employs German forced labour; granted sector in Berlin; and Austrian settlement; repossesses country after liberation; advance to Austria; forces in occupation of Rhineland; advance on Baden; undisciplined behaviour; arrival in Berlin; administration in Berlin; sympathy towards Germans; creates Rhineland-Palatinate; plans for Rhineland; favours united Europe; opposes German unity; atrocities against Germans; policy on Germany; jurisdiction over German territory; acquires Saar; demands coal from Germany; in Austria; removes Austrian industrial plant; administration in Vienna; Austrian view of; cultural activities in Vienna; on German guilt; and denazification; and German POWs; not invited to Potsdam; and Polish settlement; treaty with Soviet France - continued Russia (1945); friction with Soviet Russia; approves of German territorial concessions in east; rights to Saar; opposes Truman Doctrine; and Soviet claims to Ruhr; forms Trizonia with USA and Britain; non-participation in Berlin airlift; attitude to and relations with Adenauer; post-war arrests and trials; effect of peace settlement on
Frank, Benno
Frank, Hans
Frank, Karl-Hermann
Frankfurt-am-Main; Städel Gallery
Franz, Prinz zu Sayn-Wittgenstein
Frederick II (the Great), King of Prussia: body moved and reinterred
Frederick Leopold, Prince of Prussia
Frederick William I, King of Prussia: body moved and reinterred
Free Austrian (World) Movement (FAM; FAWM)
Free Democratic Party (FDP)
Freie Deutsche Jugend (FDJ): formed
Freisler, Roland
Freiwaldau (Jeseník), Czechoslovakia
French zone (ZOF; Germany): refugees in; co-operation with British and American zones; numbers of French in; exports to France; industrial plant transferred to France; treatment of Germans in; German youth admiration for French; culture in; food shortages in; supposed market for babies; black market in; and Berlin airlift
Freud, Anton
Freudenstadt
Freudenthal, Czechoslovakia
Freund, Hans
Frey, Hans
Freyberg, General Sir Bernard
Freytag, Gustav Frick, Wilhelm
Friede, Dieter Friedeburg, Admiral Hans von
Friedrich, Ruth Andreas: in Brandenburg; welcomes end of Reich; on life in occupied Berlin; sees Americans in Steglitz; and denazification and Fragebogen ; and disposal of dead; at killing of Borchard; on influx of Königsberger; and death of Bersarin; and cultural events; on German GI brides; on French influence on German youth; on theft of wood from grave; and Russian occupation of Chancellery; on returning German POWs; on Nuremberg trials; and Truman’s visit to Berlin; welcomes Potsdam Agreement; in severe winter (1946-7); on resurgence of Nazism in Hamburg; on Berlin blockade; and Berlin airlift; flees to West; Schauplatz Berlin
Friedrich Wilhelm von Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, Prince
Frings, Cardinal Joseph, Archbishop of Cologne
Fritsch, General Werner von
Fritzsche, Hans
Froning, Karl
Fuernberg, Friedl
Fugger von Glött, Prince
Funk, Walter
Fürstenstein, Silesia
Furtwängler, Wilhelm
Fyfe, Sir David Maxwell
Galen, Clemens August, Graf von, Bishop of Münster
Gamelin, General Maurice Gustave
Ganeval, General Jean
Gangl, Major
gangs: in central Europe
Gans, Major Hiram
Garibaldi, Sante
Gasperi, Alcide De see De Gasperi, Alcide
Gaulle, Charles de: proposes indefinite occupation of Rhineland; and changes to Germany; claims German labour for France; orders Lattre de Tassigny to cross Rhine; and French independence; advocates co-operation with Germany; Soviet hostility to; favours Germany as confederation; Hopkins negotiates with; Roosevelt disdains; on Potsdam agreement to create central agencies in zones; supports European union
GDR see German Democratic Republic
Gebauer, Alfred
Geneva Convention; and Nuremberg trials
George, Heinrich
German Democratic Republic (GDR; East Germany): lawyers in; founded; Russians introduce new currency
German Federal Republic (FDR; West Germany): beginnings; created; Russians oppose; administrative structure and