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Use this guide to help check your students` Reading
Use this guide to help check your students` Reading

... Resource T: The Battle of Stalingrad involved firebombs, fierce street-by-street battles, and a fight to the death in the bitter winter cold. It was a Soviet victory that forced the Germans to retreat. ...
hitler`s forgotten genocides
hitler`s forgotten genocides

... policies and wrote of invading Russia to achieve the necessary Lebensraum (living space) for future colonization by the master Aryan race.47 If we take Hitler at his word, we then can begin to understand why at least 25 million Soviets died in the conflict, a staggering number that simply cannot be ...
People – Chapter 28 - San Ramon Valley High School
People – Chapter 28 - San Ramon Valley High School

... Ultimately, how does Mussolini’s government stand up to the definition of the term Totalitarian? What were the key ideas of Nazism, as expressed in Hitler’s Mein Kampf? Where and how was Hitler radicalized as a young man? How did Hitler view the start of World War I and how did he view its end? Afte ...
1 - WLWV Staff Blogs
1 - WLWV Staff Blogs

... War: Spread of Totalitarian Regimes; Hitler’s Rise in Power and the Spread of Germany; Fall of France; U-Boat Attack of US Ships; Pearl Harbor – causes and effects; America enters the war; Germany First Strategy; European Front; Pacific Front; Weapon Development; The Holocaust; Fall of Berlin; Fall ...
PDF sample
PDF sample

... in Germany, a party was under way. There, deep in the dark pine forests of Coesfeld, a magnificent moated eight-hundred-year-old stone castle called Varlar was being readied for a celebration. The castle was a medieval showpiece of the Münster region, resplendent with turrets, balustrades, and looko ...
WWII Map Project
WWII Map Project

... Answer will vary. Students’ answers must pick one side and defend it using evidence from one of the readings. Students are not allowed to fence sit. ...
Secret Nazi Plans for Eastern Europe: Geography and
Secret Nazi Plans for Eastern Europe: Geography and

... to the German invasion oí Poland, but with the conquest of ever-wider areas in the East this type of research was intensified. The Nazi regime's need for accurate and detailed knowledge oí the occupied lands in the East directly benefitted this area oí research: several new research teams and entire ...
Nazi Propaganda Today you will be taking notes. Please take out your copybooks.
Nazi Propaganda Today you will be taking notes. Please take out your copybooks.

... (3) Maintaining Morale: • World War II involved not only the armed forces, but also civilians who were threatened by the bombing of the populated parts of the countries. • Therefore, an effort was made by British propagandists to keep people’s spirits up. ...
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 ...
AnneFrankIntroNotes_edit
AnneFrankIntroNotes_edit

... Otto Frank had been a lieutenant in the German Army during World War I, he is a little less hostile. The residents are taken from the house, forced into a covered truck, taken to the Central Office for Jewish Emigration, and then sent to Weteringschans Prison. Miep Gies gathers and saves Anne's scat ...
The Afghanistan Experience: Democratization by Force
The Afghanistan Experience: Democratization by Force

... the loya jirga approved a new constitution in 2003. The International Security Assistance Force, under British command, began training a new Afghan army, and the United Nations developed a humanitarian assistance plan as well as educational initiatives to combat illiteracy and increase educational o ...
No Slide Title
No Slide Title

... In 1938, Germany annexed Austria. • This action violated the Treaty of Versailles. • Britain and France took no action. Later in 1938, Hitler claimed the Sudetenland, the western part of Czechoslovakia. He said that many people of German heritage lived ...
Roden`s "tiny" Unit 9 Study Guide
Roden`s "tiny" Unit 9 Study Guide

... WWII begins in Europe & U.S. Neutrality  1939 = U.S. revises Neutrality Acts to: “Cash and Carry” to belligerents o Why did FDR revise the Neutrality Acts? To aid allies w/o war o Who was this revision suppose to aid? Britain (US will aid Allies w/o war!) o What was the “Cash and Carry” revision ex ...
Where were the atomic bombs dropped?
Where were the atomic bombs dropped?

