How did the Nazi rule change the lives of many young people in Germany after 1933? The Nazis affected the lives of the young people in many ways after 1933. The reason for this was to almost brainwash them so that they believed in the Nazi views too. They chose the young people as they would be the next generation and so if the 1000 year plan was to continue they would need the youth to be on their side. Also they spotted that the youth were very impressionable and so easy to turn onto their
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The Nazi Regime had a profound and devastating impact on European Jews from 1933 and ending in 1945‚ as they were completely isolated‚ outed by society and dehumanised.These steps that the Nazis undertook were executed in order to control the Jewish population.The regime consisted of completely isolating Jews from society by initiating antisemitic propaganda‚ boycotting Jewish businesses and establishing the Nuremberg laws. This was followed by the forced relocation into the Ghettos where they faced
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To What Extent Was The Conservative Government A Success In The Years 1951-1964? When Harold Macmillan said in 1957 that Britain had “never had it so good” it was easy to see why he spoke with such optimism. The period of Conservative dominance brought many benefits to the British people including the end of rationing‚ full employment and a boom in the economy. However‚ in labour’s 1964 manifesto they described this period as “thirteen wasted years”. It seems difficult to believe that both could
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Germany 1918 – 1939 1. The Weimer Republic * Emergence of the Democratic republic and the Impact of the Treaty of Versailles * REVOLUTION AND THE BIRTH OF THE WEIMER REPUBLIC * October 2nd 1918: Reichstag (parliament) informed GR couldn’t win war * Prince Max von Baden: became chancellor‚ brought Social Democratic Party (SDP) majority socialists into his cabinet hoped to maintain monarchy * Allies wouldn’t sign Armistice until Kaiser no longer ruled. * October 28 1918:
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’The transformation in the fortunes of the Nazi part in the years 1930-1933 was largely because of Hitler’s talents as a politician’ how far do you agree with this opinion? In the early twentieth century the Nazi party (NSDAP) was a small extremist party renowned for it’s use of violence and its beliefs such as anti-Semitism and anti-marxism. The party believed that the treaty of Versailles was wrong and unfair thus needed opposing; this was done through a military coup that ultimately failed
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TOPIC: NAZI GERMANY Propaganda‚ terror and coercion underpinned the creation and maintenance of the Nazi state. Consider this in the period 1933-1939. The adage that perception is often stronger than reality has never been truer than in the Nazi state of 1933-1939‚ where image played a colossal role in the anti-semitic and Hitler myth propaganda of Joseph Goebbels. Image manufactured the fearful aura of the Gestapo as well as the ubiquitous representation of the law‚ both of which created and
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Hitler hated democracy and in 1923 the Nazis tried to overthrow the government by force. This failed and Hitler was imprisoned by the German government. When he was released in 1924 he decided on a change of tactics. The Nazis would win power through the popular vote. To begin with they were not very successful but from 1929 their popularity dramatically increased. In my answer I will try and explain this by evaluating four factors that might explain why the Nazis eventually became the biggest power
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HW HOW POPULAR WAS THE NAZI REGIME WITH THE GERMAN PEOPLE? 19th APR 2014 Although the Nazi regime was not popular with everyone‚ especially not persecuted minority groups‚ many people did support the Nazi regime – without the support of Germans the Nazi regime may never have come to power in first place. The Nazis were popular with many German people as they reaped the benefits of the Nazi policies‚ while other people‚ for example people who weren’t part of the superior ‘Aryan’ race
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To what extent could Nazi Germany be considered a totalitarian state in the period 1933-1942? From Hitler’s election to power in January 1933‚ Nazi Germany although exhibiting totalitarian elements lacked some required factors to characterize it fully as a totalitarian state. George Orwell suggested that totalitarianism is (1984‚ introduction) "the ability for a political system or society where the individual does not exist‚ a single party controls every aspect of life." Paramount to the classification
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How much did Nazi Policies towards the Jews change between 1939-1945? Between the years 1939 – 1945 the Nazi policies towards the Jews had changed a lot. This happened by the Nazis creating laws and restrictions‚ setting up ghettos and even came to a final solution to get rid of most of the population of the Jews. Before 1939‚ hundreds of thousands of Jews lived in Germany. However‚ there were still restrictions towards them but they weren’t as severe as they were in the later years. For example
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