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The Interwar Years

The Interwar Years. 1919-1939. Versailles goes awry . The Treaty of Versailles was supposed ensure peace, satisfy nationalistic desires, and exact revenge on Germany Unfortunately, the terms of the treaty do not have the intended results. Ensuring Peace and Protecting New Nations?.

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The Interwar Years

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  1. The Interwar Years 1919-1939

  2. Versailles goes awry • The Treaty of Versailles was supposed ensure peace, satisfy nationalistic desires, and exact revenge on Germany • Unfortunately, the terms of the treaty do not have the intended results

  3. Ensuring Peace and Protecting New Nations? • The League of Nations is weak • It cannot convince countries to disarm • Why might that be the case? • It cannot help all of the new, struggling nations that were created • It does not include the US, Germany, or the newly created Soviet Union • Why would this make it weaker?

  4. Problems in Germany • The punishment of Germany goes too far and cripples their post-war economy in 1923 • Hyperinflation occurs • German money is worthless

  5. The emergence of a global economy • Germany’s hyperinflation means it cannot pay reparations to the winners of WWI • What effect will this have on those economies? • The US had a very strong economy after WWI, so they begin to lend money to Germany, which helps end their hyperinflation • Now, who will start getting their reparation payments again? • This signals the growing connections between the economies of different countries • Why is that a good thing? Why could it be bad?

  6. A brief period of prosperity • Some countries, like the US, were strong during the post-WWI era • What is this time period known as in US History?

  7. The end of prosperity: 1929 • In October of 1929, the US Stock Market crashes • What does this mean?

  8. Why was the stock market crash such a big deal?

  9. Causes of the Great Depression • The stock market crash was just one cause of the global economic downturn which became known as the Great Depression • Other causes included: • High tariffs • The expansion of credit • The linked economies due to war reparations Video: http://www.history.com/videos/1929-stock-market-crash#1929-stock-market-crash

  10. Results of the Great Depression • Affects countries across the globe • Unemployment, bank failures, collapse of credit • Government responses vary • Some become very involved with running the economy, like in the US with FDR’s New Deal • Some cannot handle the crisis well, so their people begin to look for other alternatives • Communist parties grow • Dictators who offer simple solutions in exchange for power appear in some countries

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