| DETAILS |
TREATY OF TRIANON | - Hungary lost territory to Romania and Yugoslavia.
- Military reduced to 35,000 standing army.
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TREATY OF SAINT-GERMAIN | - Austria lost territory to Czechoslovakia, Poland and Italy
- Military reduced to 35,000 standing army
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TREATY OF NEUILLY | - Bulgaria lost territory to Greece.
- 90 million pounds to pay in reparations.
- Military reduced to 20,000 standing army.
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TREATY OF SEVRES | - Turkey lost territory to Greece
- Turkey’s empire in the Middle East and North Africa become mandates of France and Britain, standing army limited to 50,000
- As the result of a revolution in Turkey in 1919, the Treaty of Sevres was rejected by the new Turkish Nationalist government and Turkey entered into the Lausanne Treaty in 1923
- This permitted Turkey to maintain a full standing army, not pay any reparations and revoked the land concession to Greece
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CLAUSE | SETTLEMENT | GRIEVANCES |
MILITARY | - Army reduced to 100 000 soldiers
- No tanks or air force
- U-boats and Navy restricted
| - The honour of the German military is destroyed
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ECONOMIC | - War Guilt Clause 231
- Pay 6.6 billion pounds in reparations
| - Germans were forced to admit their sole responsibility for causing the war.
- Forced to pay massive costs.
- Economically crippled.
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TERRITORY AND COLONIES | - Germany lost significant territory to Poland
- Germany give up claim to all of their overseas colonies in Europe
| - Germany is humiliated and loses many of the areas under her control
- Forbidden to unite with Austria
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WAR CRIMINALS | - Article 231, listed German’s responsible for the war
- Included Kaiser Wilhelm II and his chief generals - to be arrested and tried
- Never eventuated, Kaiser left for exile in Holland
| - Germany was made solely responsible for the war
- Leaders were labelled as criminal
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LEAGUE OF NATIONS | - League of Nations was to be established
| - Germany is not admitted as a member of the League of Nations
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CONDITION | EXPLANATION |
THE PRE-WAR SITUATION | - Years before the war were viewed as an idyllic period of peace.
- Rapid growth of population → urbanisation and technological developments.
- Rise of Marxist ideals → desire for revolution.
- Creation of unions that supported oppressed groups.
- Extremist groups began rising in popularity.
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IMPACT OF WWI | - Brought on revolution in Russia, Germany & Hungary.
- Governments became accustomed to authoritarian powers.
- Difficulty to separate the home front from the battlefield.
- People had been fed hate-filled propaganda → hard to move past.
- Brewing concepts of hatred, violence and revenge amongst nations.
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THE PARIS PEACE CONFERENCE | - Germany rallied against the unjust Treaty of Versailles.
- Italy felt as though they had been ‘cheated’.
- Japan was angered by the rejection of their racial equality clause.
- Economic unity of the pre-war era disappeared.
- Economic instability left nations vulnerable to the Great Depression.
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EUROPE’S POLITICAL PROCESS | - Nations began vying for national independence from empires.
- Lack of national identity.
- Political parties were attributed to single sectors of society.
- Governmental process was unstable.
- Perception of democracy became one of instability.
- Disunity & instability left an open window for dictators.
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THE ROLE OF PERSONALITIES | - Instability of the post-war period left Europe longing for strong leaders.
- Dictators offered simple solutions to long term issues → enticed the masses.
- Placed themselves above the masses, e.g. Hitler as the ‘Fuhrer’, Mussolini as ‘il Duce’.
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THE ROLE OF ECONOMICS | - Played a role in undermining liberal democracy.
- Global economic instability in the 1930’s meant that Europe needed people that would have solutions.
- High unemployment rates needed a resolution.
- Collapse of agriculture lowered national incomes and spending power.
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| DICTATORSHIP | FASCISM |
DEFINITION | An authoritarian form of government characterised by a single leader or group of leaders with limited political pluralism. | Comprised of censorship, extreme nationalism, state control of economy, strict discipline, rule by dictator, blind loyalty to the leader, use of violence and terror, and strong military. |
EXPLANATION | - SINGLE PARTY: A single government body that controls the entire state.
- MEDIA CONTROL: Censorship of mass media that contradicts the idea of the government and the dictator.
- TERROR & REPRESSION: Involves the government's use of violence in restraining the state and people within who have opposing opinions about the state they are in.
- STATE IDEOLOGY: The idea of nationalism- Extreme opinions of pride, proudness and superiority of the state that an individual has.
- SINGLE LEADER: A dictator who has total control over the state.
