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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Hans_SchollHans Scholl - Wikipedia

    Hans Fritz Scholl (German: [hans ʃɔl] ⓘ; 22 September 191822 February 1943) was, along with Alexander Schmorell, one of the two founding members of the White Rose resistance movement in Nazi Germany. [1]

  2. Hans Scholl was put on trial by the Third Reich twice, once for his leadership of the White Rose in 1943 and once in 1938, following a 1937 arrest after which he had been charged under Paragraph 175a – the infamous German legal provision that made homosexuality a crime.

  3. Mar 9, 2015 · A founder member of the movement, Hans beleived that a student uprising would lead to the downfall of the Nazi regime. Hans possibly underestimated the extent of the grip the state had on the people of Germany. Hans was caught, tried and executed. Hans Scholl was born on September 22nd 1918.

  4. German Men. Died on: February 22, 1943. place of death: Munich. Cause of Death: Execution. Founder/Co-Founder: White Rose. More Facts. Childhood & Early Life. Born on September 22, 1918, in Crailsheim, Baden-Württemberg, Germany, Hans Fritz Scholl was the son of Robert Scholl and Magdalena Müller.

  5. Sep 21, 2018 · Nearly three weeks later, Hans Scholl was dead, executed by the Nazis. First fascination, then rebellion. Hans Scholl was 14 years old and lived with his family in Ulm when Adolf Hitler...

  6. www.gdw-berlin.de › view-bio › hans-schollHans Scholl

    Hans and Sophie Scholl placed the sixth and final White Rose leaflet around the Munich University building on February 18, 1943, throwing some down into the atrium. They were arrested at the university, sentenced to death four days later and murdered in Munich-Stadelheim Prison that same day.

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  8. In 1937, 19-year-old Hans Scholl was the quintessential Hitler Youth leader – blond, tall and athletic, the epitome of Hitler’s so-called ‘master race’. But after experiencing persecution himself at the hands of the Gestapo, Scholl embarked on an audacious campaign to influence the hearts and minds of ordinary Germans against the brutal ...

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