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ADOLF HITLER 1889-1945
Hitler was born and raised in Austria.
As a child his upbringing was not always happy, but he
later wrote about how close he was to his mother.
He wanted to become an artist and tried to enter art
school in Vienna, but was rejected.
ADOLF HITLER 1889-1945
In Vienna, Hitler spent time as a vagrant (drifting from
place to place) and in boarding houses.
He left Vienna and went to Germany in order to avoid
military service.
However, when World War One started, Hitler was
caught up in the excitement and joined the army.
Many of his early experiences influenced what he
wrote in his book, Mein Kampf.
Adolf Hitler fought in the German army during World
War One.
He was badly wounded twice and won two Iron
Crosses for bravery.
Germany’s surrender in November 1918 was a shock to
him and had a profound effect on his political views.
Like many other German people at the time, he felt
they had been ‘stabbed in the back’ by politicians.
ADOLF HITLER 1889-1945
EARLY DEVELOPMENT OF THE NAZI PARTY, 1920-22
Many Germans hated the government for signing the
armistice in November 1918 - and called them the
'November Criminals'.
Many people were led to believe that Jews in the army and
government had encouraged the surrender.
The German government also signed the Treaty of
Versailles, which blamed and punished Germany for
starting the war. As many German families had lost their
men during the war, this was especially hard to bear.
THE GERMAN WORKERS' PARTY
AND THE START OF THE NAZIS
With WW1 over, Hitler returned to Munich and set on a path
that eventually led him to become the leader of the Nazi party.
1919 – Hitler joined the German Worker’s Party (DAP), a
right-wing group led by Anton Drexler.
1920 – Hitler became the Party’s speaker and propagandist.
1920 – The group changed its name to the National Socialist
German Workers Party (NSDAP) – or Nazis for short.
1921 – Hitler was elected Party Chairman and leader of Nazis.
NAZI’S 25 POINT PROGRAMME
Under Hitler’s
leadership the
Nazi party quickly
developed a 25-
Point Programme,
a list of the
policies it would
introduce if it
came to power.
KEY NAZI BELIEFS CONTAINED
IN THE 25-POINT PROGRAMME
1. A strong Germany - the Treaty of Versailles should
be abolished and all German-speaking people united
in one country.
2. Führer - the idea that there should be a single
leader with complete power rather than a democracy.
3. Social Darwinism - the idea that the Aryan race
was superior and Jews were 'subhuman'.
KEY NAZI BELIEFS CONTAINED
IN THE 25-POINT PROGRAMME
4. Autarky - the idea that Germany should be
economically self-sufficient.
5. That Germany was in danger - from communists
and Jews, who had to be destroyed.
6. Lebensraum - the need for 'living space' for the
German nation to expand.
THE APPEAL OF THE NAZIS
POLICY DETAILS OF THE POLICY
SOCIALIST
• farmers should be given their land.
• pensions should improve.
• public industries such as electricity and water should be owned by the state.
NATIONALIST
• all German-speaking people should be united in one country.
• the Treaty of Versailles should be abolished.
• there should be special laws for foreigners.
RACIST • Jews should not be German citizens.
• Immigration should be stopped.
FASCIST • focused on creating a strong central government.
• government control of the newspapers.
In the 1920s, the Nazis tried to appeal to a lot of different members
of society. The 25-Point Programme had policies that were
MEMBERSHIP AND GROWTH
When Hitler joined the German Workers’
Party he became its 55th member.
By the end of 1920 the newly named Nazi
Party recorded a membership of 2,000
and during the upheaval of the
hyperinflation crisis its membership grew
rapidly, to 20,000 by the time of the
Munich Putsch in November 1923.
THE ROLE AND IMPACT OF THE SA
In 1921 Hitler assembled a large group of unemployed young men
and former soldiers, known as the Storm Troopers (Sturmabteilung)
or SA, as the Nazi Party’s private army:
• They gained the nickname ‘Brownshirts’, after their brown
uniforms.
• Their role was to protect party meetings, march in Nazi rallies and
intimidate political opponents by breaking up their meetings.
• Many of the SA men were former soldiers. Some were upset with
the way they had been treated after World War One and saw the
government as the ‘November Criminals’.
REORGANISING SA
• After the failure of the Munich Putsch, the SA was reorganised.
• It began to be used to intimidate voters into voting for the Nazi
Party.
• However, the Nazi Party was not the only organisation to have a
paramilitary group. The communists also had similar elements.
SA MEMBERSHIP
By 1932 the SA had 400,000 members.
This number swelled to an estimated two million by the time Hitler
came to power in 1933, largely due to unemployed men joining up
during the Great Depression.
THE MUNICH PUTSCH AND THE LEAN YEARS
1923-29
Adolf Hitler during the Munich Putsch
THE MUNICH PUTSCH
In November 1923, Hitler tried to take advantage of the
hyperinflation crisis facing the Weimar government by trying to
launch a revolution in Munich – known as the Munich Putsch.