- PLANNED MARKET: The economy of the country is controlled by the government and leads to the division of all.
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| RUSSIA | ITALY | JAPAN |
SINGLE PARTY | | | |
CONTROL OF MEDIA | - History books were written to emphasise Stalin’s role in the revolution
- Artist endeavour had to be positive and optimistic - this was referred to as ‘socialist realism’
- books, art, sculpture and music that were not to Stalin’s liking were banned
- cults of personality
| | - Schools, the media and the patriotic societies insisted on unquestioning loyalty to the emperor.
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TERROR & REPRESSION
| - NKVD (secret police) had become a permanent part of the regime
- labour camps (gulags) were established in the least hospitable parts of the country → Anyone suspected of anti-party behaviour or even anti-party thinking could be sent
- Millions of people died during the course of Stalin’s dictatorship
- Purging of the party was common and removed any possible sources of opposition
| - No opposition was permitted to the regime and most active opponents fled the country.
- ‘Black shirts’ punished those who stood up against the regime.
| - The patriotic societies and the military came increasingly to dominate Japanese politics
- Frequently resulted in terror and assassinations of politicians while the army allowed the trials of offenders to be used to discredit party-led governments.
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STATE IDEOLOGY | - Stalin’s Five-Year Plan
- Collectivisation
- Absolute control and suppression of Russian society.
| - Mussolini attempted to create a ‘Corporate state’ .
- There was great emphasis put on mobilisation and indoctrination of young people.
- Italy’s youth were placed into the ‘Avanguardia’ and ‘Giovani Italiane’
- Mild on the spectrum of dictatorships
- Settled state differences through the Lateran Accord 1929 → to appease the church and Mussolini.
| - Modernisation, westernisation, and industrialisation.
- Traditional values of service, respect, patriotism and unquestioning obedience were promoted while western ideas were suppressed.
- Imperial way and the controlling group → political instability
- The control group control has increased
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SINGLE LEADER | | | |
ECONOMY | - The Five-Year Plan ended in failure.
- The rebellions of people refusing to take part in the collectivisation process caused many food shortages and famines across the country and resulted in deaths.
| - Unemployment was rising and inflation was out of control
- The northern industrial regions were suffering strikes
- The south remained mired in poverty and Mafia control
- Corporate state to end social classes
| - Advance in economy, trade still low
- Modernised its naval and military forces
- Came out of the war in a good economic shape
- However, it did not last as a post-war recession began to take hold
- Increased issues of overpopulation, food shortages and economic stagnation
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LUCK | LEGAL MANIPULATION | RUTHLESSNESS |
Reichstag Fire Decree (Feb 1933)- Painted as a communist-inspired arson attack.
- Utilised Emergency Article 48 for Hitler to be able to rule by decree.
- Hitler issued the “Law for the Protection of the People”, which severely restricted legal rights and protection for citizens and enhanced the power of the state.
- Threat of communism inspired Nazis further and the propaganda for the 1933 elections was enormous.
Great Depression - Acted as a catalyst for Hitler as the ‘saviour’ of Germany.
- Created the political instability needed for an extremist such as Hitler to come to power.
- Enabled the collapse of the Weimar Republic.
- Left the German public in need of a charismatic and pragmatic leader, as found in Hitler.
| Enabling Act- Replaced Germany’s parliamentary democracy with a dictatorship, allowing Hitler to make laws without the Reichstag.
Editorial Law
| The Night of Long Knives- Hitler was given an ultimatum by the president to deal with Rohm and the SA or the army would take power.
- Ernst Rohm and all the major leaders of the SA were rounded up and executed.
- Over 400 people were killed – including Hitler’s old enemies; Gregor Strasser and General von Schleicher.
- Confirmed Hitler’s ability to use terror tactics and deathly violence to enforce control.
Role of the SA/SS
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IDEOLOGY | EXPLANATION |
RACIAL IDEOLOGY | - The notion that German greatness and the harmony of the Volksgemeinschaft were constantly under threat from jealous, evil, racially inferior groups, in particular the Jews and Slavic peoples on Germany’s eastern borders
- The Aryan race was superior to all other races. Slavs and Jews were subhuman or Untermensch.
- Hitler believed that living space, or lebensraum for the German racially superior would be needed in the East of Europe at the expense of lower races.
- Hitler’s anti-Semitism was more a product of the immediate post WWI period.
- Notions of racial struggle and anti-Semitism became the cornerstone of Nazi ideology as it emerged in the 1920’s.
- Lebensraum → living space in the east.
- Survival of the fittest.
- All humans are subject to natural selection.
