Germany, Post War Flashcards

1
Q

November Criminals

A

Nov 11th 1918
Signed ceasefire.
People betrayed
Politicians gave up

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2
Q

T of V

A
July 28th 1919
De, not represented
Diktat
A231
Not allowed in L of N
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3
Q

Presidents, Reichstag

A

President elected every 7 years
Chancellor chosen every 4 years
PR
Coalitions

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4
Q

Ruhr

A
1923
De could not pay 1st instalment
Ruhr, ind area invaded
Govt printed money, pay striking worker and French
Hyperinflation
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5
Q

Spartakists

A
Dec 1918
Communist
Rosa Luxemburg, Karl Liebknect
Overthrow Ebert, failed
Govt=weak
Relied on Friekorps, hate Govt, hate C more
Leaders excecuted
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6
Q

Kapp Putsch

A
March 1920
Kapp, Right wing politician
Use Friekorps to overthrow Weimar
Govt, strike to stop uprising
Failed
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7
Q

Positives of hyperinflation

A

1st instalment paid
Business pay back borrowed money
Farmers benefitted from rising prices

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8
Q

Negatives of hyperinflation

A
Savings, no value
Fixed income, less to spend
Weimar blamed
Popularity decreased
Wages raised behind price rises
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9
Q

New currency introduced

A

Nov 1923
Rontemark, Reichsmark
End hyperinflation
Stresemann

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10
Q

Dawes plan

A
1924
 Reduce rep
More manageable, Ruhr left alone
Loans aid econ recovery
Start with 50mn increase 150mn over 5years
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11
Q

US loans

A

Reps more manageable
T of V too harsh
Loan of 800mn from banks, large companies, 6years
$3000mn borrowed

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12
Q

Young Plan

A

1929
Timescale for payments
Rep reduced to 1.85bn for 59 year
Not used, GD

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13
Q

L of N invite

A

1926
Had to join Locarno to work
Unpopular, linked to T of V

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14
Q

Locarno treaties

A

GB, FR, DE, IT
De promised no invasions
Others, more secure, lowered T of V terms
Improved IR position, prestige

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15
Q

Kellog Briand

A
1928
65 nations
Renounce war
Armies for defence
Diplomatic settling of disputes
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16
Q

Result of Stresemann

A

SD party more popular
Less for radicals
S, foreign minister
Chancellor, support from Hindenburg

17
Q

Munich Putsch

Why

A

November 1923
Bavarian govt planned to remove WG
H thought that they would support uprising
Nazis wanted power by force
Support from SA, Ludendorff, persuade army to help
Mussolini did same in IT

18
Q

Munich Putsch

What

A

Putsch attempted when Bavarian govt met in Munich beer cellar
Reluctantly supported them
3000 supporters through Munich

19
Q

Munich Putsch

Effects

A

H arrested, treason
Trial was propaganda, T of V, Jews, NC
Imprisoned, 9 months
Mein Kampf, end C, T of V, Jews, Lebensraum

Limited support for Nazis

20
Q

25 point programme

A

Appealed to C and N
Make De more RW
Remove non De, Jews
Only pure bloods vote, increase power, get back lost land

21
Q

Depression in Germany

A

1929
40% unemployed
Factories close, food prices fell
Homeless, more support for radical P

22
Q

Propaganda

A

Goebbels, Minister of propaganda and enlightenment
Appeal to all members of society
Rural, upper, middle, workers, women, appeal

23
Q

Reichstag fire

A

Feb 27th 1933
Dutch C
Marius Van de Lubbe, matches, firefighters
C blamed, 4000C arrested
H used A48, search C property, detained without trial

24
Q

Enabling Act

A
March 24 1933
Force policies through
Promised security
444-94
End Weimar, democracy, Reichstag, rubber stamp
25
Q

Rival parties

A

May 1934

Destroyed newspaper, funds SD, C

26
Q

Hindenburg dead

A

August 1934
Only obstacle to dictatorship
Fuhrer
Supreme power,

27
Q

The Night of the Long Knives

Why

A

June 30th’ 1934
Rohm wanted control over army
SA,2mn. Army,10000
SS wanted to break away from SA

28
Q

The Night of the Long Knives

What

A

100 SA leaders rounded up by SS when they met in Bavaria
H said SA planned a revolution
Killed

29
Q

Night of the Long Knives

Effect

A

SA, leaders removed, more under Nazi control
SS more independent, Himmler happy
Hitler, removed potential for revolution
Army, oath of loyalty, happier

30
Q

SS

A

1932
Himmler
Blackshirts, 100000, given control over police branches, arrest anyone, imprison without trial, ran conc and death camps

31
Q

Gestapo

A
Goering
Secret police
Spied with informants
Phones tapped
Enter homes without warrant
Block warden allowed to question homes in block
32
Q

Law courts

A
1934
Nazi controlled
No trial by jury
Nazi judges
No fair system
No civil rights
33
Q

Conc camps

A

1933
Dachau
SS, SA controlled
Reeducate prisoners, C, work shy, prof criminals, sex offender, Jews, racial groups

34
Q

Radio

A
Mass production
70% had one by 1939
Factories, bars, cafes
Loudspeakers in streets for imp messages
Nazi controlled stations
Short wave radio stations only, no BBC
35
Q

Newspapers

A

Non Nazi ones banned
Volkischer beabachter
Editors told what they could print

36
Q

Rallies

A

Annual rally at Nuremberg
Show Nazi power
Parades, local rallies led by SA, HY
Project image of power, terror

37
Q

Posters

A

Target all members of society

Create Hitler myth and Nazi message

38
Q

Cinema

A

100 made a year
250mn views
Goebbels read all plots
Lover, thrillers with Nazi slants with 45min newsreel

39
Q

Books

A

May 1933
Burning of Jewish and non Nazi books
Only Nazi books published