Download presentation
Published byErin Williamson Modified over 9 years ago
1
Chapter 26 The Futile Search for a New Stability:
Europe Between the Wars,
2
Timeline
3
Germany 1920s Deutschmark 1923 Wait Line Berlin Bakery 1923
Blue Angel (Marlene Dietrich) 1930 Wait Line Berlin Bakery 1923
4
An Uncertain Peace: The Search for Security
Weaknesses of the League of Nations The French Policy of Coercion (1919 – 1924) Desire for strict enforcement the Treaty of Versailles Allied Reparations Commission, April 1921 $33 billion Paid in annual installments of billion gold marks Germany unable to pay in Hyperinflation! 3.25 x 106 percent per month 1923 = prices double every two days (Hungary post WWII: x 1016 % per month = double every 15 hrs) French occupation of the Ruhr Valley German mark fall to 4.2 trillion to $1, end of November 1923 (60 marks per $1 1921) 1924: New currency: 1 Rentenmark = 3 trillion old marks The Hopeful Years (1924 – 1929) Dawes Plan, 1924: Reparations + $ loan Treaty of Locarno, 1925 guarantee Ger. western borders Kellog-Briand Pact: renunciation of war countries Coexistence with Soviet Union
5
Breadline Nov. 1923 100,000 Marks = $1 100 Million Mark 50 Million Mark 10 Million Mark 500 Million Mark
6
The Little Entente
7
The Great Depression Problems in domestic economies
International financial crisis Crash of the American stock market, October 1929 Affects European markets Unemployment Social Repercussions Powerlessness of Governments
8
The Democratic States Great Britain France The United States
Labour Party failed to solve problems Coalition claimed credit for prosperity John Maynard Keynes ( ): Keynesian Economics Keynes says the government should create jobs Obama: Stimulus Package!!! France Was the strongest power in Europe Could not solved financial problems Popular Front The United States Herbert Hoover, ( ) Franklin D. Roosevelt, ( ) New Deal Public works projects World War II ends the depression
9
European States and the World: Colonial Empires
Rising tide of unrest in Asia and Africa The Middle East Division of Ottoman Empire Turkey Colonel Mustafa Kemal (Atatürk) India Mohandas Gandhi (1869 – 1948) and Civil Disobedience Africa Britain and France awarded German colonies Protest movements
10
Retreat from Democracy: The Authoritarian and Totalitarian States
Totalitarianism By 1939 only France and Great Britain are democracies The modern totalitarian state -- origins in WWI centralization of the state control Active commitment of citizens Individual serves the state Mass propaganda techniques -- cultural control High speed communication -- Radio, Movies (News Reels) Led by single leader and single party Different forms in different countries
12
Fascist Italy Impact of World War I Birth of Fascism
Italians angry over failure to receive territory after World War I (Trieste + South Tyrol, but not Fiume, Dalmatia) Birth of Fascism Benito Mussolini ( ) -- former socialist Unsuccessful Elem. Teacher Fascio di Combattimento (League of Combat), 1919 Latin fasces (It. fascio): “bundle” or “union” -- bundle of sticks = symbol of “strength through unity” in Roman Empire Growth of the Socialist party Political stalemate + industrial & agricultural strikes Squadristi, armed Fascists -- “the Black Shirts” Fascist movement gains support from industrialists (+ middle classes, upper classes, etc.) Formula: Anticommunism, Anti-strike, Nationalism March on Rome, calculated bluff works Mussolini appointed prime minister, October 29, 1922
13
Victorious Fascists in Rome, 1922, Burning Socialist Literature
“Il Duce” Fasces
14
Mussolini and the Italian Fascist State
Fascist Government All parties outlawed, 1926 – Fascist dictatorship established -- Il Duce “The Leader” Mussolini’s view of a Fascist state “All within the state, nothing outside the state, nothing against the state.” Young Fascists -- indoctrination!!! Family is the pillar of the state -- women encouraged to have many children & not work Never achieves the degree of totalitarianism like Germany or Soviet Union Armed Forces, Monarchy still independent Lateran Accords, February 1929 Agreement w/ Church: Mutual recognition -- Italy & Vatican City
15
Young Fascist Movement
7th Anniversary of Fascism: Mussolini addresses Black Shirts In Rome Election Poster “Children Belong To The State!” Young Fascist Movement
16
Hitler and Nazi Germany
Weimar Germany No leaders Paul von Hindenberg elected president, 1925 Great Depression The Emergence of Adolf Hitler Adolf Hitler ( ) Vienna Lanz von Liebenfels -- Anti-Semetic & pro-”Aryan” former monk. Ostara radical pro-Aryan publication Munich The Rise of the Nazis German Workers’ Party National Socialist German Workers’ Party (NSDAP), 1921 Sturmabteilung (SA), Storm Troops (aka Brown Shirts)
