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  1. 15 de feb. de 2011 · Design historian Steven Heller talks about how he unearthed the Nazi Party's official design and branding guidebook, which sets rules for virtually every flag and insignia Hitler used.

  2. 22 de abr. de 2024 · In Nazi Germany the swastika (German: Hakenkreuz), with its oblique arms turned clockwise, became the national symbol.In 1910 a poet and nationalist ideologist Guido von List had suggested the swastika as a symbol for all anti-Semitic organizations; and when the National Socialist Party was formed in 1919–20, it adopted it. On September 15, 1935, the black swastika on a white circle with a ...

  3. 15 de jun. de 2021 · The GDR version of the black-red-gold flag was introduced in 1959. The excessive use and abuse of national symbols in Nazi Germany led to a more restrained approach after the end of the Second ...

  4. The term Reichskriegsflagge ( German: [ˈʁaɪçsˌkʁiːksflaɡə], lit. 'Imperial War Flag') refers to several war flags and war ensigns used by the German armed forces in history. A total of eight different designs were used in 1848–1849 and between 1867–1871 and 1945. Today the term refers usually to the flag from 1867–1871 to 1918 ...

  5. The most widespread Nazi flag featured a black swastika in a white circle on a red field. Other official flags were also displayed during the Nazi regime. The German armed forces, for example, flew a modified version of the much older Imperial Reich war flag. That flag featured horizontal and vertical black bands intersected by the Prussian eagle.

  6. 1 de jun. de 2020 · The swastika, or hakenkreuz (hooked cross), became the emblem of the Nazi Party in 1920; Hitler himself took personal credit for designing the flag. It used the red, white and black of the old German imperial flag – a cunning move to link Germany's past with its future – but attributed new meanings to them.

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