Several administrative divisions under the authority of a Chief of Civil Administration were officially designated as
CdZ-Gebiete (CdZ Areas, Chief of Civil Administration Territories): • Several CdZ organizations were established after the
occupation of the Czechoslovak
Sudetenland territories from 1 October 1938. However, these institutions proved a failure and were quickly superseded by the government of
Konrad Henlein, who was appointed
Reichskommissar on 21 October. Further CdZ officiated during the German invasion until the appointment of
Konstantin von Neurath as Reich
Protector of Bohemia and Moravia on 16 March 1939. • After the 1939
Invasion of Poland, the
Nazi Gauleiter Albert Forster from
Danzig was appointed by Hitler to act as CdZ official on 8 September in the territory that would formally become the
Reichsgau West Prussia on 26 October. • Likewise, the former Danzig Senate President
Arthur Greiser acted as CdZ in the preliminary stage of the establishment of
Reichsgau Posen from 8 September until the Reichsgau formally was established on 21 October 1939. • Also from 6 September 1939,
SS-Brigadeführer Heinz Jost was appointed CdZ of the occupied
Zichenau region which formally was attached to the
Province of East Prussia on 26 October. After the
Battle of France, from 1940, CdZ officials were appointed in those
western occupied territories that were not (yet) officially annexed by the Third Reich: •
Elsass:
Reichsstatthalter Robert Heinrich Wagner, Nazi
Gauleiter of
Baden •
Lothringen (
Lorraine):
Reichskommissar Josef Bürckel,
Gauleiter of
Saarpfalz (
Westmark) •
Luxembourg:
Gustav Simon,
Gauleiter of Koblenz-Trier (
Moselland) Further CdZ assumed office upon the 1941
Balkan Campaign: • Occupied
Yugoslav territories of
Carinthia and
Carniola:
Reichsstatthalter Friedrich Rainer,
Gauleiter of Carinthia • Occupied territory of
Lower Styria:
Reichsstatthalter Siegfried Uiberreither,
Gauleiter of Styria After the beginning of
Operation Barbarossa in June 1941, a
CdZ-Gebiet Bialystok under
Erich Koch,
Gauleiter of
East Prussia, was established on
Polish territory previously
occupied by the
Soviet Union, converted into
District Bialystok on 1 August 1941. ==See also==