About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 46. Chapters: Theodor Mommsen, Otto Kranzbuhler, Hinrich Johannes Rink, Werner Kollath, Friedrich Adolf Trendelenburg, Erich Walter Sternberg, Wilhelm Solf, Peter Harry Carstensen, John Drewe, Jamie Bishop, Gunter Blobel, Gerhard Domagk, Goetz Oertel, Peer Steinbruck, Rudiger Dohler, Gustav Adolf von Gotzen, Lorenz von Stein, Gerhard Stoltenberg, Karl Schiller, Georg Waitz, Jacob Georg Christian Adler, August Leskien, Friedrich von Esmarch, Heinz Lange, Gabriel Riesser, Julius Bahnsen, Kurt Alder, Bernhard Ernst von Bulow, Hans Hellmann, Solomon Steinheim, Klaus Wyrtki, Otto Jahn, Hermann Olshausen, Peter Wilhelm Forchhammer, Bodo Lafferentz, Wolf Wilhelm Friedrich von Baudissin, Heinrich Hansen, Max Tau, Hartmut Boockmann, Walther Herwig, Gerd Sannemuller, Herbert Giersch, Lasse Rempe, Georg Beseler, Hagen Schulze, Victor Hensen, Wilhelm Giesbrecht, Wolfgang Haken, Justus Olshausen, Daniel Vorlander, Barbel Hohn, Christian August Brandis, Julius Stinde, Michael Baumgarten, Rudolph Lexow, Johann Jacob Paul Moldenhawer, Lothar Gottsche, Theodor Olshausen, Andreas Freytag, Hans Naumann, August Friedrich Wilhelm Forchhammer, Otto Friedrich Bernhard von Linstow, Heinrich Boie, Hans-Peter Bartels, Christian Wernicke, Jurgen Drews, Erhard Hubener, Michael Bursch. Excerpt: Flottenrichter Otto Kranzbuhler (also spelled Kranzbuehler) (8 July 1907 - 9 August 2004) was a German Naval Judge who is most notably known for representing defendant Grand Admiral Karl Donitz before the International Military Tribunal at the Nuremberg Trials. Otto Kranzbuhler was born in Berlin, German Empire, on July 8, 1907. He was the youngest son of German Lieutenant Commander Heinrich Kranzbuhler. He had two sisters: Caroline (1898-1969) and Elizabeth (1904-1981) and one brother: Helmuth (1901-1978). Kranzbuhler graduated from secondary school in 1925. Followin...