Germany 1918-45 good revision exercises PDF File
... Was the Weimar Republic always going to fail? Constitution The constitution (Article 48) allowed the President to end democracy and take power himself. ...
... Was the Weimar Republic always going to fail? Constitution The constitution (Article 48) allowed the President to end democracy and take power himself. ...
GCSE History - Germany Revision Guide 2017
... • They felt the army would support them: the army had shown little loyalty to the Weimar • Hitler had the support of the war hero General Ludendorff who he felt might be able to persuade the army to support the Nazis • Stresemann’s introduction of the Rentenmark meant the French withdrew from the Ru ...
... • They felt the army would support them: the army had shown little loyalty to the Weimar • Hitler had the support of the war hero General Ludendorff who he felt might be able to persuade the army to support the Nazis • Stresemann’s introduction of the Rentenmark meant the French withdrew from the Ru ...
Higher Germany Issues 5 RG
... when those parties are extremist and authoritarian – allowed them a ‘foot in the door’ Article 48 Article 48 gave the President power to rule by decree (by himself) in times of emergency – without the approval of the Reichstag. However, this power was used all too often between 1919-33 when coalitio ...
... when those parties are extremist and authoritarian – allowed them a ‘foot in the door’ Article 48 Article 48 gave the President power to rule by decree (by himself) in times of emergency – without the approval of the Reichstag. However, this power was used all too often between 1919-33 when coalitio ...
causes of wwii
... DESTRUCTION OF THE TRADE UNIONS (May 1-2 1933) DISSOLUTION OF THE POLITICAL PARTIES (June-July 1933) ...
... DESTRUCTION OF THE TRADE UNIONS (May 1-2 1933) DISSOLUTION OF THE POLITICAL PARTIES (June-July 1933) ...
The Nazi Consolidation of Power, 1933-1934
... Hardest of all the arts to control, Nazis had no clear policy A Reich music chamber was established to control music production and promote Nazi music. Experimental music and jazz (jazz particularly as it had black American decent) were banned from being performed, along with Jewish composers. Naz ...
... Hardest of all the arts to control, Nazis had no clear policy A Reich music chamber was established to control music production and promote Nazi music. Experimental music and jazz (jazz particularly as it had black American decent) were banned from being performed, along with Jewish composers. Naz ...
CAUSES OF WORLD WAR II
... Germany did not join the League of Nations. • Italy and Japan invaded countries and the League of Nations could not force them to leave those countries! • Failure of League of Nations ...
... Germany did not join the League of Nations. • Italy and Japan invaded countries and the League of Nations could not force them to leave those countries! • Failure of League of Nations ...
1. Nazi Germany class notes File
... The Nazis did not just offer general messages to the population. Through their propaganda, they targeted specific groups and produced specific messages to attract their support. An example of this strategy can be found in the Nazi approach to the peasants of SchleswigHolstein in Northern Germany. Fo ...
... The Nazis did not just offer general messages to the population. Through their propaganda, they targeted specific groups and produced specific messages to attract their support. An example of this strategy can be found in the Nazi approach to the peasants of SchleswigHolstein in Northern Germany. Fo ...
goring presentation
... no real proof of this, but some of the Nazis witnessed, that Göring either drank a lot, or took drugs. ...
... no real proof of this, but some of the Nazis witnessed, that Göring either drank a lot, or took drugs. ...
Peer-reviewed Article PDF
... that Great Britain, guilt-ridden over the hardships the Treaty of Versailles had imposed on Germany, and having not acted when Hitler occupied the Rhineland and annexed Austria would not act. After- all Hitler could claim, correctly, that he was only taking back territory that historically was Germa ...
... that Great Britain, guilt-ridden over the hardships the Treaty of Versailles had imposed on Germany, and having not acted when Hitler occupied the Rhineland and annexed Austria would not act. After- all Hitler could claim, correctly, that he was only taking back territory that historically was Germa ...
Germany 1918-1945 revision guide
... to Hitler began to appear from within the Party itself. The most serious of these came from a young Nazi called GREGOR STRASSER who established the so-called “WORKING GROUP”. He wanted to push the Nazi Party further towards the ‘left’, to include more Socialist and antiCapitalist ideas. If Hitler ha ...
... to Hitler began to appear from within the Party itself. The most serious of these came from a young Nazi called GREGOR STRASSER who established the so-called “WORKING GROUP”. He wanted to push the Nazi Party further towards the ‘left’, to include more Socialist and antiCapitalist ideas. If Hitler ha ...
