Hitler's Successor
The rise and fall of Karl Dönitz, the man who ordered that drowning men should not be rescued
‘I Told No One About the Trials’ Part 3
Serafima Grigorievna Ponomareva headed to the front, wrote her name on the wall of the Reichstag, and became an interpreter at the Nuremberg Trials at the age of 18. The lady, now 94, told the “Nuremberg. Casus Pacis” project about her memories. We filmed and recorded Serafima Ponomareva's story. Her version of the events is presented without changes, uncut – as she remembered them. Today’s episode is the last in a multimedia series about the Nuremberg Trials interpreter. Read and watch the first and the second episode to learn how Serafima Ponomareva ended up at the trials and what she experienced in the courtroom.
Stolen Treasures of The House of Hesse Found in The US
Marine Führer
Erich Raeder's career - from monarchist to Nazi
The USA Declared Racial Segregation on Long-Distance Buses Illegal
‘Three Million Bolsheviks Could Be Sterilised’
‘I Told No One About the Trials’ Part 2
Serafima Grigorievna Ponomareva, an MGIMO University student, headed to the front, sang patriotic songs with the troops at the recently-captured Reichstag on Victory Day, and became an interpreter at the Nuremberg Trials at the age of 18. The events of those months remain fresh in her memory despite her being 94 years old. We filmed and recorded Serafima Grigorievna Ponomareva's story. Her version of events is presented without changes, uncut – as she remembered them. Today’s episode is the second in a multimedia series about the Nuremberg Trials interpreter. Read and watch the first episode to learn how Serafima Ponomareva ended up at the trials.
Italy Abolishes The Monarchy
Selling of Penicillin Starts in UK
‘I Told No One About the Trials’ Part 1
Serafima Grigorievna Ponomareva, an MGIMO University student, headed to the front, sang patriotic songs with the troops at the recently-captured Reichstag on Victory Day, and became an interpreter at the Nuremberg Trials at the age of 18. The events of those months remain fresh in her memory despite her being 94 years old. We filmed and recorded Serafima Grigorievna Ponomareva's story. Her version of events is presented without changes, uncut – as she remembered them. Today’s episode is the first in a multimedia series about the Nuremberg Trials interpreter.
Heathrow Airport Opened
On 31 May 1946, Heathrow Airport, 25 kilometres west of central London, was officially declared a passenger airport. It would soon surpass the scale of Croydon, which had been London's main airport until then.
US United Nations Ambassador Edward Stettinius Resigns
On 30 May 1946, Edward Reilly Stettinius, one of the last members of Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s team in the American government, resigned as US Ambassador to the United Nations. He cited President Harry Truman’s own reluctance to use the UN as a tool to reduce tensions with the Soviet Union as the reason for his resignation.
Minsk Tractor Works Founded
On 29 May 1946, the USSR Council of Ministers adopted Resolution No 1142 “On Construction of Minsk Tractor Works”. In the post-war period, the USSR needed domestically produced agricultural machinery. The Minsk Tractor Works (MTZ) had to master the production of “Kirovets” D-35 (KD-35) medium power caterpillar tractors designed based on the model of the US Caterpillar R2. The planned production was 50 caterpillar tractors per day. Diesel (D-35) and starter (PD-10) engines would also be produced. Production would start in November 1950 and run to August 1951, with 406 caterpillar tractors slated to be made over nine months.
Speer Didn't Come to Hollywood
The dream of Hitler’s minion to adapt his memoirs to the movie screen did not come true, but he eventually got his 97 minutes of fame
France, US Sign Blum-Byrnes Agreements
On 28 May 1946, French representative Léon Blum and US Secretary of State James Byrnes signed a protocol on the implementation of the Marshall Plan between the two countries. The agreement mainly concerned the film industry.
In-Between Genocide & Crimes Against Humanity
The Nuremberg Trials were the first of their kind in history, turning into a judgment against a regime and an entire era - the Nazi period that gripped Germany for one and a half decades. It gave a powerful impetus to the development of international law. In particular, it introduced the concept of "crimes against humanity" that we use today. The forging of a new term, a key one for the advancement of human rights, took place amid heated legal debates and even intrigues around the two concepts – "genocide" and "human rights". Georgy Bovt discusses the key legal collision for the modern world.