The document summarizes key events from 1929 to 1939 that contributed to Hitler's rise to power in Germany and the start of World War 2. It describes how the stock market crash led to widespread unemployment and loss of dignity for Germans. This created an opening for Hitler's message of nationalism. It then outlines Nazi gains in elections and Hitler's appointment as Chancellor in 1933. Finally, it discusses laws passed against Jewish citizens and the opening of concentration camps as Hitler consolidated power and pursued his racist ideology.
Geschiedenis: De opkomst van het Derde Rijk - Terreur
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Geschiedenis: De opkomst van het Derde Rijk - Terreur
I use my own material and material from colleagues who have presented their work also on internet.
I claim nothing. This is merely educational fair use.
Educational fair use:
"the fair use of a copyrighted work (...) for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching (including multiple copies for classroom use), scholarship, or research, is not an infringement of copyright"
But I claim nothing, All trademarks, works and images used are properties of their respective owners. If I violate any form of copyright please contact me and I will give credit.
The rise of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party leading up to World War II.
adolf hitler, nazis, world war ii, wwii, propaganda, germany, reichstag fire, jews, lebesraum, mein kampf, otto von bismark, heinrich himmler, joseph geobbels, schutzstaffel, gestapo, kristallnacht, nuremberg laws, non-aggression pact, national socialist german worker's party, Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei, aryan, swastika
Discusses Hitler's rise to power in Germany's political system; Discusses American Neutrality and preparation for war; discusses contributions by women, African Americans, native Americans and Japanese Internment.
CAMBRIDGE A2 HISTORY: HITLER AND THE CONSOLIDATION OF POWER 1933-1934George Dumitrache
CAMBRIDGE A2 HISTORY: HITLER AND THE CONSOLIDATION OF POWER 1933-1934. It contains: overview, Reichstag fire, general elections, enabling act, Gestapo, abolishing trading unions, the concordat, banning political parties, people's courts, night of the long knives, fuhrer, the events, Nazi government, Hitler and the army, homework.
The rise of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party leading up to World War II.
adolf hitler, nazis, world war ii, wwii, propaganda, germany, reichstag fire, jews, lebesraum, mein kampf, otto von bismark, heinrich himmler, joseph geobbels, schutzstaffel, gestapo, kristallnacht, nuremberg laws, non-aggression pact, national socialist german worker's party, Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei, aryan, swastika
Discusses Hitler's rise to power in Germany's political system; Discusses American Neutrality and preparation for war; discusses contributions by women, African Americans, native Americans and Japanese Internment.
CAMBRIDGE A2 HISTORY: HITLER AND THE CONSOLIDATION OF POWER 1933-1934George Dumitrache
CAMBRIDGE A2 HISTORY: HITLER AND THE CONSOLIDATION OF POWER 1933-1934. It contains: overview, Reichstag fire, general elections, enabling act, Gestapo, abolishing trading unions, the concordat, banning political parties, people's courts, night of the long knives, fuhrer, the events, Nazi government, Hitler and the army, homework.
CAMBRIDGE A2 HISTORY: HITLER'S TOTALITARIAN REGIME. Suitable for Year 13 History students in Cambridge. It contains: overview, totalitarian regimes, Hitler in Vienna, etc.
Brief Biography of Martin NiemöllerMartin Niemöller (pronounce.docxhartrobert670
Brief Biography of Martin Niemöller
Martin Niemöller (pronounced Nee-mū-ler), born in 1892, served in the German navy as a Uboat
commander during World War I. He was ordained as a Lutheran pastor in 1924 and showed
early enthusiasm for Adolf Hitler’s ideas for the rebuilding of the German nation. But once
Hitler came to power in 1933, Niemöller quickly became a critic of the Nazi leader’s militant
and anti-Semitic actions and his attacks on the Protestant churches in Germany. Niemöller,
along with other like-minded religious leaders—most famously Dietrich Bonhoeffer—formed a
resistance movement called the Confessional Church. These leaders preached against Hitler and
Nazism in the mid and late 1930s as WWII loomed. Hitler, seeking to silence any opposition,
ordered the leaders of the Confessional Church arrested and sent to concentration camps.
Niemöller was arrested in 1937 by Nazi authorities and sent first to Sachsenhausen and then to
Dachau concentration camp. He stayed imprisoned until he was liberated by the Allies in the
spring of 1945.
