Post World War I Nationalism
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Transcript Post World War I Nationalism
Post World War I
Nationalism
AP World History
Japan
China
Soviet Union
Post World War I
Nationalism
Germany
India
Italy
Important
Events
Diplomacy
Leader(s)
Economy
Military
People
Italy
Leader(s) – Benito Mussolini
Working class family
background
Early socialist, but switched
Formed Fasci di
Combattimento party (Fascists)
Defended private property and
class structure & prevented a
communist revolution
Promised work & benefits
Blackshirts – Mussolini’s
followers
Appointed prime minister &
Ended democratic rule & bans
non-Fascist parties establishes
a corporate state
Wanted to recapture the
greatness & glory of the
Roman Empire
Called himself El Duce
Important Events
1920 – strikes in
Lombardy and Piedmont
(Mussolini supported)
1922 – Fascists march on
Rome & Mussolini
appointed Prime Minister
1924 – Fascists win a
majority of seats in
parliament
1936 – Rome-Berlin Axis
is signed
People
Post WW I – dissatisfied
with Treaty of Versailles
Veterans, workers, and
peasants unhappy
1920 - Peasants seize
land
Middle and upper classes
feared a communist
revolution
Many Italians opposed
fascism, but most
supported Mussolini
Diplomacy
Italy invades Ethiopia
in 1935
Mussolini wants to
enhance Italy’s image
as a world power
League of Nations
imposes sanctions,
but they do not work
1936 – Rome-Berlin
Axis
Economy
Economic downturn
after WW I
Strikes, inflation,
shortages of coal
Mussolini solved
unemployment
problem
Military
WW I veterans could
not find work
Built up Italy’s armed
forces
Army invaded Ethiopia
in 1935
Germany
Leader(s) – Adolf Hitler
Austrian born
World War I veteran
Member of the National Socialist
Workers’ Party
Led the Brownshirts
1923 - Staged the “Beer Hall
Putsch” – failed
Wrote Mein Kampf
Blamed Jews & Communists for
losing war
Appealed to German’s sense of
history
Becomes Chancellor in 1933
Attacks Jews
Takes title of der Führer
Restores Germany’s military might
Ignored Versailles Treaty
Organizes Nazi youth movement
Important Events
1919 – Germans elect an
assembly which establishes a
democratic republic called the
Weimar Republic
1923 – Ruhr Valley occupied by
French troops & Beer Hall Putsch
1929 – Great Depression in
Germany
1933 – Hitler becomes chancellor
& Reichstag fire
1934 – Purge of the Brownshirts
1935 – Nuremburg Laws enacted
1936 – Hitler and Mussolini sign
the Berlin-Rome Axis
1938 – Kristallnacht
1938 - Austria is annexed – “One
blood demands one Reich”
1938 – Hitler demands and
receives the Sudetenland of
Czechoslovakia (appeasement) at
the Munich Conference
People
Blamed Weimar leaders for
signing the Versailles Treaty
Widespread opposition to Weimar
Leaders
Brownshirts – private army of
veterans and street thugs
Hitler appealed to workers and
industrialists
Political parties banned by Nazis
Labor unions taken over by Nazis
Churches controlled and clergy
silenced
Jews – stripped of citizenship and
right to hold office; barred from
schools and destroyed business
Diplomacy
France - occupies the
industrial Ruhr Valley
U.S. – provides loans to
Germany – helps free
Germany of debt
Adolf Hitler supports
General Francisco Franco
of the Spanish
Nationalists in the
Spanish Civil War (193639) he wanted Spanish
iron ore and magnesium;
prevent spread of
communism; test new
weapons and military
tactics (blitzkrieg)
Economy
Allies set reparations at $35
billion
1922 – Germany says it can
not pay (industrial Ruhr Valley
is occupied)
Inflation soared
Savings of Germans wiped out
Mid-1920s – France reaches
compromise with Germany
U.S provides loans – Germany
has 5-year period of prosperity
Great Depression (begins in
1929) – unemployment, etc.
Military
Treaty of Versailles
limited the size of the
Germany army
Hitler sought to restore
Germany’s military might
German factories begin
turning out guns,
ammunition, airplanes,
tanks, etc.
