The Memorium Nürnberger Prozesse is a Nuremberg museum dedicated to the historical testimony of the Nuremberg Trial: in fact, from 20 November 1945 to 1 October 1946, the "great war criminals", that is the main representatives of the National Socialist regime, had to answer for their crimes before to an international court in room 600 of the Nuremberg Palace of Justice.
The museum itinerary is divided into three sections: the first and largest exhibition hall explains the history, the participants and the development of the process; the second section is devoted to the legal prosecution of Nazi crimes after 1946, showing an overview of the subsequent Nuremberg trials that evoke the extent and duration of these trials. In the third part, the examination of the Nuremberg legacy to the International Criminal Court in The Hague concludes the exhibition itinerary. The Memorium is reconstructed above the same room 600, with an exhibition itinerary that deliberately renounces objects in favor of a more documentary character. Exceptions are the presence of two parts of the original platform, a box for transporting documents and the electronic control cabinet that was used to control the power supply in the hall. Original films and sound recordings are integrated at various points in the exhibition, giving a vivid impression of what was happening in the process.