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eingeforderter

Eingeforderter is a noun formed from the verb einfordern, meaning to demand or requisition. The term denotes a person or, less commonly, a thing whose service, labor, or possession has been demanded by an authority. When used for people, it refers to individuals who have been requisitioned or conscripted by state organs rather than volunteering.

Historically, eingefoorderte people appear in German-language administrative and military contexts. In various periods, authorities could call

Variants and grammar: as a nominalized form, it can appear as der Eingeforderte (masculine singular), die Eingeforderte

Modern usage: today the word is primarily found in historical or legal analyses of requisition and conscription.

See also: Einziehung, Einziehen, Zwangsarbeit, Wehrdienst.

up
manpower
and
resources
for
military
campaigns,
public
works,
or
war-related
needs,
and
the
term
described
those
compelled
to
serve
or
supply.
In
the
20th
century,
especially
during
wartime
regimes,
phrases
such
as
eingeforderte
Arbeitskräfte
or
eingeforderte
Zwangsarbeiter
appeared
in
official
language
to
denote
forced
labor,
highlighting
coercion
and
legal
mandate.
(feminine),
or
die
Eingeforderten
(plural).
It
is
commonly
encountered
in
historical
documents,
military
records,
and
legal
texts.
In
contemporary
everyday
German,
the
term
is
rarely
used
outside
historical
discussion.
More
common
contemporary
terms
for
similar
meanings
include
eingezogen
(drafted),
eingezogene
Arbeitskräfte
(recruited
workers),
or
simply
requisitiert
(requisitioned),
depending
on
context.