BBCi Revision page, 2002
This revision page was current on the
BBCi site in 2002
The Rise of Hitler
On 11th November 1918
the Armistice was signed which brought an end to the Great War and Germany
surrendered unconditionally to the Allies. the following year the leaders of
the Allies met at Versailles to decide how Germany was to be treated. When
the terms of the Treaty of Versailles were published in June most Germans
were very angry.
Why was there so much unrest in Germany from 1919 to 1923?
How did Germany recover from 1923 onwards?
Why was Hitler able to gain complete power in Germany from
1929 to 1934?
Why was there so much unrest in Germany from 1919 to 1923?
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there was opposition
to the terms of the treaty almost immediately. the Weimar Republic, as the
government of Germany became known, were very unpopular. |
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From 1919 to 1923,
there was a series of attempted revolutions in Germany, some by Communists
- who hoped to take advantage of the situation and follow the example of
Russia - others by right wing nationalists who blamed the government for
accepting the treaty and tried to overthrow it. |
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Adolf Hitler left the
German army in January 1919. He had spent the last weeks of the war in
hospital recovering from gas-blindness. He believed that the army had not
been defeated, but had been "stabbed in the back" by the politicians who
had signed the Armistice (the November Criminals). When the war ended
Hitler got a job working as a spy for the German army. He was sent to a
meeting of the German Workers Party in September 1919,which was led by
Anton Drexler, who was very anti-Semitic. Hitler joined the party and
became its leader in 1921. |
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Hitler wanted to
attract as many people as possible to the party, so he changed the name to
the National Socialist German Workers Party. He hoped that the word
"National" would attract nationalists who wanted to rebuild Germany after
the First World War and the word "Socialist" would attract socialists who
wanted to improve the lives of working people in Germany. |
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the National
Socialists, or Nazis, as they began to be called, were often violent; they
would attack their opponents at meetings and this put many people off.
Hitler's private army, the Sturm Abteilung (Storm Troopers) or S.A., were
led by a particularly unpleasant and violent ex-soldier called Ernst Roehm. |
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In 1922 the
Government stopped paying Reparations and the French and Belgian Armies
invaded the Ruhr, the main industrial area of Germany. When the German
workers went on strike they brought in their own workers and cut the area
off from the rest of Germany. |
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In 1922 and 1923
Germany was hit by Hyperinflation. This is the name given to the massive
rise in prices that took place and affected everyone in Germany. |
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Many Germans found
that their life-savings were lost. People who lived on pensions were
ruined. |
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Prices rose every day
and every hour and people rushed to buy goods as soon as they were paid.
they bought anything, because otherwise their money would lose value
immediately. People began to exchange goods (barter) rather than use money
and shopkeepers tried to keep their shops closed and avoid selling
anything. The confusion caused by hyperinflation led Adolf
Hitler to believe that he could take power in Munich in November 1923, the
Beer Hall Putsch. the attempt failed. Hitler believed that the government
of Germany was so unpopular that many Germans would support him. He was
even planning a "March on Berlin" after his success in Munich. Hitler was
arrested and tried for high treason. He was found guilty and sentenced to
five years in prison. While Hitler was in prison after the Beer Hall
Putsch, he wrote "Mein Kampf" (My Struggle), which was a cross between his
autobiography and a list of his political ideas. |
How did Germany recover from 1923 onwards?
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A new chancellor,
Gustav Stresemann, brought hyperinflation under control and most Germans
saw him as a much better leader than Hitler. Stresemann ordered all the
old banknotes to be collected in and to be burnt. He issued new notes,
called Rentenmarks, which were backed by the land of Germany and not by
gold. |
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Stresemann was also
able to deal with most of the other problems facing Germany in the 1920s
and the country seemed to be recovering from the effects of the First
World War. He got German industry going again. He persuaded the French and
Belgians to leave the Ruhr. |
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In 1924 he borrowed
money from the USA to help Germany pay Reparations, the Dawes Plan. |
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In 1925 he persuaded
the French and Belgians to sign the Locarno Pacts and promise to respect
Germany's borders. |
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He got Germany
admitted to the League of Nations in 1926 and Germany became a permanent
Member of the Council.
