The originator of the theory of the master race was Count Arthur de Gobineau, who argued that cultures degenerate when distinct 'races' mix. It was widely believed at this time that southern European peoples were racially mixed with non-Europeans from across the Mediterranean, while Northern Europeans remained 'pure'. Hence in Nazism the racial ideal was the blond blue-eyed Nordic individual. The term "Aryan race" was commonly used to name this ideal. The imagined superiority of these people supposedly made them born leaders, or a 'master race.'
The term Aryan derives from the ancient peoples who occupied Iran and the Indus Valley. Following the ideas of Gobineau and others, the Nazi theorist Alfred Rosenberg claimed that these were a dynamic warrior people who originated in northern climes, from which they migrated south, eventually reaching India. They were supposed to be the ancestors of the ancient Germanic tribes, who shared their warrior values. Following Nietzsche (but distorting him), Rosenberg claimed that Christianity was an alien Semitic slave-morality inappropriate to the warrior Aryan master-race.
In Nazi Germany, marriage of an 'Aryan' with a non-Aryan was forbidden. To maintain the supposed superiority of the Nordic master-race eugenics was practiced. In order to eliminate "defective" citizens, the T-4 Euthanasia Program was administered by Karl Brandt to rid the country of the mentally retarded or those born with genetic deficiencies.
Modern geneticists no longer give credence to the biological arguments on which the hierarchical model of race is built.
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