- Idea of a ‘superior’ race.
- Elimination of all ‘weak’ members of society, e.g. Jews, the disabled, homosexuals and other undesirables.
- Argued that some races were inherently superior to others and would prosper at the expense of those inferior races.
- Hitler believed that the life of the nation was one of permanent and continuing struggle for survival, in which the strongest race was destined to come out on top – so long as its purity remained intact.
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FUHRERPRINZIP | - The dominant leadership of Hitler and the notion that the will of the Fuhrer was supreme in the Nazi Party and the Nazi state.
- Placing all authority in Hitler’s hands
- However, this was not the reality- Hitler would make ministers in his cabinet compete for favour and deliberately ran a chaotic system.
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VOLKSGEMEINSCHAFT | - People’s community.
- The creation and protection of a harmonious national racial community.
- All Germans should work together to reduce differences in class, wealth and standards of living.
- In reality, Nazis had no concern for socialism or social equality.
- Volksgemeinschaft was a central feature of propaganda to give the impression that the Nazi state was a unified society.
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| ROLE |
HERMANN GORING | - Assisted in the failed Munich Beer Hall Putsch
- Played a huge role in helping to consolidate the Nazi’s rule by enlisting over 50 000 SA and SS men
- Legitimised their violence against political opponents
- Encouraged Hitler to purge the SA in the Night of the long knives
- Given the task of carrying out Hitler’s economic aims, by creating the Four-Year Plan Organisation
- Objective was to prepare Germany’s economy for potential war
- 1937 → began his program of Aryanisation
- He banned Jewish firms from receiving government contracts
- Convicted of crimes against humanity during the Nuremberg war crimes and sentenced to death
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JOSEPH GOEBBELS | - All aspects of culture were under the control of his Reich chamber of culture
- Created and sustained the Fuhrer myth → fashioned an image of Hitler as humble, dedicated to Germany’s people etc.
- Encouraged the spread of anti-Semitic propaganda
- Advocated and organised the violence against Germany’s Jews during Kristallnacht.
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HEINRICH HIMMLER | - Took part in the Munich Beer Hall Putsch
- Head of the SS
- Formed to serve as Hitler’s personal bodyguard
- Expanded the SS to become an elite force tasked with identifying and eliminating disloyal elements of opposition to the Nazi Party
- Actively encouraged Hitler to purge the SA → fed him false information regarding Rohm’s ambition and alleged desire to seize power
- Responsible for the creation of specialised combat divisions
- Significant role in elimination opposition to Hitler and carrying out the Nazi Party’s reign of terror
- Direct role in the attempted extermination of Europe’s Jews as part of the Final Solution
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ERNST ROHM | - One of Hitler’s oldest friends
- Played a leading role in the Munich Beer Hall Putsch
- 1931 → Hitler appointed Rohm the Chief of Staff of the SA
- Had opposing thoughts to Hitler in regard to next level of action
- Rohm believed that the SA was still required to consolidate the Nazi seizure of power
- Rohm was arrested during the Night of the Long Knives as he was believed to be a threat to the Nazi party and Hitler.
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| FEATURES | LIMITATIONS |
HITLER & THE CULT OF PERSONALITY
| - Strong
- Fit
- Peoples person
- Sacrifices for his people
- Increasing popular support
- Eliminated dissidence
| Opposition is limited and any anti-Hitler ideas would have to be hidden in order to survive within the Nazi regime. |
LAWS | - Reichstag Fire decree
- The Enabling Act - 1933
- Law Against the Establishment of Parties - 14 July
- Reich Labour Law
- Law for the Restoration of a professional civil service
- Law against the overcrowding of German schools
- Nuremberg Laws - 15 September 1935
- Law for the protection of German blood and honour
- Reich citizenship law
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CENSORSHIP | - Restricting what people see, hear and say → Goebbels
- Anything untermenschen was banned
- Chamber of culture
- Literature → book burning
- Radio
- Television and movies → only pro-Nazi
| Propaganda wasn’t that necessary → maintained support rather than cultivated it. Didn’t eliminate dissidence |
PROPAGANDA | - Joseph Goebbels
- Created the Fuhrer myth
- Speeches were broadcasted → really cheap so everyone could buy
- Jewish and negro music banned
- Music and movies that were enjoyable for the society, implicit so that they would approve of the regime, once in a while explicit Nazi theme
- Movies
- The eternal Jew → depicts Jews as rats
- Triumph of the will
| Propaganda wasn’t that necessary → maintained support rather than cultivated it. Didn’t eliminate dissidence. |
TERROR | - SA
- Rohm
- Brownshirts
- Eliminated during the night of the long knives
- SS
- Grow after the knight of the long knives
- Himmler
- Take over the concentration camps (for political opposition groups)
- Concentration camps
- Held only for political opposition groups
- Labour camps
- Eventually turned into the concentration camps for Jews
- Gestapo (secret state police)
| Gestapo was not as resourceful as people thought. Reactive rather than proactive. |
REPRESSION | - Germans lived in real fear of arrest, interrogation and concentration camps.
