Jump to content
Harvard Law School Library
HLS
Nuremberg Trials Project
  • Trials
    • People
    • Trials
  • Documents
  • About the Project
    • Intro
    • Funding
    • Guide

Search the archive

Advanced Search
← Back to search results
Search Help

Extract from a report on Germany's crimes against Norway, summarizing the economic damage, houses destroyed, and 1000 civilians killed in 1940

Image View

Authors

Norwegian War Crimes Commission

Date: Date Unknown

Literal Title: Preliminary Report on Germany's Crimes against Norway.

Defendant: Hans Fritzsche

Total Pages: 1

Language of Text: English

Source of Text: Nazi conspiracy and aggression (Office of United States Chief of Counsel for Prosecution of Axis Criminality. Washington, D.C. : U.S. Government Printing Office, 1946.)

Evidence Code: PS-1800

Citation: IMT (page 12588)

HLSL Item No.: 453805

Notes:The document is erroneously identified as USSR 78, an error for French exhibit 72. The date of the report is not stated.

Trial Issues

Education, propaganda, and youth programs (IMT, NMT 11) Wars of aggression

Document Summary

Staff Evidence Analyses

PS-1800: Preliminary report by the Royal Norweigan Govern-ment about GermanY's Crimes against Norway

PRELIMINARY REPORT ON GERMANY'S CRIMES AGAINST NORWAY
[Prepared by the Royal Norwegian Government.]
[Page 17]
Other Violations.
In different places in Norway the Germans appeared in Norwegian uniforms during battles. This was the case in the district of Bergen according to a Communique of the 14th of April, 1940, during the struggles in Valdres and in Narvik. Reports have been received that at one place the Germans even put on women's clothes, in order to reach a favourable position.
Where the Germans passed, the civilians found their homes in an indescribable condition after the battle, even if the Germans had not set fire to the houses. The so-called German "informal requisitions" which actually meant plundering and destruction, were later compensated for to the extent of about 9 million kroner in all, partly by Norwegian authorities and partly by German authorities, that is, by money drawn out of the Bank of Norway [Norges Bank] by the Germans.
On 25th April, 1940, Ulvik in Hardanger was reduced to ruins, as a reprisal measure, as the Germans claimed that civilians there had fired on German troops. Damage was done to more than 400 buildings and chattels amounting to a total of 2.3 million kroner. [Page 26]
B. CRIMES AGAINST NORWEGIAN PROPERTY
a. Wanton ravaging and destruction.
4. As a result of the advance of the Russian troops and the retreat of the German Army in Finnmark, October-November 1944, the Germans practised the "scorched earth" policy for the first time in Norway. Orders were issued that the civilian population was to evacuate and that all houses, transport and stores were to be destroyed. As a result of this about 30,000 houses were dam-I800-PS
aged, apart from 12,000 items of damage to chattels, amounting to a total of about 176 million kroner (Appendices 31 and 32). [Page 62]
Appendix 31.
TO THE POPULATION:
The evacuation of a part of North Norway has been rendered a military necessity as a result of the treachery of a Finnish Government clique.
This evacuation necessitates the removal of the civilian population, as the enemy has proved that, in those territories occupied by him, he ruthlessly and brutally forces the civilian population to give him active assistance in achieving his aims.
This means that no shelter or means of existence of any kind can be left to the Bolshevisk enemy in the fighting zone. All such installations as housing accommodation, transport facilities and food stocks must be destroyed or removed.
The population in these districts will therefore be deprived of the basis for their existence so that in order to be able to survive they must evacuate to those Norwegian territories which are still protected by the German Wehrmacht.
For this reason, the German occupation authorities have declared themselves prepared to support, by all means at their disposal, the civil evacuation which the Norwegian authorities are carrying out.
In the interests of the people themselves all means by which they can effect their own evacuation are to be used to the greatest possible extent.
It is above all essential for a successful evacuation that all fishing smacks and other craft which are available in this area shall be fully employed. Owners of craft who try to' evade evacuation must be prepared for severe counter-measures such as the shooting and sinking of craft and crew.
He who does not comply with these unequivocal instructions exposes himself and his family to possible death in the arctic winter without house or food.
(signed) Terboven.
Reichskommissar for the Occupied Norwegian Territories.
(signed) Rendulic.
Colonel-General Commander-in-Chief 20th Army. Proclamation by Terboven and General Rendulic on the evacuation
of Finnmark.
376

Harvard Law School Library Nuremberg Trials Project
The Nuremberg Trials Project is an open-access initiative to create and present digitized images or full-text versions of the Library's Nuremberg documents, descriptions of each document, and general information about the trials.
specialc@law.harvard.edu
Copyright 2020 © The President and Fellows of Harvard College. Last reviewed: March 2020.
  • About the Project
  • Trials
  • People
  • Documents
  • Advanced Search
  • Accessibility