The Road to World War II. Rise of Dictators

Similar documents
Rise of Totalitarianism

On your own paper create the following layout LEADER PROBLEMS MAJOR REFORMS

The Rise of Dictators

Ch 13-4 Learning Goal/Content Statement

Rise of the Totalitarian Rulers

Chapter 7: Rejecting Liberalism. Understandings of Communism

Ch 13-4 Learning Goal/Content Statement Section 4

The Rise of Totalitarian leaders as a Response to the Great Depression NEW POLITICAL PARTIES IN EUROPE BEFORE WWII!!

Clicker Review Questions

TOTALITARIANISM. Friday, March 03, 2017

AMERICA AND THE WORLD. Chapter 13 Section 1 US History

WORLD WAR II. Chapters 24 & 25

Chapters 30 and 31: The Interwar Period ( )

I. The Rise of Totalitarianism. A. Totalitarianism Defined

Standard 7-4: The student will demonstrate an understanding of the causes and effects of world conflicts in the first half of the twentieth century.

Essential Question: Who were the major totalitarian leaders in the 1920s & 1930s? What were the basic ideologies of Fascists, Nazis, and Communists?

5/11/18. A global depression in the 1930s led to high unemployment & a sense of desperation in Europe

The Collapse of the Old Order. Soviet Union - Nazi Germany - Fascist Italy

Section 1: Dictators and War

The Interwar Years

UNIT 6 - day 1 THE RISE OF DICTATORS

5/23/17. Among the first totalitarian dictators was Joseph Stalin of the Soviet Union

In this 1938 event, the Nazis attacked Jewish synagogues and businesses and beat up and arrested many Jews.

Between the Wars Timeline

No clearly defined political program (follow the leader) were nationalists who wore uniforms, glorified war, and were racist. Fascist?

The Rise Of Dictators In Europe

Chapter 15. Years of Crisis

The Rise of Fascism. AP World History Chapter 21 The Collapse and Recovery of Europe ( s)

15-3: Fascism Rises in Europe 15-4: Aggressors Invade Nations

& 5. = CAUSES OF WW2

DO NOW: How did the results of World War I plant the seed of World War II? You have 3 minutes to write down your thoughts (BE SPECIFIC!!!

The Rise of Totalitarian Governments

III. The Rise of Fascism in Italy

RISE OF TOTALITARIANISM: ITALY, GERMANY, USSR, AND JAPAN

Lead up to World War II

4/1/2019. World War II. Causes of the war. What is ideology? What is propaganda?

WORLD HISTORY TOTALITARIANISM

The Futile Search for Stability

Dictators Threaten The World

The Rise of Dictators Ch 23-1

Explain how dictators and militarist regimes arose in several countries in the 1930s.

Obtaining Information About Totalitarian States in Europe

E. America Enters World War II (1945-Present) a.describe circumstances at home and abroad prior to U.S. involvement in World War II b.

Ideological Alternatives: Soviet Union and Germany. Inter War World: The Great Depression

The Rise of Dictators. The totalitarian states did away with individual freedoms.

New Leaders and New Ideas in Europe during the 1930s

Who Would You Vote For?

Obtaining Information About Totalitarian States in Europe

Here we go again. EQ: Why was there a WWII?

THE COMING OF WORLD WAR II

1920s: Rise of Dictators

World War I and the Great Depression Timeline

Section 1: Dictators & Wars

Prelude to War. The Causes of World War II

III. Features of Modern Totalitarianism Absolute Domination over every area of life The worship and cultivation of violence --War is noble --The need

LG 5: Describe the characteristics of totalitarianism and fascism and explain how Mussolini and Hitler came to power.

Write the letter of the description that does NOT match the name or term.

Review Post World War I

1 Run Up To WWII 2 Legacies of WWI Isolationism: US isolated themselves from world affairs during 1920s & 1930s Disarmament: US tried to reduce size

AP European History Chapter 29: Dictatorships and the Second World War

From Lenin to Stalin: Part II. Building a Communist State in Russia

World War II. Unit 7: The Great Depression and World War II. Part 5: Dictatorship and Aggression

The Last Czar: Nicholas II and Alexandra 6.1

The Rise of Dictators Ch 23-1

15-3 Fascism Rises in Europe. Fascism political movement that is extremely nationalistic, gives power to a dictator, and takes away individual rights

Unit 5. Canada and World War II

- CENTRAL HISTORICAL QUESTION(S) - IN WHAT CONTEXT WOULD PEOPLE GIVE UP THEIR RIGHT TO HAVE A DEMOCRATIC GOV.T?