Soon after the war, Niemöller helped compose the “Stuttgart Confession of Guilt,”
acknowledging the German people’s collective guilt for the Holocaust. From 1961-1968 he
served as President of the World Council of Churches. Throughout the rest of his life he
preached reconciliation and disarmament. Martin Niemöller died in 1984.
Niemöller’s Famous Statement (Poem)
“In Germany they came first for the Communists, and I didn't speak up because I
wasn't a Communist. Then they came for the Jews, and I didn't speak up because
I wasn't a Jew. Then they came for the trade unionists, and I didn't speak up
because I wasn't a trade unionist. Then they came for the Catholics, and I didn't
speak up because I was a Protestant. Then they came for me, and by that time no
one was left to speak up.”
--Martin Niemöller, 1945
Although Niemöller and other Germans actively preached and campaigned against Nazism in the
1930s, millions of others did nothing or actively supported Hitler as he consolidated his power
and spread oppression and murder across Europe. Niemöller’s stirring quote was a statement
aimed at all Germans for allowing such things to happen. His eloquent words soon became
synonymous with the struggles of individual and national consciences everywhere, as the world
came to recognize the enormous horrors of the Holocaust and the other atrocities of WWII.
Today a debate about collective guilt during WWII still rages amongst academics and in the
popular media. Even today, Niemöller’s words have meaning. They are often altered to fit differing political or social agendas, but they stand as a universal call for social action and solidarity and vigilance in the face of oppression and injustice.
THE HOLOCAUST AN HISTORICAL SUMMARY
The Holocaust was the systematic, bureaucratic annihilation of six million Jews by the Nazi regime and their collaborators as a central act of state during World War II. In 1933 approx ...
1. The Road to World War II1929-1939 Alyssa Brewer
2. “All great movements are popular movements. They are the volcanic eruptions of human passions and emotions, stirred into activity by the ruthless Goddess of Distress or by the torch of the spoken word cast into the midst of the people.” Adolf Hitler
3. October 29, 1929 Black Tuesday. The Stock Market crashed in Germany. Within days, millions of people living in Germany lost their jobs. 1929 December 1929. The Nazi Party has grown to a membership of 178 000.
4. 1929 Previous to the Stock Market crash, Germany had been lost. They did not know how to meet the required reparation payments, and the inflation of the Germany economy had ruined the lives of citizens living in the country. Gustav Stresemann did everything in his power to unite and fix Germany, and many believed he was on that track. When he died, Germans lost one of the only stable things in Germany. When the stock market crashed, they lost jobs, homes, food and lives. They had no dignity anymore, and it was at this time they lost everything. Hitler was there for them. He was serious about nationalism and confident in the power of all Germans. It is often said that people want what they don’t have, and they did not have nationalism in their country. Their country was no longer even theirs. They owed payments, they had lost all respect, and they wanted out. The Germans did not have anything to their name, but they wanted to become “one”.
5. 1930: Hitler hired a lawyer. Hans Frank became the Nazis personal lawyer. High ranking Nazis were being charged for “high treason” in 1930, due to the 40 000 from 1927-1930 cases the courthouse had heard about. September 1930: German Federal Elections. The Nazi Party went from controlling 12 parliamentary seats to 107. 1930
6. 1930 The year 1930 was the year the Nazi Party started to take control. The Federal election had gained them 103 seats from the previous election, and Hitler knew it was time. He also knew he couldn’t be brought down, so he hired a personal lawyer. This election was just months after the stock market crash, and Germans had still not recovered. They still did not have dignity, respect, or any wealth. What was Germany? Who was Germany? This was the year he started to convince the majority of Germany that he knew, and he knew how to prove it.
7. 1931 January 1: The Nazi Brown House. The Nazi Brown house was the official national headquarters of the Nazi Party. 1931 October 1931: The Meeting. Right winged officials, political leaders, German Nationalists, and the Nazi Party in Bad Harzburg. Here, the Austro-German customs union was introduced, and it was demanded that the Bruning Government in the Reich and the Social Democratic-Centrist coalition was to be discontinued immediately.
8. 1931 The year 1931 was when the Nazi Party became “official”. They opened their headquarters, created many more riots, and made decisions at federal meetings. It was now that the Nazi Party became an international association, and it was the strength and rapidness of the group’s growth that made the Germans feel secure. They wanted to be part of a strong group, and the Nazi Party could be just that.
