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  1. Gottfried Feder

    Gottfried Feder

    German economist and politician

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  1. Gottfried Feder (27 January 1883 – 24 September 1941) was a German civil engineer, a self-taught economist, and one of the early key members of the Nazi Party and its economic theoretician. One of his lectures, delivered on 12 September 1919, drew Adolf Hitler into the party.

  2. Apr 18, 2022 · Gottfried Feder was the ideologist of the Nazi Party and the chairman of its Reich Economic Council. He outlined the fundamental principles and proposals of National Socialist economic policy in 1932, such as the corporative state, the socialization of the means of production, and the protection of the productive personality.

  3. Gottfried Feder, 1930. Gottfried Feder (born Jan. 27, 1883, Würzburg, Ger.—died Sept. 24, 1941, Murnau) was a German political activist who was the principal economic theoretician of the initial phase of German Nazism. Feder, a civil engineer, gained notoriety in 1919 for his vaguely socialistic “Manifest zur Brechung der Zinsknechtschaft ...

  4. Aug 16, 2019 · Gottfried Feder. Topics National Socialism, Economics Collection opensource Language English Item Size 318306464. National Socialist economics. Addeddate

  5. Gottfried Feder was an anti-capitalist, anti-Semite and one of the early key members of the German Nazi party. He was their economic theoretician. Initially, it was his lecture in 1919 that drew Hitler into the party. (1) Feder was born in Würzburg, Germany on January 27, 1883, as the son of civil servant Hans Feder and Mathilde Feder (née Luz).

  6. Oct 27, 2023 · This chapter examines Feder's plans for a radical reorganization of the German industrial base and urban space as Settlement Commissioner. Feder's proposals combined völkisch, anti-modern, and technocratic elements, but were opposed by various interests and eventually dismissed.

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  8. Oct 27, 2023 · Gottfried Feder developed economic theories which influenced Adolf Hitler and the Nazi movement more than is commonly recognized. Feder’s writings and speeches revolved around four inter-connected themes: (1) anti-capitalism, replete with antisemitic overtones, and attacks on “finance capital” and the charging of interest, (2) a desire ...

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