Philip H. Buss, Andrew Mollo (1978). Hitler's Germanic legions: an illustrated history of the Western European Legions with the SS, 1941-1943. Macdonald and Jane's, p. 89 [1]
Weinberg, Gerhard L. Visions of Victory: The Hopes of Eight World War II Leaders Cambridge, England, United Kingdom:2005--Cambridge University Press [2]
Beim „Anschluss Österreichs“ an das Deutsche Reich 1938 hatte der österreichische ReichsstatthalterArthur Seyß-Inquart auf eine autonome Rolle für das annektierte Land gehofft, zu denen auch Raumordnungsprojekte wie ein Prinz-Eugen-Gau und eine Reichsfestung Belgrad gehörten, deren Benennung auf Seyß-Inquart zurückgeht. Adolf Hitler lehnte einen solchen „k. u. k. Reichs-Nationalsozialismus“ ab, da „Geschichte und Kultur den angestrebten Pangermanismus auf österreichischem Gebiet behinderten“.
Testo orig.: „Notions of an autonomos role for the annexed Austria, such as the early Ostmark Governor Arthur Seyss-Inquart’s concepts of naming a future district the ‚Prince Eugene Gau‘ […] and the ‚Reich Fortress of Belgrade‘ (conjuring up images of Austro-Hungarian designs in the Balkans) were immediately dispelled by a Habsburg-detesting Hitler who rejected such ‚quasi-imperial and royal [Austrian] National Socialism‘. Nevertheless, Austrias history and culture continued to impede pan-Germanism in the Austrian territory.“
→ Robert von Dassanowsky, Phantom Empires: The Novels of Alexander Lernet-Holenia and the Question of Postimperial Austrian Identity Studies in Austrian literature, culture, and thought. Ariadne Press, 1996, ISBN 1-57241-030-2, S. 91.
Testo orig.: „Arthur Seyss-Inquart even hoped the Anschluss would allow for some cultural autonomy, perhaps a specific Austrian mission. He and the Austrian National Socialists used the specter of Old Austria in plans for a Balkan Reichsfestung Belgrad and a Prinz-Eugen-Gau, but Hitler’s hatred of the Habsburgs and such ‚imperial and royal‘ National Socialism made him reject any cultural or historical excursions into the Austrian past for a German Ostmark.“
Suetonius, Life of Nero, su penelope.uchicago.edu, maggio 2008. URL consultato il 14 maggio 2008.
Plutarch, Life of Sulla, su penelope.uchicago.edu, maggio 2008. URL consultato il 14 maggio 2008.
Plutarch, Life of Cato, su penelope.uchicago.edu, maggio 2008. URL consultato il 14 maggio 2008.
web.archive.org
(EN) Utopia: The 'Greater Germanic Reich of the German Nation', su obersalzberg.de, Monaco di Baviera - Berlino, Institut für Zeitgeschichte, 1999. URL consultato il 10 agosto 2014 (archiviato dall'url originale il 14 dicembre 2013).
Secondo Madision Grant, "The Nordics are, all over the world, a race of soldiers, sailors, adventurers and explorers, but above all, of rulers, organisers and aristocrats in sharp contrast to the essentially peasant character of the Alpines ... The mental characteristics of the Mediterranean race are well known, and this race, while inferior in bodily stamina to both the Nordic and the Alpine, is probably the superior of both, certainly of the Alpines, in intellectual attainments." Grant accepts that Mediterraneans created Semitic and Egyptian cultures, but insisted that Greece was "invigorated" by Nordics, and that "Roman ideals of family life, loyalty, and truth, point clearly to a Nordic rather than to a Mediterranean origin" . Madison Grant, The Passing of the Great Race, su churchoftrueisrael.com, 1916, p. part 2, ch. 11; part 2, chapter 5. URL consultato il 18 luglio 2007 (archiviato dall'url originale l'8 giugno 2007).
Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression, Vol. IV., vol. 4, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, 1946, pp. 553–572. URL consultato il 19 luglio 2007 (archiviato dall'url originale il 17 agosto 2007).
white-history.com
"All these are roads taken by Nordic tribes: by the Phrygians to Troy and Asia Minor; by the Nordic Hellenes to Greece; by the Nordic Italics (Romans) to Italy; by the Nordic Kelts to France and Spain. To these lands these tribes bring their Indo-European languages, and as the ruling class force them on to the subject, mainly Mediterranean, lower orders.",. Hans F K Günther, The Racial Elements of European History[collegamento interrotto], su white-history.com, Methuen, 1927, p. chapter 8, part one. URL consultato il 18 luglio 2007.