Hermann Lutz Explained

Hermann Lutz (1881–1965) was a German civil servant and writer.

From 1919 to 1937, Lutz worked for the Kriegsschuldreferat (War Guilt Section) within the German Foreign Ministry. He contributed the section on 'The German Case' to the 'War Guilt' article in the 1929 Encyclopædia Britannica, and wrote Die europäische Politik in der Julikrise 1914 (1930) for the Reichstag Commission investigating the cause of the First World War and the German defeat.[1] His papers are held at the Hoover Institution archives at Stanford University.[2]

Works

See also

Notes and References

  1. Ellen L. Evans and Joseph O. Baylen, 'History as Propaganda: The German Foreign Ministry and the 'Enlightenment' of American Historians on the War-Guilt Question, 1930-1933', in Keith M. Wilson, ed., Forging the Collective Memory: Government and International Historians Through Two World Wars, Berghahn Books, 1996, pp. 151-54, 171
  2. http://cdn.calisphere.org/data/13030/0j/kt6f59r90j/files/kt6f59r90j.pdf Overview of the Hermann Lutz papers