Court Documents

Official transcripts, verdicts, indictments, and legal proceedings from the war that reshaped international law. This category features rare and digitized court documents from World War II, including materials from the Nuremberg Trials, military tribunals, occupation courts, and postwar justice efforts across Europe and beyond.

These documents offer a direct view into how justice was pursued in the aftermath of unprecedented crimes—war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide. They provide critical insight into legal arguments, witness testimonies, prosecution strategies, and the historical framework that led to the development of modern international law.

Essential for legal scholars, historians, and researchers, this collection preserves the written record of accountability, ethics, and the pursuit of justice in the shadow of war.

  • Sale! The Milh Case Files on Austria & the Reich (Irving File 67) - Partly Negative Reel
    Archives

    The Milh Case Files on Austria & the Reich (Irving File 67) – Partly Negative Reel

    Add to cart

    The document “The Milh Case Files on Austria & the Reich (Irving File 67)” appears to be a compilation of archival correspondence, official documents, and legal memoranda from German and Austrian government bodies—primarily dating from the 1930s—focusing on the status, legality, and dissolution of the Austrian Concordat following Austria’s annexation (Anschluss) by Nazi Germany in 1938.

    It contains legal and political analyses about whether the Austrian Concordat with the Holy See remained valid after the annexation, with commentary on Austria’s status as a sovereign state, jurisdictional shifts, and constitutional implications during the Nazi regime.

Scroll to Top