World War II Review
... 1. Hitler’s belief that white-skinned Germans were the Master Race, better than all others. ____________________ _______________ 2. Lightning War. ____________________________ 3. The imprisonment and murder of six million Jews during World War II. _________________________ 4. Law saying the U.S. cou ...
... 1. Hitler’s belief that white-skinned Germans were the Master Race, better than all others. ____________________ _______________ 2. Lightning War. ____________________________ 3. The imprisonment and murder of six million Jews during World War II. _________________________ 4. Law saying the U.S. cou ...
World War II Test - Mrs. Cooper`s World History class
... World War II Study Guide 1. What new militant political movement emphasized loyalty to the state and obedience to its leaders? 2. Which German political party sought to overturn the Treaty of Versailles and combat communism after WWI? 3. What was the purpose of propaganda during WWII? 4. What prompt ...
... World War II Study Guide 1. What new militant political movement emphasized loyalty to the state and obedience to its leaders? 2. Which German political party sought to overturn the Treaty of Versailles and combat communism after WWI? 3. What was the purpose of propaganda during WWII? 4. What prompt ...
WWII
... Appeasement Appeasement is the act of giving in to an enemy’s demands in hopes of avoiding further conflict. In 1938, Hitler demanded that Czechoslovakia cede the Sudetenland to Germany. He claimed that the German population living there was being mistreated. The British and French prime ministers ...
... Appeasement Appeasement is the act of giving in to an enemy’s demands in hopes of avoiding further conflict. In 1938, Hitler demanded that Czechoslovakia cede the Sudetenland to Germany. He claimed that the German population living there was being mistreated. The British and French prime ministers ...
Ch 19 A World In Flames
... • Hitler escaped death and went to prison for about 1 year Mein Kampf ( ...
... • Hitler escaped death and went to prison for about 1 year Mein Kampf ( ...
File
... 6. After the 1933 election, no political party won a majority of votes. President _____________ appointed Hitler as chancellor after being convinced to do so by an important group of German ________________________. a) Hindenburg b) business leaders 7. In 1933, right after the election, the ________ ...
... 6. After the 1933 election, no political party won a majority of votes. President _____________ appointed Hitler as chancellor after being convinced to do so by an important group of German ________________________. a) Hindenburg b) business leaders 7. In 1933, right after the election, the ________ ...
Essay Questions
... Answer these questions on a separate sheet of paper. 1. How and why did the United States attempt to isolate itself from foreign troubles in the early and mid 1930’s? 2. How did the Fascist dictators’ continually expanding aggression gradually erode the United States’ commitment to neutrality and is ...
... Answer these questions on a separate sheet of paper. 1. How and why did the United States attempt to isolate itself from foreign troubles in the early and mid 1930’s? 2. How did the Fascist dictators’ continually expanding aggression gradually erode the United States’ commitment to neutrality and is ...
World War II
... A. Why was the U.S. Isolationist? 1. Great Depression (problems at home) 2. Perceptions of WWI a. WWI did not seem to solve much b. People began to think that we’d got into WWI for the ...
... A. Why was the U.S. Isolationist? 1. Great Depression (problems at home) 2. Perceptions of WWI a. WWI did not seem to solve much b. People began to think that we’d got into WWI for the ...
WWII American Perspective
... • The Allied forces then invade Italy from the south and also begin to plan the mass D-Day invasion • Italy is a house of cards and the Italian King Victor Emanuel the III called in Mussolini into a meeting to strip him of all powers and said he was the most hated man of Italy • Mussolini was then t ...
... • The Allied forces then invade Italy from the south and also begin to plan the mass D-Day invasion • Italy is a house of cards and the Italian King Victor Emanuel the III called in Mussolini into a meeting to strip him of all powers and said he was the most hated man of Italy • Mussolini was then t ...
chapter 24 - Lone Star College
... d. the crushing of the Kiel Mutiny by the SS. 14. To whip up popular support for his totalitarian regime, Hitler organized gigantic mass rallies in the 1930's in the city of a. Berlin. b. Nuremberg. c. Cologne. d. Vienna. 16. The purpose of the SS was to a. augment the duties of the SA. b. use terro ...