Government stresses
importance of a strong
military
Japan
Leader(s)
Emperor Hirohito –
constitutional
monarch
Influential military
leaders – opposed to
democratic reforms
Important Events
1915 – Japan forces China to
sign the Twenty-One Demands
(eventually abandoned)
1922- disarmament
conference/ Japan becomes 3rd
most powerful navy
1923 – earthquake in TokyoYokohama area
1924 – U.S. bans Japanese
immigration
1925 – universal male suffrage
1931 – invades Manchuria
1937 – war with China begins
1941 – attack on Pearl Harbor
Diplomacy
Twenty-One Demands
makes China Japanese
protectorate
Disarmament conference
in Washington benefits
Japan
Japanese army invades
Manchuria
War with China (after
Marco Polo Bridge clash)
Attack on Pearl Harbor,
Singapore, and Dutch
East Indies in 1941
People
1872-1925 - population
explosion from 35 million
to 60 million
1930s – militarism
influences all aspects of
Japanese life
Many democratically
minded Japanese hoped
Emperor would stop
militarism
Working and middle class
grows
Military dress was
appealing
Universal male suffrage
Economy
Most of the Japanese
economy was in hands of
ziabatsu
Challenges of population
density
World wide depression
devastated silk factories
and other industries
Tokyo-Yokohama
earthquake affects
economy
Land was scarce
Very few resources
(especially iron ore, coal,
and oil)
Military
Army leaders decide
to invade NE China
(after Mukden
Incident)
Government could not
control army
1932 – assassinates a
prime minister of
Japan
India
Leader(s)
Jawaharlal Nehru - led
the Hindus
Mohammed Ali Jinnah led the Muslims
Mohandas (Mahatma)
Gandhi - middle class
background; pacifist who
believed in civil
disobedience
Indian National Congress
& Muslim League –
nationalist organizations
that lead India to
independence
Important Events
1914 – Gandhi leaves
South Africa for India
1919 – Britain imposes
harsh laws on India to
stifle opposition
1919 - Amritsar massacre
1922 - British arrest
Gandhi
1930 - 200 mile march to
the sea by Gandhi to
protest the salt tax
1935 - British parliament
passes the Government
of India Act – limited self
rule for India
Diplomacy
India had no control
over diplomacy until
they achieved
independence in 1948
People
Were urged to reject Western
civilization (used brute force,
worship of money, & prejudice)
by Gandhi
Called Gandhi Mahatma or
“great soul”
Boycotted British goods
Shocked by brutal massacre at
Amritsar
Hindu-Muslim tension and
conflict intensifies as India
moves toward independence
Nationalists supported Britain
in WW I, but eventually want
complete independence for
India
Some Indian’s want to remain
in the British empire, but
desire home-rule
Economy
Wheat from India fed
Allied soldiers in
WW I
Indian cotton clothed
Allied troops
1935 – agricultural
put under provincial
government’s control
Military
Indian soldiers fought
for the British in
World War I (Middle
East & Africa)
China
Leader(s)
Sun Yat-sen – declares
China a republic in 1912
Yuan Shigai – ousts Sun
Yat-sen in 1914 and
establishes a dictatorship
Chiag Kai-shek – officer in
the Kuomintang Army
that defeats the warlords
in 1928 and establishes a
government in Nanjing
Mao Zedong – leader who
leads the 100,000
communist troops on the
Long March
Important Events
1912 – Chinese republic
declared
1914 – Sun Yat-sen
ousted
1923 – Chiang kai-shek
grows in power
1925 – Sun Yat-sen dies
1927 – communists fail to
take over Kuomintang;
Chiang purges them
1931 – Japan invades
Manchuria
1934-35 – Long March
(100,000 communists
troops to 8,000)
Diplomacy
Versailles Treaty
granted Shandong
Peninsula to Japan –
was humiliating and
surprising to China
Japan invades in 1931
and controls most of
eastern China by
1939
People
Shocked by Versailles
Treaty
Peasants supported
communists because
they overthrew local
landlords and
redistributed their
land to peasants
Economy
Agriculturally based
economy with millions
of peasants
Military
Warlords (military
leaders) divided China
amongst themselves in
1916 – civil war followed
Kuomintang Army battled
Red Army in 1930s for
control of China
Long March – retreat of
communists
Chiang Kai-shek’s
Nationalist’s forces and
the Communist forces
suspended their conflict
with each other in order
to concentrate on fighting
the Japanese
Soviet Union
Leader(s)
Vladimir Ulyanov (Lenin) –
Bolshevik leader; suffered a
stroke in 1922
Leon Trotsky – most important
person in the communist party
after Lenin; built the Red Army
into an effective fighting force;
believed in a world wide
revolution; exiled to Siberia
(and then expelled) by Stalin;
assassinated in Mexico City
Joseph Stalin – skilled
administrator; rose to general
secretary of the Communist
party; outmaneuvered Trotsky
after Lenin’s death; believed in
Soviet Union first in terms of
revolution; had Trotsky
murdered
Important Events
1919 – Comintern established
1921 – Lenin announces New
Economic Policy (NEP)
1922 – Official name changes
to Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics (USSR), new
constitution written, and Lenin
suffers two strokes
1924 – Lenin dies
1928 – Stalin declares end to
NEP, announces Five Year
Plans and collectivization
1930s – series of purges by
Stalin
Stalin seizes Ukraine’s grain
results in death of millions
1934 – Socialist realism art
instituted
1943 – Comintern dissolved
Diplomacy
Comintern established
to encourage
Communist parties in
other countries to
overthrow their
governments by legal
or illegal means
People
27 million died in WW I,
revolution, and civil war
Leadership of the communist
party controlled the workers (was
supposed to be the other way
around)
Private businesses, small
manufacturers and farmers
allowed to operate under NEP
Peasant majority (farmers) were
fiercely anticommunist – had
prospered under NEP
Kulaks (prosperous peasants) –
opposed collectivization
Millions of communist party
members were expelled and sent
to labor camps (purges)
Non-Russian nationalities suffered;
Russians dominated Soviet Union
Thousands of peasants were killed
when opposing collectivization;
millions in the Ukraine starved
Economy
NEP – major industries
under government
control; small businesses
allowed to operate
Five Year Plans – success
in spurring industrial
growth
Collectivization produced
terrible results –
opposition and starvation;
Soviet union unable to
feed its population
Military
Military leadership
suffered as a result of
purges – would take
them years to recover