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Subject: History Year Group: 10 Term One Unit one
Subject: History Year Group: 10 Term One Unit one

... Key issue: How and why was Hitler able to become Chancellor in January 1933? Key issue: How did Hitler change Germany from a democracy to a Nazi dictatorship, 1933–1934, and then reinforce this? Key issue: To what extent did Germans benefit from Nazi rule? ...
Nazi Economic Policy
Nazi Economic Policy

... – Whatever it takes to make Germany great! – Favoured Industrialists if possible • Heavily directed ...
Erik Larson, In the Garden of Beasts: Love, Terror, and an American
Erik Larson, In the Garden of Beasts: Love, Terror, and an American

... where Ambassador Dodd walked each day. It was one place where people could walk and talk without being overheard. It was also a place where someone observed: ‘Germans love animals! Their dogs and horses are so loved, fed, talked to! Much better than they treat their children and each other.’ The Dod ...
How Depression helped Nazis
How Depression helped Nazis

... How did these problems help the Nazis? • Nazis claimed they had the answers: – Weimar was weak – Hitler was a strong leader – unemployment – Nazis would create jobs – Communists – SA would deal with them ...
WW2 - mre8thgrade
WW2 - mre8thgrade

... Hitler’s Rise to Power A. Hitler becomes chancellor: 1. While in jail Hitler decides to change his strategy to gain power. He will work within the system. 2. When he gets out of jail he regains total control of the Nazi party and turns it into a truly national party. 3. By 1932 the Nazi Party was th ...
Germany: 1919-1939 - BTHS World History
Germany: 1919-1939 - BTHS World History

... that he would have to get power by being elected, rather than by rebellion. However, he was banned from speaking until 1928. The prosperity of the Stresemann years, also, meant that the Nazi’s message became less appealing, and the party lost support: ...
Ms. Lampton’s 5th Grade Class World War II
Ms. Lampton’s 5th Grade Class World War II

... up its land and was banned from having armed forces.  In 1933 German people voted for a leader named Adolf Hitler, who led a party called the National socialist or Nazis. Hitler promised to get his country great again and quickly began to arm Germany again.  In 1939 German forces stormed in Poland ...
Germany - AceHSC
Germany - AceHSC

...  closing down of independent organizations  rush to join Nazi party  radio  it was used to influence people  March 1933 elections  Goebbels moved to ban all stations but Nazis  banned SPD, communists, trade unions  no effective opposition  Jews were banned from the civil service  legal app ...
Weimar Germany - Mr. O`Sullivan`s World of History
Weimar Germany - Mr. O`Sullivan`s World of History

... 1. Study pages 5–6. Find Nazi beliefs which would have appealed to:  a nationalist (who thought the German race was better than others)  a socialist (who wanted to help the poor people),  someone who was angry about losing the war,  someone who wanted to return to the autocratic government of th ...
Hitler`s Speech at Youth Rally (1935)
Hitler`s Speech at Youth Rally (1935)

... you German boys and girls are taking on everything we hope for from Germany. We want to be one people, and you, my youth, are to be this people. We want to see no more class divisions: you must not let this grow up amongst you. We want to see one nation one day, and you must train for it. We want ou ...
Rise of Nazis Essay Plan
Rise of Nazis Essay Plan

... A: How did it help the Nazis? 2. THE ECONOMIC WEAKNESSES OF THE WEIMAR REPUBLIC KU: Hyperinflation 1923 to 24 – what was it & examples A: How did it help the Nazis? - Putsch showed what? Trial helped Hitler/how? KU: Golden Age? – 1924 to 28 why Germany prosperous again? A: What did it do to Nazi sup ...
Buchtel OGT Review
Buchtel OGT Review

... 27. The authors of many history books provide bibliographies that indicate the sources for information provided in the text. Why would providing the reader with this information make a book more credible? A. It allows the reader to check the reputation of the writer. B. It allows the reader to find ...
World War II: Blitzkrieg and the Eastern Front
World War II: Blitzkrieg and the Eastern Front

... losses from which it never recovered • Both sides licked their wounds and prepared for renewed operations in the spring ...
Note Taking 1o1 - Mosierssocialstudies
Note Taking 1o1 - Mosierssocialstudies

... • Join German Workers Party(DAP)- held many of the same ideals Hitler would later • Party would change its name to National Socialist German Workers Party(NAZI-Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei ) • Often get members by talking about problems caused by Treaty of Versailles ...
Chapter 13 Quiz
Chapter 13 Quiz

... A _____ is a one-party dictatorship that tries to regulate every area of its citizens’ lives. A style of art called _____ tried to portray the workings of the unconscious mind. The _____ was a system of brutal Russian labor camps where Joseph Stalin sent millions of his enemies. Adolf Hitler’s secre ...
Dictators in Europe Section 4 The Interwar Years
Dictators in Europe Section 4 The Interwar Years