... d. the crushing of the Kiel Mutiny by the SS. 14. To whip up popular support for his totalitarian regime, Hitler organized gigantic mass rallies in the 1930's in the city of a. Berlin. b. Nuremberg. c. Cologne. d. Vienna. 16. The purpose of the SS was to a. augment the duties of the SA. b. use terro ...
World War II Test Study Guide
... 36. Where were most of the Nazi death camps located? 37. What was the goal of the Nazi’s "Final Solution"? 38. Who was on trial at the Nuremberg Trials? 39. What impact did the Holocaust have on the Jewish population of Europe? ...
... 36. Where were most of the Nazi death camps located? 37. What was the goal of the Nazi’s "Final Solution"? 38. Who was on trial at the Nuremberg Trials? 39. What impact did the Holocaust have on the Jewish population of Europe? ...
Document
... Who were the Bolsheviks? What were soviets under Russia's provisional government? What is a totalitarian state? What was the purpose of the Soviet state's Five-Year Plans? Under Joseph Stalin's command economy system, all economic decisions were made by? How did the Russo-Japanese war show the czar' ...
... Who were the Bolsheviks? What were soviets under Russia's provisional government? What is a totalitarian state? What was the purpose of the Soviet state's Five-Year Plans? Under Joseph Stalin's command economy system, all economic decisions were made by? How did the Russo-Japanese war show the czar' ...
Hatred and Fear
... • 1929: World Wide Depression – Stock market crashed – Large-scaled unemployment – Businesses close ...
... • 1929: World Wide Depression – Stock market crashed – Large-scaled unemployment – Businesses close ...
to work on the “home front”
... and People of Color Brief unity and ongoing racism Defeat of Nazis and crippled Germany Destroyed Europe U.S. and Soviet Union became superpowers ...
... and People of Color Brief unity and ongoing racism Defeat of Nazis and crippled Germany Destroyed Europe U.S. and Soviet Union became superpowers ...
World War Two, 1941-1945
... and People of Color Brief unity and ongoing racism Defeat of Nazis and crippled Germany Destroyed Europe U.S. and Soviet Union became superpowers ...
... and People of Color Brief unity and ongoing racism Defeat of Nazis and crippled Germany Destroyed Europe U.S. and Soviet Union became superpowers ...
Dylan Cranley - rathregan.scoilnet.ie
... beginning of World War II, Zygmunt Klukowski, a young Polish doctor, confided in his diary that everyone was talking about war. "Everybody," he continued, "is sure that we will win." The reality was startlingly different. Nazi Germany's war with Poland, begun on September 1, was an uneven contest. ...
... beginning of World War II, Zygmunt Klukowski, a young Polish doctor, confided in his diary that everyone was talking about war. "Everybody," he continued, "is sure that we will win." The reality was startlingly different. Nazi Germany's war with Poland, begun on September 1, was an uneven contest. ...
his16sec.2(part1).
... 1. What were Germany, Italy and Japan called? 2. What were the United Kingdom, France and Canada called? 3. What was the agreement between the Soviet Union and Germany? 4. What was the area of Czechoslovakia that was given to the Germans? 5. What is the policy of giving up principles to make an aggr ...
... 1. What were Germany, Italy and Japan called? 2. What were the United Kingdom, France and Canada called? 3. What was the agreement between the Soviet Union and Germany? 4. What was the area of Czechoslovakia that was given to the Germans? 5. What is the policy of giving up principles to make an aggr ...
Chapter 14 The Coming of War - Mr Russell FCHS
... Totalitarianism in Italy direct result of WWI/treaties Italy on winning side Doesn’t get land it wanted Depression = high unemployment = communist ...
... Totalitarianism in Italy direct result of WWI/treaties Italy on winning side Doesn’t get land it wanted Depression = high unemployment = communist ...
