Nazi-run schools had close links with Eton, Harrow and other top British institutions, new documents have revealed. Pupils from elite schools in Germany, known as Napolas, took part in exchanges and sporting tournaments with boys from England before the Second World War. Dr Helen Roche, of Durham University, has for the first time detailed the little-known exchanges in a new book, based on archive research and testimonies from former pupils. She found the Napolas – set up to train and indoctrinate future leaders of the Third Reich – were modelled on various elite British public schools. Dr Roche said the...