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  1. 9 Μαρ 2015 · During World War Two, the German public only read about the ‘good news’ as nothing bad was allowed to be reported. ‘Der Angriff’ translated as ‘The Assault’ and it was a newspaper founded by Goebbels in 1927 and became effectively his property. Its subtitle was ‘For the Oppressed against the Oppressors’.

  2. When Adolf Hitler took power in 1933, the Nazis controlled less than three percent of Germany’s 4,700 papers. The elimination of the German multi-party political system brought about the demise of hundreds of newspapers produced by outlawed political parties.

  3. Das Reich (German: The Reich [1]) was a weekly newspaper founded by Joseph Goebbels, the propaganda minister of Nazi Germany, in May 1940. [2] It was published by Deutscher Verlag. German soldier reading "Das Reich", Russian Front, 1941.

  4. 8 Δεκ 2021 · German Historical Newspapers; Over 280,000 newspaper scans available online. Feldzeitungen aus dem 1. Weltkrieg - online; Newspapers for German soldiers at the front during WWI. Digitized by Universitätsbibliothek Heidelberg. (1914-1918; German-language facsimiles) Rhön- und Saalpost

  5. The Nazis wanted Germans to support the Nazi dictatorship and believe in Nazi ideas. To accomplish this goal, they tried to control forms of communication through censorship and propaganda. This included control of newspapers, magazines, books, art, theater, music, movies, and radio.

  6. Völkischer Beobachter, (German: “People’s Observer”), daily newspaper published by the Nazi Party in Germany from the 1920s until the fall of the Third Reich in 1945. The paper was originally founded in 1887 as a four-page Munich weekly, the Münchner Beobachter. It had become a daily anti-Semitic.

  7. 14 Οκτ 2019 · Der Stuermer ("The Attacker") was the Nazi's antisemitic, weekly newspaper that was founded and created by Julius Streicher and was published from April 20, 1923, until February 1, 1945.

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