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PresentationExpress - Antelope Valley High School
PresentationExpress - Antelope Valley High School

... The Battle of Stalingrad was another turning point for the Allies in Europe. • Hitler launched an offensive in 1942 to gain the rich oilfields of the Soviet Union. • His troops got only as far as Stalingrad, where they launched a fierce house-by-house battle. • As winter came, Soviet troops surround ...
The Allies Turn the Tide
The Allies Turn the Tide

... The Battle of Stalingrad was another turning point for the Allies in Europe. • Hitler launched an offensive in 1942 to gain the rich oilfields of the Soviet Union. • His troops got only as far as Stalingrad, where they launched a fierce house-by-house battle. • As winter came, Soviet troops surround ...
The Last Days - Movie Study Guide
The Last Days - Movie Study Guide

... be “fixed” by conversion. In Germany before World War II, Adolf Hitler capitalized on the deep-rooted antisemitism among the people, using it to make German Jews the scapegoat for economic, political, and other problems. During World War II, the Nazi leaders of Germany decided that the “Jewish probl ...
cold war causes
cold war causes

... However Stalin had previously promised to set up a government in Poland including both capitalists and communists but had broken his word. Furthermore, America had just tested the first atomic bomb, so Harry Truman was acting rather arrogantly and trying to order Stalin around. Little did he know, t ...
To what extent was the US responsible for the outbreak of the Cold
To what extent was the US responsible for the outbreak of the Cold

... Free elections were not conducted but Stalin did concede London Poles in the now mainly communist gov’t. *Stalin saw the Moscow Conf. agreements as more important; he was prepared to trade British influence over Greece for Soviet hegemony in Romania and Bulgaria *In 1945, US recognized the new Polis ...
No Slide Title
No Slide Title

... • In September, leaders of Britain, France, Italy, and Germany met in Munich. At this Munich Conference, Hitler promised that Germany would take no further territory once it had the Sudetenland. • Britain and France agreed. This practice of giving in to aggression in order to avoid war is known as a ...
9th WWII UPDATED
9th WWII UPDATED

... Baltic States (Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania). Poland was also to be divided between the two. The new territories gave the Soviet Union the buffer (in land) that it wanted to feel safe from an invasion from the West. For the Nazis, when attacking Poland on September 1, 1939, the Soviets promised no ...
Ivan Maiskii Soviet Ambassador to London 1932
Ivan Maiskii Soviet Ambassador to London 1932

... • The International Brigades (foreigners who signed up to fight against the fascists) were withdrawn. ...
9th WWII UPDATED
9th WWII UPDATED

... Baltic States (Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania). Poland was also to be divided between the two. The new territories gave the Soviet Union the buffer (in land) that it wanted to feel safe from an invasion from the West. For the Nazis, when attacking Poland on September 1, 1939, the Soviets promised no ...
1 - Net Start Class
1 - Net Start Class

... 2. Great Britain and the Soviet city of Leningrad each fought off a German invasion. Other countries gave in to the Germans without much resistance. What factors do you think a country’s leaders consider when deciding whether to surrender or to fight? ...
United States History World War II Timeline
United States History World War II Timeline

... April 10, 1942 - Bataan Death March begins as 76,000 Allied POWs including 12,000 Americans are forced to walk 60 miles under a blazing sun without food or water toward a new POW camp, resulting in over 5,000 American deaths. April 18, 1942 - Surprise U.S. "Doolittle" B-25 air raid from the HORNET ...
Cold War
Cold War

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lithuanian prisoners of war in western
lithuanian prisoners of war in western

... 30 April 1945, the German army recruited 17,893,000 people. A total of 21% of all German citizens (of the size of the country in 1939) were mobilised. This was a high-level mobilisation, the tension of which was albeit diminished by the economies of the occupied lands, their natural resources and th ...
How did the rise of fascism affect world events following World War I?
How did the rise of fascism affect world events following World War I?

