Hitler's Home Front
Nazi Rule in Würtemberg

Jill Stephenson

What was life like for ordinary Germans under Hitler? Hitler's Home Front paints a picture of life in Württemberg, a region in south-west Germany, during the rise to power and rule of the Nazis. It concentrates in particular on life in the countryside. Many Württembergers, while not actively opposing Hitler, carried on their normal lives before 1939, with their traditional loyalties, to region, village, church and family, balancing the claims of Nazism. The Nazis did not kill its own citizens (other than the Jews) in the way that Stalinist Russia did, and there were limits to the numbers and power of the Gestapo and to the reach of the Nazi state. Yet the region could not escape the catastrophic effect of the war, as conscription, labour shortages, migrant labour, bombing, hunger and defeat overwhelmed the lives of everyone.


420 pages 16 illus. 1 December 2005
1 85285 422 1     £ 25