- Nazi terror was a part of everyday life and everyday work → fear is a powerful weapon of control.
- Low level officials → checked on a group of 50 families to see that they were enthusiastic about the Nazi regime.
- Wise for Germans to display support for the regime such as hanging Nazi flags etc.
- Germans by settling personal scores would report anything suspicious to the authorities if anything was a possible threat.
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| IMPACT | LIMITATIONS |
CULTURAL EXPRESSION | - Goebbels took control of artistic expression → creation of the Reich Chamber of Culture
- Artistic endeavour was suppressed
- More traditional German styles was pursued
- Literature was tightly controlled
- Book burning common
- Modernist and abstract styles were not acceptable
- Strict controls on the theatre
- Sculpture was expected to be heroic, and glorify the ‘Aryan’ body
- Jazz, blues and swing music was banned due to its black influence
- Advertising became dominated with Nazi iconography
- Modern styles of architecture were frowned upon.
| Even though there was a tight control, there was still access to other forms of expression, therefore came groups such as the ‘swing kids’. |
RELIGION | - Nazism looked very similar to a religion
- Messiah - Hitler
- Bible - Mein Kampf
- Iconography - Swastika
- July 1933 - Nazis signed a Concordat with the Vatican
- Nazis did not keep their word
- Catholic schools were being shut down
- Catholic youth groups were removed as the Hitler Youth movement took over
- ‘Evangelical Reich Church
- ‘Twenty-Five Points of the German Religion’ in 1934
| Church still stands as a threat of opposition. Fail to remove it as an institution. Overall as institutions the churches survived, despite being passive and silent about the crimes committed by the regime. |
WORKERS | - Mainly from the working class
- Nazis did not trust the workers
- Compliance of German workers was essential for the achievement of the Nazis program
- 2 May 1933 German trade union offices were broken into by SA gangs
- Union leaders were marched off to concentration camps
- Workers had job security and were made to feel a part of a special community (Volksgemeinschaft)
- However, they were no longer able to strike, wages remained low
| While they did the work, the workers never liked the work or trusted the Nazis. |
YOUTH | - The development of young people played a key part in Nazi thinking
- Filling the minds of the young with love for the Fuhrer
- Racially pure
- Develop fit and well-trained soldiers
- First Hitler Youth group → 1922 (collapsed when Hitler was sent to prison)
- Girls were expected to be as physically involved as the boys → capable of bearing many children
- Young were not encouraged to think for themselves
- Often interrupted normal schooling and were given priority
- Boys → military or labour service
- Girls → engage in domestic service and were encouraged to marry early
| 1.6 million youth had not signed up for the Hitler youth, therefore not gaining total support and participation Opposition groups are from the youth groups Hitler Youth was not the all-consuming success the Nazis would have liked it to be - both in terms of membership figures and attitude of the young who were members |
WOMEN | - Nazis tried to end the opportunities that were given to Women during the Weimar Republic
- Hitler’s beliefs of women was a second-class status
- He believed that a woman's world was a smaller one, restricted to her husband, children and home
- Nazis thought women as inferior to men and to be controlled by them.
- Encouraged women to have as many children as they could for the Reich
- Kinder, Kirche and Kuche (children, church and children)
- 1933 - the Law for the Encouragement of Marriage - made clear what was expected of women
- ‘Lebensborn’
- ‘Racially undesirable’ women were sterilised → 1934 almost 28 000 women were sterilised
- Gradually, women were barred from being doctors, lawyers, judges and were denied any real political role at all.
| As they got closer to war, 90% of women were in the workforce (didn’t want them to be, their idea of women not working failed). Changes were short lived. Employment rates for women remained high. Birth rates didn’t change. |
MINORITIES | - Physically and mentally handicapped were seen as a possibility to affect the Ryan bloodstock
- Laws were implemented to eliminate such people totally (euthanasia)
- Gypsies were attacked (untermenschen)
- Jehovah's witnesses keenly persecuted
- Mischlinge - having only one Jewish grandparent or having two who were not practicing Jews
- Homosexuals were seen as a threat to Nazi masculinity and contrary to the Nazi ideal.
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