Unit11Day2-Totalitarianism
... I am Benito Mussolini the leader (Il Duce) of Italy from 1922 to 1943. What is Fascism? ...
... I am Benito Mussolini the leader (Il Duce) of Italy from 1922 to 1943. What is Fascism? ...
Review Book WWII Unit 6 Section 5
... Unit 6 Section 5 World War II 1. What events led up to World War II? ...
... Unit 6 Section 5 World War II 1. What events led up to World War II? ...
Youth Remember the Italian Campaign Fact Quest : Answer Sheet
... overlooking the Adriatic Sea. Its narrow, rubble-filled streets limited the use of tanks and artillery. This meant the Canadians had to engage in vicious street fighting and smash their way through walls and buildings—“mouseholing”, as it was called. ...
... overlooking the Adriatic Sea. Its narrow, rubble-filled streets limited the use of tanks and artillery. This meant the Canadians had to engage in vicious street fighting and smash their way through walls and buildings—“mouseholing”, as it was called. ...
Japanese Military
... railroad tie and 2 fishplates were damaged. Roughly about 3-4 feet on track were damaged, but the honor of the entire country of Japan had been violated. The Japanese army stormed across the border and within a few days had control of Manchuria. They renamed it Manchukuo and established a puppet-gov ...
... railroad tie and 2 fishplates were damaged. Roughly about 3-4 feet on track were damaged, but the honor of the entire country of Japan had been violated. The Japanese army stormed across the border and within a few days had control of Manchuria. They renamed it Manchukuo and established a puppet-gov ...
world war ii allied invasions
... • The U.S. and especially the British decide to invade Africa instead – Nov. 1942 – three amphibious landings in the French colonies of Algeria, Tunisia, and Morocco • Led by American general Dwight Eisenhower • Landed with 107,000 Allied troops and the Vichycontrolled colonies soon joined • As a re ...
... • The U.S. and especially the British decide to invade Africa instead – Nov. 1942 – three amphibious landings in the French colonies of Algeria, Tunisia, and Morocco • Led by American general Dwight Eisenhower • Landed with 107,000 Allied troops and the Vichycontrolled colonies soon joined • As a re ...
World History from World War I to World War II
... Hitler begins rebuilding German military and marches troops into the Rhineland (lost in WWI) Germany annexes Austria and claims parts of the Sudetenland Great Britain and France pursue policy of appeasement—rather than challenge Hitler’s aggression • Appeasement- granting concessions to ...
... Hitler begins rebuilding German military and marches troops into the Rhineland (lost in WWI) Germany annexes Austria and claims parts of the Sudetenland Great Britain and France pursue policy of appeasement—rather than challenge Hitler’s aggression • Appeasement- granting concessions to ...
Life in Mussolini
... what childbearing is to the female." Girls were taught that giving birth was natural – while for boys, fighting was the same – natural. Children were taught to obey those in charge. This was not an unusual move in a dictatorship. Once the OVRA had dealt with those adults who challenged the authority ...
... what childbearing is to the female." Girls were taught that giving birth was natural – while for boys, fighting was the same – natural. Children were taught to obey those in charge. This was not an unusual move in a dictatorship. Once the OVRA had dealt with those adults who challenged the authority ...
Totalitarianism and Fascism
... October 1922: Mussolini’s Fascists march on __________________, demanding power, even though they had only 35 of 535 seats in parliament. The weak liberal King Victor Emmanuel III appoints Mussolini __________________ to __________________ them. 1925-6: Mussolini eliminates non-Fascists from his ___ ...
... October 1922: Mussolini’s Fascists march on __________________, demanding power, even though they had only 35 of 535 seats in parliament. The weak liberal King Victor Emmanuel III appoints Mussolini __________________ to __________________ them. 1925-6: Mussolini eliminates non-Fascists from his ___ ...
The Italian Campaign
... “Desert Fox” because of his success in desert warfare. • In November 1942, the British defeated Rommel at El Alamein, (on the boarder of Libya and Egypt) that prevented the Germans from capturing the Suez Canal linking the Mediterranean and the Red Sea. ...
... “Desert Fox” because of his success in desert warfare. • In November 1942, the British defeated Rommel at El Alamein, (on the boarder of Libya and Egypt) that prevented the Germans from capturing the Suez Canal linking the Mediterranean and the Red Sea. ...