The Rise of Fascism....and the death of liberalism. Saturday, April 2, 16

Why do we have to learn about something that already happened. -- Lessons From History

Georgia High School Graduation Test Tutorial. World History from World War I to World War II

Module 20.2: The Soviet Union Under Stalin

Ascent of the Dictators. Mussolini s Rise to Power

Cruel, oppressive rule of the Czars for almost 100 years Social unrest for decades Ruthless treatment of peasants Small revolts amongst students and

RISE OF TOTALITARIANISM

THE COMING OF WORLD WAR II

World War II. Part 1 War Clouds Gather

Hollow Times. 1. Olivia Gregory. 2. Lexi Reese. 3. Heavenly Naluz. 4. Isabel Lomeli. 5. Gurneet Randhawa. 6. G.A.P period 6 7.

normally. Unit I: Test 1 Consequences of WWI, Rise of WW II, Holocaust In your own words define the Treaty of Versailles? You Tell Me.

Canada & World War Two ( )

Iwo Jima War Memorial in Arlington, Virginia. American soldiers arriving on the beach of Omaha: D-Day, June 6, 1944

The Rise of Dictatorships. Mussolini s Italy

The Rise of Dictatorships in Europe. Chapter 21 Section 1

World War II Causes of World War II

CAUSES OF THE SECOND WORLD WAR CAUSES DEALT WITH IN PREVIOUS UNITS. a) The Treaty of Versailles

Unit 5 Canada in the Second World War. 5.1 Causes of war: Treaty of Versailles, Rise of Fascism, Failure of League of Nations, and appeasement

WW II. The Rise of Dictators. Stalin in USSR 2/9/2016

The Age of Anxiety. Chapter 35

Making of the Modern World 15. Lecture #8: Fascism and the Blond Beast

Common Principles of Totalitarianism. Nazi Germany, Communist USSR, Fascist Italy & Spain, and Imperial Japan

Fascism is a nationalistic political philosophy which is anti-democratic, anticommunist, and anti-liberal. It puts the importance of the nation above

The United States in a Menacing World CHAPTER 35 LECTURE 1 AP US HISTORY

D-Day Gives the Allies a Foothold in Europe

What is Totalitarianism?

CHAPTER 23- THE RISE OF FASCISM AND TOTALITARIAN STATES

Rise of Dictators. After WWI Around the World

BETWEEN WORLD WAR I AND WORLD WAR II,

WORLD HISTORY: THE INTER-WAR YEARS

The Rise of Fascism and Communism. For the first time, war was waged on a global scale, leading to casualties and destruction on a

6. The invasion of started the Second World War. 7. Britain and France adopted the policy towards the aggression of the Axis Powers.

Begins to believe isolationism will not work for the U.S. FDR wanted to : 1) fix the depression at home 2) recognize the USSR (1933), trade

Transcription:

The Road to World War II Rise of Dictators

Causes of World War II Germany blamed for causing World War I Economy destroyed after WWI Discrimination of ethnic groups, especially Jewish and Polish. The rise of dictators as a result of WWI

Trouble in Europe The Great Depression is worldwide - but especially hard in Germany (due to the Treaty of Versailles - remember how brutal it was to the Germans?)

Hyperinflation strikes Germany By November 5th, 1923 a loaf of bread cost 140 billion marks. Workers were paid twice a day, and given halfhour breaks to rush to the shops with their satchels, suitcases or wheelbarrow, to buy something, anything, before their paper money halved in value yet again. By mid- November, when a new currency was issued, prices had added twelve zeros since the first world war began in 1914. The Economist

By the end of 1923 the German currency was of no value at all. The quarterly rate of inflation stood at 52,000% Using money to wallpaper the house Using money to heat the house

In early August 1923 one pound of meat stood at 180,000 marks, a four-pound loaf of bread at 90,000, a liter of beer at 30,000; one egg cost more or less 15,000 marks. And one U.S. dollar brought 7,000,000 marks. In Winterhausen near Würzburg 60-year-old Johann Hofmann recorded in his diary in stunned disbelief how it was "almost indescribable how much everything cost." A pound of butter: 20,000 marks. A cow: 20,000,000 marks. A six-pound loaf of bread: 4,800 marks. One month later that loaf cost 135,000 marks, in early September, 450,000. In early October it was 3,500,000 marks, and in mid-november a mind-boggling 220,000,000,000 marks or just about 5 cents because on November 15 one U.S. dollar was worth 4,200,000,000,000, that is 4.2 trillion marks.

Europe Before World War I

Europe after World War 1

The Rise of Dictators Soviet Union (USSR): Joseph Stalin SPAIN: Francisco Franco ITALY: Benito Mussolini JAPAN: Emperor Hirohito GERMANY: Adolf Hitler

Adolf Hitler Fuhrer

Three Governments Soviet Union Communism Italy - Fascism Germany Nazism

Communism A political, social, economic system where the government controls everything- making sure that all get what they need. (in theory) More extreme form of Socialism

Lenin father of the Soviet Union Stalin the over thrower Trotsky- Lenin's handpicked successor

Joseph Stalin the brief version (1879-1953) 1924 Lenin died Lenin wanted Trotsky to take over Stalin took over instead. Bullied / threatened / murdered his way into power. Killed those loyal to Trotsky Eventually has Trotsky himself killed. (Mexico 1940) Stalin launched a massive program for industrialization (railroads, steel mills, military hardware), despite what it would require in human suffering. Five-Year Plan to catch and overtake the leading capitalist countries.

