to form the Greater German Reich as of 1944 by
Konrad Henlein during the
Sudeten Crisis as part of an encouragement/intimidation process. Re-published in the British socialist newspaper
Daily Worker (the Communist Party newspaper) on 29 October 1938. " based on various, only partially systematised target projections (e.g.
Generalplan Ost) from
state administration and the
SS leadership sources World War I became the first attempt to carry out the Pan-German ideology in practice, and the Pan-German movement argued forcefully for expansionist imperialism. Following the defeat in
World War I, the influence of German-speaking elites over
Central and Eastern Europe was greatly limited. At the
Treaty of Versailles, Germany was substantially reduced in size.
Alsace-Lorraine was also influenced by the
Francization after it returned to France.
Austria-Hungary was split up. A rump Austria, which to a certain extent corresponded to the
German-speaking areas of Austria-Hungary (a complete split into language groups was impossible due to multi-lingual areas and language-exclaves) adopted the name "
German Austria" () in hope for union with
Germany. Union with Germany and the name "German Austria" was forbidden by the
Treaty of St. Germain and the name had to be changed back to Austria. It was in the
Weimar Republic that the Austrian-born
Adolf Hitler, under the influence of the
stab-in-the-back myth, first took up German nationalist ideas in his
Mein Kampf. Nazi propaganda also used the political slogan
Ein Volk, ein Reich, ein Führer ("One people, one Reich, one leader"), to enforce pan-German sentiment in Austria for an "
Anschluss". The chosen name for the projected empire was a deliberate reference to the
Holy Roman Empire (of the German Nation) that existed in the
Middle Ages, known as the
First Reich in Nazi historiography. Different aspects of the legacy of this medieval empire in German history were both celebrated and derided by the
Nazi government. Hitler admired the
Frankish Emperor Charlemagne for his "cultural creativity", his powers of organization, and his renunciation of the
rights of the individual. Nuremberg, in addition to being the former unofficial capital of the Holy Roman Empire, was also the place of the
Nuremberg rallies. The transfer of the regalia was thus done to both legitimize Hitler's Germany as the successor of the "Old Reich", but also weaken Vienna, the former imperial residence. After the
1939 German occupation of Bohemia, Hitler declared that the Holy Roman Empire had been "resurrected", although he secretly maintained his own empire to be better than the old "Roman" one. Unlike the "uncomfortably
internationalist Catholic empire of
Barbarossa", the Germanic Reich of the German Nation would be
racist and
nationalist. On November 17, 1939,
Reich Minister of Propaganda Joseph Goebbels wrote in
his diary that the "total liquidation" of this historic treaty was the "great goal" of the Nazi regime, The
Heim ins Reich ("Back Home to the Reich") initiative was a policy pursued by the
Nazis which attempted to convince the
ethnic Germans living outside of
Nazi Germany (such as in
Austria and
Sudetenland) that they should strive to bring these regions "home" into a
Greater Germany. This notion also led the way for an even more expansive state to be envisioned, the Greater Germanic Reich, which Nazi Germany tried to establish. This pan-Germanic empire was expected to
assimilate practically all of
Germanic Europe into an enormously expanded Greater Germanic Reich. Territorially speaking, this encompassed the already-enlarged Reich itself (consisting of pre-1938 Germany plus the
areas annexed into the Großdeutsche Reich), the
Netherlands,
Belgium,
areas in north-eastern France considered to be historically and ethnically Germanic,
Denmark,
Norway,
Sweden,
Iceland, at least the
German-speaking parts of Switzerland, and
Liechtenstein. The most notable exception was the predominantly
Anglo-Saxon United Kingdom, which was not projected as having to be reduced to a German province but to instead become an
allied seafaring partner of the Germans. The eastern
Reichskommissariats in the vast stretches of Ukraine and Russia were also intended for future integration, with
plans for them stretching to the
Volga or even beyond the
Urals. They were deemed of vital interest for the survival of the German nation, as it was a core tenet of
Nazi ideology that it needed "living space" (
Lebensraum), creating a "pull towards the East" (
Drang nach Osten) where that could be found and
colonized, in a model that the Nazis explicitly derived from the American
Manifest Destiny in the
Far West and its clearing of native inhabitants. As the foreign volunteers of the Waffen-SS were increasingly of non-Germanic origin, especially after the
Battle of Stalingrad, among the organization's leadership (e.g.
Felix Steiner) the proposition for a Greater Germanic Empire gave way to a concept of a European union of self-governing states, unified by German hegemony and the common enemy of
Bolshevism. The Waffen-SS was to be the eventual nucleus of a common European army where each state would be represented by a national contingent. Himmler himself, however, gave no concession to these views, and held on to his Pan-Germanic vision in a speech given in April 1943 to the officers of the
1st SS Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler, the
2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich and the
3rd SS Division Totenkopf: == History since 1945 ==