Heinrich Anacker
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Heinrich_Anacker an entity of type: Thing
Heinrich Anacker (* 29. Januar 1901 in Buchs, Kanton Aargau, Schweiz; † 14. Januar 1971 in Wasserburg am Bodensee) war ein erfolgreicher schweizerisch-deutscher Schriftsteller, der für den Nationalsozialismus wirkte.
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Heinrich Anacker (ur. 29 stycznia 1901 w Buchs - zm. 14 stycznia 1971 w Wasserburgu) – niemiecki poeta związanym z ruchem narodowo-socjalistycznym.
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Ге́нрих А́накер (нем. Heinrich Anacker; 29 января 1901, Букс, Аргау, Швейцария — 14 января 1971, Вассербург, Бодензее) — немецкий писатель и поэт швейцарского происхождения, получивший известность своей поэзией, прославлявшей нацизм и военные действия Германии и широко распространявшейся нацистской пропагандой.
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Heinrich Anacker (29 January 1901 – 14 January 1971) was a Swiss-German author. Anacker was born in Buchs, Aargau. He entered National Socialist circles in Vienna in 1922, joined the SA, and after 1933 lived in Berlin as a freelance writer. He wrote a spate of SA and Hitler Youth songs and was considered the "lyricist of the Brown Front"; he won the 1934 Dietrich Eckart Prize and the 1936 NSDAP Prize for Art. Nonetheless, after the war he was classified as only minimally incriminated. His poetry collections include Die Trommel (The Drum; 1931), Der Aufbau (Uplift; 1936), and Glück auf, es geht gen Morgen (Hurrah, It Will Soon Be Morning; 1943).
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Heinrich Anacker
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Heinrich Anacker
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Heinrich Anacker
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Анакер, Генрих
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34129063
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1090011110
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Heinrich Anacker (* 29. Januar 1901 in Buchs, Kanton Aargau, Schweiz; † 14. Januar 1971 in Wasserburg am Bodensee) war ein erfolgreicher schweizerisch-deutscher Schriftsteller, der für den Nationalsozialismus wirkte.
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Heinrich Anacker (29 January 1901 – 14 January 1971) was a Swiss-German author. Anacker was born in Buchs, Aargau. He entered National Socialist circles in Vienna in 1922, joined the SA, and after 1933 lived in Berlin as a freelance writer. He wrote a spate of SA and Hitler Youth songs and was considered the "lyricist of the Brown Front"; he won the 1934 Dietrich Eckart Prize and the 1936 NSDAP Prize for Art. Nonetheless, after the war he was classified as only minimally incriminated. His poetry collections include Die Trommel (The Drum; 1931), Der Aufbau (Uplift; 1936), and Glück auf, es geht gen Morgen (Hurrah, It Will Soon Be Morning; 1943). Brothers, what will remain from our time?Runes will forever glow!Our bodies will disappearAs dust in the winds they will blow.It was we who built the streets,That our grandchildren first saw complete;Along them, cars will boldly whiz,For a hundred and a thousand years.What we wrote in inflexible deedsUnshaken will ever remain,Forever, beginning and amen,The most vivid rune: The Führer's name! — "Brothers, What Will Remain?" in Das Schwarze Korps, 14 August 1935. He died in Wasserburg am Bodensee, aged 69.
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Heinrich Anacker (ur. 29 stycznia 1901 w Buchs - zm. 14 stycznia 1971 w Wasserburgu) – niemiecki poeta związanym z ruchem narodowo-socjalistycznym.
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Ге́нрих А́накер (нем. Heinrich Anacker; 29 января 1901, Букс, Аргау, Швейцария — 14 января 1971, Вассербург, Бодензее) — немецкий писатель и поэт швейцарского происхождения, получивший известность своей поэзией, прославлявшей нацизм и военные действия Германии и широко распространявшейся нацистской пропагандой.
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2076