Mr. Trzepinska Holocaust and Genocide Nuremberg Trials
... 4. To add to his defense Speer told the court he denied Hitler’s orders to destroy Germany at the end of the war and that he had tried to assassinate Hitler in 1945. Should these two actions effect the court’s decision on him? ...
... 4. To add to his defense Speer told the court he denied Hitler’s orders to destroy Germany at the end of the war and that he had tried to assassinate Hitler in 1945. Should these two actions effect the court’s decision on him? ...
ALBERT SPEER Final Script - Phil Sheppard Video Production
... In 1937, Speer had been appointed Inspector-General of Construction, the highest level in the German civil service. He was handed the most ambitious architectural project of his career, to rebuild Berlin, renamed Germania, the new capital of the anticipated ‘thousand year Reich’. It was to be filled ...
... In 1937, Speer had been appointed Inspector-General of Construction, the highest level in the German civil service. He was handed the most ambitious architectural project of his career, to rebuild Berlin, renamed Germania, the new capital of the anticipated ‘thousand year Reich’. It was to be filled ...
Albert Speer
... How involved was Reichminister Speer in the “slave” camps for the armament works? • “The result was that we had to work out guidelines for a joint undertaking with the SS leadership – what was to be called the Central Works. My assistants went into it reluctantly, and their fears were soon confirme ...
... How involved was Reichminister Speer in the “slave” camps for the armament works? • “The result was that we had to work out guidelines for a joint undertaking with the SS leadership – what was to be called the Central Works. My assistants went into it reluctantly, and their fears were soon confirme ...
Hitler We Loved and Why
... We loved him because he hid nothing from us. He was confident in our strength to face the worst atrocities our enemies had to offer— and surmount them with courage and determination. We loved him because he taught our Fellow White men, the Poles, the truth about their Jewish Soviet “liberators.” He ...
... We loved him because he hid nothing from us. He was confident in our strength to face the worst atrocities our enemies had to offer— and surmount them with courage and determination. We loved him because he taught our Fellow White men, the Poles, the truth about their Jewish Soviet “liberators.” He ...
GHI TEXT, IX/17/04 - German History in Documents and Images
... rearmament. Reichswehr Minister Werner von Blomberg (1878-1946), who had already been appointed to the post by Hindenburg, quickly put in his claim for resources, arguing that the state of the German army made emergency rearmament an absolute priority. Only after this was achieved could the governme ...
... rearmament. Reichswehr Minister Werner von Blomberg (1878-1946), who had already been appointed to the post by Hindenburg, quickly put in his claim for resources, arguing that the state of the German army made emergency rearmament an absolute priority. Only after this was achieved could the governme ...
Goebbles, Joseph (1897-1945)
... Master propagandist of the Nazi regime and dictator of its cultural life for twelve years, Joseph Goebbels was born into a strict Catholic, working-class family from Rheydt, in the Rhineland, on 29 October 1897. He was educated at a Roman Catholic school and went on to study history and literature a ...
... Master propagandist of the Nazi regime and dictator of its cultural life for twelve years, Joseph Goebbels was born into a strict Catholic, working-class family from Rheydt, in the Rhineland, on 29 October 1897. He was educated at a Roman Catholic school and went on to study history and literature a ...
entry level certificate in history
... A source showing that many people voted for the Nazis in the elections. A source showing that Hitler could not be trusted. A source that shows that many people in Germany supported Hitler and the Nazis. A source that shows that the Nazis arrested people who opposed them in the elections. ...
... A source showing that many people voted for the Nazis in the elections. A source showing that Hitler could not be trusted. A source that shows that many people in Germany supported Hitler and the Nazis. A source that shows that the Nazis arrested people who opposed them in the elections. ...
Fascism in Germany
... We know the German people are tired and hurting and want to make a change within their society. ...
... We know the German people are tired and hurting and want to make a change within their society. ...
Hitler Youth Rules - the Education Forum
... members of the Nazi Youth Groups liked it so much? “We were very proud of our new Heim. It stood on one of the most beautiful spots in our part of the town, close to the park. The Hitler Youth, the Bund Deutscher Madel (League of German Maidens), the Jungmadel (Young Maidens), and the Jungvolk could ...
... members of the Nazi Youth Groups liked it so much? “We were very proud of our new Heim. It stood on one of the most beautiful spots in our part of the town, close to the park. The Hitler Youth, the Bund Deutscher Madel (League of German Maidens), the Jungmadel (Young Maidens), and the Jungvolk could ...
