
audiobook
In the winter of 1946 a solemn courtroom in Nuremberg becomes the stage for an unprecedented legal drama. Senior prosecutors, judges, and witnesses gather to dissect the machinery of aggression that plunged Europe into war, each word recorded with painstaking care. The opening day unfolds with detailed references to diplomatic memoranda, revealing how high‑level officials discussed the fate of neutral nations.
The transcript captures the methodical rhythm of the trial: prosecutors cite specific documents, read excerpts aloud, and challenge the accused with pointed questions. As the British Deputy Chief Prosecutor lays out the evidence linking foreign‑policy decisions to the invasions of Belgium, the Netherlands, Greece and Yugoslavia, the judges interject, demanding clarification and ensuring every claim is rigorously examined. The dialogue feels immediate, pulling listeners into the tense exchange between legal minds and the remnants of the regime they seek to hold accountable.
Listening to this volume offers a rare, immersive glimpse into the early phase of the International Military Tribunal, where the pursuit of justice is recorded line by line, preserving the solemn gravity of the historic proceedings.
Language
en
Duration
~24 hours (1402K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Larry Harrison, Cindy Beyer, and the online Project Gutenberg team at http://www.pgdpcanada.net with images provided by The Internet Archives-US.
Release date
2017-06-16
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
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