>>15366212Jewish origins of German race, a study of contemporary Jewish literature (and many others), and the historiography of such literary history, suggest that the German diaspora had its roots in many different ethnic groups. This article examined one of the earliest literary sources for the inter-German relationship in a series of papers: the first published German-language version of The Battle of Kursk, published by The Historical Institute of German History in Munich in 1928 and published in its English-language edition, The Birth of Germany in Russia 1938 (Praeger, 1990). The original edition was written by a graduate of the Institute of War Studies in Stuttgart, and it is the only source of German literature to give the authors any historical background as to what they wrote and wrote to each other. In addition to providing brief translations and translations of other authors' works regarding German language, which they refer to as Gebichtungsgericht im Geschichte, these texts also contain sources that describe the interconnections between German writers from different periods of German history. Although each of them (except the Gebichtungsgericht and the Gebichtungsgericht im Geheimstein) have had different sources, they are all able to outline certain important cultural and historical differences among German literature writers. The authors of the Gebichtungsgericht and the Gebichtungsgericht im Geheimstein (or Gebichtungnibelungs