It seemed like the perfect opportunity to take power, but poor
planning and misjudgement resulted in failure and the subsequent
imprisonment of Adolf Hitler.
CAUSES THAT LED TO HITLER
ATTEMPTING THE MUNICH PUTSCH IN 1923
By 1923, the Nazi party had 55,000 members and was stronger than ever
before. The Weimar Republic was in crisis due to hyperinflation.
In September 1923, the Weimar government had called off the general
strike, and German nationalists were furious with the government.
Hitler thought he would be helped by important nationalist politicians in
Bavaria. Hitler had a huge army of SA members, but he knew he would
lose control of them if he did not give them something to do.
Hitler hoped to copy Mussolini - the Italian fascist leader - who had come
to power in Italy in 1922 by marching on Rome.
MUNICH PUTSCH 1923 – EVENTS SUMMARY
During the hyperinflation crisis of 1923, Hitler saw an opportunity.
People across the country had many different ideas about how Germany
was being run. The individual states had different identities that affected
how politics was run in that area.
In Bavaria, (capital – Munich) the majority of the population were
Catholic and things were quite traditional.
This meant that many within that state intensely disliked the new
Weimar government and saw them as weak.
Hitler thought he would take advantage of this and plotted with two
nationalist politicians - Kahr and Lossow - to take over Munich in a
revolution.
MUNICH PUTSCH 1923 – EVENTS SUMMARY
Hitler collected the SA and told them to be ready to rebel.
But then, on 4 October 1923, Kahr and Lossow called off the rebellion.
This was an impossible situation for Hitler, who had 3,000 troops ready
to fight.
On the night of 8 November 1923, Hitler and 600 SA members burst into
a meeting that Kahr and Lossow were holding at the local Beer Hall.
Waving a gun at them, Hitler forced them to agree to rebel - and then let
them go home.
The SA took over the army headquarters and the offices of the local
newspaper.
MUNICH PUTSCH 1923 – EVENTS SUMMARY
The next day, 9 November 1923, Hitler and the SA went into Munich on
what they thought would be a triumphal march to take power.
However, Kahr had called in police and army reinforcements.
There was a short scuffle in which the police killed 16 members of the SA.
Hitler fled, but was arrested two days later.
CONSEQUENCES OF THE MUNICH PUTSCH
The Munich Putsch was a failure in the short term, but it was also an
important event in the Nazis’ rise to power.
SHORT TERM FAILURE
The Nazi party was banned, and Hitler was prevented from
speaking in public until 1927.
Hitler was tried for high treason (betraying his country) and
sentenced to five years in prison.
LONG TERM SUCCESS
He was sentenced in April and out of prison by December.
During his time in the comfortable Landsberg Prison, he wrote 'Mein
Kampf' – a propaganda book setting out Nazi beliefs. Millions of
Germans read it, and Hitler's ideas became very well-known.
The fact that the judge had been so lenient with the sentence and that
Hitler had served so little time suggests that some people in authority
had sympathy with Hitler and what he had tried to do.
Hitler realised that he would never come to power by revolution and
that he would have use democratic means, so he reorganised the party
to enable it to take part in elections.
THE PARTY REBUILDS, 1924-29
Hitler was released from jail after the Munich Putsch in December 1924.
He committed the Nazis to democratic politics – taking part in elections
– and began to reorganise the party, strengthening his authority as
leader and beginning to build a national party structure.
However, the period up to 1929 is known as the Nazi Party’s ‘lean years’
because two apparently contradictory things were happening to it:
• it was growing in size – its membership increased from 27,000 in
1925 to 130,000 in 1929
• but it struggled to win seats in the Reichstag
THE PARTY REBUILDS, 1924-29
NEW STRUCTURE OF THE NAZI PARTY
PROPAGANDA – MEIN KAMPF
While in jail Hitler wrote a book called Mein Kampf (My Struggle),
which was an autobiography-cum-manifesto, laying out his political
beliefs and ambitions. Many of the ideas contained in the books directly
informed Nazi policy after 1933 under the Third Reich, including:
• The belief that the Jews were an inferior race to the German Aryans,
and also represented a threat to the German state.
• The need to destroy the parliamentary system of government and
replace it with that of a single, strong dictator.
• Germany’s requirement for Lebensraum, or living space, to house its
growing population. This required Germany to expand to the East
into Poland and Russia.
DEVELOPING TECHNIQUES
Josef Goebbels – the Berlin Gauleiter at this time – was clever because
he experimented with new techniques and methods to share the Nazis’
message.
Posters started to show Hitler as a strong leader, speeches were
arranged in public places and rallies were held to capture people’s
enthusiasm.
THE BAMBERG CONFERENCE 1926
Hitler called a special Nazi Party conference on 14 February 1926
at Bamberg in southern Germany in response to tension
between the northern and southern sections of the party.
