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The World Between the Wars (1910–1939)

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1 The World Between the Wars (1910–1939)
Lesson 8 The Rise of Nazi Germany

2 The World Between the Wars (1910–1939)
Lesson 8 The Rise of Nazi Germany Learning Objectives Summarize the political and economic problems faced by the Weimar Republic. Analyze Hitler's rise to power. Describe the political, social, economic, and cultural policies of Nazi Germany. Explain why Eastern Europe turned to authoritarian rule.

3 The World Between the Wars (1910–1939)
Lesson 8 The Rise of Nazi Germany Key Terms chancellor, Ruhr Valley, hyperinflation. Adolf Hitler Third Reich, Gestapo Nuremberg Laws,

4 The Weimar Republic As World War I drew to a close, Germany tottered on the brink of chaos. Under the threat of a socialist revolution, Kaiser William II abdicated. Moderate leaders signed the armistice and later, under protest, the Treaty of Versailles. German leaders drafted a constitution in the city of Weimar and created a democratic government known as the Weimar Republic.  Weimar Republic faced numerous problems, including political extremists, extreme inflation, and the Great Depression. Germans of all classes blamed the Weimar Republic for the hated Versailles treaty. Germany fell behind in reparations payments, France occupied the coal-rich Ruhr Valley, (roor) taking over its iron, coal, and steel industries. 

5 The Weimar Republic Dawes Plan: France withdrew its forces from the Ruhr, and American loans helped the German economy recover Great Depression hit and Germans turned to an energetic leader, Adolf Hitler, who promised to solve the economic crisis and restore Germany’s former greatness.

6 The Weimar Republic Political Turmoil Economic Hardship
Recovery and Depression Culture in the Weimar Republic

7 The Weimar Republic German delegates to the Paris Peace Conference reluctantly signed the Treaty of Versailles on June 28, 1919.

8 Hitler Leads the Nazi Party
The Great Depression sent the German economy into a downward spiral. As discontent rose, Germans began to listen to the ideas of Adolf Hitler, who had operated on the fringe of German politics for a decade. While living in Vienna, Hitler developed the fanatical anti-Semitism that would later play a major role in his rise to power. He despised the Weimar government, and within a year, he was the unquestioned leader of the National Socialist German Workers, or Nazi party In November 1923, Hitler tried to follow Mussolini’s example by staging a small-scale coup known as the Beer Hall Putsch in Munich.  The coup failed and Hitler was imprisoned where he wrote Mein Kampf (book of Nazi goals and ideology: extreme nationalism,

9 racism, and anti-Semitism.
Hitler Leads the Nazi Party racism, and anti-Semitism. Hitler promised to end reparations, create jobs, and defy the Versailles treaty by rearming Germany. Hitler was appointed chancellor in 1933 through legal means under the Weimar constitution and within a year, Hitler was dictator of Germany.  He and his supporters suspended civil rights, destroyed the Communists, and disbanded other political parties. Hitler purged his own party, brutally executing Nazis he felt were disloyal.

10 Hitler Leads the Nazi Party
Early Years Hitler’s Ideological Manifesto Hitler Comes to Power

11 Hitler Leads the Nazi Party
The Nazi Party was active between 1920 and Hitler served as the party's leader starting in Initially, the Nazis focused on anti-big business and anti-capitalist rhetoric.

12 Hitler Leads the Nazi Party
Analyze Information How did the events of post–World War I Germany affect the rise of the Nazi Party?

13 The Third Reich Once in power, Hitler and the Nazis moved to build a new Germany. Like Mussolini, Hitler appealed to nationalism by recalling past glories. Germany’s First Reich, or empire, was the medieval Holy Roman Empire, which had lasted more than 800 years. The Second Reich was the empire forged by Bismarck in Under Hitler’s new Third Reich, he boasted, the German master race would dominate Europe for a thousand years. His aggressive goals would eventually lead Germany—and the world—into another war. To combat the Great Depression, Hitler launched large public works programs( building highways and housing and replanting forests) Hitler also repudiated, or rejected, the Versailles treaty and launched a crash program to rearm Germany and schemed to unite Germany and Austria. Hitler organized an efficient but brutal system of terror, repression, and totalitarian rule. Nazis controlled all areas of German life—from government to religion to education

14 Nazis passed the Nuremberg Laws, which deprived Jews of German citizenship and placed severe restrictions on them.  A German Jew wounded a German diplomat, so Hitler used this to stage an attack on all Jews and eventually force them into concentration camps. Nazis indoctrinated young people with their ideology and urged young Germans to destroy their so-called enemies without mercy They burned books, denounced art, condemned jazz, but they glorified old German myths. He sought to replace religion with his racial creed.

15 The Third Reich A Totalitarian State Emerges
Anti-Semitism Campaign Begins Nazi Social Policies Purifying German Culture

16 The Third Reich The Nazis initiated massive public works programs to generate jobs and stimulate economic growth. Unemployed Germans worked on government-funded construction, clearance, or agricultural labor projects.

17 In Czechoslovakia, Czechs and Slovaks were unwilling partners
Authoritarian Rule in Eastern Europe Like Germany, most new nations in Eastern Europe slid from democratic to authoritarian rule in the postwar era. In 1919, a dozen countries were carved out of the old Russian, Austro-Hungarian, Ottoman, and German empires. Although they differed from one another in important ways, they faced some common problems. They were small countries whose rural agricultural economies lacked capital to develop industry. Social and economic inequalities separated poor peasants from wealthy landlords. None had much experience with the democratic process. Old rivalries between ethnic and religious groups created severe tensions In Czechoslovakia, Czechs and Slovaks were unwilling partners  More than three million Germans lived in northern Czechoslovakia, and some of them wanted to join Hitler’s Nazi Germany. Economic problems and ethnic tensions contributed to instability, which in turn helped fascist rulers gain power. Dictators promised order and won the

18 support of the military and wealthy
Authoritarian Rule in Eastern Europe support of the military and wealthy They also turned to anti-Semitism, using Jewish people as scapegoats for many national problems

19 Authoritarian Rule in Eastern Europe
Ethnic Rivalries Dictators Replace Democracy

20 Authoritarian Rule in Eastern Europe
Analyze Maps According to the map, which eastern European nation was the first to have an authoritarian government?

21 Quiz: The Weimar Republic
Which statement best describes economic conditions in the Weimar Republic after World War I? A. The German people prospered by getting government jobs rebuilding the war-torn country. B. The German people spent money on art, music, and shows to forget the horrors of war. C. The German government paid veterans bonuses, and that money boosted the economy. D. The German government printed extra money to pay protesting workers, causing hyperinflation.

22 Quiz: Hitler Leads the Nazi Party
How did Hitler establish a totalitarian state in Germany? A. He planned a successful coup in Munich that took over the government. B. He disbanded other political parties and made Germany a one-party state. C. He formed a coalition government with Communists and then purged them. D. He rose through the ranks of the army and then established a military government.

23 Quiz: The Third Reich What method did Germany's totalitarian government use to spread Hitler's beliefs? A. Schoolbooks were rewritten to reflect the racial views of the Nazi Party. B. Hitler launched worker education programs to train non-Aryan people. C. Woman were encouraged to attend university and study Nazi beliefs. D. Hitler banned traditional German myths in favor of Nazi ideology.

24 Quiz: Authoritarian Rule in Eastern Europe
Like Hitler, how were the new dictators in Eastern Europe able to gain power? A. They promised more lands for people who served in the military. B. They promised order and stability at a time of economic unrest. C. They promised to create a written constitution. D. They promised to establish religious freedom.


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