9. March 1932. Elections. In 1932, the Nazi Party had obtained 107 seats, which was a much greater number than the previous election. In 1932, the Nazi Party took control of 230 seats. The Communists rose to 89 seats, which showed that the Germans were looking up at the extremist groups. 1932 October 16, 1932. Schweinfurt. Hitler travelled to Schweinfurt where he spoke to 12 000 people. Soon after, he became the Chancellor of Germany.
10. 1932 In 1932, people really began to notice and listen to Hitler. His confidence was spread throughout the country’s German citizens, and it gave many hope. This was also the year when the government began to worry about Hitler’s power. Hitler saw this, and just became more powerful. The government in power was looking out for the nation, trying to control Hitler, but “title” Hitler gave to the Germans about Germans, was much to powerful to be contained.
11. January 1933: Chancellor. Hitler was appointed Chancellor of Germany. The very first days of 1933, and the last days of the Weimar Republic, 6 million people were unemployed, and Hitler was here to change Germany. 1933 All of 1933: Taking control. Throughout 1933, Hitler boycotted Jewish businesses, persecuted homosexuals, and burned books.
12. 1933 This was the year Hitler’s rise to power ended. This was the year he had the power. When he was appointed chancellor, he immediately began to “clean” out Germany. He and the Nazi Party were now truly and fully believing that to have a powerful and pure Germany, it must only contain powerful and pure Germans. Although it was obviously not the best nationality to create, the Germans had no nationality at all. They had no power to their name, and this was the year Hitler began to try to get some.
13. January 2, 1934 Sterilization. A German Law passes that sterilization of the “unfit” will begin. 1934 August 1, 1934 Death of the President. President Hindenburg dies of natural causes. Hitler quicklyproclaims himself both Chancellor and Fuehrer of the German People
14. 1934 In 1934 Germany lost its President. He was the only person keeping the Nazi Party somewhat under control, and when he passed away, there was no one in Hitler’s path. Within a day Hitler put his plan into action. He passed laws, took any mention of the Jews in the Bible , out, and started to take away their rights within a month. The Germans had no leader when their president died, and they were in no shape not to have one. Hitler stepped in.
15. March 10, 1935 Testing. Hitler tests strength of Treaty of Versailles. Calls in British newspaper man Ward Price and tells him that Germany now has a military Air Force. There was no reaction from Britain. They intend to continue their peace movement with Germany. September 15, 1935 Citizenship. Nuremberg Laws define Reich Citizenship. 1.) Only belong to Germany if of kindred blood. 2.) All Jews were defined as being not of German blood. 1935
16. 1935 Hitler had been in power a year now. No one was objecting from other parts of the world, and he soon began to notice that no one was watching him. He started to test how strong the Treaty of Versailles really was, and soon found that the world was too busy to care. He started opening “camps”, taking more rights away from the Jews until he finally managed to succeed in taking their citizenship away.
17. March 7 1936 Testing. Re-occupation of the Rhineland. In contravention of theterms of the Versailles Treaty, Hitler sent German troops to re-occupy the Rhineland. 1936 December 1936 Hitler Youth. Law concerning the Hitler Youth made membership of the Hitler Youth compulsory for all boys
18. 1936 Not much had changed in Hitler’s strategies from 1935-1936. He was still testing the control of the Treaty of Versailles and passing laws. However, Hitler touched on a very powerful and “touchy” subject for the German people. The Treaty of Versailles had taken away their powerful military and resourceful piece of land. This being the Rhineland. Hitler sent in troops to take back this territory, and the Germans were ecstatic. In order to have the Nazi Party larger, more powerful, and more in control, he made it mandatory that all German boys join the Nazi military.
19. April 11, 1937 Citizenship for Jews = Nothing. A new order from the German Ministry of the Interiordeprives all Jews of municipal citizenship. 1937 July 19, 1937 Camps. Ettersberg, a new concentration camp, originally designed for professional criminals, is opened in central Germany. Its name is changed to Buchenwald on July 28.
20. 1937 The Jewish people lost everything in 1937. Previously, Hitler had said that only those of a German decent were the only actual citizens, but in 1937, the Jews completely lost their citizenship. Hitler also opened a large concentration camp, which was used for criminals before Hitler decided to change its use.