... What were the major events and turning points of World War II? (USII 6b) 1. Germany invaded ______________, setting off war in Europe. The Soviet Union also invaded Poland and the Baltic nations. 2. Germany invaded ___________, capturing Paris. 3. Germany bombed London and the Battle of ___________ ...
The Influence of the Treaty of Versailles on World War II The Treaty
The Influence of the Treaty of Versailles on World War II The Treaty

... The Influence of the Treaty of Versailles on World War II The Treaty of Versailles, drafted and passed after World War I, was a document that addressed the state of the international community in response to the war. Notably, decisions made during the treaty were passed without input from German del ...
Class Notes_PDF - Jessamine County Schools
Class Notes_PDF - Jessamine County Schools

... o Abolished privately owned farms and replaced them with giant collectives- government-owned farms, worked by hundreds of families  Worked to transform the Soviet Union into an industrial power o 1928- Stalin outlines the first of his “Five-year Plans”  The communist government would direct all ec ...
Crete during the Second World War.
Crete during the Second World War.

... warfare and constitutes a war crime. Throughout the occupation of Crete, such acts were ‘common practice’ for the German forces. Civilians were killed, while cities, towns and villages were wantonly destroyed, left deserted by the forcible evacuation of civilians and turned into scorched earth. Thro ...
US.7 - Suffolk Public Schools Blog
US.7 - Suffolk Public Schools Blog

... How did post-World War I Europe set the stage for World War II?  German’s government was weak and couldn’t hold law/order. Causes of World War II  Germany destroyed many cities/countries in WWI. Part of ending the war  Political instability and was the understanding that Germany would pay the cou ...
The Cold War in Brief
The Cold War in Brief

... Copy this slide second-largest economy after the United States. Ms. Ramos ...
The Cold War revision notes (latest) DOCX File
The Cold War revision notes (latest) DOCX File

... Germany was formally divided in two. In September, Western Germany became the Federal Republic of Germany. In October, Eastern Germany became the German Democratic Republic. ...
World War II- Spring Project
World War II- Spring Project

... 2) DOCUMENT 1: In what year was the cartoon published? What is the main idea of this cartoon and how does it relate to the causes of World War II? 3) Why were dictators able to rise to power in Italy, Germany and the Soviet Union? 4) Who was Adolph Hitler and how did he rise to power in Germany? Wha ...
NATO, the Warsaw Pact - IB 20th c. World History Y2
NATO, the Warsaw Pact - IB 20th c. World History Y2

... rearming of West Germany and its admission into NATO in 1955. In the aftermath of World War I and World War II, Soviet leaders felt very apprehensive about Germany once again becoming a military power-a concern that was shared by many European nations on both sides of the Cold War divide. In the mid ...
World War II, 1939–1945
World War II, 1939–1945

... Polish Corridor, along with its port city of Danzig, be returned to Germany. After World War I, the Allies had cut out the Polish Corridor from German territory to give Poland access to the sea. This time, Great Britain and France decided to resist this threat of aggression. At this point, as was me ...
EDEXCEL SECTION 4 EBook How did the Cold War
EDEXCEL SECTION 4 EBook How did the Cold War

... of 1914 and 1941. He wanted to build a buffer zone against possible future German attacks and this idea of a buffer zone conflicted with the ideas of Churchill, who did not wish to see communism spread into Western Europe. In addition, the distrust was compounded by Stalin’s suspicion that the Allie ...
Electronic Book Word document
Electronic Book Word document

... of 1914 and 1941. He wanted to build a buffer zone against possible future German attacks and this idea of a buffer zone conflicted with the ideas of Churchill, who did not wish to see communism spread into Western Europe. In addition, the distrust was compounded by Stalin’s suspicion that the Allie ...
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Consequences of Nazism



Nazism and the acts of the Nazi German state profoundly affected many countries, communities and peoples before, during and after World War II. While the attempt of Germany to exterminate several nations viewed as subhuman by Nazi ideology was eventually stopped by the Allies, Nazi aggression nevertheless led to the deaths of tens of millions and the ruin of several states.
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