Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byStephanie White Modified over 9 years ago
1
INTRO to the depth Study
2
GERMANY BACKGROUND Before 1919 Germany had been – under Kaiser Wilhelm II – virtually a dictatorship. There was a Reichstag (a parliament), but it could not make laws and did not appoint the government. The Kaiser did all that. The German Government was a military autocracy. (Germany before 1914)
4
But the First World War changed everything. As Germany sank into defeat, the government fell apart. The navy rebelled and there were food riots. German had to sign the Armistice (temporary stoping war) in November 1918, and the Kaiser fled to Holland.
5
After a short period of political chaos, the members of the Reichstag met in the small town of Weimar, near Berlin, and set up a new government in February 1919. It was a Republic (it did not have a king – which is why we call it the ‘Weimar Republic’) and it was a democracy.
6
The Weimar Republic was a very good democracy. It had a Bill of Rights to protect the freedoms of the people, and it gave the vote to all men and women over the age of 21. The voting system was one of ‘proportional representation’ – which elected MPs exactly in line with the wishes of the people. The people elected the Reichstag, which appointed the government and made the laws. The Republic did have a President – Frederick Ebert – but he was elected too. (The Weimar Republic)
8
Treaty of versailies http://www.youtube.co m/watch?v=Le89Wkx GTmU&NR=1 http://www.youtube.c om/watch?v=J31vkB 4IdS0&feature=relate d http://www.youtube.c om/watch?v=gKzZ1O wPXgk&feature=fvwr el (The Treaty of Versailles) (The Peace Settlements of WWI) (A war to end all War)
9
Weimar Republic Germany 1919–1933 The history of Germany 1919–1933 falls into three phases: 1919–1923 At first the Weimar Republic had great difficulties: Left wing rebellions All people were angry with it Right-wing rebellions and terrorism Invasion and inflation Munich Putsch
10
1923–1929 – But the Republic survived and (after Gustav Stresemann became Chancellor in 1923) did well: Economic Prosperity Foreign Policy successes Cultural flowering (architecture, books, art)
11
1929–1933 – After the Wall Street Crash of 1929, however, the Republic collapsed: – Unemployment – Nazi Party grew more powerful – In 1933, Adolf Hitler became Chancellor (Weimar Problems 1919-1923) (was Weimar Republic ever a success) (Directed Investigation)
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.