Hitler and Nazi Germany (Six Things) Flashcards
What were the effects on Germany of the end of the First World War?
- Food shortages due to the British naval blockade
- Struggled to cope with outbreak of the Spanish Flu
- End of rule by monarchy as Kaiser Wilhelm II abdicated
- Forced to sign the Armistice on November 11th
- Faced the threat of revolution as sailors mutinied at Kiel
- Emergence of the ‘stabbed in the back myth’
What happened during the Spartacist Revolt in January 1919?
- 100,000 people gathered to protest about the sacking of a police chief
- Far-left groups took opportunity to call for a revolution
- Protesters seized key newspaper offices and armed themselves
- Revolt lacked organisation and many people went home
- Far-right ‘Freikorps’ called in to suppress uprising
- Hundreds killed during ‘Bloody Week’, including Spartacist leaders
What were the terms of the Treaty of Versailles?
- Germany forced to take full responsibility for starting WW1
- Army reduced to 100,000 men
- Forbidden from having an airforce
- Lost territory to neighbours
- Overseas colonies given to other imperial powers
- Made to pay reparations
What were the main characteristics of the Weimar Republic?
- Representative democracy, simillar to Britain, France and the USA
- Men and women over 20 allowed to vote in Reichstag elections
- Proportional representation led to coalition governments
- Basic freedoms protected by the Fundamental Laws
- Powers of Reichstag, president and chancellor limited by system of checks and balances
- Article 48 allowed the president to rule by decree in an emergency
How did the hyperinflation crisis of 1923 impact Germany?
- Some mortgages and loans able to be paid off easily
- Panic buying and long queues outside shops
- Middle classes and elderly lost all their savings
- Tenants struggled to keep up with rent rises
- Many people lost faith in democracy
- Dawes Plan for recovery tied Germany’s economy to the USA’s
What were the key events of the Munich Beer Hall Putsch?
- Hitler, Ludendorff and SA troops stormed into a beer hall and declared a revolution had begun
- Three local political figures were forced to declare their support
- Hitler left to seize key media outlets and check on other SA troops
- Ludendorff allowed the political figures to leave
- They then renounced their support and alerted the police
- Hitler, the SA and other key Nazis clashed with police the next day
Why was there discontent against Weimar by the early 1930s?
- Associated with defeat in WW1
- Post-war leaders had signed the hated Treaty of Versailles
- Blamed for causing hyperinflation
- Had not solved problems created by the Great Depression
- Seemed weak as coalition governments kept collapsing
- Multiple chancellors had resorted to using Article 48
Why did the Nazis rise in popularity by 1933?
- Hitler seen as someone from outside the Weimar ‘establishment’
- Hitler excellent public speaker
- Nazi propaganda used short and simple slogans
- Nazi policies appealled to people across the political spectrum
- They promised to tear up the Treaty of Versailles
- Rich people like Fritz Thyssen gave them financial backing
What happened during the Reichstag fire?
- In February 1933, the Reichstag went on fire
- A Dutch Communist was arrested at the scene
- He confessed to police but said he acted alone
- Hitler declared it was part of a wider Communist plot to seize power
- More than 4000 other Communists then arrested
- Reichstag Fire Law was passed, which suspended basic freedoms
How did the Nazis consolidate their power between 1933 and 1934?
- Passed the Enabling Act, letting them rule by decree for four years
- All other political parties banned
- Trade unions abolished
- People’s Courts established and all judges swore oath of loyalty to Hitler
- The Night of the Long Knives removed internal opponents
- Hitler merged roles of chancellor and president to become ‘Fuhrer’
How did the Nazis use fear and intimidation to maintain control?
- Created a totalitarian state where Hitler had absolute authority
- Controlled all law and order, including the police and courts
- All freedoms and individual rights were removed
- The Gestapo arrested people in the middle of the night
- A network of informants was used to spy on ordinary citizens
- Opponents were sent to concentration camps, such as Dachau, run by the SS
How did the Nazis use propaganda and censorship to maintain control?
- Produced cheap radios that only recieved Nazi-controlled stations
- Movies reflected Nazi beliefs
- Berlin Olympics in 1936 intended to prove German superiority
- Book burnings in 1934
- Editor’s Law in 1933 stopped anti-Nazi articles in newspapers
- Alternative viewpoints suppressed
How did the Nazis treat Jews and other minorities?
- SA boycott of Jewish shops and other businesses in 1933
- Nuremberg Laws passed between 1935 and 1936
- Kristallnacht pogrom in 1938
- Those with hereditary illnesses sterilised from 1933
- T4 programme ‘mercifully killed’ anyone deemed unworthy of living from 1939
- Homosexuals put in concentration camps from 1933
How did people in Germany oppose the Nazis from 1933?
- Some people refused to give the Nazi salute
- The Red Orchestra formed resistence cells
- The Leipzig Meuten promoted left-wing ideas and vandalised Nazi meeting spaces
- The Edelweiss Pirates helped Jews and attacked young Nazis
- The Swing Kids wore American fashion and listened to jazz
- Church leaders like Martin Neimoller denounced the Nazis
Why was it difficult for Germans to oppose the Nazis?
- Nazis very powerful
- Rebel groups could be infiltrated by the Gestapo
- Most political opponents put in concentration camps
- People brainwashed by propaganda
- Treatment of Jews and others made people afraid to go against the Nazis
- Nazi popularity