During his time in jail disagreements had grown between the
two sections:
• the northern section, led by a man named Gregor Strasser,
was keen to emphasise the socialist elements of the 25-Point
Programme to attract support from the workers
• the southern section more interested in the nationalist and
racist policies in order to attract support from the middle
classes and farmers
NAZIS STILL ON THE FRINGES
Despite all of this development of the party, by 1928 the Nazis
were still on the fringes of politics in Weimar Germany for
several reasons.
STRESEMANN’S ECONOMIC POLICIES
Gustav Stresemann’s economic policies had helped Germany a
lot. After 1923, the introduction of a new currency and the
Dawes Plan had helped to turn Weimar’s economy around and
Germans began to feel more prosperous.
As a result of this, Germany was also more politically stable.
Germans voted for moderate parties who supported the
Republic, rather than more extreme parties like the Nazis who
wanted to abolish it.
NAZI MESSAGES
At a time of stability, scaremongering and playing on people’s
fears was less likely to work. The Nazis’ messages about the
dangers posed by Jews and the need to abolish democracy
largely fell on deaf ears.
Hitler was jailed and then banned from speaking in public until
1927 after the Munich Putsch. This prevented the party from
campaigning effectively.
The Nazi Party was under constant pressure from the Weimar
authorities following the Munich Putsch. Several times it was
banned nationally or in certain parts of Germany.
DEVELOPING EFFECTIVE PROPAGANDA
Nevertheless, the party was developing effective propaganda
techniques under its Berlin Gauleiter, Joseph Goebbels, which
would enable it to capitalise on the economic disaster that was
to strike Germany from 1929 onwards.
THE GROWTH IN SUPPORT FOR THE NAZIS
1929-32
The growth in support for the Nazis, 1929-32
Hitler was appointed Chancellor in January 1933.
His rise to power was the result of many factors: the impact of
the Depression, the weaknesses of Weimar democracy and the
strengths of the Nazi party.
THE IMPACT OF THE DEPRESSION ON GERMANY
In October 1929 the Wall Street Crash on the US stock exchange
brought about a global economic depression.
In Europe, Germany was worst affected because American banks called
in all of their foreign loans at very short notice.
These loans, agreed under the Dawes Plan in 1924, had been the basis
for Germany’s economic recovery from the disaster of hyperinflation.
The loans funded German industry and helped to pay reparations.
Without these loans German industry collapsed and a depression began.
RISE OF UNEMPLOYMENT
The most obvious consequence of this collapse was a huge rise in
unemployment.
Over the winter of 1929-30 the number of unemployed rose from 1.4
million to over 2 million.
By the time Hitler became Chancellor in January 1933 one in three
Germans were unemployed, with the figure hitting 6.1 million.
Industrial production had also more than halved over the same period.
THE IMPACT OF UNEMPLOYMENT
The rise in unemployment significantly raised government expenditure
on unemployment insurance and other benefits.
Germans began to lose faith in democracy and looked to extreme
parties on the both the Left (the communists) and the Right (the Nazis)
for quick and simple solutions.
Nazi Propaganda
POLITICAL FAILURE
In March 1930 the German Chancellor, Hermann Müller, resigned when
his government could not agree on how to tackle the rise in government
spending caused by the rise in unemployment.
He was replaced by Heinrich Brüning.
His policies were ineffective in dealing with the unemployment crisis
and further undermined Germans’ faith in democracy.
ARTICLE 48
In July 1930 Chancellor Brüning cut government expenditure, wages
and unemployment pay.
This added to the spiral of decline and unemployment continued to rise,
as well as making those who had lost their jobs even poorer.
However, Brüning could not get the Reichstag to agree to his actions, so
President Hindenburg used Article 48 of the Weimar constitution,
which gave the President the power to pass laws by decree, to govern.
This undermined democracy and weakened the power of the Reichstag
– arguably opening the way for Hitler’s later dictatorship.
THE RISE OF EXTREMISM
During the economic depression between 1930 and 1933, many people
were affected and poverty hit Germany hard.
Extreme political parties offering simple solutions to their problems
appeared at both ends of the political spectrum.
Between 1930 and 1933, support for the extreme right-wing Nazis and
the extreme left-wing communists soared.
THE COMMUNISTS
By 1932 parties committed to the destruction of the Weimar Republic
held 319 seats out of a total of 608 in the Reichstag, with many workers
turning to communism.
The communists had their own version of the SA, the Communist Red
Fighting League, which broke up opposition party meetings.
They confronted the police in street battles, and clashed with the Nazis’
SA as well.
However, ultimately, the party that did better out of all this unrest were
the Nazis.
REASONS FOR THE GROWTH
IN SUPPORT OF THE NAZI PARTY
In 1928, the Nazis had only 12 seats in the Reichstag; by July 1932 they
had 230 seats and were the largest party.
