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Hitlers Germany - Whole year A level notes

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Hitlers Germany - Whole year A level notes. These are my in-depth A level History notes.

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  • November 1, 2021
  • 29
  • 2020/2021
  • Lecture notes
  • Alan olson
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Hitler’s Germany, 1929 - 1941

HITLER'S PERSONALITY AND THE SHAPING OF HIS CHARACTER AND BELIEFS

https://classroom.google.com/c/MTQ4MTAyNjYyOTYy/a/MTc3OTU1Nzg1ODUy/details


April 20 1889

Hitler was born into a poor peasant family.

January 1903

Hitler’s abusive father dies

December 1907

Hitler's mother dies.

February 1906

Adolf Hitler was rejected from the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna.
After being rejected, Hitler became an anti-Semite in Vienna, which
contained a large Jewish community.
May 1914

Joined German army to fight in World War 1. He was a dispatch
runner, taking messages back and forth from the commanding staff
in the rear to the fighting units near the battlefield. - Gained an Iron
Cross

September 1919

Hitler was ordered by the military to investigate a small group of
German workers in Munich,known as the German Workers Party.

At the party, Hitler was inspired by an economist speaker Gottfried
Feder, who gave a speech entitled, "How and by what means is
capitalism to be eliminated?" It was here He began public speaking

, Background

Kaiser Willhelm was the leader of Germany in 1918 - during this time Germany was a monarchy.

- Willhelm grew up with a withered left arm, his parents made him exercise to compensate for this, he

then became obsessed with his strength and fitness.

- In 1888 Willhelm’s father died leaving him to be king at the age of 29, he was intelligent but suffered

ADHD. He was a great show off, he almost always wore a uniform and wanted all paintings of him to

reflect strength.

- He was quite rude and even called the King of Italy a “dwarf”

The first world war



➔ In 1917 Germany had defeated Russia which allowed them to move their troops from the Eastern front to

the Western front

➔ In 1918 Germany tried to defeat Britain and France in one last big push before America had time to enter

the war

➔ But the Big Push failed and soon Germany was seriously outnumbered fighting both Britain, France and

the USA. Wilson promised that if Germany surrendered they would not be harsh on them.

➔ In October 1918 one of the top German Generals, Ludendorff, told the Kaiser that Germany should

surrender as it could never win in the war. The German army was just too small and the German people

were starving

➔ The Kaiser refused to surrender. Instead he ordered the German Navy to break the British blockade.

This led to the Kiel mutiny and revolution. The Kaiser abdicated and Ebert became the new President

➔ On 11th November at 11 am Ebert agreed to surrender in World War I


THE STAB IN THE BACK MYTH

This was first introduced by Ludendorff, a general whose idea it was to surrender on November 11 1918. He

needed a scapegoat in order to maintain the support of his soldiers. Therefore, he told the press that it was Ebert

and the other politicians who had agreed to the armistice in an attempt to backstab the army. The media then

started creating propaganda to depict this betrayal and some extremists even blamed the Jewish people for the

surrender. Many believed this myth, including Germans soon to be dictator, Hitler.

, PROBLEMS FACING THE WEIMAR REPUBLIC

There were various strengths of the Weimar republic which made it seem like a perfect political system. Firstly,
there was the Bill of Rights which guaranteed all citizens freedom of speech, religion and equality under the law.
Along with this all Germans above the age of 20 had the right to vote, including women which was quite
uncommon in Europe (In the UK only women above 30 could vote). There was also a democratically elected
president and Reichstag (parliament). The Reichstag could make the laws and appoint the government - the
government would be controlled by the Reichstag.


The Weimar republic was an attempt to make a perfect democracy, and although it looked like one, under the
surface there were two major weaknesses. The first weakness was proportional representation, in order to make
the democracy fair there were dozens of tiny parties and none of them held the majority; thus making it
impossible to enforce or vote on new policies and laws. Along with this article 48 states that in an emergency
situation the president could issue decrees without the need of the Reichstag. This article would have been fine if
the term emergency was defined, instead an emergency situation could be anything therefore, allowing a
president or Hitler to exploit the system legally.




Remember:

1. What the Weimar Constitution of 1919 said.

2. How good the Weimar Constitution was.

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