THE YEARS BETWEEN THE WARS 1918-1939
Download
Report
Transcript THE YEARS BETWEEN THE WARS 1918-1939
THE YEARS BETWEEN
THE WARS 1918-1939
Unemployed: George Grosz
Consequences of WWI
Cost $200 billion
Only US and Japan were in better financial
shape in 1919
Decline of European dominance in world affairs
Rise of new democracies:
Hohenzollerns
Hapsburgs
Romanovs…all overthrown
WEIMAR REPUBLIC
Had serious weaknesses
Few democratic traditions
Many political parties
Bore the burden of defeat
Enormous economic problems
Germany had not increased taxes during the war
Simply printed paper money
Skyrocketing inflation
Most Germans blamed the Weimar government
for Germany’s problems
THE DAWES PLAN
• Enabled Germany to recover from
hyperinflation
• Provided a $200 million loan from
American banks to stablize the mark
• Set more realistic reparations payments
• Put into effect in 1924
THE RISE OF FASCISM
• A political movement that believed in an
extreme form of nationalism
• Denied individual rights
• Insisted on the supremacy of the state
• Advocated dictatorial one party rule
• Did not seek a classless society
Italy and Benito Mussolini
• In 1919, Italians felt betrayed
– 650,000 dead and 1 million wounded in vain
• Severe economic crisis
• Mussolini, a newspaper editor, promised to
rescue Italy
• Organized the Fascist party
• Used Blackshirts to terrorize Communists and
Socialists
• Won support of middle class, aristocrats and
industrialists
Il Duce
Italy under Mussolini
• October 1922: became prime minister
• Abolished democracy and outlawed all other political
parties
• Secret police
• Censorship
• Set up 22 corporations to run the economy
• “Mussolini is always right.”
The Rise of Nazi Germany
ADOLF HITLER
• A failure as an artist
• Soldier in WWI: awarded Iron Cross
• Believed that Germany had been
betrayed at Versailles
• 1920: joined the National Socialist
German Workers party in Munich
• German brand of fascism
• Private army of Brownshirts/the S.A.
Munich 1923
• Beer Hall Putsch…attempted coup failed
• Hitler sent to jail for 9 months
Mein Kampf
• Book written while Hitler was in prison
• Set forth his goals and ideas
– Germans were the master race: all others
should be destroyed, including Jews, Slavs,
and gypsies
– Treaty of Versailles was a outrage
– Germany needed lebensraum
Hitler became Chancellor
• 1929 depression ended German economic
recovery
• Germans listened to the Nazi message of
hate
• 1932: Nazi party was largest in Germany
• 1933: President von Hindenburg forced to
appoint Hitler chancellor
ABSOLUTE POWER
Reichstag fire
Enabling Act: gave Hitler absolute power for 4
years
All political parties banned except the Nazis
Total control of economy, culture and religion
Secret police: Gestapo
SS: elite protection squad
Jugend: Hitler Youth
Der Fuhrer
JEWS WERE PERSECUTED
• Only 1% of Germany’s population was Jewish
• Included many distinguished scientists,
businessmen and academics
• Anti-Semitism began in earnest in 1933
– Laws forbade Jews from holding public office
• Nuremberg Laws
– 1935
– Deprived of German citizenship
– Required to wear yellow Star of David
KRISTALLNACHT
• November 9-10, 1938
• “night of broken glass”
• Destroyed 7500 Jewish shops and
businesses
• Burned 275 synogogues
• Thousands were rounded up and sent to
concentration camps
• November 10, 1938
The World Drifted Towards War
• League of Nations was weak
• Britain and France followed policy of
appeasement
• Japan invaded Manchuria in
1931…League did nothin
• 1937: War between China and Japan
• Mussolini attacked Ethiopia 1936
• Hitler scrapped the Versailles Treaty 1935
Expansion of Nazi Germany
ROME-BERLIN AXIS
Spanish Civil War 1936-1939
• Spain had been a monarchy until 1931,
when a democratic gov’t was established
• July 1936: Generalissimo Francisco
Franco led a revolt against the
government (the
Nationalists/Falange…fascists)
• Franco supported by Mussolini and Hitler
• Republicans (the gov’t.) supported by
Stalin
Guernica…April 1937
Pablo Picasso’s Guernica
ANSCHLUSS: MARCH 1938
ANNOUNCING THE ANNEXATION OF
AUSTRIA
APPEASEMENT: SEPTEMBER
1938
• The Sudetenland: home to 3 million
Germans within Czechoslovakia
• Hitler demanded the Sudentenland
• Czechs refused
• Called upon France for help
• Hitler called Neville Chamberlain, Britain’s
PM, to meet in Munich on September 29
“I believe it is peace for our time.”
• Neville Chamberlain September 1938