the significance of the nuremberg trials
... former officer of the Gestapo. Von Blomberg, Minister of War, was not in favor of the extreme Nazi plans of aggression. He was in favor of rearming Germany so that Germany could cope with any possible enemy, and he was moving in the direction of a moderate rearmament of Germany. But when he failed t ...
... former officer of the Gestapo. Von Blomberg, Minister of War, was not in favor of the extreme Nazi plans of aggression. He was in favor of rearming Germany so that Germany could cope with any possible enemy, and he was moving in the direction of a moderate rearmament of Germany. But when he failed t ...
Hitler
... economic woes and brought widespread discontent. This was especially sharp in Bavaria, due to its traditional separatism and the region’s popular dislike of the republican government in Berlin. In March 1920 a coup d’état by a few army officers attempted in vain to establish a right-wing government. ...
... economic woes and brought widespread discontent. This was especially sharp in Bavaria, due to its traditional separatism and the region’s popular dislike of the republican government in Berlin. In March 1920 a coup d’état by a few army officers attempted in vain to establish a right-wing government. ...
File - need help with revision notes?
... Women in Nazi Germany KINDER – children; expand the German empire by having racially pure children. KIRCHE – church; a powerful tool to convey the Nazis message that women have a duty to God to do these things. KUCHE – kitchen; being a housewife, cooking and cleaning and looking after the husband. ...
... Women in Nazi Germany KINDER – children; expand the German empire by having racially pure children. KIRCHE – church; a powerful tool to convey the Nazis message that women have a duty to God to do these things. KUCHE – kitchen; being a housewife, cooking and cleaning and looking after the husband. ...
The Nazis in January 1933
... Papen urged Hitler to join coalition with DNVP, Hitler refused => appointed Chancellor or nothing September 1932, Reichstag passed overwhelming vote of no-confidence in Papen (512 to 42), election in November brought no further support for government Nazis remained largest party, Papen was prepared ...
... Papen urged Hitler to join coalition with DNVP, Hitler refused => appointed Chancellor or nothing September 1932, Reichstag passed overwhelming vote of no-confidence in Papen (512 to 42), election in November brought no further support for government Nazis remained largest party, Papen was prepared ...
Germany (1871) 1919-1939
... surfaced to interbreed with humans, he wanted his race to be chosen.) Blamed Jews for loss of WWI, reparations, inflation, depression, communism The Big Lie is more believable than a little lie because no one will believe you would try it, Hitler claimed the Jews were using the Big Lie, not him Late ...
... surfaced to interbreed with humans, he wanted his race to be chosen.) Blamed Jews for loss of WWI, reparations, inflation, depression, communism The Big Lie is more believable than a little lie because no one will believe you would try it, Hitler claimed the Jews were using the Big Lie, not him Late ...
Review Jeopardy: World War II
... This intense urban battle in Russia halted the German advance and proved to be the turning point in the war between Germany and the ...
... This intense urban battle in Russia halted the German advance and proved to be the turning point in the war between Germany and the ...
Germany - Moodle Ecolint
... Who were the Spartacists/Spartacus League? Left-wing revolutionaries who wanted more change. They wanted Germany to be run by soldiers and workers councils and not by a Parliament. Wanted social revolution like Russian Revolution (1917). Led by Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht Disagreement ...
... Who were the Spartacists/Spartacus League? Left-wing revolutionaries who wanted more change. They wanted Germany to be run by soldiers and workers councils and not by a Parliament. Wanted social revolution like Russian Revolution (1917). Led by Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht Disagreement ...
Antisemitism and Racism in Nazi Ideology
... Copyright © 2007 Yad Vashem The Holocaust Martyrs' and Heroes' Remembrance Authority ...
... Copyright © 2007 Yad Vashem The Holocaust Martyrs' and Heroes' Remembrance Authority ...
Weimar and Nazi Germany
... Nazis from gaining support. As Foreign Minister, he signed the Locarno Pact, which guaranteed the borders of European countries, effectively making them promise not to invade each other, making Germany more trustworthy to their European neighbours. ...
... Nazis from gaining support. As Foreign Minister, he signed the Locarno Pact, which guaranteed the borders of European countries, effectively making them promise not to invade each other, making Germany more trustworthy to their European neighbours. ...
The Night of the Long Knives
... Friday, June 29, Hitler made a scheduled inspection tour of a labor service camp and then went to a hotel near Bonn for the night. He was informed by Himmler that evening by phone that SA troops in Munich knew about the coming action and had taken to the streets. Hitler decided to fly to Munich to p ...
... Friday, June 29, Hitler made a scheduled inspection tour of a labor service camp and then went to a hotel near Bonn for the night. He was informed by Himmler that evening by phone that SA troops in Munich knew about the coming action and had taken to the streets. Hitler decided to fly to Munich to p ...
Power: Interpersonal, Organizational, and Global Dimensions
... e.g. Hitler had mastery of German – significant since German language was spoken throughout all the various German states, uniting them (vs. France who had to impose single language) – fissures of nations often on the fault lines of language, e.g. Belgium; – national fissures occur perhaps because t ...
... e.g. Hitler had mastery of German – significant since German language was spoken throughout all the various German states, uniting them (vs. France who had to impose single language) – fissures of nations often on the fault lines of language, e.g. Belgium; – national fissures occur perhaps because t ...
Germany 1919-1945
... lack of food and supplies. People were starving. Riots were breaking out. The navy had mutinied (rebelled) against the Kaiser (king of Germany). The Kaiser realised the situation was hopeless and abdicated (quit his job) in October 1918. Germany was left without a leader and in a mess. The bigge ...
