* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download spring midterm review powerpoint
Consequences of Nazism wikipedia , lookup
British propaganda during World War II wikipedia , lookup
Nazi Germany wikipedia , lookup
Allied plans for German industry after World War II wikipedia , lookup
Nazi views on Catholicism wikipedia , lookup
Foreign relations of the Axis powers wikipedia , lookup
End of World War II in Europe wikipedia , lookup
Allies of World War II wikipedia , lookup
Appeasement wikipedia , lookup
Diplomatic history of World War II wikipedia , lookup
European theatre of World War II wikipedia , lookup
New Order (Nazism) wikipedia , lookup
Fascism in Europe wikipedia , lookup
SPRING MIDTERM REVIEW POWERPOINT MATCH THE TERMS! Fought in USSR, 1942. The Red Army pushed back the Germans and began advancing into Eastern Europe. Battle of Stalingrad Area of Europe where Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated. It was called the “Powder Keg of Europe” because tensions in the region had been building up for years. The Balkans This started when thousands of people marched on the Czar’s palace in St. Petersburg in 1917. After this event Czar Nicholas II abdicated. March Revolution in Russia The region rich in natural resources that Japan invaded and conquered in 1931 Manchuria Battle of Tannenberg and the location of other battles fought by the Russians, Germans, and Austro-Hungarians Eastern Front To improve the economy after the Bolshevik Revolution, Lenin allowed for small businesses to open; peasants could own small plots of land and sell surplus crops. New Economic Policy Japan suffered a major setback here in 1942. Attacks were carried out by planes launched from aircraft carriers. Battle of Coral Sea Germany, AustriaHungary, and Italy Triple Alliance of World War One The U.S. did not want to get involved in the League of Nations after WWI or the beginning of WWII. Isolationism Highly militaristic, nationalistic, racist form of totalitarian government in Germany Nazism The small political party in Russia responsible for the Communist Revolution of 1917. Lenin was the leader. Bolsheviks Hitler and Stalin agreed not to attack each other for 10 years and would divide Poland between their two countries after 1939. Nazi-Soviet NonAggression Pact The quote, “Peace for our time,” was said after Hitler successfully convinced other European leaders that he would not take any territory beyond the Sudetenland. Munich Conference The Russian Parliament that set up a provisional government after the czar abdicated. Duma The fascist leader of Spain beginning in 1936. Francisco Franco After WWI, President Wilson wanted new European nations to be formed based on the will of their people. Self-Determination “Peace, Land, and Bread!” Vladimir Lenin All resources of a nation are used to win the war. Total War Absolute control of the government by a single man; all government and economic decisions, as well as the lives of the citizens are controlled by the leader and government. Totalitarianism WORLD WAR ONE (CH. 11) REVIEW What are the four main causes of World War One? The Great War (WWI) was caused by… • ARMS RACE IN EUROPE (Militarism) • NATIONALISM • COLONIAL RIVALRY (Imperialism) • ALLIANCE SYSTEM Green: Triple & Dual Alliance Blue: Triple Entente Red: ties Russia to Serbia 1915 Black: Japan & Britain Yellow: Italy joins Allies 1915 Forest Green: O.Empire joins CP ASSASSINATION OF ARCHDUKE… READ THE HANDOUT DETAILING HIS MURDER!!! THE CHAIN REACTION On July 28 A-H declared war on SERBIA On the same day, RUSSIA announced MOBILIZATION of its vast army towards the Austrian border On August 1, GERMANY declared war on RUSSIA On August 3, GERMANY declared war on FRANCE France was now at war with GERMANY & A-H On August 4, BRITAIN declared war on GERMANY after invading Belgium On August 23, JAPAN declared war on GERMANY On August 25, A-H declared war on JAPAN CENTRAL POWERS Austria-Hungary Germany Bulgaria Ottoman Empire (1915) ALLIED POWERS Great Britain France Russia Japan Italy (1915) Belgium Greece Serbia Romania Others…USA (1917) THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION (CH. 11.5) RUSSIAN REVOLUTION FLOW CHART CHARACTERISTICS OF 19TH CENTURY CZARS • • • • • • Autocracy Harsh measures against opponents Secret police Pogroms Oppression of non-Russians Resistance to change EVENTS OF 1905 Bloody Sunday • 200,000 workers march on czar’s winter palace • Troops fire on crowd, 1,000 + killed Creation of Duma • First parliament of Russia • Czar forced to share power; dissolved it after 10 weeks NICHOLAS II’s MISTAKES • Brought Russia into WWI • Moved Headquarters to front in WWI • Czarina Alexandra given power; she became influenced by Rasputin • Rasputin was freaky, crazy, and corrupt • People poor and starving; lots of unrest • MARCH 1917 (February in Russian Calendar) • 200,000 workers march on St. Petersburg (Petrograd) over bread and fuel shortages • Czar’s soldiers joined the crowds “DOWN WITH AUTOCRACY!” PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT Temporary Government Led by: Alexander Kerensky But the Provisional Government did not have