Why Was Nazi Germany Called the Third Reich?
In 1923 German cultural critic Arthur Moeller van den Bruck published Das Dritte Reich (1923; “The Third Empire,” or “Reich”). Written at a time when the Weimar Republic was struggling to contain revolutionary forces from both the right and left, Moeller’s treatise espoused a conservative doctrine that called for the elevation of German intellectualism and nationalism. Both Marxism and Western-style democracy were regarded as impediments to Germany’s rightful ascent to supremacy in Europe, and Moeller proposed that the realization of the Third, or final, Empire would see the harmonious fusion of Germany’s socialist and conservative movements. Positioning his theoretical Reich as the third in a series may have been an attempt to evoke the Hegelian concept of synthesis or an invocation of Joachim of Fiore’s Trinitarian philosophy
While Hitler did not explicitly mention the Third Reich in his political manifesto Mein Kampf, early Nazi leader Otto Strasser claimed that Hitler was aware of Moeller’s work, and the phrase Third Reich entered common use throughout Germany after Hitler became chancellor in 1933. Although Moeller had coined the name of one of the most feared and reviled regimes in human history, he did not live to see its creation. He committed suicide in 1925. In the introduction to Das Dritte Reich, Moeller warned:
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Why Was Nazi Germany Called the Third Reich?
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September 15, 2018
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Reviewed by faster share
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September 15, 2018
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