History of Hitler and the Nazi Party
... everyone must remain there quietly. He said a new provisional government had been formed, and its police occupied the area. None of that was true, but he didn’t care. To discover if the Bavarian sided with him, and what came of Hitler’s Revolution, click here http://www.historyplace.com/worldwar2/ri ...
... everyone must remain there quietly. He said a new provisional government had been formed, and its police occupied the area. None of that was true, but he didn’t care. To discover if the Bavarian sided with him, and what came of Hitler’s Revolution, click here http://www.historyplace.com/worldwar2/ri ...
File - Beechen Cliff School Humanities Faculty
... How did the failure of the League of Nations help cause WW2? • It failed to keep peace. • It failed miserably in Manchuria and Abyssinia and so set an example to Hitler. • It showed that Britain and France would do almost anything to prevent war. • Hitler learnt many lessons from all this. ...
... How did the failure of the League of Nations help cause WW2? • It failed to keep peace. • It failed miserably in Manchuria and Abyssinia and so set an example to Hitler. • It showed that Britain and France would do almost anything to prevent war. • Hitler learnt many lessons from all this. ...
7. Master on Life in Nazi Germany File
... superior race and should not marry inferior races. Biology became a study of the different races to 'prove' that the Nazi belief in racial superiority was a sound belief. "Racial Instruction" started as the age of 6. Hitler himself had decreed that "no boy or girl should leave school without complet ...
... superior race and should not marry inferior races. Biology became a study of the different races to 'prove' that the Nazi belief in racial superiority was a sound belief. "Racial Instruction" started as the age of 6. Hitler himself had decreed that "no boy or girl should leave school without complet ...
The Years of Unrest - Abraham Darby Academy
... The Nazis saw the Church as a Threat 1) Many Nazis were against Christianity — its teaching of peace was seen as incompatible with Nazi ideas. However, the Nazis didn't want to risk an immediate attack on it. 2) Hitler signed an agreement with the Catholic Church in 1933. Each side promised not to i ...
... The Nazis saw the Church as a Threat 1) Many Nazis were against Christianity — its teaching of peace was seen as incompatible with Nazi ideas. However, the Nazis didn't want to risk an immediate attack on it. 2) Hitler signed an agreement with the Catholic Church in 1933. Each side promised not to i ...
LOVE AND FEAR: USE OF TWO PRIMAL EMOTIONS IN NAZI
... Germany in the 1930s was caught up in “…die grosse angst—an all pervasive ‘great fear’ of many thing, including economic catastrophe, personal failure, social upheaval, moral decline, the communist menace, the Jewish peril” (Waite, 1977, p. 330). The Nazis understood this fear and manipulated this p ...
... Germany in the 1930s was caught up in “…die grosse angst—an all pervasive ‘great fear’ of many thing, including economic catastrophe, personal failure, social upheaval, moral decline, the communist menace, the Jewish peril” (Waite, 1977, p. 330). The Nazis understood this fear and manipulated this p ...
Blake and Zach Holocaust ppt - Mr. Jeffers Block 8-9
... •Alfons joins Hitler Youth •Helen gives up her child •Helen goes into hiding •Helen and Seigfried go to Auschwitz ...
... •Alfons joins Hitler Youth •Helen gives up her child •Helen goes into hiding •Helen and Seigfried go to Auschwitz ...
20 July plot
On 20 July 1944, an attempt was made to assassinate Adolf Hitler, Führer of the Third Reich, perpetrated by Claus von Stauffenberg and other conspirators, inside his Wolf's Lair field headquarters near Rastenburg, East Prussia. This event has become known by the misnomer Operation Valkyrie which was the planned coup d'etat that took place immediately after the attempted assassination. The apparent purpose of the assassination attempt was to seize political control of Germany and its armed forces from the Nazi Party (including the SS) in order to obtain peace with the western Allies as soon as possible. The underlying desire of many of the involved high ranking Wehrmacht officers was apparently to show to the world that not all Germans were like Hitler and the Nazi Party. The details of the conspirators' peace initiatives remain unknown, but they likely would have included demands to accept wide-reaching territorial annexations by Germany in Europe.Template:What?The plot was the culmination of the efforts by several groups in the German Resistance to overthrow the Nazi-led German government. The failure of both the assassination and the military coup d'état which was planned to follow, led to the arrest of at least 7,000 people by the Gestapo. According to records of the Führer Conferences on Naval Affairs, 4,980 of these were executed.