as much power as the… • Formed by social revolutionaries • Local councils in cities • Consisted of workers, peasants, and soldiers MISTAKES OF PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT Biggest mistake: kept Russia in World War One Also, did not help workers or peasants with food and fuel shortages Lost all support! NOVEMBER REVOLUTION Led by: Vladimir Lenin, leader of Bolshevik Party (Communists!) His slogan: “Peace, Land, and Bread” • Bolshevik Red Guards took over gov’t offices; arrested Prov. Gov’t leaders • Bolsheviks in power November 1917 • • • • All farmland distributed to peasants Factories controlled by workers End Russia’s involvement in WWI Gained many opponents, leading to Russian Civil War RUSSIAN CIVIL WAR 1918-1920 RED ARMY • Bolsheviks (Communists!) • Led by…Leon Trotsky WHITE ARMY • Opponents of Bolsheviks in Russia; western nations like the USA RESULTS OF THE CIVIL WAR • Red Army crushes all opposition to Bolshevik rule • Russian economy destroyed: no trade or industrial production BOLSHEVIKS BECOME KNOWN AS… THE COMMUNIST PARTY (still led by Lenin) THE NEW ECONOMIC POLICY 1921 To help Russia recover from the war Lenin allowed for a little bit of capitalism • Peasants could sell surplus (extra) crops for profit • Individuals could buy and sell goods for profit • Some small factories, farms, and businesses allowed NEW COUNTRY • Lenin organized Russia into self-governing republics • Central Government controlled them! • 1922: Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) • Capital: Moscow • Lenin had created a “Dictatorship of the Communist Party” (Marx calls it the Dictatorship of the Proletariat) • This becomes known as Leninism END OF WWI THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES-1919 The Goals (what they wanted) France: • Never get attacked by Ger. again • Rebuild national economy • Gain back territory Britain: • Germany pays for war (reparations) • Control the seas; remain global power United States: • System of world security • New nations based on will of people (selfdetermination) Germany: • Fair peace settlement • Keep territory in Europe and colonies in Africa/Asia • Keep national self respect TERMS OF THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES– WHAT THEY GOT France: • Reparations from Ger • Land rich in nat. resources Britain: • Control of Ger colonies • Reparations from Ger • Control of German boats United States: • League of Nations • New nations: Austria, Hungary, Poland Germany: • Lost 10% of land & colonies • Accept responsibility for war • Pay $5 Billion in reparations • Military disbanded THE WORLD AFTER WWI YEARS OF CRISIS 1919-1939 POSTWAR DEMOCRACIES • Little experience w/ rep. gov’t • Too many political parties • Coalition Governments didn’t work: too many disagreements • Weak gov’ts in difficult times changed for totalitarian rulers THE DAWES PLAN 1924-1930 $2.6 Bill War debts to be repaid; U.S. goods imported to rebuild economies U.S. lends $2.6 bill to Germany; spent on building up German economy Germany uses increased tax revenues to pay $2.0 bill reparations to France WEIMAR REPUBLIC of GERMANY • • • • Established in 1919 No democratic tradition in Germany Post-WWI Germany had many political parties Many people blamed the Weimar Gov’t for the problems Treaty of Versailles HYPER-INFLATION IN GERMANY • Wartime taxes not increased • German gov’t printed money to pay for war • German gov’t printed money to pay for war reparations forced by the Treaty of Versailles • Prices increased while the value of the currency (Mark) fell • People unable to afford basic necessities THE UNITED STATES: OVERPRODUCTION AND UNDERCONSUMPTION Factories: • U.S. factories producing large amounts of goods • Most people in U.S. too poor to purchase these goods • Store owners cut back orders from factories • Factories reduce production; workers fired Farms: • Large amount of crops • Competition from foreign crops • Surplus food drives prices down • Farmers don’t make profit; cannot make loan payments • Farmers lose land to banks DECLINE IN DEMAND FOR GOODS INCREASE IN UNEMPLOYMENT DECLINE IN PRODUCTION OF GOODS DECLINE IN OVERALL FACTORY PRODUCTION UNEMPLOYMENT, 1928-1938 STOCK MARKET CRASHES HITLER FDR & NEW DEAL The Political Spectrum CHARACTERISTICS OF TOTALITARIANISM Dictatorship One-party rule Primacy of state over individual Control by state of most aspects of life Communism: Fascism/Nazism: 1. 1. Basic Principles: Authoritarian; action- 2. 3. 4. 