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Hitler and the Rise of Nazi Germany. Why the Nazis could rise to power in Germany  Defeat in World War I  Versailles Treaty—England and France “Stabbed.

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Presentation on theme: "Hitler and the Rise of Nazi Germany. Why the Nazis could rise to power in Germany  Defeat in World War I  Versailles Treaty—England and France “Stabbed."— Presentation transcript:

1 Hitler and the Rise of Nazi Germany

2 Why the Nazis could rise to power in Germany  Defeat in World War I  Versailles Treaty—England and France “Stabbed Germany in the Back”  Great Depression: High Employment, Low Profits, People Lose Savings  German Military Tradition: Frederick the Great— Prussia; Otto Von Bismarck—Unified Germany; Luddendorf; Hindenburg  Anti-Semitism—Jews as Scapegoats: “Had all the jobs”; “Controlled Politics”; “Had all the money” (None of the above was true but it didn’t matter)

3 Adolph Hitler  Emblematic of German Problem: Only success came in war—won a minor medal Believed that Germany “stabbed in the back” Germany should have won the war Unemployed after the war—no jobs Couldn’t get into art school—claimed only Jews got in. He had no artistic talent Formed a paramilitary group to substitute for Germany Army—National Socialists

4 Adolph Hitler (continued)  Hitler promised Germans: Stability Jobs To be Proud Again To Reverse the Versailles Treaty To End “Weak” Democracy To “Get Rid of” the Jews Lebenstraum— “Living Space for Germans”

5 Fascism  Nation comes first  Against Liberalism and Liberal Institutions  Irrational Politics— Emphasize Street Fighting SA Storm Troopers (Ernst Rohm)—they wanted to get rid of Nazi’s enemies. They were called the “Brown shirts” SS—Schutzstaffel (Heinrich Himmler)— they were called the black shirts.

6 Key Dates  October 1929—Great Depression  Summer-Fall 1932 –German Elections: Nazis win a majority: 230; Socialists 133, Center 97, Communists 89 The main points: Nazis won 42% of the vote; no center; Nazi’s powerful but can’t form government.

7 Key Dates Continued  President Hindenburg Names Hitler Chancellor in January 30, 1933.  Street Violence  February 27 Reichstag Fire—Legislature Building Burns Down  March 5 New Elections: Nazis 288; Nationalists 52; Center 74; Socialists 120; Communists 81; Others 23—Nazis win only 44% of vote  March 23, 1933—Reichstag passes (with huge majority) the Enabling Act which made Hitler dictator until April 1, 1937  July 14, 1933—Nazi Party was made only legal party  November 12, 1933 Nazis win 92% of the vote  Main Point: Only at this date does Hitler behave illegally July 1934-SS and Army purge the SA and they begin to secretly arm the army 1935 Denounces Versailles Treaty 1936 Remilitarizes the Rhineland

8 The Nazi Revolution  June 30 “Night of the long knives” – Nazis kill 77 people, mostly high ranking SA members—Ernst Roehm, Gregor Strasser  August 1 Law combining President and Chancellor  August 2 Death of President von Hindenburg  August 19 Plebiscite approves Hitler as President with 88% voting yes

9 1936-1937 Four Year Plan  War materials  Industrialization  Autobahn  VW  Daimler-Benz  General Motors  Ford

10 Racism in Nazi Germany  Belief German “Aryan” Race Master Race Jews inferior Slavs inferior Gypsies inferior Eugenics-Social Darwinism run amok  1935 Nuremberg Laws Identify Jews (with Yellow Star Deprive Jews of Citizenship Allows only so many Jews in specific jobs Outlaw marriage and sex between Jews and non-Jews

11 9 of November 1938  Night of Broken Glass or Kristallnacht In response to assassination of German diplomat in Paris:  Nazis set synagogues on fire  Broke Jewish shop windows  Beat up Jews—91 killed; thousands injured  Confiscated Jewish property  Jews forbidden to collect insurance  20,000+ Jews sent to concentration camp

12 Why Hitler?  War Vets—Hated Government for Losing the War  Middle Class—Ruined by Inflation, Depression  Workers—Unemployed  Industrialists—Hated Socialist Labor Struggle  More than economy/defeat: Emphasized a cult of war, physical danger, sexuality, future, speed, a “new life” Airplanes, car, radio

13 Goebbels and Riefenstahl  Goebbels was the Chief Propaganda Officer. He promoted radios. By 1942, Germany had 23 million radios  Leni Riefenstahl was Hitler’s filmmaker. “Triumph of Will” and “Olympiad”

14 Hitler’s Road to War  March 1938—Annexed Austria  1938 German minority in Sudetenland (Czechoslovakia)  September 1938– “Munich Crisis” Appeasement Chamberlain— “There will be peace in our Time”  Spring 1939 Annexed all of Czechoslovakia  Summer 1939—Nazi-Soviet “Non Aggression Pact”

15 World War II in Europe  1 September 1939 Nazis invade Poland  3 of September 1939 England, France declare war on Germany  Hitler defeats Poland in a month  “Phony War” (September 1939- May 1940)  May 1940 Germany invades the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, and France  “Battle of Britain”  22 of June 1941 Germany invades Soviet Union.  1941 First Extermination Camp Created

16 Concentration/Extermination Camps  Who went- 1933- 1945  Political Adversaries  Jews  Those considered socially and racially inferior to Nazi standards

17 Dachau

18 Dachau est. 1933  Location- 10 miles northwest of Munich  Who- political opponents of Nazism- later Jews-Gypsies (Roma)-Jehovah's Witness-Homosexuals  Result- over 35000 died in Dachau

19 Buchenwald

20 Buchenwald est. 1937  Location- Weimer, Germany along a mountain  Who- Jews, Poles, Slovenes, Roma, Jehovah's Witness, Homosexuals, Soviet Troops  Result- 56,545 deaths

21 Treblinka 1 and 2

22 Treblinka 1 and 2 est. 1941  Location- 62 miles northeast of Warsaw, Poland  Who- Jewish Extermination Camp  Result-850,000 killed from 1941-44

23 Auschwitz

24 Auschwitz 1, 2, 3, est. 1940  Location- 31 miles west of Krakow, Poland  Who- Jews, Poles, Soviet soldiers, Roma  Result- over 1.1 million died according to Rudolph Hess at Nuremberg over 3 million died

25 Today

26 Animated Maps http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/medi a_list.php?MediaType=am http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8i sjSGL2g-o


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