Workers laboring in the GULAG work camp system

Stalin s Five Year Plans Concentrate on Heavy Industry

Stalin the brief version Stalin was a paranoid who oppressed and often killed anyone who was perceived as a threat to his power. He purged (killed off) most of the best officers and politicians out of his army and government. By the late 1930s, the USSR was weak from the removal of its best and brightest but at least Stalin felt secure

Collectivization of farms Individual farms (Kulaks) Each has own farmhouse Tractor Equipment etc Farmers make $ based on how productive they are. The more productive, the more $ they make.

Workers live in communal village, in govt housing projects Collective farm state (government) owned, all equipment and Housing, pooled together. Everyone gets paid the same wages. All profits go to government, which then pays the workers. No incentive, no ownership of land

Collectivization He also started a revolution in Soviet agriculture forcing peasants to participate in collectivization. This meant the pooling of farmlands, animals, and equipment for the sake of more efficient, and state-run, large-scale production. Knowing that the well-to-do peasants (kulaks) would not accept this, Stalin decided to liquidate them as a class. Millions were killed outright or sent to forced-labor camps to suffer a slow death.

Purges Many of the remaining peasants refused to go along, killing their herds and intentionally sabotaging their crops. From 1931 to 1933, millions starved to death. By 1935, practically all farming was collectivized. To wipe out any remaining resistance, Stalin unleashed terror to crush opposition through a series of purges. 750,000 were executed between 1936 and 1938. Those who were not executed were sent to forced labor camps, collectively known as the Gulag. In the 1920s and 1930s, between 10 and 20 million people died as a result of Stalin s policies.

Why didn t anyone stop him? It seems most Soviet people accepted this as a necessary response to the Soviet Union s internal and external problems and as a method for creating a new world. Violent crusade of building socialism in a hostile world. Or maybe they were simply too beat down to care Or maybe they feared for themselves Or maybe, it was a case of its not my problem (reread First they came for the Jews )

Fascism Italy under Mussolini Fascism - Glorification of the all powerful state at the expense of the individual

Fascism what does it believe in? A right-wing political philosophy based on order over liberty Celebrates militarism Celebrates obedience to authority Celebrates Private Property Hates democracy Hates Communism Hates Socialism Fasces: Roman symbol of power and status

Italy After World War I, the Italian monarchy was torn by rising threats from the Communist left and the Fascist right. Former army officer Benito Mussolini founded the Italian Fascist party in 1920.

A New Roman Emperor? or idiotic buffoon? The slogan was "Mussolini, the man who made the Trains Run on Time." It was simple, if the train was late... the engineer was arrested or tortured, along with the conductor and ticket clerk etc. Or, they just changed the time the train was supposed to arrive to coincide with when it ACTUALLY showed up. Simple

Italy In 1922, Mussolini March on Rome thousands of his Black Shirt Fascist supporters captured the Italian capital to stop a fictitious Communist plot to overthrow the government. Fearing the Communists, the king named Mussolini as Prime Minister.

Nazism Nazism (National Socialism) a political ideology promoting Germanic racial superiority. Held that the German nation and the purported "Aryan" race were superior to other races.

In Germany Adolf Hitler comes to power in Germany by preaching socialism, nationalism, and militarism. Hitler blamed the other European countries, and the minorities living in Germany for the poor German economy Hitler s party soon gained enough support so they could name him to office One people, one empire, one leader!

In Germany Hitler began violating the Treaty of Versailles building up his military (militarism) Stopped paying war debts to the allies

In Germany Hitler also began getting his country ready for war. Began drafting men into the army Made very nationalistic speeches (very pro- German and anti- Semitic, anti-anything other than German)

Hitler Highlights Nuremberg Laws: stripped German Jews of all of civil rights (rights to own property, vote, protection under the law, etc.) Kristalnacht: Hitler orders a night of violence against Jews. 1000s of businesses and homes attacked on this Night of Broken Glass Night of the Long Knives: On this night, Hitler removed his political enemies including Communists, remaining democratic leaders and even one of his closest friends ( Ernst Rohm)

First They Came for the Jews First they came for the Jews and I did not speak out because I was not a Jew. Then they came for the Communists and I did not speak out because I was not a Communist. Then they came for the trade unionists and I did not speak out because I was not a trade unionist. Then they came for me and there was no one left to speak out for me. Pastor Martin Niemöller