5. Leninism, Marxism, dictatorship of proletariat Nationalist, internationalist Supported by workers (USSR) and peasants (China) Collective ownership; centralized state planning Censorship, indoctrination, secret police Examples: Communism in USSR oriented; leader identified with state 2. Political: Nationalist, highly militarist, racist (Nazism) 3. Social: supported by middle class, industrialists and military 4. Economic: private property; control by state corporations or state 5. Cultural: censorship, indoctrination, secret police Examples: Fascism in Italy and Spain; Nazism in Germany The Political Spectrum What is Fascism? By Benito Mussolini “Fascism is the complete opposite of [Communism]…it combats the whole system of democracy…it denies that the majority [of the people] can direct society…For Fascism the growth of the empire and war is essential…” 1932 BELIEFS OF FASCISM: • Loyalty to the state • Extreme nationalism • Peaceful states would be conquered • Uniforms and special salutes • Mass rallies • Each class has a place & function Benito Mussolini “Il Duce” • • • • • ITALIAN FASCISM Wanted to rescue Italy from poor economy, rebuild military after WWI “Black shirts” terrorized Communists 1922 Italian Prime Minister Abolished democracy and all opposition; won support of middle class, aristocracy, industry leaders Italy became the model for fascism in Spain and Germany The Characteristics of Fascism Ideology • A form of extreme right-wing ideology. • Celebrates the nation or the race over individual happiness • Powerful and continuing nationalism. –Constant use of patriotic mottos, slogans, symbols, songs, etc. –Flags are seen everywhere. Subordination to the State • Nothing is more important than the State (country) • It uses organized violence to suppress opposition. –Glorification of force. –Is anti-democratic. Cult of State Worship • The individual had no significance except as a member of the state. • The fascists were taught: – Credere! [to believe] – Obbedire! [to obey] – Combattere! [to fight] The Myth of Rebirth • Emphasis on a national or racial rebirth after a period of decline or destruction (such as the Great Depression and WWI) • Seeks to purge “alien” forces and groups that threaten the “pure” community. The Fascist Family The Fascists encouraged the development of large families. Controlled Mass Media Fascism in Spain • Civil war in Spain: Italy and Germany supported General Francisco FrancoSpanish Fascist • 1939 Franco became dictator until 1970s • Guernica: Spanish village bombed by German planes The Spanish Civil War: 1936 - 1939 Francisco Franco “Guernica” Pablo Picasso Adolf Hitler “The Fuhrer” • Joined National Socialist German Worker’s Party (NAZI) in 1920 • Mein Kampf: set Hitler’s beliefs as later policy for nazi party • Great Depression gave him followers; nazi’s became largest political party • Economic and cultural control NAZI PROPAGANDA 1920-1945 “The greater the mass of men to be reached, the lower its intellectual level must be.” --Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf Techniques To convince the masses, Nazi’s must have a few points driven home through: • Simple slogans • Repeat them endlessly • Use of mass meetings to get people to feed off of one another; new members of the movement will feel a sense of belonging “I want to exploit film as an instrument of propaganda.” – Joseph Goebbels, Minister of Propaganda “It is possible by means of shrewd and unremitting propaganda to make people believe that heaven is hell- and hell heaven.” Hitler “The Fuhrer above all! Above the tremendous symphony of crowds, marching columns, meetings, commemorations, marches and congresses: his words on the present- for the future.” – Leni Riefenstahl The World Drifted Towards War Japan Invades Manchuria Japan challenged the League of Nations • 1931: Japan invaded Manchuria • Set up puppet gov’t in Manchuria (controlled by Japan) • Japan withdrew from League of Nations • War between China and Japan 1937 • Rape of Nanking: Japanese army executed 200,000 men, women and children as a show of force Mussolini meets Haile Selassie • Mussolini attacks Ethiopia to expand Italian empire • Haile Selassie, Emperor of Ethiopia, appeals to League of Nations for help • “It is us today. It will be you tomorrow.” Hitler takes the Rhineland And joins with Mussolini and Japan1936 • Occupied the former buffer zone between France and Germany • Oct. 1936: Germany and Italy alliance called RomeBerlin Axis • Nov. 1936: Germany, Italy and Japan– Axis Powers • 1937: Hitler declares the need for Lebensraum: living space • Took Austria, 1938 • Majority of Austrians supported unity w/ Germany Munich Conference- Sept. 1938 The Sudetenland Munich Conference- 1938 • Hitler wanted the Sudetenland: area between Germany and Czechoslovakia with 3 million German speakers • Britain, France and Italy agreed to let Hitler take the Sudetenland, as long as he promised to respect Czech’s new borders • March 1939: Hitler attacks Czechoslovakia, looks to attack Poland • Munich Conference a symbol of appeasement and surrender THE TWO SIDES AXIS POWERS • Germany • Italy • Japan Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary joined in 1941 ALLIED FORCES • U.S. • Britain • Russia • Australia • Canada • China Major Battles • 1940 Battle of Britain; Hitler repelled from West • 1942 Battle of Stalingrad: Hitler defeated by Soviets • 1942 Battle of El Alamein: German and Italians defeated in northern Egypt • 1941 Pearl Harbor • 1942 Battle of Midway: Japan begins losing Pacific • 1944 D-Day End of WWII • Eastern Front: Soviet Red Army pushed towards Germany • Western Fronts: Allies thru Sicily/Italy • D-Day: June 6, 1944; 156,000 British, American, Canadian troops @ Normandy • May 7,1945 Germany surrendered • Sept 2, 1945 Japan surrenders after 2 ABombs