RuSHA Trial
0 sources
RuSHA Trial
Summary
RuSHA Trial is a war crimes trial[1]. It draws 38 Wikipedia views per month (war_crimes_trial category, ranking #24 of 40).[2]
Key Facts
- RuSHA Trial's image is recorded as RuSHA Trial Indictment.jpg[3].
- RuSHA Trial's instance of is recorded as war crimes trial[4].
- RuSHA Trial's part of the series is recorded as subsequent Nuremberg trials[5].
- RuSHA Trial's GND ID is recorded as 4226694-4[6].
- RuSHA Trial's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as sh96009036[7].
- RuSHA Trial's location is recorded as Palace of Justice[8].
- RuSHA Trial's Commons category is recorded as RuSHA Trial[9].
- RuSHA Trial's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/04_t_p[10].
- RuSHA Trial's defendant is recorded as Ulrich Greifelt[11].
- RuSHA Trial's defendant is recorded as Rudolf Creutz[12].
- RuSHA Trial's defendant is recorded as Konrad Meyer-Hetling[13].
- RuSHA Trial's defendant is recorded as Otto Schwarzenberger[14].
- RuSHA Trial's defendant is recorded as Herbert Hübner[15].
- RuSHA Trial's defendant is recorded as Heinz Brückner[16].
- RuSHA Trial's defendant is recorded as Otto Hofmann[17].
- RuSHA Trial's defendant is recorded as Richard Hildebrandt[18].
- RuSHA Trial's defendant is recorded as Fritz Schwalm[19].
- RuSHA Trial's defendant is recorded as Max Sollmann[20].
- RuSHA Trial's defendant is recorded as Gregor Ebner[21].
- RuSHA Trial's defendant is recorded as Günther Tesch[22].
- RuSHA Trial's defendant is recorded as Inge Viermetz[23].
- RuSHA Trial's National Library of Israel J9U ID is recorded as 987007563776205171[24].
Why It Matters
RuSHA Trial draws 38 Wikipedia views per month (war_crimes_trial category, ranking #24 of 40).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 12 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[25] It is known by 5 alternative names across languages and contexts.[26]