1 / 60

The Rise of the Nazi Party

The Rise of the Nazi Party. 1920 - 1935. Hitler. Born 1889 in Austria Moved to Vienna to study art - rejected Worked as a house painter, postcard painter, beggar. 1914 - Salvation. Sought and received permission to join the Imperial German Army - 1914 He loved the war experience: Comrades

gabriella
Télécharger la présentation

The Rise of the Nazi Party

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Rise of the Nazi Party 1920 - 1935

  2. Hitler • Born 1889 in Austria • Moved to Vienna to study art - rejected • Worked as a house painter, postcard painter, beggar

  3. 1914 - Salvation • Sought and received permission to join the Imperial German Army - 1914 • He loved the war experience: • Comrades • Discipline • Violence • Excitement • Clear values (to him) - strongest survive

  4. 1914 - Salvation • Used as a trench runner • Wounded twice • Decorated • Reached rank of corporal

  5. After the War • Learned of Armistice while recuperating from gassing • Sent to demobilization camp • Trained as a political officer • Political awareness • Public speaking

  6. Germany 1919 - 1922 • Political Chaos • Weak central government - Ebert named president • Moderately left-wing Social Democrats • Radical critics on both the left and the right Ebert Luxembourg Kapp

  7. Weimar Constitution • Drafted July 1919 • Highly Democratic in Principle: • Universal adult suffrage • Proportional Representation • Referendum provisions • Recall • Article 48 • Allowed President emergency powers • President could govern without Reichstag

  8. Revolts • Sparticist Revolt - 1919 (Leftwing) • Luzembourg & Liebnicht • Put down by Freikorps • Kapp Putsch (Rightwing) • Led by Wolfgang Kapp • Supported by Freikorps • Failed when Berlin workers called general strike and shut off power

  9. After the War • Hitler enlisted by army to spy on small German Workers’ Party • The German Workers’ Partywas founded January 9, 1919 by Anton Drexler & Karl Harrer • Hitler joined party in September 1919 • Changed its name to National Socialist German Workers’ Party (NSDAP) in February 1920

  10. Nazi Posters - 1920 "Citizens! Do not believe that the Germany of misfortune and misery, the nation of corruption and usury, the land of Jewish corruption, can be saved by parties that claim to stand on a foundation of facts. Never!". "We chose red for our posters, since it is vivid and was the color that most aroused our opponents. It forced them to notice and remember us.” - Mein Kampf

  11. Sturm Abteilung(SA) • Formed in 1921 • Paramilitary organization • Led by Ernst Roehm • Ex-Soldiers and Unemployed workers • Nazi muscle - street violence

  12. Economic Chaos • Reaparations set at 132 Billion Gold Marks • By 1922 Germany defaulted on her payments • French and Belgian troops invaded the Ruhr Valley in 1922 • General Strike • To pay strining workers, the Weimar government printed money

  13. Hyperinflation • In 1922, a loaf of bread cost 163 marks • By September, 1923 it cost 1,500,000 marks • November 1923, a single loaf of bread cost 200,000,000,000 marks

  14. Results of Hyperinflation • Middle Class suffered the most: • Savings primarilyin cash - wiped out • Economically, they became working class • Socially, they remained distinct • Lost faith in old Prussian society • Looking for an alternative

  15. Beer Hall Putsch • November, 1923 - Munich • Hitler wanted to take advantage of Ruhr debacle • Supported by Ludendorf • Not Supported by Police • 19 Killed in confrontation

  16. Dawes Plan • Reparation payments decreased • US government loans to Weimar gov’t • American capital flowwed into Germany • Revaluation of the mark

  17. Dawes Plan

  18. Mein Kampf • Outlined Hitler’s ideas on: • Race • Propaganda • Versailles • Lebensraum • Not taken seriously at first

  19. Reorganization

  20. Roster - The Henchmen Himmler Goering Hess

  21. Roster - The Henchmen Ribbentrop Borman Schacht

  22. Roster - The Henchmen Goebbels Streicher Heydrich

  23. Roster - The Henchmen Von Papen Von Blomberg Von Schirach

  24. 1927 - 1928 "Who is Adolf Hitler? The man from the people, for the people! The German front soldier who risked his life in 48 battles for Germany! What does Adolf Hitler want? Freedom and food for every decent working German! The gallows for profiteers, black marketeers and exploiters, regardless of religious faith or race! Why is Adolf Hitler not allowed to speak? Because he is ruthless in uncovering the rulers of the German economy, the international bank Jews their lackeys, the Democrats, Marxists, Jesuits and Free Masons! Because he wants to free the workers from the domination of race! Working Germans! Demand the lifting of the illegal ban on his speaking!

