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Nicholas Lynn H.

    Lynn H. Nicholas is renowned for her deep dives into art history and historical analysis. Her work navigates the complex issues of art theft and repatriation, illuminating the moral and legal quandaries surrounding cultural heritage. Nicholas explores the impact of wartime conflicts on art and its ownership, offering sharp insights that resonate with broader themes of justice and memory. Her writing style is characterized by meticulous research and compelling narrative, drawing readers into the history of art and beyond.

    Important Old Master Paintings From the Collection of Jacques Goudstikker. Wednesday 14 November 2007
    The Rape of Europa
    Cruel World
    Le pillage de l'Europe
    • Cruel World

      • 656 pages
      • 23 hours of reading
      4.2(83)Add rating

      In this riveting, powerful narrative, Lynn Nicholas shows how children under the Nazis became mere objects available for use in the service of the totalitarian state. Nicholas recounts the euthanasia and eugenic selection, racist indoctrination, kidnapping and “Germanization,” mass executions, and slave labor to which the Nazis subjected Europe’s children. She also captures the uprooted children’s search for their families in the aftermath of the war. A disturbing and absolutely necessary work, Cruel World opens a new chapter in World War II studies.

      Cruel World
    • The Rape of Europa

      • 512 pages
      • 18 hours of reading
      4.0(7373)Add rating

      The treasures of Quedlinburg . . . the Trojan gold . . . the Amber Room. These fabled objects are only the tiny summit of an immense mountain of artifacts - artistic, religious, historic - that were sold, confiscated, stolen, dismembered, defaced, destroyed, or buried as Europe succumbed first to the greed and fury of the Nazis and then to the ravages of war. Now, in a riveting account brimming with tales of courage and sacrifice, of venality and beastliness, Lynn H. Nicholas meticulously reconstructs the full story of this act of cultural rape and its aftermath. In doing so, she offers a new perspective on the history of the Third Reich and of World War II. From the day Hitler came to power, art was a matter of highest priority to the Reich. He and other Nazis (especially Hermann Goering) were ravenous collectors, stopping at nothing to acquire paintings and sculpture, as well as coins, books, tapestries, jewels, furniture - everything. Their insatiable appetite (feared by the museum directors who sent their collections into hiding as war loomed) whipped the international art market into a frenzy of often sleazy dealing. When the German occupation of Poland, France, the Low Countries, and finally Italy began, a colossal wave of organized and casual pillage stripped entire countries of their heritage as works of art were subjected to confiscation, wanton destruction, concealment in damp mines, and perilous transport across combat zones. Meanwhile, in Washington and London curators and scholars campaigned energetically to convince President Franklin Roosevelt, Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and, most importantly, General Dwight Eisenhower to add the protection of art and edifices tothe Allied invasion agenda. The landings in Italy and France, and the ultimate victory of the Allies, brought a dedicated corps of Monuments officers to the ravaged continent. On the front lines or immediately behind, they shored up bombed churches, cleaned the vandalized buildi

      The Rape of Europa