It seemed that Germany had recovered from the humiliation of Versailles
and had been accepted by the other countries of Europe once again. In the
meantime Hitler had realised that he would have to change his tactics if
he were to have any chance of gaining power in Germany. He decided that he
must try to gain power by legal means. |
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When Hitler was
released from prison, he set up a proper political party with a national
organisation. Before, the Nazis had only been well known in Bavaria.
Hitler knew that he needed to win as many votes as possible if he was to
gain a majority in the Reichstag. |
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He set up sections
within the party for teachers, women and children. |
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He appointed Josef
Goebbels as head of propaganda. His job was to put the Nazi message across
as clearly as possible. |
Why
was Hitler able to gain complete power in Germany from 1929 to 1934?
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On 3rd October Gustav
Stresemann died. |
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On 24th October Wall
Street, the American Stock Exchange crashed. This led to the Depression of
the 1930s, which affected Germany more than any other country. By 1932
6,000,000 Germans were out of work. This was much more than in any other
country.
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From 1929 support for
the Nazis rose steadily: |
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the Nazi Party was
well organised and had the support of Alfred Hugenberg. He was a
millionaire who owned 53 newspapers. Hugenberg had begun to support Hitler
in the 1920s. All of his newspapers backed Hitler. |
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Hitler hired a
private plane to fly around Germany. He was the first politician to do
this. When he landed he had two Mercedes cars to carry him from place to
place. This meant that he could speak in many towns on the same day.
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Hitler told the
German people that the problems of the Depression were not their fault. He
blamed the Jews for Germany's problems. He used them as a scapegoat.
Hitler said that he would be able to solve the problems and promised
different things to different groups of people. To businessmen he promised
that he would control the Trade Unions and deal with the Communists. To
workers he promised that he would provide jobs. |
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Hitler said that he
would do away with the Treaty of Versailles, which had treated Germany so
badly. Hitler was always backed up by large numbers of disciplined and
uniformed followers - this made it appear that he was a man who could take
decisions and sort out Germany's problems.
As the situation in Germany became more and more desperate, people were
more and more ready to listen to the ideas of Hitler. On 30th January
Hitler was appointed chancellor by President Hindenburg. In January 1933
Hindenburg was persuaded by Franz von Papen to appoint Hitler as
Chancellor of Germany. Von Papen believed that he would be able to control
Hitler and use the 196 Nazi MPs to create a majority in the Reichstag. He
was wrong: |
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When he took office,
Hitler was leading a coalition government. there were only three Nazis
apart from himself. He immediately called a general election to try to win
a majority. |
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On 27th February,
just a week before the election, the Reichstag caught fire and burnt down.
A communist, Franz van der Lubbe was arrested inside. Hitler used this as
an excuse to arrest many members of the Communist Party, his main
opponents. |
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the general election
took place on 5th March 1933. the Nazis won 288 seats. This was not a
majority, but 52 Nationalists supported them. At the first meeting of the
Reichstag on 23rd March, the 81 Communists stayed away. Hitler could now
do as he liked.
the Reichstag immediately passed the Enabling Act - this made Hitler
dictator of Germany for four years. He immediately began to use this power
to crush all opposition to him in Germany. All trade unions were abolished
and all political parties banned, except for the Nazis. In November 1933
in another general election, in which only Nazi candidates were allowed,
92% of the people supported the Nazis.
Finally on 30th June 1934 Hitler eliminated his opponents within the Nazi
Party in the "Night of the Long Knives". 400 members of the Sturm
Abteilung, the Brownshirts, and other people, who Hitler did not trust
were murdered. |
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the main aim of this
was to get rid of Ernst Roehm, the leader of the S.A. Roehm had been
demanding that he should be made the commander in chief of the German
army. Hitler did not want to do this as he knew that it would be very
unpopular with the generals. |
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Roehm was also one of
the leaders of the Socialist wing of the Nazi Party. He wanted a social
revolution to give working people more influence in Germany. Hitler wanted
to set up a right wing dictatorship. Hitler was frightened that Roehm
would use the S.A. to get rid of him and seize power. the S.A. had at
least 500,000 members, although Roehm claimed that there were 3,000,000.
When President Hindenburg died in August 1934, Hitler was finally able to
gain total power and combined the posts of chancellor and president,
giving himself the title of Fuhrer. All members of the armed forces now
had to swear an oath of loyalty to him.
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