Latvijas Vēsturnieku komisijas raksti - 23.sējums
Latvijas Vēsturnieku komisijas raksti - 23.sējums
Latvijas Vēsturnieku komisijas raksti - 23.sējums
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Dr. Matthew Kott. What Does the Holocaust in the Baltic States Have to Do with the SS’ Plans?<br />
64 Persönlicher Stab RF-SS to SS-Personalhauptamt 26.10.1942, BArch (former BDC), SSO-Akten,<br />
Otto Marrenbach, roll 297A.<br />
65 Blindheim, pp. 97–9.<br />
66 Telegram Jüttner to Himmler 8.9.1942, BArch, NS 19/3165.<br />
67 Kompanidagbok, Nasjonalbiblioteket Oslo (NBO), Handskriftsamlingen, Jonas Lie Ms. 4° 4711:1.<br />
68 Letter of Lie to Quisling 1.9.1942, NBO, Handskriftsamlingen, Jonas Lie Ms. 4° 4711:1.<br />
69 Meeting protocol of 7.8.1942, NHM 8(Magne Skodvin papers) [BR]. The document is a copy from<br />
the US National Archives’ microfilm collection T-175.<br />
70 The designation Schutzmannschaft was usually reserved for non-Germanic peoples of eastern<br />
Europe: i.e. Latvians, Lithuanians, Ukrainians, Belarusians, and the like.<br />
71 Blindheim, p. 97.<br />
72 Kompanidagbok, NBO, Handskriftsamlingen, Jonas Lie Ms. 4° 4711:1.<br />
73 Rødder, pp. 130–6, 138–9; Andrej Angrick, Besatzungspolitik und Massenmord: Die Einsatzgruppe<br />
D in der südlichen Sowjetunion 1941–1943 (Hamburg: Hamburger Edition, 2003), pp. 305–6. While<br />
there, Lie encountered men 4th Company of PB 9 attached to EG D: Angrick, p. 306 fn. 338.<br />
74 Kompanidagbok, NBO, Handskriftsamlingen, Jonas Lie Ms. 4° 4711:1; Diary of Rasmus Hetland,<br />
typescript, p. 1, available online at www.sno.no; Sjåstad, p. 39.<br />
75 Undervisning og undervisningsmateriell, Riksarkivet Oslo (RA), Stapo (S-1329), I 0003 Ø3.<br />
76 Cüppers, p. 241; Blindheim, p. 44.<br />
77 On Jeckeln’s role in anti-partisan warfare, see both Cüppers and Curilla, op. cit.<br />
78 Claus Bundgård Christensen, Niels Bo Poulsen, & Peter Scharff Smith, Under hagekors og Dannebrog:<br />
Danskere i Waffen SS (Copenhagen: Aschehoug, 1998), pp. 267–76.<br />
79 Cf. Egil Ulateig, Jakten på massemorderne: En dokumentarbok (Lesja: Reportasje, 2006), p. 225.<br />
80 Ole Andreas Dahl, “Frontkjemperbevegelsen i Norge: Med særlig vekt på ‘Den norske Legion’”,<br />
master’s thesis (University of Oslo, 1972), pp. 49–50.<br />
81 A photo of Himmler addressing the Norwegian volunteers in Jelgava is published in: Egil Ulateig and<br />
Geir Brendan, Nordmennene på Østfronten: Deres egen historie i bilder (Lesja: Reportasje, 2005),<br />
p. 95.<br />
82 See, for example, the lack of entries for this period in: Diary of Rasmus Hetland, p. 6. Lie’s KTB for<br />
the 1st Police Company also ends before the trip to Jelgava.<br />
83 Ringdal, pp. 79–80.<br />
84 Letter of former Tito partisan Dr Antoni Słupik to the author 17.9.2007. Słupik states that in one<br />
skirmish his unit captured two Norwegians, at least one of whom he took pity on and let escape.<br />
85 On the record of Pol.Geb.Rgt. 18, see: Ralph Klein, “Das Polizei-Gebirgsjäger-Regiment 18: Massaker,<br />
Deportation, Traditionspflege”, Zeitschrift für Geschichtswissenschaft 55 (2007), no. 1, pp. 41–64.<br />
Two of the three battalions that were brought together to form the regiment, PB 302 and PB 312,<br />
had been serving in northern Norway immediately prior: Klein, p. 44.<br />
86 O.H. Langeland, Dømmer ikke (Oslo: Heim og samfund 1948), pp. 237–45. Even though Major<br />
Langeland’s book was later withdrawn from sale following a libel trial, wartime press clippings and<br />
documents in Riksarkivet confirm his version of events.<br />
87 Blindheim, pp. 16–17; BArch (former BDC), SSO-Akten, Fridjof Georg Henriksen, roll 087A; RA,<br />
L-sak Fridjof Georg Henriksen. My thanks to my project colleague, Terje Emberland, for finding the<br />
material in Henriksen’s landssviksak.<br />
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