Exam 3 Flashcards
(37 cards)
This was a myth in Europe during the Middle Ages that Jews used the blood of Christian children for ritual purposes.
Blood Libel
This was a notorious anti-Semitic tract published first in Russia in 1905. It was written in the form of a dialogue, and it suggested a Jewish plot to take over the world.
Protocols of the Elders of Zion
This was a traditional Jewish village in the Pale and other parts of East Europe. It made the integration and assimilation of East European Jews less likely than in West Europe.
Shtetl
These laws were passed in 1935 and denied German Jews of their basic civil rights. They were stripped of their German citizenship, were denied employment in government or the military, and had to be segregated in public places.
Nuremberg Laws
These were trials in 1946 that convicted the principal Nazi leaders, many of whom executed by hanging.
Nuremberg Trials
This stands for North Atlantic Treaty Organization. It was a collective security arrangement created in 1949 that included the United States and most West European countries, and its purpose was to prevent Soviet expansion. West Germany joined in 1955.
NATO
This was a pact signed between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union in August 1939. By this pact, the two countries agreed not to make war against the other, and they also divided Poland and other parts of East Europe with secret protocols within the pact.
Nazi-Soviet Nonaggression Pact
This was a series of anti-Jewish riots in Germany in 1938 in which Jewish businesses and synagogues were destroyed. Many Jews were assaulted and lost their lives, and afterward many fled Germany.
Kristallnacht
These were nationalists who wanted to see all Germanspeaking lands united into a single nation state. They especially wanted to see Austria included in a greater Germany.
Pan-German Nationalists
This is a German term that translates as “living space,” and it was the word that Adolf Hitler used to describe his foreign policy. In particular, he wanted to conquer much of East Europe and create a huge German empire in Europe.
Lebensraum
This word is German for “annexation” and it refers to the annexation of Austria by Nazi Germany in 1938.
Anschluss
This was a diplomatic crisis in 1938 that was caused by Germany’s insistence upon annexing the Sudetenland. The crisis was averted by letting Germany annex the Sudetenland.
Czechoslovakian Crisis
This was the Soviet Union’s version of the European Economic Community. It was a forced integration of the Soviet Union’s satellite countries into a single economic bloc. It generally did East Germany little good since it had the healthiest communist economy and it was forced to integrate into less-developed communist economies such as that of Romania.
COMECON
This was a strip of land that extended south from the city of Danzig and that was taken from Germany after World War I and given to Poland. There was a significant German minority population in this strip of land, and Adolf Hitler used this as a pretext to invade Poland in 1939.
Danzig Corridor
This was a horseshoe-shaped piece of land in Czechoslovakia that had a German population of about three million. Hitler received this land as part of the Munich Pact in 1938.
Sudetenland
This is a German term that means “lightening war,” and it refers to a set of tactics that depend of the speed, mobility, and firepower of the tank and airplane to rapidly defeat an enemy.
Blitzkrieg
This is the name given to the air war fought over Great Britain during late 1940 and early 1941 between Nazi Germany’s Luftwaffe and the Britain’s Royal Air Force.
Battle of Britain
This was an operation initiated by the United States in 1948 when the Soviet Union cut off all ground corridors into West Berlin in the hope of forcing out the British, French, and American troops there. The operation successfully kept West Berlin supplied with food, fuel, and consumer goods, and in 1949 the Soviet Union finally relented and allowed the allied powers ground access to West Berlin.
Berlin Airlift
This was an ultimatum delivered by Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev in 1958 to the Western Powers—the United States, Britain, and France— that they must leave West Berlin permanently or forced out militarily. Ultimately, this ultimatum failed, and Berlin remained divided.
Berlin Ultimatum
This was a treaty between East and West Germany in 1972 whereby both countries granted diplomatic recognition to the other. This paved the way for both
countries to enter the United Nations the next year.
Basic Treaty
This was the code name for Nazi Germany’s invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941.
Operation Barbarossa
A term (sometimes used disparagingly) to describe a person who lived in the former East Germany.
Ossi
These were mobile SS killing squads that, during the first phase of the Holocaust, went into East European villages, rounded up Jews, shot them, and buried them in mass graves.
Einsatzgruppen
This is the name given to West Germany’s dramatic economic growth of the 1950s under Chancellor Konrad Adenauer.
Economic Miracle