Title: HI 112 Raffael Scheck Colby College
1HI 112Raffael ScheckColby College
- A Survey of Modern Europe
- 6
2Europe Between the Wars
3The Paris Peace Conferences
- Comparison 1815 to 1919
- Goals of the victors
- Democracy
- National self-determination
- Security for France (cordon sanitaire)
- Weakening Germany (Treaty of Versailles, 1919)
- League of Nations as a peaceful mediating
institution
4Why did the Peace Order Not Work?
- Germany unreconciled
- Nationality problems in Eastern Central Europe
- Withdrawal of U.S.
- Unsettled situation in the Soviet Union
5Germany and the Treaty of Versailles
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7Phases of the Postwar Period
8Revolutions and Unrest Hungary under Béla Kun
(1918-19)
9A Personal Connection for Reconciliation Briand
and Stresemann
10Treaty of Locarno, 1925
11Great Depression and Mass Unemployment, 1929-33
12The Rise of Totalitarianism
13What is Totalitarianism?
- Party - strong influence on state
- State - reaches into every area of life
- Army - high prestige
- Ideology - shapes state and society
- Propaganda - used unscrupulously
- Police Repression - largely outside of the law
- Leadership Cult - adulation of charismatic leader
through state-controlled media - Internal and external target groups of aggression
14Fascisms Three Sources (according to Scheck)
- Crisis of Christian and humanitarian values and
of liberal-democratic states based on these
values - Deep-seated fear of communism and socialism
- World War I experience brutalization of
politics veneration of military order stress on
struggle extreme nationalism
15Italian Fascism
- Mussolini
- Fascist Party, black shirt paramilitary
organization - March on Rome, October 1922
- Gradual consolidation of power by 1926
- Corporatism
- Lateran Accord, 1929
16The Triumph of Hitler and National Socialism
- Anti-Semitic rabble-rousing, 1919-1923
- Beer Hall Putsch 1923
- Organizing a mass party, 1925-28
- Sudden mass success because of the Great
Depression, 1930-33
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19The Rise of the KPD and NSDAP(in percent of the
electorate)
20Stalinism
- Massive industrialization at gigantic human cost
(five-year plans), 1929-1941 - Extremely repressive police state
- The Great Purges, 1935-39
- The Gulag
- Foreign policy out of isolation into an alliance
first with the West (1935) and then Nazi Germany
(1939)
21The Road to World War II
22Hitlers Successes
- Makes Germany strong and respected again
- Rearms Germany
- Wins an alliance with Italy (1936)
- Revises the Versailles peace order by annexing
Austria and the Sudetenland - He achieves all of this WITHOUT war
23Mussolinis Foreign Policy
- Initially opposition to Nazi designs on Austria
(1934) and efforts to contain Nazi Germany
(Stresa Front, 1935) - Attack on Abyssinia (1935-36)
- Alliance with Germany (1936) and Japan (1939)
- Involvement in Spanish Civil War (1936-39)
24German Foreign Policy 1933-38 Main Events
25What Made Hitlers Foreign Policy Successes
Possible?
- General misunderstanding of Hitlers ultimate
aims (Lebensraum, racial policy) - Doubts about Versailles
- Disillusionment with postwar order
- No more war sentiment
- Global diversions for Britain (Japan, Italy, U.S.
competition)
26Concentration Camp Flossenbürg
27Axis Berlin-Rome
28Italian Atrocities in Ethiopia
29Spanish Civil War
30Anschluß
31Maginot Line
32Munich Conference
33Unemployment in Germany 1932-39
34German Military Spending 1932-39
35World War II
36Cause
- Hitler wants war
- Obsession with his own mortality
- Exploitation of temporary advantage in terms of
rearmament
37The Outbreak
- Hitler-Stalin Pact (August 1939) dooms Poland and
misleads Hitler to believe that France and
Britain will not go to war - France and Britain do declare war but do not
attack (Phony War) - Soviet Union takes its share of Poland
38The Defeat of the Allies in the West, 1940
- Reasons German tactics and slowness of
Franco-British response - Consequence Germany in control of most of
Continental Europe and able to attack the Soviet
Union
39Britain Stays in the War
- Decision to keep fighting
- Inconclusive air battle over Britain, 1940-41
40The Attack on the Soviet Union
- Hitlers priority
- War of annihilation
- Tied to the Holocaust
- Too risky gamble
41The Long Road to Axis Defeat
- Soviet resilience
- U.S. entry into the war after Pearl Harbor
- Axis defeats in Russia, North Africa, the
Atlantic - D-Day and final defeat of Germany
42Consequences
- Europe looses its predominant position
- Utter destruction in many areas
- 50-65 million killed
- Soviet Union dominates Eastern Europe
43The Holocaust
44Ideological Background and Context
- The Nazi vision of races
- Racial hygiene
45Stages of Radicalization
- Segregation (1933-38)
- Nürnberg laws 1935
- Expulsion (1938-41)
- Crystal Night 1938
- Madagascar Plan 1940-41
- Mass murder (1941-45)
- Ghettos, gas vans, mass executions, death camps,
death marches
46I Segregation
47The Nürnberg Laws, 1935
48Jews Unwanted
49II Expulsion
50Crystal Night, Nov. 1938
51III Mass Murder
52The Wannsee Conference, 1942
53Euthanasia
54Ghettoization of Jews in Poland
55The Ramp at Auschwitz (1942-45)
56Open Discussion
- Who was responsible?
- How many people knew?