17
Storm Troopers (SS) Munich, 1923
Hitler, Joseph Göebbels, Münich 1923 Adolph Hitler 1923 Julius Streicher & Nazi Club 1922
18
Hitler and Nazi Germany (cont)
The Nazi Seizure of Power Munich Beer Hall Putsch, November 1923 Hitler imprisoned Mein Kampf, (My Struggle) Lebensraum (living space) Reorganization of the party New strategies Nazi party largest in the Reichstag after 1932 election Support from right-wing elites Becomes chancellor, January 30, 1933 Reichstag fire, February 27, 1933 Successes in 1933 election Enabling Act, March 23, 1933 Gleichschaltung, coordination of all institutions under Nazi control President Paul von Hindenburg dies, August 2, 1934
19
SA Occupies Workers’ Bank, Arrest Employees
Goebbels Addressing German Film Academy, 1934 Prison 1924 SA Occupies Workers’ Bank, Arrest Employees Site of Beerhall Putsch Planning The Volkswagon (“People’s Car) Hitler’s Project 1938 Founding of Party, Munich, 1925 1933: Hitler, Hindenburg, Goering Saluting Hitler & Hindenburg “Hitler Over Germany” 1933 “Death to Marxism” 1926 “Freedom from Misery, Freedom from Jews!” 1933 Election “End it Now!” Book Burning May 1933 Autobahn, 1938
20
The Nazi State (1933-1939) Parliamentary republic dismantled
Mass demonstrations and spectacles to create collective fellowship Constant rivalry gives Hitler power Economics and the drop in unemployment Heinrich Himmler and the SS Churches, schools, and universities brought under Nazi control Hitler Jugend (Hitler Youth) and Bund deutscher Mädel (League of German Maidens) Influence of Nazi ideas on working women Aryan Racial State Nuremberg laws, September 1935 Kristallnacht, November 9-10, 1938 Restrictions on Jews
21
Nuremburg, 1937, Hitler Youth Day
Buchenwald: Some of the 30,000 Jews arrested around Kristallnacht Berlin 1936 Kristallnacht 10 Nov Looted Jewish Shops Nuremburg, 1936 Munich Putsch Flag Ceremony Nuremburg, 1938 Long Jump Record! Japan’s Naoto Tajima (bronze), American Jesse Owens (gold) & Germany's Luz Long (silver) Boycott Jewish Stores Hitler Youth, 1933 Hitler Youth, Nuremburg 1936 Nuremburg Rally 1934 Kristallnacht: Burning Synagogue Old Jews forced to scrub the streets
22
The Soviet Union New Economic Policy (NEP)
Modified capitalism Union of Socialist Republics established, 1922 Revived economy Lenin suffers strokes, ( ) Division Leon Trotsky -- War Minister, Charismatic Joseph Stalin -- In background General Party Secretary Used position to build up power base -- appointments Trotsky ousted exile & assassination 1940
23
Stalin’s Birthplace Gori, Georgia.
1922
24
The Stalinist Era, (1929-1939) Rapid collectivization of agriculture
First Five Year Plan, 1928 Emphasis on industry Real wages declined -- 43% from Use of propaganda -- Stakhanov Cult & Cult of Personality Rapid collectivization of agriculture Famine of ; 10 million peasants died Deliberate policy to starve Ukrainians, Kulaks Political Control Stalin’s dictatorship established, 1929 Political purge, ; 8 million arrested Gulag Archipelago
25
Lunch during harvest on a Ukrainian Collective, 1936
Women on a Collective Farm 1930 Gulag Arctic Siberia Young Communists, May Day Parade Let’s Get to Work! 1920 Stalin Cult 1951 With Honor, We will Fulfill and Fulfill again Stalin’s New Five-Year Plan! Cult of the Personality Worker & Kolkhoz (Collective) Woman 1937 Former Gulag, Pevec, Siberia
26
Authoritarianism in Eastern Europe
Conservative Authoritarian Governments Eastern Europe Austria, Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Yugoslavia adopted parliamentary systems Romania and Bulgaria gained new parliamentary constitutions Greece became a republic Hungary parliamentary in form; controlled by landed aristocrats Adm. Miklós Horthy -- Regent of Hungary Problems Little or no tradition of liberalism and parliamentary form Rural and agrarian society Ethnic conflicts
27
Dictatorship in the Iberian Peninsula
General Miguel Primo de Rivera and the End of Parliamentary Government (1923) The Spanish Civil War The Popular Front General Francisco Franco (1892 – 1975) Foreign intervention Italy, Germany, USSR -- also Lincoln Brigade (U.S.) Franco emerges victorious (March 28, 1939) The Franco Regime Traditional, conservative, dictatorship Portugal Antonio Salazar (1889 – 1970)
28
Discussion Questions How would you define fascism? How was fascism different from traditional authoritarianism? What were the strengths and weaknesses of Weimar democracy? Compare and contrast Stalin’s Soviet Union and Hitler’s Germany. What did the two states have in common? What anxieties were reflected in the cultural and intellectual trends of the interwar period?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.