... lack of food and supplies. People were starving. Riots were breaking out. The navy had mutinied (rebelled) against the Kaiser (king of Germany). The Kaiser realised the situation was hopeless and abdicated (quit his job) in October 1918. Germany was left without a leader and in a mess. The bigge ...
Interpreting Hitler
... love of Germany. His early twenties, by contrast, in Vienna, eking out a living as a painter, were unhappy and ‘a continual struggle with Hunger’. It was in these years, he claimed, that he formed his ideology – the hatred of Communism and (in a famous encounter) the Jews. After the defeat of 1918, ...
... love of Germany. His early twenties, by contrast, in Vienna, eking out a living as a painter, were unhappy and ‘a continual struggle with Hunger’. It was in these years, he claimed, that he formed his ideology – the hatred of Communism and (in a famous encounter) the Jews. After the defeat of 1918, ...
Cartoons on NOLK and Nazi pressuring of voters File
... L3 – Main message only [4] L4 – Main message supported by details of the cartoon OR contextual knowledge [5-6] L5 – Main message supported by details of the cartoon & contextual knowledge [7] • The main message is that Hitler is forcing ordinary Germans to vote for him in the 1933 elections by threa ...
... L3 – Main message only [4] L4 – Main message supported by details of the cartoon OR contextual knowledge [5-6] L5 – Main message supported by details of the cartoon & contextual knowledge [7] • The main message is that Hitler is forcing ordinary Germans to vote for him in the 1933 elections by threa ...
Weimar Germany
... Reform of the law to make it more German. Improve education so that all Germans can get a job. Improve people’s health by making a law for people to do sport. Abolition of the Army, and a new People’s Army in its place. German newspapers must be free of foreign influence. Freedom of religion. Strong ...
... Reform of the law to make it more German. Improve education so that all Germans can get a job. Improve people’s health by making a law for people to do sport. Abolition of the Army, and a new People’s Army in its place. German newspapers must be free of foreign influence. Freedom of religion. Strong ...
The Coming of Fascist Germany
... Schroeder Bank – on Jan. 3, 1933, Reinhard Schroeder met Hitler and asked him to form a government. And even some foreign firms including: Henry Ford of Ford Motors. Hitler borrowed passages from Ford's book The International Jew to use in Mein Kampf and had a picture of Ford on the wall of his offi ...
... Schroeder Bank – on Jan. 3, 1933, Reinhard Schroeder met Hitler and asked him to form a government. And even some foreign firms including: Henry Ford of Ford Motors. Hitler borrowed passages from Ford's book The International Jew to use in Mein Kampf and had a picture of Ford on the wall of his offi ...
Austria The Munich Crisis: Appeasement
... more important than in the borderland between them, in the little state of Austria. As recently as 1934, Mussolini had been Austria's protector against any idea of a German takeover. The passage of time weakened his resolve. His estrangement from the Western ...
... more important than in the borderland between them, in the little state of Austria. As recently as 1934, Mussolini had been Austria's protector against any idea of a German takeover. The passage of time weakened his resolve. His estrangement from the Western ...
9 What was life like in wartime Germany, 1939–45?
... was a considerable bedrock of support for the regime in 1939, and this was to continue nearly to the end of the war. One reason for this continuing support was that the regime was highly sensitive to the issues of rationing and shortages on the Home Front. Before and during the war the Nazi leadersh ...
... was a considerable bedrock of support for the regime in 1939, and this was to continue nearly to the end of the war. One reason for this continuing support was that the regime was highly sensitive to the issues of rationing and shortages on the Home Front. Before and during the war the Nazi leadersh ...
Lesson 16 & 17- How Hitler Rose To Power ACP
... Joining the Nazi Party & Rise to Nazi Leader • After the war, Hitler was appointed to the position of police spy in the intelligence wing of the German Army. • One of his first jobs was to infiltrate a small political party, the German Worker’s Party ...
... Joining the Nazi Party & Rise to Nazi Leader • After the war, Hitler was appointed to the position of police spy in the intelligence wing of the German Army. • One of his first jobs was to infiltrate a small political party, the German Worker’s Party ...
C – Student Pages – Appeasement
... Was appeasement the right policy for Britain in 1938? In the 1930s, challenges to the peace of the world were certainly plentiful. Dictators in Europe and Japan saw people’s desire for peace “at any cost” as a sign of political weakness. They began responding with acts of aggression that left people ...
... Was appeasement the right policy for Britain in 1938? In the 1930s, challenges to the peace of the world were certainly plentiful. Dictators in Europe and Japan saw people’s desire for peace “at any cost” as a sign of political weakness. They began responding with acts of aggression that left people ...
File
... German Reich, supreme commander of the armed forces, and that I shall at all times be prepared, as a brave soldier, to give my life for this oath." ...
... German Reich, supreme commander of the armed forces, and that I shall at all times be prepared, as a brave soldier, to give my life for this oath." ...
Weimar Germany - Mr. O`Sullivan`s World of History
... Reform of the law to make it more German. Improve education so that all Germans can get a job. Improve people’s health by making a law for people to do sport. Abolition of the Army, and a new People’s Army in its place. German newspapers must be free of foreign influence. Freedom of religion. Strong ...
... Reform of the law to make it more German. Improve education so that all Germans can get a job. Improve people’s health by making a law for people to do sport. Abolition of the Army, and a new People’s Army in its place. German newspapers must be free of foreign influence. Freedom of religion. Strong ...
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.