THE APPEAL OF HITLER AND THE NAZIS
Because the Nazis’ 25 Point Programme appealed to people all over the
country from all walks of life, they became popular.
Other extremist groups like the communists only really appealed to the
industrial workers in Germany’s cities and couldn’t keep up.
WEALTHY BUSINESSMEN
Wealthy businessmen were frightened communists would take
their wealth away and did not want to see any more increase in
support for them.
To combat this, they began to give money to Hitler and the
Nazis, hoping they would gain more seats – not the communists.
SS chief Heinrich Himmler with Max Faust, engineer with Nazi-backed company I. G. Farben
THE MIDDLE CLASS
The middle-class were generally quite traditional and were not
convinced by the Weimar democracy.
Hitler promised them a strong government and won their votes.
NATIONALISTS
Nationalists blamed the legacy of the Treaty of Versailles and
reparations for causing the depression and so lent their support
to the Nazis who had promised to make Germany strong again.
RURAL AREAS
In the rural areas the Nazis appealed to people in the countryside
- especially middle class shopkeepers and craftsmen, farmers and
agricultural labourers.
THE EFFECTS OF PROPAGANDA
Nazi propaganda was controlled by Joseph Goebbels and had
three main themes.
THE FUHRER CULT
Hitler was always portrayed as Germany’s saviour – the man
who would rescue the country from the grip of depression.
VOLKSGEMEINSCHAFT
- PEOPLE’S COMMUNITY -
This was the idea that the Nazis would create one German
community that would make religion or social class less relevant
to people.
SCAPEGOATING THE JEWS (AND OTHERS)
FOR GERMANY’S ILLS
Jews were often portrayed as sub-human, or as a threat to both
the racial purity and economic future of the country.
HITLER’S TALENTS
Hitler was a great speaker with an extraordinary power to win
people over.
Goebbels' propaganda campaign was very effective (he used
aeroplanes to bring Hitler to speak across the country, radios to
broadcast important speeches and rallies to make supporters
excited) and brought huge support for the Nazis by targeting
specific groups of society with different slogans and policies to
win their support.
THE WORK OF THE SA
The SA played a part in the Nazis’ increasing popularity by:
• intimidating the Nazis’ political opponents – especially the
communists – by turning up at their meetings and attacking
them
• providing opportunities for young, unemployed men to become
involved in the party
• protecting Hitler and other key Nazis when they organised
meetings and made speeches
HOW HITLER BECAME CHANCELLOR 1932-33
The chain of events that led to Hitler’s appointment as Chancellor on
30 January 1933 is a complicated one.
Chancellors in this period were normally weak because proportional
representation made it hard for political parties to gain a majority of
seats meaning the Chancellor found it difficult to control the Reichstag.
By 1932 President Hindenburg had to use Article 48 to pass almost
every law.
It was against this backdrop that the events of 1932 ad 1933 unfolded.
MAJOR EVENTS LEADING TO
HITLER BECOMING CHANCELLOR 1932
April. Presidential election.
Hitler came second to Hindenburg, who won 53 per cent of the vote to
Hitler’s 36.8 per cent.
May. Brüning resigned as Chancellor.
Hindenburg appointed Franz Von Papen, a conservative, as his
replacement.
July. Reichstag elections.
The Nazis became the largest party with 230 seats. Hitler demanded to
be made Chancellor but Papen remained.
MAJOR EVENTS LEADING TO
HITLER BECOMING CHANCELLOR 1932
November. Reichstag elections.
Called by Von Papen to try to win a majority in parliament. Nazis lost
34 seats but remained the largest party with 196 seats.
December. Von Papen resigned.
Hindenburg appointed Kurt Von Schleicher, an army general, as
Chancellor. Von Schleicher tried to split the Nazis by asking a leading
Nazi called Gregor Strasser to be his Vice Chancellor. Hitler forced
Strasser to decline.
Papen Begins Talks with Hitler over the Chancellorship
MAJOR EVENTS LEADING TO
HITLER BECOMING CHANCELLOR 1933
January. Hitler Chancellor.
Von Papen and Hindenburg turned to Hitler, appointing him as
Chancellor with Von Papen as Vice Chancellor. They believed they
could control Hitler and get him to do what they wanted.
MAJOR EVENTS LEADING TO
HITLER BECOMING CHANCELLOR 1933
January. Hitler Chancellor.
Von Papen and Hindenburg turned to Hitler, appointing him as
Chancellor with Von Papen as Vice Chancellor.
They believed they could control Hitler and get him to do what they
wanted.

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NAZI GERMANY: HITLER RISE TO POWER 1919-1933

  • 1.
  • 2. ADOLF HITLER 1889-1945 Hitler was born and raised in Austria. As a child his upbringing was not always happy, but he later wrote about how close he was to his mother. He wanted to become an artist and tried to enter art school in Vienna, but was rejected.