1 15th Century: Stabilization The Spanish consolidated power with
... The Spanish consolidated power with the marriage of Isabella I of Castile and Ferdinand II of Aragon in 1469. Their dual monarchy made Spain the bestadministered kingdom in Europe. Meanwhile, Italian city-states largely held their peace with one another, allowing them to control the Mediterranean. I ...
... The Spanish consolidated power with the marriage of Isabella I of Castile and Ferdinand II of Aragon in 1469. Their dual monarchy made Spain the bestadministered kingdom in Europe. Meanwhile, Italian city-states largely held their peace with one another, allowing them to control the Mediterranean. I ...
WORLD WAR II
... • The U.S. and especially the British decide to invade Africa instead – Nov. 1942 – three amphibious landings in the French colonies of Algeria, Tunisia, and Morocco • Led by American general Dwight Eisenhower • Landed with 107,000 Allied troops and the Vichycontrolled colonies soon joined • As a re ...
... • The U.S. and especially the British decide to invade Africa instead – Nov. 1942 – three amphibious landings in the French colonies of Algeria, Tunisia, and Morocco • Led by American general Dwight Eisenhower • Landed with 107,000 Allied troops and the Vichycontrolled colonies soon joined • As a re ...
Kelly Bisi
... invaded our ally, Ethiopia, and the League of Nations denounced Italy. May 1935, Italy conquered Ethiopia and the League of Nations lost its “prestige and effectiveness” because they refused to take action to aid our allies. March 1936 Germany violates the international treaties and reoccupies Rhine ...
... invaded our ally, Ethiopia, and the League of Nations denounced Italy. May 1935, Italy conquered Ethiopia and the League of Nations lost its “prestige and effectiveness” because they refused to take action to aid our allies. March 1936 Germany violates the international treaties and reoccupies Rhine ...
Fascism - Denton ISD
... by a party elite, which ruthlessly crushed all free expression and banished critics of the regime to penal settlements on islands off the southern Italian Coast. ...
... by a party elite, which ruthlessly crushed all free expression and banished critics of the regime to penal settlements on islands off the southern Italian Coast. ...
Benito Mussolini
... founded in 1919 in Milan. – Mostly Italian war veterans who rejected Versailles. ...
... founded in 1919 in Milan. – Mostly Italian war veterans who rejected Versailles. ...
WWII Timeline PowerPoint
... In 1943, Benito Mussolini was ousted and arrested by order of King Victor Emmanuel III, which provoked a civil war in Italy between the German-occupied north and the Allied-occupied south. Mussolini was later captured and killed on April 28, 1945 by the Italian resistance while attempting to flee. D ...
... In 1943, Benito Mussolini was ousted and arrested by order of King Victor Emmanuel III, which provoked a civil war in Italy between the German-occupied north and the Allied-occupied south. Mussolini was later captured and killed on April 28, 1945 by the Italian resistance while attempting to flee. D ...
File
... Another was a new political movement known as fascism. Fascism was different from communism because it had no plan of action. Most fascist believed in an extreme type of nationalism that included war as a way to get what they wanted. Fascism also included belief in controlling leaders who need compl ...
... Another was a new political movement known as fascism. Fascism was different from communism because it had no plan of action. Most fascist believed in an extreme type of nationalism that included war as a way to get what they wanted. Fascism also included belief in controlling leaders who need compl ...
WC-B - GHS World Civ
... What Caused the War • Most historians believe that the causes of WWII can be traced to WWI (1914-1919). The peace treaties that ended WWI did not make the world safe for democracy. Instead, it caused bitterness and anger. • In the early 1930s, the world was hit by an economic depression. Workers lo ...
... What Caused the War • Most historians believe that the causes of WWII can be traced to WWI (1914-1919). The peace treaties that ended WWI did not make the world safe for democracy. Instead, it caused bitterness and anger. • In the early 1930s, the world was hit by an economic depression. Workers lo ...
December 2004 - Dr. Harold C. Deutsch WWII History Roundtable
... Tonight’s program is about the Italian Campaign. Our speaker this evening is Flint Whitlock, author and historian. Flint is the author of: Soldiers on Skis, Rock of Anzio, The Fighting First and his latest book, Given Up for Dead. Flint is a regular contributor to World War II magazine and World War ...
