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Chapter 28

Chapter 28. Europe 1919-1939. Lesson 1: Instability after World War I. The peace settlement after WWI left many nations unhappy The Great Depression swept the Western world in 1929, shaking people’s confidence in democracy. Uneasy Peace, Uncertain Security.

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Chapter 28

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  1. Chapter 28 Europe 1919-1939

  2. Lesson 1: Instability after World War I • The peace settlement after WWI left many nations unhappy • The Great Depression swept the Western world in 1929, shaking people’s confidence in democracy

  3. Uneasy Peace, Uncertain Security • From the beginning, many nations were unhappy with peace settlements after WWI • The U.S. never joined the League of Nations, weakening its effectiveness • The French made strict demands of Germany following the Treaty of Versailles and occupied the Ruhr Valley, Germany’s industrial center

  4. The Weimar Republic • Germany’s new government was set up in 1919 • Called the Weimar Republic, it was named after the city where the national assembly met • Problems with this included: Germany had no democratic tradition, too many political parties, and Germans blamed the Weimar government for the Treaty of Versailles

  5. Inflation in Germany • When the French occupied the Ruhr Valley, German workers went on strike • To finance the war, Germany had simply printed more money, which caused inflation problems after the war • They continued to print more money after the war to pay their reparations

  6. Attempts at Economic Stability • Germany recovered from the 1923 inflation due to an international committee and a $200 million loan from the U.S., called the Dawes Plan • It also set a more realistic schedule for Germany’s reparation payments, contributing to a brief period of European prosperity

  7. The Treaty of Locarno • In 1925, foreign ministers from Germany and France met in Switzerland and signed the Treaty of Locarnopromising to never again go to war with each other • Germany was admitted to the League of Nations • In 1928, almost every country in the world signed the Kellogg-Briand peace pact, renouncing war

  8. The Great Depression • Several individual nations had economic problems in the 1920’s such as uneven distribution of wealth, overproduction, and people buying less • This, coupled with the crash of the U.S. stock market in 1929, began the Great Depression

  9. The Stock Market Crashes • In 1929, Wall Street was booming with soaring stock prices • In September 1929, many investors started to think prices were unnaturally high, and began selling stocks causing panic • Prices plunged to a new low by October 29th, 1929, known as Black Tuesday, causing the market to collapse

  10. Responses to the Depression • Factory production was cut in half by 1932 • Around 9 million people lost their money when banks closed • In 1932, 25% of Americans, 25% of British and 30% of Germans were unemployed • The Great Depression increased government involvement in the economy • Many new and unstable democracies in Europe and around the world were on the defensive

  11. Recovery in the United States • In 1932, Americans elected Franklin D. Roosevelt as president • Roosevelt began a program of government reform called the New Deal, which consisted of large public works programs to provide jobs • New regulations were imposed on banks and the stock market

  12. Lesson 2: The Rise of Dictatorial Regimes • By 1939, only two major European states (France and Great Britain) remained democratic • A new form of dictatorship arose called the totalitarian state, lead by a single leader and a single party • Germany, Italy, the Soviet Union, and many other states

  13. Fascism in Italy • Fascism was a new, militant political movement that emphasized loyalty to the state and its leader • Fascists believed in extreme nationalism and authoritarian leaders • Fascism in Italy was fueled by disappointment over failure to win territory in WWI, as well as inflation and unemployment

  14. Mussolini Takes Control • A newspaper editor named Benito Mussolini promised to rescue Italy • He founded the fascist party and demanded the king put him in charge of the government in 1922 • By 1926, Mussolini was called “Il Duce”, or the leader • He abolished democracy and outlawed political parties besides fascists, and also formed secret police and put government censors in place • Even so, Mussolini never achieved the total control that Stalin or Hitler did

  15. From Russia to the USSR • During the Russian civil war, Lenin followed a policy of war communism • Peasants sabotaged this plan by hoarding food • Drought from 1920-1922, over 5 million died • Industrial collapse followed, and the revolution was in danger of failing

  16. Lenin’s New Economic Policy • In March 1921, Lenin resorted to a small-scale version of capitalism called the New Economic Policy (NEP) to restore the economy • The economy slowly recovered, and by 1928, Russia was producing at pre-WWI levels

  17. The Soviet Union • Bolshevik leaders organized Russia into several self-governing republics, and named the country the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) • Lenin’s NEP saved the Soviet Union from economic disaster and Lenin died in 1924 without a clear successor

  18. Stalin and His Five-Year Plans • By 1928, Joseph Stalin was in complete control of the communist party in the USSR • Stalin began to outline a series of Five-Year Plans for the development of the economy • These plans called for impossibly high quotas of steel, coal, and oil • In order to reach these quotas, the government limited production of consumer goods and the people faced shortages of everything from food to clothing

  19. Costs of Stalin’s Programs • Wages of industrial workers declined by 43% by 1940 • Agriculture was collectivized, followed by the “Terror Famine” in Russia and Ukraine • In 1937, Stalin launched the Great Purge, a campaign of terror eliminating anyone who threatened his power • Stalin killed 8-13 million Russians during the one-year purge

  20. Lesson 3: Hitler and Nazi Germany • After the war, Adolph Hitler settled in Munich and joined the National Socialist German Workers’ Party (Nazi Party) in 1919 • The group adopted the swastika as its symbol and set up a militia called the Brown Shirts • Hitler was chosen as der Fürher, or leader, of the Nazi party

  21. Hitler and Nazi Germany, cont. • Hitler and the Nazis marched on Munich in 1923 to seize power, but were unsuccessful • Hitler was arrested and while in jail, wrote Mein Kampf (My Struggle), setting forth his beliefs and goals for Germany • After leaving prison in 1924, Hitler was ignored by most Germans until the Great Depression caused them to look for firm leadership

  22. The Nazis Take Control • Conservative leaders in Germany mistakenly believed they could control Hitler, so they advised the president to name him chancellor in 1932 • Once in office, Hitler called for new elections which the Nazis won • Hitler turned Germany into a totalitarian state and abolished all political parties except the Nazis • By 1936, unemployment in Germany went from 6 million to 1.5 million

  23. The Nazi State 1933-1939 • Hitler wanted to develop an Aryan racial state that would dominate Europe • The Nazis used mass demonstrations and spectacles to showcase Hitler’s ideas

  24. The State and Terror • The Schutzstaffen (SS), were originally created as Hitler’s bodyguards, but came to control the police force including the Gestapo (secret police) under Heinrich Himmler • The SS was based on terror and Nazi ideaology

  25. Economics • Unemployment in Germany dropped from over 5 million in 1932 to less than 500,000 in 1937, due mainly to Hitler’s rearmament program • Ending the depression gave Hitler widespread support

  26. Women and Nazism • Part of Nazi ideology was that women were expected to bear children to further the “Aryan race” • Women were allowed to hold jobs such as nurses or social workers, but were not expected to stay after having children

  27. Anti-Semitic Policies • Anti-Semitism (hatred of Jews) was a key part of Nazi ideology • The Nazis used them for the scapegoat for Germany’s troubles since WWI • Beginning in 1933, Nazis passed laws depriving Jews of their rights, and violence against Jews mounted • On November 9, 1938, known as Kristallnacht, Nazi mobs attacked Jews in the streets and destroyed thousands of Jewish businesses

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