... Greater horrors yet to come ...
Dictators in Europe pdf
Dictators in Europe pdf

... Nazi Anti-Semitism A key component of the Nazi system was strong anti-Semitic beliefs. Anti-Semitism is hostility toward or prejudice against Jews. Hitler blamed Jews for many of German’s problems, including its defeat in World War I. Long History •  Anti-Semitism had long history in largely Christi ...
New Perspective
New Perspective

... he listened earlier war could have been avoided. Finally a disastrous policy of appeasement was replaced by the heroism of resistance. Mussolini was right: seeing Chamberlain in his ‘uniform of a bourgeois pacifist’ acted on Hitler ‘like the taste of blood to a wild beast’. Under Churchill, however, ...
`Opposition` and `Resistance` inside Nazi Germany
`Opposition` and `Resistance` inside Nazi Germany

... assassination attempts which historians have found out about 9. Ranging from 19351944. ...
Human Rights Timeline - teaching to make a difference
Human Rights Timeline - teaching to make a difference

... selection of the main events that we feel provide more insight into the processes that set the stage for the genocide of the Jews and Rrom (Gypsies), and the murder of millions of other innocent victim because of their religious beliefs, ethnicity, physical and mental health, lifestyle or political ...
The Rise Of Adolf Hitler
The Rise Of Adolf Hitler

... The failure of the Beer Hall Putsch demonstrates to Hitler that power needs to be achieved through legal means, not violent overthrow. When Hitler leaves prison, the Nazis have a new approach to gaining political power: getting votes When the Great Depression hits Germany, desperate, starving peo ...
Fascism and Communism
Fascism and Communism

... Hitler is considered to have been one of the greatest public speakers of all time. ...
Sol Invictus: The Inextinguishable Light of Those Who - H-Net
Sol Invictus: The Inextinguishable Light of Those Who - H-Net

... giving what looks much like a Hitler salute with Hans. was already inventing American atrocities, writing that The niece of both Lord Northcliff and Lord Rothermere, their soldiers had rounded up the inhabitants of a village newspaper magnates in the First World War, she stands near Saarbrücken in t ...
North African Theater
North African Theater

... ►Supplies carrying tanks could be shot by enemy troops. ►Both sides used mines making it hard to maneuver. ...
Heinrich Himmler
Heinrich Himmler

... hierarchy. He came to control all of Germany's police forces, including the Gestapo (secret police). For attempting to negotiate with the Allies in 1945, Hitler stripped him of his powers. He was captured by the Allies at the war's end, where he committed suicide on May 23, 1945. During the war Hein ...
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Triumph of the Will

Triumph of the Will (German: Triumph des Willens) is a 1935 propaganda film directed, produced, edited and co-written by Leni Riefenstahl. It chronicles the 1934 Nazi Party Congress in Nuremberg, which was attended by more than 700,000 Nazi supporters. The film contains excerpts from speeches given by Nazi leaders at the Congress, including Adolf Hitler, Rudolf Hess and Julius Streicher, interspersed with footage of massed Sturmabteilung and Schutzstaffel troops and public reaction. Hitler commissioned the film and served as an unofficial executive producer; his name appears in the opening titles. The film's overriding theme is the return of Germany as a great power, with Hitler as the leader who will bring glory to the nation. Because the film was made after the 1934 Night of the Long Knives (on June 30) many prominent Sturmabteilung (SA) members are absent since they were murdered in that Party purge organized and orchestrated by Hitler to replace the SA (led by his rival Ernst Roehm) with the Schutzstaffeln (SS) as his main paramilitary force.Triumph of the Will was released in 1935 and became a prominent example of propaganda in film history. Riefenstahl's techniques—such as moving cameras, aerial photography, the use of long focus lenses to create a distorted perspective, and the revolutionary approach to the use of music and cinematography—have earned Triumph of the Will recognition as one of the greatest propaganda films in history. Riefenstahl helped to stage the scenes, directing and rehearsing some of them at least fifty times. Riefenstahl won several awards, not only in Germany but also in the United States, France, Sweden, and other countries. The film was popular in the Third Reich, and has continued to influence movies, documentaries, and commercials to this day. However, it is banned from showing in Germany owing to its support for Nazism and its numerous portrayals of the swastika.An earlier film by Riefenstahl—Der Sieg des Glaubens—showed Hitler and SA leader Ernst Röhm together at the 1933 Nazi party congress. After Röhm's murder, the party attempted the destruction of all copies, leaving only one known to have survived in Britain. This can be viewed at the Internet Archive. The direction and sequencing of images is almost the same as that Riefenstahl used in Triumph of the Will a year later.Frank Capra's seven-film series Why We Fight is said to have been directly inspired by, and the United States' response to, Triumph of the Will.
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