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World War II: The Rise of Dictators

World War II: The Rise of Dictators. World History B – Seminar #7. Warm Up: Totalitarian state 2. Dictator 3. Appeasement. Totalitarian State: Government in which a one party dictatorship regulates every aspect of citizens’ lives. Dictator: Ruler who has complete control over a government .

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World War II: The Rise of Dictators

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  1. World War II: The Rise of Dictators World History B – Seminar #7 • Warm Up: • Totalitarian state 2. Dictator • 3. Appeasement

  2. Totalitarian State: Government in which a one party dictatorship regulates every aspect of citizens’ lives. Dictator: Ruler who has complete control over a government Appeasement: Policy of giving in to an aggressor’s demands in order to keep the peace.

  3. After WWI In the two decades following World War I, a wave of economic and political crises swept the globe. While many people spent the 1920s trying to cope with the uncertainties of the postwar world, by 1929 they suddenly faced a much greater problem. That year, the stock market in the United States crashed. Because so many war-torn nations had come to depend on financial help from America, the stock market’s collapse triggered a worldwide economic depression that left millions around the globe jobless and hungry. In response to the turmoil, some nations turned to fascist dictators, who promised order and stability. Not content to merely rule a country, however, these dictators soon looked to conquer other lands.

  4. The Great Depression Worldwide Economic Depression Long-Term Effects • Nazis take control in Germany. • Fascists come to power in other countries. • Democracies try social welfare programs. • Japan expands in East Asia. • World War II breaks out. Immediate Effects • Millions become unemployed worldwide. • Businesses go bankrupt. • Governments take emergency measures to protect economies. • Citizens lose faith in capitalism and democracy. • Nations turn toward authoritarian leaders.

  5. Fascists Come to Power in ItalyTextbook: page 757 • Italy in a deep financial depression after WWI • Mussolini promised order and prosperity • Introduced “fascism” • Fascism: characterized by dictatorship, centralized control of private enterprise, repression of opposition, and extreme nationalism • Used “Black Shirts” to impose his rule. • Invades Ethiopia • Makes a pact with Hitler

  6. Compare Fascism and Communism – page 760

  7. Compare Fascism and Communism – page 760

  8. Compare Fascism and Communism – page 760

  9. Compare Fascism and Communism – page 760

  10. Hitler and the Rise of Nazi Germany – page 761 • Weimar Republic politically weak and unpopular • Huge inflation • Two revolutions against Weimar Republic. Once Hitler tried to seize power unsuccessfully. Went to jail. • Huge inflation and Great Depression • Hitler forms Nazi Party, promises reform, is elected as Chancellor in 1933 • Becomes dictator by 1934

  11. Hitler’s Third Reich • Totalitarian State – Nazis controlled all. • Huge public works programs • Big business and labor under government control • Built up military • Set aside Versailles Treaty and moved military into the Rhineland • Indoctrinated the youth • Hitler despised Christianity and began to close churches • Jews were persecuted as enemies of the state

  12. Hitler’s Aggression to 1939page 773

  13. Events of World War II Pacific Europe 1936 March 1936 Hitler marches troops into the Rhineland 1937 April 1937 Germany attacks Guernica, Spain 1938 March 1938 Germany invades Austria September 1938 Germany invades the Sudetenland

  14. Events of World War II Europe Pacific 1939 March 1939Germany invades Czechoslovakia Aug. 1939 Nonaggression pact between Germany and the Soviet Union Sept. 1939 Germany invades Poland; World War II begins 1940 May 1940 Evacuation of British forces at Dunkirk 1941 June 1940 France surrenders; the Battle of Britain begins December 1941Japan attacks Pearl Harbor. US declares war on Japan.

  15. Europe at WAR

  16. Allied Powers Great Britain France Russia United States The Alliance System in 1942 Axis Powers • Germany • Italy • Japan • Ottoman Empire

  17. WWII Begins World War II began in Europe with the German blitzkrieg, or lightning war, against Poland in September of 1939. By June of 1940, Germany had conquered most of western Europe. In June of 1941, Germany invaded the Soviet Union. On December 7, 1941, Germany’s ally, Japan, launched a surprise attack on the United States—an act that drew America into the war. Eventually, the Allies turned the tide of the conflict against Germany and Japan. In the Pacific, Allied forces won a major victory in the Battle of Midway and began to recapture territory from the Japanese. In Europe, the Soviet Union captured the German army that besieged Stalingrad in February of 1943. The Allies opened a western front in Europe by landing in Normandy in June of 1944, and the combined pressure on two fronts drove Germany to surrender in May of 1945. Two atomic bombs dropped on Japan in August forced the Japanese to surrender in September of 1945.

  18. The War in the Pacific • Late 1930s – Japan attacks China for oil resources and territory • 1940 – Japan conquers French Indochina and continues takeover of Pacific Islands. • December, 1941 – Japan attacks Pearl Harbor. • US enters the war.

  19. Events of World War II Pacific Europe Dec. 1941 Japanese attack Pearl Harbor; U.S. declares war on Japan 1941 June 1941 Germany invades the Soviet Union Apr. 1942 Allies surrender in Philippines; Bataan Death March begins 1942 Aug. 1942 Hitler orders attack on Stalingrad May 1942 Allies turn back Japanese fleet in Battle of the Coral Sea June 1942 Allies defeat Japan in Battle of Midway Nov. 1942 Allies land in North Africa 1943 Feb. 1943 Germans surrender at Stalingrad Feb. 1943 Japanese abandon the island of Guadalcanal

  20. Events of World War II Pacific Europe 1944 Oct. 1944 Allies defeat Japan in Battle of Leyte June 1944 Allies invade Europe on D-Day Mar. 1945 Allies capture Iwo Jima Dec. 1944 Battle of the Bulge begins 1945 June 1945 Allies capture Okinawa May 1945 Germany surrenders Aug. 1945 Atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki 1946 Sep. 1945 Japan surrenders

  21. Jewish Women and Children in Belsen Concentration CampDuring the advance of the 2nd Army, the huge concentration camp at Belsen was relieved. Some 60,000 civilians, mostly suffering from typhus, typhoid, and dysentry were dying in their hundreds daily, despite the frantic efforts being made by medical services rushed to the camp. The camp was declared a neutral area before allies arrived, and the allied Military Government stood to reach the camp at the earliest possible moment, only to be faced by the most indescribable scenes--60,000 people starving and without water for over six days. The camp was littered with the dead and dying, and on closer investigation, it was discovered that the huts capable of housing about 30 people in many cases were holding as many as 500. It was impossible to estimate the number of dead among them. The others were too weak to remove the bodies, so they just had to remain.

  22. The Final Solution

  23. Hiroshima and Nagasaki

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