
Contents
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The Glory that was Rome: The Sovereignty of a Germanic Aristocracy The Glory that was Rome: The Sovereignty of a Germanic Aristocracy
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The Wehrmacht in the Footsteps of the Roman Legions The Wehrmacht in the Footsteps of the Roman Legions
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From Roman Roads to Reichsautobahnen: Building an Imperial Infrastructure From Roman Roads to Reichsautobahnen: Building an Imperial Infrastructure
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Imperialism and Imperial Architecture: Public Architecture as Cultural monument and Symbol of Power Imperialism and Imperial Architecture: Public Architecture as Cultural monument and Symbol of Power
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Hybris: Megalomania in Stone Hybris: Megalomania in Stone
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Rome: Model and Challenge Rome: Model and Challenge
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Bigger Than the Colosseum Bigger Than the Colosseum
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Germania, Nova Roma: A Manifesto Set in Stone Germania, Nova Roma: A Manifesto Set in Stone
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Roman and Classical Mythology in the Decorative Arts Roman and Classical Mythology in the Decorative Arts
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Antique Gigantism and Hieratism, from Nuremberg to Paris: The Image of the New Germany Antique Gigantism and Hieratism, from Nuremberg to Paris: The Image of the New Germany
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The Figure of the Leader and Führerpersönlichkeit in Antiquity The Figure of the Leader and Führerpersönlichkeit in Antiquity
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Antiquity and the Cult of the Leader: Providence, the Past, and the Great Man Theory of History Antiquity and the Cult of the Leader: Providence, the Past, and the Great Man Theory of History
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An Austrian Autodidact’s Taste for the Antique An Austrian Autodidact’s Taste for the Antique
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Building an Empire through Colonization: Nordic Landshungrige Bauern and the Search for Lebensraum in Antiquity Building an Empire through Colonization: Nordic Landshungrige Bauern and the Search for Lebensraum in Antiquity
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Ver Sacrum, Helotization, and Wehrbauerntum: Antiquity and the East in the Nazi Colonial Imaginary Ver Sacrum, Helotization, and Wehrbauerntum: Antiquity and the East in the Nazi Colonial Imaginary
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Peasant-Soldiers and Slaves: Spartan Colonization as Model Peasant-Soldiers and Slaves: Spartan Colonization as Model
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Conclusion Conclusion
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6 From Empire to Reich: The Lessons of Roman Rule and Classical Colonialism
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Published:September 2016
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Abstract
This chapter examines Rome as a source of political, military, and even architectural inspiration for Nazism. A source of infinite lessons and precise instructions, the history of Rome showed not only how to build empires but also the tangible symbols of that empire. National Socialism would thus have to pursue its imperial pretensions by imitating and eclipsing the shadows of the ancients in the granite of Nuremberg, where once the living, breathing mass of the Volksgemeinschaft met and rallied in congress, now only a desolate wasteland haunted by the devastation of the Nazi Walpurgisnacht. This chapter describes an organic link between the monuments of modern Germany, the distant history of the race, and its imperial future.
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