  • 3.
  • 4. ADOLF HITLER 1889-1945 In Vienna, Hitler spent time as a vagrant (drifting from place to place) and in boarding houses. He left Vienna and went to Germany in order to avoid military service. However, when World War One started, Hitler was caught up in the excitement and joined the army. Many of his early experiences influenced what he wrote in his book, Mein Kampf.
  • 5.
  • 6. Adolf Hitler fought in the German army during World War One. He was badly wounded twice and won two Iron Crosses for bravery. Germany’s surrender in November 1918 was a shock to him and had a profound effect on his political views. Like many other German people at the time, he felt they had been ‘stabbed in the back’ by politicians. ADOLF HITLER 1889-1945
  • 7.
  • 8. EARLY DEVELOPMENT OF THE NAZI PARTY, 1920-22 Many Germans hated the government for signing the armistice in November 1918 - and called them the 'November Criminals'. Many people were led to believe that Jews in the army and government had encouraged the surrender. The German government also signed the Treaty of Versailles, which blamed and punished Germany for starting the war. As many German families had lost their men during the war, this was especially hard to bear.
  • 9.
  • 10. THE GERMAN WORKERS' PARTY AND THE START OF THE NAZIS With WW1 over, Hitler returned to Munich and set on a path that eventually led him to become the leader of the Nazi party. 1919 – Hitler joined the German Worker’s Party (DAP), a right-wing group led by Anton Drexler. 1920 – Hitler became the Party’s speaker and propagandist. 1920 – The group changed its name to the National Socialist German Workers Party (NSDAP) – or Nazis for short. 1921 – Hitler was elected Party Chairman and leader of Nazis.
  • 11.
  • 12. NAZI’S 25 POINT PROGRAMME Under Hitler’s leadership the Nazi party quickly developed a 25- Point Programme, a list of the policies it would introduce if it came to power.
  • 13.
  • 14. KEY NAZI BELIEFS CONTAINED IN THE 25-POINT PROGRAMME 1. A strong Germany - the Treaty of Versailles should be abolished and all German-speaking people united in one country. 2. Führer - the idea that there should be a single leader with complete power rather than a democracy. 3. Social Darwinism - the idea that the Aryan race was superior and Jews were 'subhuman'.
  • 15.
  • 16. KEY NAZI BELIEFS CONTAINED IN THE 25-POINT PROGRAMME 4. Autarky - the idea that Germany should be economically self-sufficient. 5. That Germany was in danger - from communists and Jews, who had to be destroyed. 6. Lebensraum - the need for 'living space' for the German nation to expand.
  • 17.
  • 18. THE APPEAL OF THE NAZIS POLICY DETAILS OF THE POLICY SOCIALIST • farmers should be given their land. • pensions should improve. • public industries such as electricity and water should be owned by the state. NATIONALIST • all German-speaking people should be united in one country. • the Treaty of Versailles should be abolished. • there should be special laws for foreigners. RACIST • Jews should not be German citizens. • Immigration should be stopped. FASCIST • focused on creating a strong central government. • government control of the newspapers. In the 1920s, the Nazis tried to appeal to a lot of different members of society. The 25-Point Programme had policies that were
  • 19.
  • 20. MEMBERSHIP AND GROWTH When Hitler joined the German Workers’ Party he became its 55th member. By the end of 1920 the newly named Nazi Party recorded a membership of 2,000 and during the upheaval of the hyperinflation crisis its membership grew rapidly, to 20,000 by the time of the Munich Putsch in November 1923.
  • 21.
  • 22. THE ROLE AND IMPACT OF THE SA In 1921 Hitler assembled a large group of unemployed young men and former soldiers, known as the Storm Troopers (Sturmabteilung) or SA, as the Nazi Party’s private army: • They gained the nickname ‘Brownshirts’, after their brown uniforms. • Their role was to protect party meetings, march in Nazi rallies and intimidate political opponents by breaking up their meetings. • Many of the SA men were former soldiers. Some were upset with the way they had been treated after World War One and saw the government as the ‘November Criminals’.
  • 23.
  • 24. REORGANISING SA • After the failure of the Munich Putsch, the SA was reorganised. • It began to be used to intimidate voters into voting for the Nazi Party. • However, the Nazi Party was not the only organisation to have a paramilitary group. The communists also had similar elements.
  • 25.
  • 26. SA MEMBERSHIP By 1932 the SA had 400,000 members. This number swelled to an estimated two million by the time Hitler came to power in 1933, largely due to unemployed men joining up during the Great Depression.
  • 27.
  • 28. THE MUNICH PUTSCH AND THE LEAN YEARS 1923-29 Adolf Hitler during the Munich Putsch
  • 29.