... ANSWER: Germany’s invasion of Poland ...
Chapter 25 The World at War
Chapter 25 The World at War

... Within six months, Hitler’s forces had overrun the rest of Czechoslovakia and were threatening to march into Poland. ...
Sample Responses Q7 - AP Central
Sample Responses Q7 - AP Central

... Hitler repudiates Versailles Treaty and League of Nations. March 7, 1936: Hitler remilitarizes Rhineland. October 1936: Germany allies with Italy, followed by Anti-Comintern Pact with Japan. September 1939: Having agreed to the absorption of the Czech Sudetenland the previous year, Chamberlain signe ...
World War II Unit Outline
World War II Unit Outline

... Invasion of Poland (define) Documents: The Munich Conference pg. 693 What were the opposing views of Churchill and Chamberlain on the Munich Conference? Who do you support? Why? Japan’s Justification for Expansion pg. 695 What arguments does Hashimoto Kingoro make in favor of territorial expansion? ...
Resistance of Small Groups - Rosa-Luxemburg
Resistance of Small Groups - Rosa-Luxemburg

... groups had been formed that were close to the platforms of Trotsky and of BrandlerThalheimer. The groups were small, but their influence could not be ignored. In the international arena they had briefly forced Stalinism onto the ideological defensive. However, in the Soviet Union the German politica ...
WWII - timeline 1939-1945
WWII - timeline 1939-1945

... • Japan and Italy Join Germany in Axis Agreement (Sept. 27, 1940): The three powers officially enter into a military alliance, referred to as the Axis Powers, to oppose the Allied Powers. Their purpose is to support the economic and general welfare of participating nations through all levers possib ...
17 Outline Notes
17 Outline Notes

... What happened to passengers on the St. Louis? 2. Hitler’s “Final Solution” Define genocide. a. The Condemned Aside from Jews, what other groups were considered by Hitler to be inferior? b. Forced Relocation Define ghetto. What was life like in one? c. Concentration Camps Describe living conditions i ...
America Enters the War
America Enters the War

... out of funds to wage its war against Germany. Roosevelt came up with a way to remove the cash requirement of the most recent neutrality act. He proposed the Lend-Lease Act, which allowed the United States to lend or lease arms to any country considered “vital to the defense of the United States.” Th ...
chapter 25: americans and a world in crisis, 1933-1945
chapter 25: americans and a world in crisis, 1933-1945

...  He then turned to the Sudetenland (a part of Czechoslovakia, which had 3 million ethnic Germans).  APPEASEMENT – policy of giving into an aggressor to avoid war  MUNICH PACT – agreement between Hitler and British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain that gave Germany the Sudetenland, while Hitler ...
The Origins of the Cold War - Know Your Stuff | GCSE and IGCSE
The Origins of the Cold War - Know Your Stuff | GCSE and IGCSE

... Although  they  had  felt  the  USSR  should  have  some  extent  of  control  over  Eastern  Europe  for  defence,   neither  Britain  nor  the  USA  had  expected  such  domination.  Truman  feared  the  worst:  the  Domino   effect—t ...
Reichskommissariat Ostland - Grahams Nazi Germany Third Reich
Reichskommissariat Ostland - Grahams Nazi Germany Third Reich

... Poland and the west part of the Belarusian SSR during World War II. It was also known initially as Reichskommissariat Baltenland ("Baltic Land").[1] The political organization for this territory—after an initial period of military administration before its establishment— was that of a German civilia ...
Unit 4 WWII
Unit 4 WWII

... rationale for answering yes or no to the statements on the anticipation guide.  After everyone has finished, we will debate  Be sure to use respectful language, and ...
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New Order (Nazism)



The New Order (German: Neuordnung) or the New Order of Europe (German: Neuordnung Europas) was the political order which Nazi Germany wanted to impose on the conquered areas under its dominion. The establishment of the New Order had already begun long before the start of World War II, but was publicly proclaimed by Adolf Hitler in 1941:The year 1941 will be, I am convinced, the historical year of a great European New Order.Among other things, it entailed the creation of a pan-German racial state structured according to Nazi ideology to ensure the supremacy of an Aryan-Nordic master race, massive territorial expansion into Eastern Europe through its colonization with German settlers, the physical annihilation of the Jews and others considered to be ""unworthy of life"", and the extermination, expulsion, or enslavement of most of the Slavic peoples and others regarded as ""racially inferior"". Nazi Germany’s desire for aggressive territorial expansionism was one of the most important causes of World War II.Historians are still divided as to its ultimate goals, some believing that it was to be limited to Nazi German domination of Europe, while others maintain that it was a springboard for eventual world conquest and the establishment of a world government under German control.The Führer gave expression to his unshakable conviction that the Reich will be the master of all Europe. We shall yet have to engage in many fights, but these will undoubtedly lead to most wonderful victories. From there on the way to world domination is practically certain. Whoever dominates Europe will thereby assume the leadership of the world.
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