Page 224 - Was Hitler a Riddle?
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Notes
the following abbreviations are used in the Notes. Complete authors’ names, titles,
and publication data are given in the Bibliography:
BdFa British documents on Foreign affairs: reports and Papers from the Foreign
Office. Confidential Print. series F. europe 1919–1939. General editors: Kenneth
Bourne and d. Cameron Watt. University Publications of america, n.p., 1993.
CaC Churchill archives, Churchill archives Centre, Cambridge, UK.
CadN Centre des archives diplomatiques de Nantes.
ddF documents diplomatiques Français, 1 série (1932–1935) 12 vols.; 2 série
e
re
(1936–1939), 12 vols. Paris, 1963–1969.
FrUs Foreign relations of the United states; diplomatic Papers/department
of state, Washington, 1930–1941.
Na National archives, Hyattsville, Md., Usa.
tNa the National archives, london, UK.
introduction
1. shirer, Berlin Diary, pp. 84–87; self, Neville Chamberlain, p. 396.
2. the article is reprinted in remak, The Nazi Years, pp. 80–82. On lloyd
George, see the biography by K. Morgan, Lloyd George.
3. Norman ebbutt, “Germany to-day: Herr Hitler’s Foreign Policy,” The Times
of london, april 21, 1933.
4. Quoted in Gilbert, Winston S. Churchill, vol. V, p. 407.
5. Gilbert, Churchill: A Life, pp. 506–7.
6. langworth, Churchill by Himself, p. 254.
7. the quotation is from Olson, Troublesome Young Men, p. 76.
8. Wheeler-Bennett, Munich—Prologue to Tragedy, pp. 206–7.
9. Wächter, Von Stresemann zu Hitler, p. 41.
10. Williamson, Stanley Baldwin, p. 301.
11. Quoted in Kershaw, Making Friends with Hitler, p. 36.
12. Wright, France, p. 498.