  • 30. THE MUNICH PUTSCH In November 1923, Hitler tried to take advantage of the hyperinflation crisis facing the Weimar government by trying to launch a revolution in Munich – known as the Munich Putsch. It seemed like the perfect opportunity to take power, but poor planning and misjudgement resulted in failure and the subsequent imprisonment of Adolf Hitler.
  • 31.
  • 32. CAUSES THAT LED TO HITLER ATTEMPTING THE MUNICH PUTSCH IN 1923 By 1923, the Nazi party had 55,000 members and was stronger than ever before. The Weimar Republic was in crisis due to hyperinflation. In September 1923, the Weimar government had called off the general strike, and German nationalists were furious with the government. Hitler thought he would be helped by important nationalist politicians in Bavaria. Hitler had a huge army of SA members, but he knew he would lose control of them if he did not give them something to do. Hitler hoped to copy Mussolini - the Italian fascist leader - who had come to power in Italy in 1922 by marching on Rome.
  • 33.
  • 34. MUNICH PUTSCH 1923 – EVENTS SUMMARY During the hyperinflation crisis of 1923, Hitler saw an opportunity. People across the country had many different ideas about how Germany was being run. The individual states had different identities that affected how politics was run in that area. In Bavaria, (capital – Munich) the majority of the population were Catholic and things were quite traditional. This meant that many within that state intensely disliked the new Weimar government and saw them as weak. Hitler thought he would take advantage of this and plotted with two nationalist politicians - Kahr and Lossow - to take over Munich in a revolution.
  • 35.
  • 36. MUNICH PUTSCH 1923 – EVENTS SUMMARY Hitler collected the SA and told them to be ready to rebel. But then, on 4 October 1923, Kahr and Lossow called off the rebellion. This was an impossible situation for Hitler, who had 3,000 troops ready to fight. On the night of 8 November 1923, Hitler and 600 SA members burst into a meeting that Kahr and Lossow were holding at the local Beer Hall. Waving a gun at them, Hitler forced them to agree to rebel - and then let them go home. The SA took over the army headquarters and the offices of the local newspaper.
  • 37.
  • 38. MUNICH PUTSCH 1923 – EVENTS SUMMARY The next day, 9 November 1923, Hitler and the SA went into Munich on what they thought would be a triumphal march to take power. However, Kahr had called in police and army reinforcements. There was a short scuffle in which the police killed 16 members of the SA. Hitler fled, but was arrested two days later.
  • 39.
  • 40. CONSEQUENCES OF THE MUNICH PUTSCH The Munich Putsch was a failure in the short term, but it was also an important event in the Nazis’ rise to power.
  • 41.
  • 42. SHORT TERM FAILURE The Nazi party was banned, and Hitler was prevented from speaking in public until 1927. Hitler was tried for high treason (betraying his country) and sentenced to five years in prison.
  • 43.
  • 44. LONG TERM SUCCESS He was sentenced in April and out of prison by December. During his time in the comfortable Landsberg Prison, he wrote 'Mein Kampf' – a propaganda book setting out Nazi beliefs. Millions of Germans read it, and Hitler's ideas became very well-known. The fact that the judge had been so lenient with the sentence and that Hitler had served so little time suggests that some people in authority had sympathy with Hitler and what he had tried to do. Hitler realised that he would never come to power by revolution and that he would have use democratic means, so he reorganised the party to enable it to take part in elections.
  • 45.
  • 46. THE PARTY REBUILDS, 1924-29 Hitler was released from jail after the Munich Putsch in December 1924. He committed the Nazis to democratic politics – taking part in elections – and began to reorganise the party, strengthening his authority as leader and beginning to build a national party structure. However, the period up to 1929 is known as the Nazi Party’s ‘lean years’ because two apparently contradictory things were happening to it: • it was growing in size – its membership increased from 27,000 in 1925 to 130,000 in 1929 • but it struggled to win seats in the Reichstag
  • 47.
  • 49. NEW STRUCTURE OF THE NAZI PARTY
  • 50. PROPAGANDA – MEIN KAMPF While in jail Hitler wrote a book called Mein Kampf (My Struggle), which was an autobiography-cum-manifesto, laying out his political beliefs and ambitions. Many of the ideas contained in the books directly informed Nazi policy after 1933 under the Third Reich, including: • The belief that the Jews were an inferior race to the German Aryans, and also represented a threat to the German state. • The need to destroy the parliamentary system of government and replace it with that of a single, strong dictator. • Germany’s requirement for Lebensraum, or living space, to house its growing population. This required Germany to expand to the East into Poland and Russia.
  • 51.
  • 52. DEVELOPING TECHNIQUES Josef Goebbels – the Berlin Gauleiter at this time – was clever because he experimented with new techniques and methods to share the Nazis’ message. Posters started to show Hitler as a strong leader, speeches were arranged in public places and rallies were held to capture people’s enthusiasm.
  • 53.
