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Profile Documents Logout
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File - Mr. Takos` Website
File - Mr. Takos` Website

... -Sustaining _____ losses during the daytime, Hitler began bombing at _____ -Eventually, the Battle of Britain ended on ____________ with Hitler turning his attention to _______ Europe -During the Battle of Britain, _____ launched a campaign into _____ _______ to try and capture the _____ ______ and ...
CHAPTER 17 World War II and Its Aftermath 1931
CHAPTER 17 World War II and Its Aftermath 1931

... pact with his great enemy–Joseph Stalin, the Soviet dictator. Publicly, the Nazi-Soviet Pact bound Hitler and Stalin to peaceful relations. Secretly, the two agreed not to fight if the other went to war and to divide up Poland and other parts of Eastern Europe between them. The pact was based not on ...
Aggression Leads to War - Epiphany Catholic School
Aggression Leads to War - Epiphany Catholic School

... Section Review ...
primary - Caen Memorial museum
primary - Caen Memorial museum

... The hatred of Jews, accused of being responsible for all the problems, is called 10 Anti-Semitism. All the Jews, ...
PDF sample
PDF sample

... before stopping. Hiring dedicated Nazis was without precedent, entirely unprincipled, and inherently dangerous not just because, as Undersecretary of War Robert Patterson stated when debating if he should approve Paperclip, “These men are enemies,” but because it was counter to democratic ideals. Th ...
Note Taking Study Guide
Note Taking Study Guide

... became the predominant nations of the postwar world. The postwar world did not turn out quite as the Allies had planned. Communists and noncommunists clashed in Eastern Europe. In China, civil war began once again. Japan gained a new constitution that abolished the armed forces and enacted democrati ...
Ch 24 and 26 Rise of Totalitariansim and WWII Study
Ch 24 and 26 Rise of Totalitariansim and WWII Study

... 8. Describe the course of World War II: identify the 2 theaters of war, significant battle strategies, and a few important battles. [Note: Guide your response to this question based on the terms below; and any battles mentioned in the blue book] 9. Explain how World War II came to an end. 10. Explai ...
Lord of the Flies
Lord of the Flies

... 1940- Fall of France 1940- Fascist Italy joins the Axis with Germany 1941- Japan attacks Pearl Harbor causing USA to declare war on Japan and enter the world war ...
ws05-wwii-the-axis-powers
ws05-wwii-the-axis-powers

... Gestapo police and was in charge of the concentration camps.  Hermann Goering - Goring held the title Prime Minister of Prussia. He was commander of the German air force called the Luftwaffe.  Erwin Rommel - Rommel was one of Germany's smartest Generals. He commanded their army in Africa and then ...
Unit 14
Unit 14

... ● Since   appeasement   had   failed,   Britain   and   France   agreed   to   fight   if   Poland   was   a柠�acked  ● In   1939,  S  talin   &  Hitler   signed   a  nonaggression   pact ,  shocking   Britain   and   France  ○ Stalin   and   Hitler   agreed   to   divide   Poland   between   them  ● ...
WWII
WWII

... • Allies discover concentration camps where Jews, others murdered • During the Holocaust Nazis kill: - about 6 million Jews - millions of people from other ethnic groups - 11 million people in all • Hitler preaches hatred of Jews, blames Jews for Germany’s problems ...
World War II Section 1 - Geneva Area City Schools
World War II Section 1 - Geneva Area City Schools

... territorial demands. March 1939 Hitler takes over rest of Czechoslovakia. • Chamberlain (British) and Daladier (French) agreed not to block Hitler. • Czechs had no representatives at the Munich Conference. ...
World War II Lecture Slides
World War II Lecture Slides

... Grynszpan, shot and killed a German diplomat in Paris -Hitler was furious and ordered his Minister of Propaganda, Joseph Goebbels, to stage attacks against the Jews (would appear to be ...
Chapter 26: World War II, 1939-1945
Chapter 26: World War II, 1939-1945

... Czechoslovakia was prepared to fight to keep the Sudetenland. Britain and France, fearing a full-fledged war in the region, sought a peaceful solution to the crisis. In September 1938, European leaders met in Munich, Germany. Britain and France thought that they could avoid war by accepting Germany’ ...
Chapter 26: World War II, 1939-1945
Chapter 26: World War II, 1939-1945

... Czechoslovakia was prepared to fight to keep the Sudetenland. Britain and France, fearing a full-fledged war in the region, sought a peaceful solution to the crisis. In September 1938, European leaders met in Munich, Germany. Britain and France thought that they could avoid war by accepting Germany’ ...
Class Notes - Jessamine County Schools
Class Notes - Jessamine County Schools

...  October 1922- Mussolini, who called himself Il Duce (“the leader”), marched on Rome with thousands of followers in a symbolic show of power o Important government officials, the army, and the police sided with the Fascists o The Italian king appointed Mussolini as head of the Italian government  ...
Week 3 Day 1
Week 3 Day 1

... Weaponry-atomic bombs, rockets Technology- penicillin, vaccines Communication-computers ...
The Deepening of the European Crisis: World War II
The Deepening of the European Crisis: World War II

... believer in the doctrine of Lebensraum (living space), espoused by Karl Haushofer, a professor of geography at the University of Munich. The doctrine of Lebensraum maintained that a nation’s power depended upon the amount and kind of land it occupied. Already in the 1920s, in the second volume of Me ...
Revision Test 3.1 full history[1]. - The-Historic
Revision Test 3.1 full history[1]. - The-Historic

... i.e. answers that show how some factors are contingent /dependent on others, or the different roles factors play (short-term, long term, etc.) In conclusion, I would argue that the Great Depression was the underlying and therefore most important factor, as it made the fear of Communism more real, an ...
WHUnit6-7StudyGuide
WHUnit6-7StudyGuide

... 2. List three reasons why leaders allowed Nazi Germany to 3. How did the Treaty of Versailles impact WWII? build up their military power and expand their territory: ________________________________________ a. __________________________________________ ____________________________________________ b. ...
World War II Section 1 - Geneva Area City Schools
World War II Section 1 - Geneva Area City Schools

... territorial demands. March 1939 Hitler takes over rest of Czechoslovakia. • Chamberlain (British) and Daladier (French) agreed not to block Hitler. • Czechs had no representatives at the Munich Conference. ...
War!
War!

... heavily fortified borders with German? ...
file
file

... their union in California's Sanitary Canning Corporation. Family and community groups supported their effort. "Although their union could not be sustained after the war in the face of mounting opposition by anticommunist crusaders, its success during the war demonstrate how much control over their w ...
Ruins, Rebuilding, and Two Europes
Ruins, Rebuilding, and Two Europes

... Soviet Union, 1945 more than 25 million homeless people 7.5 million civilian citizens killed during Nazi occupation (nearly ½ in Ukraine) 3,000,000 taken as slave labor for German factories (2,000,000 of those died) orphans waiting for food (UNICEF photo, Truman Library) ...
Chapter 14
Chapter 14

... was Hitler’s birthplace. He had long dreamed of uniting all the German-speaking people in Europe. In fact, Hitler’s Nazi party already had many supporters in Austria. In early 1938 Hitler began to demand that Austrian officials accept annexation by Germany. Annexation is the formal joining of one co ...
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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.
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