Chapter 29 Review Questions
... 1. Describe conservative authoritarianism—as a theory, and its character in Poland, Hungary, Yugoslavia, and Portugal. 2. What are the characteristics of modern totalitarianism? How does it differ from conservative authoritarianism? 3. What was the purpose of Lenin’s New Economic Policy? 4. How succ ...
... 1. Describe conservative authoritarianism—as a theory, and its character in Poland, Hungary, Yugoslavia, and Portugal. 2. What are the characteristics of modern totalitarianism? How does it differ from conservative authoritarianism? 3. What was the purpose of Lenin’s New Economic Policy? 4. How succ ...
HIST2037 - University of Hong Kong
... → Increased popular support for NS regime → Weakened inner-German resistance → Stimulated Goebbels’ Total War propaganda, 18 ...
... → Increased popular support for NS regime → Weakened inner-German resistance → Stimulated Goebbels’ Total War propaganda, 18 ...
World War II - Options
... Most of WWI battles took place in France, so many cities were badly damaged and a lot of farmland was ruined The country had huge war debt to pay and very little money in treasury Spent over $200 million to build defense system against any future German invasion Experienced major economic troubles, ...
... Most of WWI battles took place in France, so many cities were badly damaged and a lot of farmland was ruined The country had huge war debt to pay and very little money in treasury Spent over $200 million to build defense system against any future German invasion Experienced major economic troubles, ...
Study Guide with answers - Effingham County Schools
... World War II and Cold War Study Guide Answers 1. What event in 1929 began the Great Depression in the United States? The stock market crash 2. What were some causes of the worldwide depression after WWI? Great loss of life, property damage, no money to repay war debts, and inflation 3. What were rep ...
... World War II and Cold War Study Guide Answers 1. What event in 1929 began the Great Depression in the United States? The stock market crash 2. What were some causes of the worldwide depression after WWI? Great loss of life, property damage, no money to repay war debts, and inflation 3. What were rep ...
Totalitarian Regimes 2012-2013
... - Adolf Hitler and Nazism, a type of Fascism in Germany - Benito Mussolini and Fascism in Italy * Most of the new Republics of Europe were not meeting the economic and social needs of their people * Weimar Republic of Germany could not deal with inflation in the German economy * The Italian Social R ...
... - Adolf Hitler and Nazism, a type of Fascism in Germany - Benito Mussolini and Fascism in Italy * Most of the new Republics of Europe were not meeting the economic and social needs of their people * Weimar Republic of Germany could not deal with inflation in the German economy * The Italian Social R ...
Hitler`s Big Mistake
... winter sets in!!! • Soviets counterattacked, took back the city, & went on the offensive, driving the German army back ...
... winter sets in!!! • Soviets counterattacked, took back the city, & went on the offensive, driving the German army back ...
Economy of Nazi Germany
World War I caused economic and manpower losses on Germany led to a decade of economic woes, including hyperinflation in the mid-1920s. Following the Wall Street Crash of 1929, the German economy, like those of many other western nations, suffered the effects of the Great Depression, with unemployment soaring. When Hitler became Chancellor in 1933, he introduced new efforts to improve Germany's economy, including autarky and the development of the German agricultural economy by placing tariffs on agricultural imports.However, these changes—including autarky and nationalization of key industries—had a mixed record. By 1938, unemployment was practically extinct. Wages increased by 10.9% in real terms during this period. However, nationalization and a cutting off of trade meant rationing in key resources like poultry, fruit, and clothing for many Germans.In 1934 Hjalmar Schacht, the Reich Minister of Economics, introduced the Mefo bills, allowing Germany to rearm without spending Reichmarks but instead pay industry with Reichmarks and Mefo bills (Government IOU's) which they could trade with each other. Between 1933 and 1939, the total revenue was 62 billion marks, whereas expenditure (at times made up to 60% by rearmament costs) exceeded 101 billion, thus creating a huge deficit and national debt (reaching 38 billion marks in 1939) coinciding with the Kristallnacht and intensified persecutions of Jews and the outbreak of the war.