  • 54. THE BAMBERG CONFERENCE 1926 Hitler called a special Nazi Party conference on 14 February 1926 at Bamberg in southern Germany in response to tension between the northern and southern sections of the party. During his time in jail disagreements had grown between the two sections: • the northern section, led by a man named Gregor Strasser, was keen to emphasise the socialist elements of the 25-Point Programme to attract support from the workers • the southern section more interested in the nationalist and racist policies in order to attract support from the middle classes and farmers
  • 55. NAZIS STILL ON THE FRINGES Despite all of this development of the party, by 1928 the Nazis were still on the fringes of politics in Weimar Germany for several reasons.
  • 56. STRESEMANN’S ECONOMIC POLICIES Gustav Stresemann’s economic policies had helped Germany a lot. After 1923, the introduction of a new currency and the Dawes Plan had helped to turn Weimar’s economy around and Germans began to feel more prosperous. As a result of this, Germany was also more politically stable. Germans voted for moderate parties who supported the Republic, rather than more extreme parties like the Nazis who wanted to abolish it.
  • 57.
  • 58. NAZI MESSAGES At a time of stability, scaremongering and playing on people’s fears was less likely to work. The Nazis’ messages about the dangers posed by Jews and the need to abolish democracy largely fell on deaf ears. Hitler was jailed and then banned from speaking in public until 1927 after the Munich Putsch. This prevented the party from campaigning effectively. The Nazi Party was under constant pressure from the Weimar authorities following the Munich Putsch. Several times it was banned nationally or in certain parts of Germany.
  • 59.
  • 60. DEVELOPING EFFECTIVE PROPAGANDA Nevertheless, the party was developing effective propaganda techniques under its Berlin Gauleiter, Joseph Goebbels, which would enable it to capitalise on the economic disaster that was to strike Germany from 1929 onwards.
  • 61.
  • 62. THE GROWTH IN SUPPORT FOR THE NAZIS 1929-32 The growth in support for the Nazis, 1929-32 Hitler was appointed Chancellor in January 1933. His rise to power was the result of many factors: the impact of the Depression, the weaknesses of Weimar democracy and the strengths of the Nazi party.
  • 63.
  • 64. THE IMPACT OF THE DEPRESSION ON GERMANY In October 1929 the Wall Street Crash on the US stock exchange brought about a global economic depression. In Europe, Germany was worst affected because American banks called in all of their foreign loans at very short notice. These loans, agreed under the Dawes Plan in 1924, had been the basis for Germany’s economic recovery from the disaster of hyperinflation. The loans funded German industry and helped to pay reparations. Without these loans German industry collapsed and a depression began.
  • 65.
  • 66.
  • 67.
  • 68. RISE OF UNEMPLOYMENT The most obvious consequence of this collapse was a huge rise in unemployment. Over the winter of 1929-30 the number of unemployed rose from 1.4 million to over 2 million. By the time Hitler became Chancellor in January 1933 one in three Germans were unemployed, with the figure hitting 6.1 million. Industrial production had also more than halved over the same period.
  • 69.
  • 70. THE IMPACT OF UNEMPLOYMENT The rise in unemployment significantly raised government expenditure on unemployment insurance and other benefits. Germans began to lose faith in democracy and looked to extreme parties on the both the Left (the communists) and the Right (the Nazis) for quick and simple solutions.
  • 72. POLITICAL FAILURE In March 1930 the German Chancellor, Hermann Müller, resigned when his government could not agree on how to tackle the rise in government spending caused by the rise in unemployment. He was replaced by Heinrich Brüning. His policies were ineffective in dealing with the unemployment crisis and further undermined Germans’ faith in democracy.
  • 73.
  • 74. ARTICLE 48 In July 1930 Chancellor Brüning cut government expenditure, wages and unemployment pay. This added to the spiral of decline and unemployment continued to rise, as well as making those who had lost their jobs even poorer. However, Brüning could not get the Reichstag to agree to his actions, so President Hindenburg used Article 48 of the Weimar constitution, which gave the President the power to pass laws by decree, to govern. This undermined democracy and weakened the power of the Reichstag – arguably opening the way for Hitler’s later dictatorship.
  • 75.
  • 76. THE RISE OF EXTREMISM During the economic depression between 1930 and 1933, many people were affected and poverty hit Germany hard. Extreme political parties offering simple solutions to their problems appeared at both ends of the political spectrum. Between 1930 and 1933, support for the extreme right-wing Nazis and the extreme left-wing communists soared.
  • 77.
  • 78. THE COMMUNISTS By 1932 parties committed to the destruction of the Weimar Republic held 319 seats out of a total of 608 in the Reichstag, with many workers turning to communism. The communists had their own version of the SA, the Communist Red Fighting League, which broke up opposition party meetings. They confronted the police in street battles, and clashed with the Nazis’ SA as well. However, ultimately, the party that did better out of all this unrest were the Nazis.
