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  2. Linz. In 1898, the Hitler family moved to Linz, the capital of Upper Austria. Hitler wanted a career in the visual arts. He fought bitterly with his father, who wanted him to enter the Habsburg civil service.

  3. Mar 1, 2012 · In 1945 the Allies designated Austria as “Hitlers first victim,” but Europeans whose families suffered under the Nazis in Austria (including Linz and its environs) understood this as self-serving revisionism. The EU urged Linzas it set about preparing for a year in the limelight—to recover its memory.

  4. The Führermuseum or Fuhrer-Museum ( English: Leader's Museum ), also referred to as the Linz art gallery, was an unrealized art museum within a cultural complex planned by Adolf Hitler for his hometown, the Austrian city of Linz, near his birthplace of Braunau.

  5. Hitler planned to achieve power in Austria through the Austrian Nazi Party. But, in the late 1920s and early 1930s, the Austrian Nazi Party was weak, divided, and ineffective. Party members disagreed on their relationship to Hitler and their German counterparts.

  6. May 4, 2018 · After the Anschluss of Austria in March 1938, Adolf Hitler, as a chancellor and fuhrer visited Leonding on March 12. History preserved a rare photo of Hitler, who lays flowers on the graves of his parents. These gravestones of Alois and Clara Hitler survived the War and the next 60 years.

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  7. Dec 16, 2008 · The boyhood home of Hitler, Eichmann, and Ernst Kaltenbrunner, it was a center of German Nationalist agitation before World War I, a model of democratic propriety during the 1920s, and a major battlefield of the Austrian Civil War of 1934.

  8. Austria within Nazi Germany. Austria was part of Nazi Germany from 13 March 1938 (an event known as the Anschluss) until 27 April 1945, when Allied-occupied Austria declared independence from Nazi Germany. Nazi Germany's troops entering Austria in 1938 received the enthusiastic support of most of the population. [1] .

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