The Third Reich's Pillage of European Art and Treasures
Legalized Looting
According to Nicholas, the confiscation of property was regulated and justified by an extraordinary array of laws and directives based on Nazi radical and political theory. The laws enacted by the Nazis were tools used to suppress and intimidate the Jewish culture and any others whose views and beliefs conflicted with their own. Moreover, the laws served as a precursor to the final solution, that of exterminating Jews from the European continent.
Hitlers degenerate art campaign of 1937 was one of his first organized attempts to regulate cultural property on a large scale. At the time, the Nazi powerhouse disallowed any and all art criticism and forbade the exhibition of disapproved art, which was expropriated. Initially, most confiscated objects were primarily taken from German museums and other state collections, although that would soon change.
Interestingly, most of the artworks were confiscated approximately one year before the actual law regarding degenerate art was even drafted. In effect, the Nazis first committed crimes, then justified them later by legalizing it.
Not long after they marched into
By April 1938, all Jews were required to register their private property. The registered items were then catalogued and greedily scrutinized by the Nazis. This Ordinance for the Registration of Jewish Property literally provided the Nazis with a detailed shopping list of objects that could be confiscated at their will. Even though Hitler would pass another law that gave him supreme authority over confiscated objects, many disregarded it and pocketed the valuables.
Petropoulos further suggested that in 1940, Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels launched a project that was aimed at recovering all artworks of German origin or provenance taken by foreigners during the past four-hundred years. A majority of the German works would be transferred to