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Bormann Decree on Lettering

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    Bormann Decree on Lettering

    For those of you who are interested in lettering and typefaces, I am posting a copy of the original Bormann letter on the decree from Hitler, which in effect outlawed the use of Gothic typefacing for printed material as of January 1941. The reasoning behind the change to 'Antiqua' ie. 'Roman' or 'Latin' text is a rather tenuous link to the 'Schwabacher' type Gothic script allegedly being of Jewish origin, which he justifies by claiming that the Jews originally owned the printing presses of Germany. This, of course, is a very simplistic way in which to view the development of Germanic lettering. Gothic text originally evolved through Medieval (Christian) scribes as a space saving style, which went on to develop different characteristics throughout Europe. The 'Schwabacher' text referred to by Bormann was actually a style which evolved in the area of Mainz, which always did have quite a strong Jewish community, so it is possible that the Nazis, in their misguided pedantry, have decided that this is enough to proscribe all similar fonts. Another fact that has apparently been deemed irrelevant in the justification of this decree, is that Johannes Gutenburg, who is credited with the invention of the printing press, was born into a family house that was "liberated" from a Jewish family in a pogrom similar to those which were repeated by the Nazis half a century later.
    The seemingly ubiquitous use of Gothic lettering had already been somewhat on the wane in Germany at the start of the 20th. Century until the rise of the Nazi Party, when many more modernised variations started to appear. Interestingly, these newer Gothic styles where collectively known as "Schaftstiefel Grotesk" which can be translated nowadays as "Jackboot Helvetica". The turnaround back to the use of 'Roman' typeface was , like so many other policies of the Third Reich, basically blamed on the Jews, when in fact the logic behind the reversal of opinion probably had more to do with communication barriers which appeared in the newly occupied territories.
    I presume that a similar decree was issued with regard to 'Sütterlin' Script, or 'Kurrent' as it was originally known before Ludwig Sütterlin simplified and standardised it for the use in Prussian schools in 1915, but I have as yet to come accross it.
    Anyway, I could ramble on all night about lettering, so here is the Bormann letter of which I have also provided an English translation...
    Attached Files
    Last edited by J C Gray; 11-25-2008, 07:59 PM.

    #2
    English translation...
    Attached Files

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      #3
      Very interesting doc. Thank you for sharing it with us.

      Comment


        #4
        Many thanks. What is the source of this document please?
        Max.

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          #5
          Originally posted by max history View Post
          Many thanks. What is the source of this document please?
          Max.
          Hi Max, I chanced upon the letter whilst browsing the web about 6 months ago, but at the moment I can't remember what site it was on. I'm sure that I would have added it to my favourites, so I will try and find it for you later on tonight when I get a chance. I think that I also saw a reference to the letter at a website called Walden Fonts...I will try to get you a link to this also.

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            #6
            Here you can also find the memo of Bormann

            http://german.about.com/library/gall..._fraktur06.htm


            Gerdan

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              #7
              Here a better version of the memo:

              http://www.ligaturix.de/bormann.htm


              Gerdan

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                #8
                Do you think this decree would apply to ALL printed material, including for example packets for the EK11?

                Allan
                Looking for information on RKT KARL HUBER
                Stoßtruppführer AufKlAbt 20 (mot.)

                'Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it'

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                  #9
                  It was given for all official authorities of the German government and army and the NS party but if a degree like this was really established you need years specially when you remember that WWII was going on and sometimes there was also a lack of paper. All offices had to use their forms they had in their stock/depot what type of typeface the printer had used.

                  Gerdan

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                    #10
                    That Bormann memo is also reproduced in the factfinder guidebook to wartime Berlin.

                    It is the reason why not only new citations but also Wehrpasses, Soldbuchs, Cuff Titles, armbands etc. etc. all changed to a Latin typeface after 1941.

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                      #11
                      Originally posted by Gerdan View Post
                      It was given for all official authorities of the German government and army and the NS party but if a degree like this was really established you need years specially when you remember that WWII was going on and sometimes there was also a lack of paper. All offices had to use their forms they had in their stock/depot what type of typeface the printer had used.

                      Gerdan
                      Besides the lack of paper to make new forms, the printers all faced the necessity of producing/procuring new presses with the required typeface. Judging from copies of "Mein Kampf" printed after Jan 1941, that took a while. By 1942 many "Mein Kampf" printers had switched to the new font for the book text, but the title on the spine remained in Fraktur on many copies through 1944 printings.

                      Greg
                      sigpicFacebook "Tigers in the Ardennes" book page
                      www.facebook.com/TigersintheArdennes

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                        #12
                        Originally posted by Gerdan View Post
                        Here you can also find the memo of Bormann

                        http://german.about.com/library/gall..._fraktur06.htm


                        Gerdan
                        That's the one I was looking for...thanks for that Gerdan.

                        The 'Reichsgesetzblatt' had stopped using Fraktur by January 1942, yet it seems to have taken Heinrich Doehle another year to change his 'Orden & Ehrenzeichen' volumes from his Tannenberg Gothic to Antiqua (I'm not even sure if Doehle published a 1942 volume or not).

                        Assuming that the letter shown above is actually a copy of the original letter, it seems to be slightly contradictory of Bormann to have issued it on paper bearing a letterhead in Gothic typeface. I am also assuming that he is using the term 'Schwabacher' as a generic term for all Gothic fonts...the typeface used for the letterhead in question bears very little resemblance to the actual Schwabacher styles, but in fact it is a very Anglicised, Victorian version of Gothic...is this style (particularly the 'N'), an accepted form of NSDAP letterhead font?

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