Ostmark (Austria)

Ostmark (Austria)

Ostmark (English: "Eastern March") was the name used by Nazi propaganda to replace that of the formerly independent Austria after the Anschluss annexation of that country by Nazi Germany in 1938.

The Nazi government under Adolf Hitler had the incorporated territory renamed: the name Austria (Österreich in German, meaning "Eastern Realm") was forbidden and at first replaced by "Ostmark", referring to the 10th century Marcha orientalis. The change of name was meant to blank out the millennium of separate Austrian history and to hark back to the time when the lands simply formed a march of the Bavarian stem duchy.

Administrative divisions of Nazi Germany in 1941, Reichsgaue in green

According to the Ostmarkgesetz with effect from 1 May 1939 the former States of Austria were reorganized into seven Reichsgaue, each under the rule of a government official holding the dual offices of Reichsstatthalter (governor) and Gauleiter (Nazi Party leader):[1]

A Reichsgau was a new, simple administrative sub-division institution which replaced the federal states in the otherwise completely centralized Third Reich.[2] From 1942, as the term "Ostmark" was still too reminiscent of the old, independent state of Austria, the chosen official name for the seven entities was Donau- und Alpenreichsgaue ("Danubian and Alpine Reichsgaue"). In the course of the Allied occupation after World War II, the Austrian state was restored in its pre-1938 borders according to the 1943 Moscow Declaration.

References

  1. ^ (German) legal text at verfassungen.de
  2. ^ reconciliationfund

See also

  • Anschluss
  • Austria in the time of National Socialism


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