The Nuremberg statute redefined Jews as non-human. Thus, Jews were immediately deprived of all the legal rights that they would otherwise have had as human beings or as German citizens (or citizens of other European nations). Jews became the legal equivalent of vermin, such as rats (to which they were compared by the Nazis). This was the necessary preparation for the Holocaust.
The Nuremberg laws (1935) stripped German Jews of their German citizenship, and prohibited marriage or sexual relations between Jews and other Germans. They also defined who is considered Jewish, based on ancestry.
The impact was that these laws legalized anti-Jewish persecutions, and enabled the Holocaust (mass killing of Jews) to start.
The Nuremberg laws (1935) stripped German Jews of their German citizenship, and prohibited marriage or sexual relations between Jews and other Germans. They also defined who is considered Jewish, based on ancestry.
The impact was that these laws legalized anti-Jewish persecutions, and enabled the Holocaust (mass killing of Jews) to start.
See also:
Jews were stripped of their citizenship and banned from marrying German citizens.
The Nuremberg laws determined whether a person was Jewish primarily based on the number of Jewish great-grandparents.
their citizenship was removed and they were banned from certain areas.
The right of citizenry was taken away from the Jews by the Nuremberg laws on citizenship and race.
The Nuremberg Laws of 1935 should not be confused with the postwar Nuremberg Tribunal. The Nuremberg Laws (1935) were anti-Semitic laws that took away civil rights and (in effect) citizenship from German Jews. Anyone who had three or four Jewish grandparents was classified as a full Jew, regardless of whether that individual recognized himself or herself as a Jew or belonged to the Jewish religious community. (Those with two Jewish grandparents were classified as "half Jews," and those with one Jewish grandparent were classed as "quarter Jews.") The Nuremberg Laws forbade sex and marriage between Jews and non-Jews. Later, the term "sex" was defined in detail. The laws were drawn up by Wilhelm Stuckart and Hans Globke. There is disagreement among historians as to whether the Nuremberg Laws were, in some sense, "spontaneous" (for example, a reaction to a recent anti-Jewish riot) or whether they had been planned long in advance.
Jews were stripped of their citizenship and banned from marrying German citizens.
Jews were stripped of their citizenship and banned from marrying German citizens.
Jews were stripped of their citizenship and banned from marrying German citizens.
The Nuremberg Laws were a series of sanctions against the Jewish people.
The Nuremberg laws determined whether a person was Jewish primarily based on the number of Jewish great-grandparents.
There was no 'Jewish resistance' to the Nuremberg Laws.
Not happy
They were called the Nuremberg Laws. They were so named because the laws came after the annual rally at the city of Nuremberg.
their citizenship was removed and they were banned from certain areas.
The Nuremberg Laws.
There were hundreds of such laws, starting with the Nuremberg Laws of 1935.
The right of citizenry was taken away from the Jews by the Nuremberg laws on citizenship and race.