  25. Mainstream Parties • The SPD (Social Democrats)were a moderate socialist party and the largest of the parties committed to the Republic. It was strongly anti-communist. • The Centre Party (Zentrum)was set up to defend Catholic interests in 1870. It drew support from all classes. It was present in every Weimar coalition government until 1933. • The DDP (German Democratic Party)was a middle class Liberal party. It lost support rapidly after 1920. In 1919 it received 19% of the vote. By 1932 this was down to 1%. • The DVP (German People’s Party)at heart they were Monarchists. They were supported by the middle-classes. Gustav Stresemann was the leader of this party. Its highest point of support was in 1920 when it received 14% of the vote. By 1932 this was down to 2%.

  26. Left-wing Parties • The USPD (Independent Socialist Party) had broken from the SPD in 1917 because they did not support Germany’s continued participation in WWI. It declined rapidly after 1920 with the rise of the Communist party. • The KPD (Communist Party) was formed from the Spartacus Union that had led a revolt against the Weimar government in January 1919. It was very closely allied to Moscow and it refused to co-operate, in any way, with the parties that supported Weimar. This refusal to support Democratic parties went as far as allying with the Nazis (their sworn enemies) in Reichstag votes. This was in order to further destabilize the Republic

  27. Right-wing parties • The DNVP (German National People’s Party) was set up in 1918. It was composed of supporters of the old Monarchy. It had strong rural support especially in Protestant areas. They were Hitler’s coalition partners when he came to power in 1933. • The NSDAP (National Socialist German Worker’s Party)was founded in Munich in 1919. At first it favoured the violent overthrow of the Weimar Republic. It came to national prominence in 1930 when it won 18% of the vote and by 1932 it was the largest party in the Reichstag

  28. Weimar Culture

  29. Jazz Resistance

  30. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QPCYYdECJIs&feature=related • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Qrjtr_uFac

  31. 1924 - 1933 Elections National Socialism: The Organized Will of the Nation

  32. The Depression • Hindenburg - President • Bruening - Chancellor • Schleicher - Advisor to Hindenburg

  33. The DepressionIn Germany

  34. Unemployment & Nazi Vote Share

  35. Bruening’s Policies • Wage and price controls • Central control of business • Cut back on social services • Very Unpopular • Could not form coalition • Hindenburg ruled by decree

  36. Elections • September 1930 (Reichstag) • March 13th, 1932 (Presidential) • July 31st, 1932 (Reichstag) • November 1932 (Reichstag)

  37. 1932 • Hitler decided to run against Hindenburg for President • Confusing Campaign • Mixing old loyalties • Example: Socialists supported the old monarchist Hindenburg • Hitler lost

  38. 1932 • Breuning dismissed • SA banned • Rumours of a coup • Von Papen chosen chancellor • Hitler supports gov’t on condition that the ban on the SA is lifted

  39. 1932 • July elections • Nazis won 231 out of 608 seats • Largest single party in Reichstag • Hitler demanded Chancellorship • Denied • Nazis brought down von Papen gov’t • New elections in November • Nazis loose 32 seats

  40. November 1932

  41. 1932 • Schleicher named Chancellor - December 2 • Could not form Government • Hindenburg finally names Hitler Chancellor - January 31, 1933

  42. First Cabinet 3 of the 11 ministers were Nazis • Hitler: Chancellor • Frick: No portfolio • Goering: Minister of the Interior for Prussia - responsible for the police

  43. Consolidation • Called election for March 5, 1933 • February 4 gov’t got emergency power to ban political meetings • February 17, Prussian police ordered to actively support nazi party • 50,000 auxiliary police sworn in (mostly SA) - Threat of Communist Putsch

  44. Reichstag Fire • Burned down a week before elections

  45. Decree for the Protection of People and State • Censor mail • Arrest individuals without charge • Unlimited search and siezure • Central gov’t could take over state gov’ts that did not take adequate measures to “protect citizens”

  46. March Election • Nazis got 43.9 % of vote • Slim majority in Reichstag

  47. Gleichschaltung March 23 - Enabling Act • Gave power to Chancellor to change constitution at will • Required 2/3 majority • 81 Communist deputies locked up • Centre Party voted for the Act

  48. Gleichschaltung • March 31 - State diets had to reflect % of seats in Reichstag • Granted May Day holiday (May 1) • May 2 Abolished trade unions - replaced with Nazi Labour Front “Scene from the 'Good Old Days.’”

  49. Gleichschaltung • July 14 - Nazi party becomes only legal party • July - Concordat with Vatican - church could control its own activities - ignored by Nazis

More Related