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Nazi Germany

A look at Nazi Germany as presented by the History Channel.

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<strong>Nazi</strong> <strong>Germany</strong><br />

History of WW2<br />

<strong>Nazi</strong> <strong>Germany</strong><br />

01/1933 to 05/1945<br />

“At the risk of appearing to talk nonsense, I tell you that the <strong>Nazi</strong> movement will go<br />

on for 1,000 years!”<br />

- Adolf Hitler to a British Journalist<br />

At the beginning of the 1930s, Adolf Hitler’s (/biographies/adolf-hitler) <strong>Nazi</strong> Party<br />

(/shows/the-third-reich-the-rise-and-fall) exploited widespread and deep-seated<br />

discontent in <strong>Germany</strong> to attract popular and political support. There was resentment<br />

at the crippling territorial, military and economic terms of the Versailles Treaty (/studytopics/history-of-ww2/treaty-of-versailles),<br />

which Hitler blamed on treacherous<br />

politicians and promised to overturn. The democratic post-World War I Weimar<br />

Republic was marked by a weak coalition government and political crisis, in answer<br />

to which the <strong>Nazi</strong> party offered strong leadership and national rebirth. From 1929<br />

onwards, the worldwide economic depression provoked hyperinflation, social unrest<br />

and mass unemployment, to which Hitler offered scapegoats such as the Jews.<br />

Hitler pledged civil peace, radical economic policies, and the restoration of national<br />

pride and unity. <strong>Nazi</strong> rhetoric was virulently nationalist and anti-Semitic (/studytopics/history-of-ww2/genocide).<br />

The ‘subversive’ Jews were portrayed as<br />

responsible for all of <strong>Germany</strong>’s ills.<br />

Did you Know<br />

When Adolf Hitler was a struggling,<br />

poverty stricken artist in Vienna, he did<br />

not show any signs of anti-Semitism.<br />

Many of his closest associates in the<br />

hostel where he lived were the Jewish<br />

men who helped him to sell his<br />

pictures.<br />

During the 1936 Berlin Olympics, Hitler<br />

refused to shake the hand of African-<br />

American Jesse Owens, who won four<br />

gold medals. However, when<br />

questioned about this Owens said:<br />

"Hitler didn't snub me - it was FDR who<br />

snubbed me. The president didn't even<br />

send me a telegram."<br />

In the federal elections of 1930 (which followed the Wall Street Crash), the <strong>Nazi</strong> Party<br />

won 107 seats in the Reichstag (the German Parliament), becoming the secondlargest<br />

party. The following year, it more than doubled its seats. In January 1933,<br />

President von Hindenburg appointed Hitler chancellor, believing that the <strong>Nazi</strong>s could<br />

be controlled from within the cabinet. Hitler set about consolidating his power,<br />

destroying Weimar democracy and establishing a dictatorship. On 27 February, the


Reichstag burned; Dutch communist Marianus van der Lubbe was found inside,<br />

arrested and charged with arson. With the Communist Party discredited and banned,<br />

the <strong>Nazi</strong>s passed the Reichstag Fire Decree, which dramatically curtailed civil<br />

liberties.<br />

In March 1933, the <strong>Nazi</strong>s used intimidation and manipulation to pass the Enabling<br />

Act, which allowed them to pass laws which did not need to be voted on in the<br />

Reichstag. Over the next year, the <strong>Nazi</strong>s eliminated all remaining political opposition,<br />

banning the Social Democrats, and forcing the other parties to disband. In July 1933,<br />

<strong>Germany</strong> was declared a one-party state. In the ‘Night of the Long Knives’ of June<br />

1934, Hitler ordered the Gestapo and the SS to eliminate rivals within the <strong>Nazi</strong> Party.<br />

In 1935, the Nuremburg Laws marked the beginning of an institutionalised anti-<br />

Semitic persecution which would culminate in the barbarism of the ‘Final Solution’.<br />

Hitler’s first moves to overturn the Versailles (/study-topics/history-of-ww2/treaty-ofversailles)<br />

settlement began with the rearmament of <strong>Germany</strong>, and in 1936 he<br />

ordered the remilitarisation of the Rhineland. Hitler became bolder as he realised that<br />

Britain and France were unwilling and unable to challenge German expansionism.<br />

Between 1936 and 1939, he provided military aid to Franco’s fascist forces in the<br />

Spanish Civil War, despite having signed the ‘Non-Intervention Agreement’. In March<br />

1938, German troops marched into Austria; the Anschluss was forbidden under<br />

Versailles. Anglo-French commitment to appeasement (/study-topics/history-ofww2/appeasement)<br />

and ‘peace for our time’ meant that when Hitler provoked the<br />

‘Sudeten Crisis’, demanding that the Sudetenland be ceded to <strong>Germany</strong>, Britain and<br />

France agreed to his demands at September 1938’s Munich conference. <strong>Germany</strong>’s<br />

territorial expansion eastwards was motivated by Hitler’s desire to unite German–<br />

speaking peoples, and also by the concept of Lebensraum: the idea of providing<br />

Aryan Germans with ‘living space’.<br />

At the end of the year, anti-Jewish pogroms erupted across <strong>Germany</strong> and Austria.<br />

Kristallnacht – a state-orchestrated attack on Jewish property – resulted in the<br />

murder of 91 Jews. Twenty thousand more were arrested and transported to<br />

concentration camps (/study-topics/history-of-ww2/genocide). In March 1939,<br />

<strong>Germany</strong> seized the remainder of Czechoslovakia; in August Hitler signed the <strong>Nazi</strong>-<br />

Soviet Pact of non-aggression with the USSR. The next step would be the invasion<br />

of Poland (/study-topics/history-of-ww2/poland) and the coming of World War II<br />

(/study-topics/history-of-ww2).<br />

< Treaty of Versailles (/study-topics/history-of-ww2/treaty-of-versailles)<br />

Appeasement (/study-topics/history-of-ww2/appeasement) ><br />

]<br />

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