... Tonight’s program is about the Italian Campaign. Our speaker this evening is Flint Whitlock, author and historian. Flint is the author of: Soldiers on Skis, Rock of Anzio, The Fighting First and his latest book, Given Up for Dead. Flint is a regular contributor to World War II magazine and World War ...
Exit Slip Exit Slip
... Exit Slip Name:___________________________________________Date_______________________ Use your knowledge from today’s activities to answer the following questions: 1. Major Allied Powers were: _______________, __________________, ________________ 2. Major Axis Powers were:__________________, _______ ...
... Exit Slip Name:___________________________________________Date_______________________ Use your knowledge from today’s activities to answer the following questions: 1. Major Allied Powers were: _______________, __________________, ________________ 2. Major Axis Powers were:__________________, _______ ...
WWII - The European Theater
... • Both sides ordered not to surrender/retreat (MayNovember) • 91,000 Germans surrendered only 5,000 make it out of Soviet Prison Camps • Puts the Germans on the defensive • Soviets are motivated for revenge. ...
... • Both sides ordered not to surrender/retreat (MayNovember) • 91,000 Germans surrendered only 5,000 make it out of Soviet Prison Camps • Puts the Germans on the defensive • Soviets are motivated for revenge. ...
Timeline for World War II — Italy
... wanted as a colony. • 1935: October 2: The Kingdom of Italy invaded Empire of Ethiopia. The Second ItaloAbyssinian Colonial War lasted until May 1936. Italy won and created the new colony of Italian East Africa. The Italians invaded without a formal declaration of war. The League of Nations declared ...
... wanted as a colony. • 1935: October 2: The Kingdom of Italy invaded Empire of Ethiopia. The Second ItaloAbyssinian Colonial War lasted until May 1936. Italy won and created the new colony of Italian East Africa. The Italians invaded without a formal declaration of war. The League of Nations declared ...
THE ITALIAN RESISTANCE AND THE ITALIAN CIVIL WAR
... The partisan groups originated from the large number of individuals wandering round Central and Northern Italy. Ex Italian soldiers, escaped allied prisoners of war, deserters and draft dodgers of all varieties. They were joined by men avoiding forced deportations to work in Germany. They had a deg ...
... The partisan groups originated from the large number of individuals wandering round Central and Northern Italy. Ex Italian soldiers, escaped allied prisoners of war, deserters and draft dodgers of all varieties. They were joined by men avoiding forced deportations to work in Germany. They had a deg ...
Italian Empire
The Italian Empire (Italian: Impero Italiano) comprised the colonies, protectorates, concessions, dependencies and trust territories of the Kingdom of Italy and, after 1946, the Italian Republic. The genesis of the Italian colonial empire was the purchase, in 1869, by a commercial company of the coastal town of Assab on the Red Sea. This was taken over by the Italian government in 1882, becoming Italy's first overseas territory. Over the next two decades the pace of European acquisitions in Africa increased, causing the so-called ""Scramble for Africa"". By the start of the First World War in 1914, Italy had acquired in Africa alone a colony on the Red Sea coast (Eritrea), a large protectorate in Somalia and administrative authority in formerly Turkish Libya. Outside of Africa, Italy possessed a small concession in Tientsin in China and the Dodecanese Islands off the coast of Turkey.From early in the ""scramble"", Italy had designs on the Ethiopian Empire, but was twice defeated in the 19th century: first at the Battle of Dogali in 1887 and then in first invasion of Ethiopia in 1895–96. During the First World War, Italy occupied southern Albania to prevent if from falling to Austria-Hungary. In 1917, it established a protectorate over Albania, which remained in place until 1920. The Fascist government that came to power with Benito Mussolini in 1922 sought to increase the size of the Italian empire and to satisfy the claims of Italian irredentists. In 1935–36, in its second invasion of Ethiopia Italy was successful and it merged its new conquest with its older east African colonies. In 1939, Italy invaded Albania and incorporated it into the Fascist state. During the Second World War (1939–45), Italy made several conquests and annexations, but was forced in the final peace to abandon all its colonies and protectorates. It was granted a United Nations trust to administer Somaliland in 1950. When Somalia became independent in 1960, Italy's eight-decade experience with colonialism ended.