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Europe in Ruins

Europe in Ruins. 16.5. Europe in Ruins. After six long years of war, the Allies finally were victorious. However, World War II had caused more death and destruction than any other conflict in history.

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Europe in Ruins

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  1. Europe in Ruins 16.5

  2. Europe in Ruins • After six long years of war, the Allies finally were victorious. • However, World War II had caused more death and destruction than any other conflict in history. • It left 60 million dead. About one-third of these deaths occurred in one country, the Soviet Union.

  3. Europe in Ruins • Close to 40 million Europeans had died, two-thirds of them civilians. • Constant bombing and shelling had reduced hundreds of cities to rubble. • Displaced persons from many nations were left homeless

  4. Europe in Ruins • The misery in Europe continued for years after the war. • The fighting had ravaged Europe’s countryside, and agriculture had been completely disrupted. • Thousands died as famine and disease spread through the bombed-out cities.

  5. Postwar Governments and Politics • Europeans often blamed their leaders for the war and its aftermath. • In countries like Germany, Italy, and France a return to the old leadership was not desirable • Some prewar governments—like those in Belgium, Holland, Denmark, and Norway—returned quickly

  6. The Nuremberg Trials • During 1945-1946, an Military Tribunal representing 23 nations put Nazi war criminals on trial • During the Nuremberg Trials, 22 Nazi leaders were charged with waging a war of aggression. • They were also accused of committing “crimes against humanity”—the murder of 11 million people.

  7. The Nuremberg Trials • Adolf Hitler, SS chief Heinrich Himmler, and Minister of Propaganda Joseph Goebbels had committed suicide long before the trials began. • Other high-ranking Nazi leaders remained to face the charges. • Many were given severe prison sentences or the death penalty • The bodies of those executed were burned at the concentration camp of Dachau. They were cremated in the same ovens that had burned so many of their victims.

  8. Assignment • 1. What was the cost of WWII in terms of human life. • 2. Why did people continue to pass away even after the wars end? • 3. How did the Allies deal with the issue of war crimes in Europe? • 4. Explain the government and political situations in Europe after the war? • 5. Why do you think that the bodies of the executed war criminals were disposed of the way they were?

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