  • 79. REASONS FOR THE GROWTH IN SUPPORT OF THE NAZI PARTY In 1928, the Nazis had only 12 seats in the Reichstag; by July 1932 they had 230 seats and were the largest party.
  • 80. THE APPEAL OF HITLER AND THE NAZIS Because the Nazis’ 25 Point Programme appealed to people all over the country from all walks of life, they became popular. Other extremist groups like the communists only really appealed to the industrial workers in Germany’s cities and couldn’t keep up.
  • 81. WEALTHY BUSINESSMEN Wealthy businessmen were frightened communists would take their wealth away and did not want to see any more increase in support for them. To combat this, they began to give money to Hitler and the Nazis, hoping they would gain more seats – not the communists.
  • 82. SS chief Heinrich Himmler with Max Faust, engineer with Nazi-backed company I. G. Farben
  • 83. THE MIDDLE CLASS The middle-class were generally quite traditional and were not convinced by the Weimar democracy. Hitler promised them a strong government and won their votes.
  • 84.
  • 85. NATIONALISTS Nationalists blamed the legacy of the Treaty of Versailles and reparations for causing the depression and so lent their support to the Nazis who had promised to make Germany strong again.
  • 86.
  • 87. RURAL AREAS In the rural areas the Nazis appealed to people in the countryside - especially middle class shopkeepers and craftsmen, farmers and agricultural labourers.
  • 88. THE EFFECTS OF PROPAGANDA Nazi propaganda was controlled by Joseph Goebbels and had three main themes.
  • 89. THE FUHRER CULT Hitler was always portrayed as Germany’s saviour – the man who would rescue the country from the grip of depression.
  • 90. VOLKSGEMEINSCHAFT - PEOPLE’S COMMUNITY - This was the idea that the Nazis would create one German community that would make religion or social class less relevant to people.
  • 91. SCAPEGOATING THE JEWS (AND OTHERS) FOR GERMANY’S ILLS Jews were often portrayed as sub-human, or as a threat to both the racial purity and economic future of the country.
  • 92. HITLER’S TALENTS Hitler was a great speaker with an extraordinary power to win people over. Goebbels' propaganda campaign was very effective (he used aeroplanes to bring Hitler to speak across the country, radios to broadcast important speeches and rallies to make supporters excited) and brought huge support for the Nazis by targeting specific groups of society with different slogans and policies to win their support.
  • 93. THE WORK OF THE SA The SA played a part in the Nazis’ increasing popularity by: • intimidating the Nazis’ political opponents – especially the communists – by turning up at their meetings and attacking them • providing opportunities for young, unemployed men to become involved in the party • protecting Hitler and other key Nazis when they organised meetings and made speeches
  • 94. HOW HITLER BECAME CHANCELLOR 1932-33 The chain of events that led to Hitler’s appointment as Chancellor on 30 January 1933 is a complicated one. Chancellors in this period were normally weak because proportional representation made it hard for political parties to gain a majority of seats meaning the Chancellor found it difficult to control the Reichstag. By 1932 President Hindenburg had to use Article 48 to pass almost every law. It was against this backdrop that the events of 1932 ad 1933 unfolded.
  • 95. MAJOR EVENTS LEADING TO HITLER BECOMING CHANCELLOR 1932 April. Presidential election. Hitler came second to Hindenburg, who won 53 per cent of the vote to Hitler’s 36.8 per cent. May. Brüning resigned as Chancellor. Hindenburg appointed Franz Von Papen, a conservative, as his replacement. July. Reichstag elections. The Nazis became the largest party with 230 seats. Hitler demanded to be made Chancellor but Papen remained.
  • 96.
  • 97. MAJOR EVENTS LEADING TO HITLER BECOMING CHANCELLOR 1932 November. Reichstag elections. Called by Von Papen to try to win a majority in parliament. Nazis lost 34 seats but remained the largest party with 196 seats. December. Von Papen resigned. Hindenburg appointed Kurt Von Schleicher, an army general, as Chancellor. Von Schleicher tried to split the Nazis by asking a leading Nazi called Gregor Strasser to be his Vice Chancellor. Hitler forced Strasser to decline.
  • 98. Papen Begins Talks with Hitler over the Chancellorship
  • 99. MAJOR EVENTS LEADING TO HITLER BECOMING CHANCELLOR 1933 January. Hitler Chancellor. Von Papen and Hindenburg turned to Hitler, appointing him as Chancellor with Von Papen as Vice Chancellor. They believed they could control Hitler and get him to do what they wanted.
  • 100. MAJOR EVENTS LEADING TO HITLER BECOMING CHANCELLOR 1933 January. Hitler Chancellor. Von Papen and Hindenburg turned to Hitler, appointing him as Chancellor with Von Papen as Vice Chancellor. They believed they could control Hitler and get him to do what they wanted.