The Dokumentationszentrum Reichsparteitagsgeländ (literally: National Socialist Party Rally Area Documentation Center) is a museum in Nuremberg. It is located in the former headquarters of the Nazi party rallies, a monumental building of eleven square kilometers, intended for the party's self-celebration. The museum is concerned with providing a complete picture of National Socialist tyranny and the history of the Nazi party rallies, delving into the causes, connections and consequences of Nazism in German society at the time. The leitmotif of the museum itinerary is the history of the party's annual congresses, the so-called "Reichsparteitage": gigantic mass demonstrations that were used by Nazi propaganda to stage the "Volksgemeinschaft", the popular community so dear to the party's ideology. Modern media tools such as, for example, computer animations, films and touchscreens, as well as photographs and documents of the time, illustrate to the visitor both the function of the buildings present in the architectural complex, and the history and background of the annual party rallies. An audio guide allows you to listen to texts and comments in seven different languages. The museum offer is completed by an educational program and special exhibitions.