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What kind of dictatorship was Hitler’s dictatorship

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1 What kind of dictatorship was Hitler’s dictatorship
What kind of dictatorship was Hitler’s dictatorship? B aim – to explain what kind of dictatorship you believe Hitler’s dictatorship was using evidence and historians A/A* aim - to explain what kind of dictatorship you believe Hitler’s dictatorship was using evidence and historians and challenging other interpretations Mommsen – weak dictator/structuralist Kershaw – fairly strong dictator and chaotic plurocracy Various – strong dictator, similar to Stalin, early Cold War Which interpretation do you most agree with and why? Challenge another interpretation in your answer.

2 Reginald, Kausar, Fares, Agonita
What kind of dictatorship was Hitler’s dictatorship? B aim – to explain what kind of dictatorship you believe Hitler’s dictatorship was using evidence and historians A/A* aim - to explain what kind of dictatorship you believe Hitler’s dictatorship was using evidence and historians and challenging other interpretations Fill in the sentence starters relating to this exam question. ‘Hitler was a dictator who did not dictate’. How far do you agree? Reginald, Kausar, Fares, Agonita Hitler’s personality shows that he was dictator that did not dictate as in source 4 it says..... This is supported by the fact that (OK) Source Also supports this as it says. However, source 5 argues This is supported by the point that Overall, it appears that source 4/source 5 and 6 are correct because (OK) Charis, Deborah, Whelan Hitler’s personality shows that he was dictator that did not dictate as in source 4 it says..... This is supported by the fact that (OK) Source Also supports this as it says. This concurs with the historian Who argues Because However, source 5 argues This is supported by the point that This concurs with the historian Who argues overall, it appears that source 4/source 5 and 6 are correct because (OK)

3 Red edexcel book 189-196 Case Study
How does this present Hitler’s dictatorship? Evidence to support this interpretation How can you challenge this interpretation?

4 Debate Add to your starter....
B – write a paragraph explaining what you think the correct interpretation of Hitler’s dictatorship is. Include facts to support it and explain which historians support and challenge this. A/A* aim - write a paragraph explaining what you think the correct interpretation of Hitler’s dictatorship is. Include facts to support it and explain which historians support and challenge this. Use evidence to show another interpretation is wrong.

5 New Divider – last one! Until Easter and then revision.
How did WWII affect the popularity of the Nazis? The economy – pre-war, war-time, Schacht and Speer, successes and failures Morale of war – opposition and conformity Repressing dissent and opposition Persecution of the Jews Creation of the Final Solution

6 Schacht, rebuilding, employment, labour schemes
Recap – How far did the Nazis gain more support from their actions with the economy from ? Schacht, rebuilding, employment, labour schemes Strength through joy, glorification of labour, DAF German Labour Front Big business Small businesses, artisans and farmers 4 year plan and Goering, guns or butter Tried to reduce trade deficit

7 Did an economic crisis in Germany in 1939 push Germany into war
Did an economic crisis in Germany in 1939 push Germany into war? B – to explain whether there was an economic crisis in 1939 and whether it pushed Germany into war A/A* aim - to explain whether there was an economic crisis in 1939 and whether it pushed Germany into war and link this into the structuralist and internationalist debate The problem: Germany had built an economy for rearmament extremely quickly. By 1939 Germany was spending too much on rearmament. There were shortages of food, consumer goods and raw materials which meant that rearmament was slowing down. How could taking over parts of Europe solve this problem?

8 How taking over parts of Europe could solve this
Problem How taking over parts of Europe could solve this Germany was spending too much on rearmament Shortages of raw materials for rearmament, food and consumer goods Labour shortages which meant wages were going up and costing more Agriculture was suffering from labour shortages, price freezes due to shortages and declining dairy production which was the main source of fats Exports were declining and imports were increasing for war production Growing public deficit Fear or popular unrest and people thinking of removing Hitler due to the pressure

9 Why had this become such a problem for the Nazis? The challenge...
The evidence for these problems in the economy are based on eye witness reports Nazi reports show problems in 1939 but not a crisis State controls on wages and prices were stopping inflation which could happen from spending too much money on rearmament, so there was no need to go to war to stop rearmament Little evidence of social unrest WWII produced an economic crisis as it became a large scale war rather than a localised war Hitler’s aims were more important for causing WWII

10 B – Was there an economic crisis in 1939 and did this push Germany in to war?
A/A* - Considering the economic factors do you believe that WWII happened due to intentionalist (master plan) or structuralist (circumstantial) factors?

11 Wartime Economy – Mr Stewart Introduction

12 How successful was the Nazi war economy up to 1942?
Read pp

13 Homework – Due Monday Write b question
Economy homework – prepare a paper to deliver on Monday arguing either.... The wartime economy was successful up to 1942 The wartime economy was unsuccessful up to 1942


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