1943
| January | German language sixth Army surrenders at Stalingrad (Volgograd) |
| March | Liquidation of Craców ghetto |
| April nineteen | Warsaw Ghetto defection begins as Germans attempt to liquidate seventy,000 inhabitants; Jewish underground fights Nazis until early on June |
| May | Liquidation of the Warsaw Ghetto. On May 16, 1943, SS and Police Principal Jurgen Stroop proclaimed, "180 Jews, bandits, and subhumans were destroyed. The Jewish quarter of Warsaw is no more." |
| June | Himmler orders the liquidation of all ghettos in Poland and the Soviet Marriage |
| Summertime | Armed resistance by Jews in Bedzin, Bialystok, Czestochowa, Lvov, and Tarnów ghettos |
| Autumn | Liquidation of large ghettos in Minsk, Vilna (Vilnius), and Riga |
| October xiv | Armed revolt in Sobibor extermination campsite |
| October-Nov | Rescue of the Danish Jewry |
1944
| March 19 | Germany occupies Hungary |
| May xv | Nazis begin deporting Hungarian Jews; past June 27, 380,000 sent to Auschwitz |
| June 6 | D-Day: Allied invasion at Normandy |
| Bound/Summertime | Red Army repels Nazi forces |
| July 20 | Group of German language officers attempt to assassinate Hitler |
| July 24 | Russians liberate Majdanek killing center |
| October 7 | Defection past inmates at Auschwitz; one crematorium blown up |
| November | Last Jews deported from Theresienstadt (Terezin) to Auschwitz |
| November viii | Start of death march of approximately 40,000 Jews from Budapest to Austria |
1945
| January 17 | Evacuation of Auschwitz; outset of death march |
| January 25 | Beginning of death march for inmates of Stutthof |
| April 6-10 | Death march of inmates of Buchenwald |
| April 30 | Hitler commits suicide |
| May viii | V-E Day: Deutschland surrenders; end of Third Reich |
| August half-dozen | Bombing of Hiroshima |
| August nine | Bombing of Nagasaki |
| August 15 | V-J Day: Victory over Japan proclaimed. |
| September 2 | Japan surrenders; end of World State of war Ii |
Source: https://www.museumoftolerance.com/education/teacher-resources/holocaust-resources/timeline-of-the-holocaust.html
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