21. March 12, 1938. The First Army Invasion. Adolf Hitler ordered the German Army into Austria. This was a huge deal to the German people because the German speaking people in Austria had wanted to unite with the German Republic, but were forbidden to do so by the Treaty of Versailles. 1938 November 9, 1938 Crystal Night. Joseph Goebbels organizes Crystal Night. 7500 Jewish shops were destroyed and 400 synagogues were burnt to the ground.
22. 1938 1938 was the year Hitler started driving fear into the hearts of the Jewish people. He was burning books, stores, and homes. The Nazi Party were committing violent crimes against the Jews, and they had no where to hide any longer. Hitler was also strengthening the trust of the Germans. He had successfully regained control of the Rhineland, which was one of the leverages he used to get the Germans to elect him to power.
23. March 15/16, 1939 Seized. Nazi troops seize Czechoslovakia (Jewish pop. 350,000). September 1, 1939 Seized. Nazis invade Poland (Jewish pop. 3.35 million, the largest in Europe). Beginning of SS activity in Poland. 1939 October 1939. Euthanization. Hitler ordered widespread "mercy killing" of the sick and disabled. They were focused on newborns and very young children. Midwives and doctors were required to register children up to age three who showed symptoms of mental retardation, physical deformity, or other symptoms included on a questionnaire from the Reich Health Ministry.
24. 1939 The Jews were completely helpless by the end of 1939. Hitler had taken away their rights, their lives, and put in place rules and laws. They now had curfews and were forced to wear the star of David wherever they went. The murder of the sick, disabled, and the Jewish people had now been put into action. Hitler had officially started to “clean” out Germany.
26. 1.The Stock Market Crash. When the stock market crashed in 1929, Germany and all its people had absolutely nothing to their name, nor their country. They had previously lost their dignity by the Treaty of Versailles, and now they lost their homes and lives. They were nobodies, and the whole population of Germany had lost their identity. When you have nothing or feel hopeless, you look for something that will become you and when Hitler vowed to give the Germans a name, they were willing to take it. Feeling lost can lead to destructible things. The feeling of being alone, weak and vulnerable can lead to extreme actions and decisions. It is number one because if the Germans had wealth and confidence, they would have not needed Hitler.
27. 2.Hitler’s Rebellion to the Treaty of Versailles. The Treaty of Versailles had taken away everything that gave the Germans power. Their oil, industries, and even other Germans had been ripped from them. Territory, regions, water ways, and military, which had once meant plenty to the German name, were gone. When Hitler rebelled against the Treaty, the people were ecstatic and shocked. He had gone against Europe and had been successful. He was taking back what rightfully belonged to the Germans. He was giving back their nation’s name, which meant he was grabbing hold of a collective identity.
28. 3.Death of the President The economy after the stock market crash was a mess. Billions of people had lost their jobs, and the inflation of money had only made the Germans saving worthless. However, President Hindenburg had started to bring back the economy during the Weimar Republic. He was also the only thing keeping Hitler’s rapid growth and strength at bay. When he died in 1934, Germany lost its only stable possession. The German people had started to look towards extremist ideas for extreme times, and when their president died, they were ready to try anything to have some identity. Because of Hitler’s rapid growth, powerful speeches, and perfect promises, it seemed a good choice to have him President of Germany.
29. 4. Rapid Growth in The Nazi Party- Strength, violence and votes. Extreme times call for extreme ideas. Hitler had just those. He vowed to give Germans a name again, to take back what is rightfully theirs, and give back families what they had lost. When the votes for the Nazi Party started to grow, so did their strength. As their strength grew, so did the violence. Although the violence scared many civilians, it gave them hope and power. With this violence, they could take back Germany. With the fear and hope, came more votes. The more votes, came more speeches, and it was a never ending cycle until Hitler fully had power. With more and more German citizens coming together, the more identity they had. No one could fail, and the Germans were equal. They had equal blood and equal ideas. They had some identity back.
30. 5.Violence, Power, and Purity. The more violence brought into Germany, the more power some people had. The more people who had power, just caused greed in others. As a collective identity grew through the violence and power, greed and ideas came about. As the Nazis grew and showed the German people the strength that was with them all, the thought of a pure Germany was too much for some. The idea of rising to the top, being unstoppable and untouchable, caused people to join the Nazi Party and attack the Jews. It also gave them the confidence to take back regions that had been taken away. When they got more, they wanted more. This, again, was a never ending cycle. And somehow, Hitler had encouraged enough people that the only way they could ever have their lives back was to have no people in Germany that were not Germans. Purity was key.
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