Paper 2 Revision Guide
Paper 2 Revision Guide
Revision Guide
Paper 1 Understanding the Modern World
The exam is 1hr 45mins. Section A has 6 questions, and Section B has 4.
There are two sections you must answer all the questions on the topics we have
studied. These are:
(4)
You need to compare the CONTENT of the interpretations in what ways are they
different?
Interpretation A suggests whereas Interpretation B suggests
Remember your points from the interpretations need to be LINKED TO THE
QUESTION.
(4)
In this question, you are trying to find REASONS why the interpretations are
different. This might consider WHO wrote it, and WHAT their experiences
might be of the topic in question.
It might also consider the TIME at which they are writing, and how this might
INFLUENCE their perspective. You also need to think about what the
intention or motivation of the author might have been.
Eg.
In comparison, Interpretation B was written by. In. this may mean that..
because.
The author may have been trying to.
(8)
This question requires you to use your relevant knowledge and understanding of the
topic in order to MAKE A JUDGEMENT on which interpretation you find the most
convincing.
It is suggested that you first compare the relative strengths and limitations of each
interpretation, and then make a judgement on which is most convincing AND WHY.
DETAILED KNOWLEDGE here is important; you are being marked on your ability to
evaluate an interpretation by using your knowledge to say why it is convincing and what
it fails to recognise.
Interpretation A is convincing because it suggests.. and from my own knowledge..
However, it is limited because.. and I know that..
Interpretation B is convincing because it suggests.. and from my own knowledge..
However, it is limited because.. and I know that..
Overall, I find that Interpretation [ ] is more convincing for finding out about.
Because
(4)
This requires a description of TWO key features, and will test your knowledge.
(5) In what ways? question
(8)
Start with your SECOND CHOICE and explain why it was an important factor,
using knowledge. Sum up the paragraph with a LINK TO THE QUESTION This
helped Hitler to become Chancellor because.
Then, explain which you think was the most important factor, using knowledge.
Sum up the paragraph with a LINK TO THE QUESTION This helped Hitler to
become Chancellor because.
Your third paragraph is your conclusion, where you explain which factor you
think was more important/significant AND EXPLAIN WHY compare the
factors and explain why one was more important than the other.
Context
Germany had only been a unified country since the Franco-Prussian wars in 1871. The
unified Germany had a Kaiser (Emperor), who had complete control over the appointment
of the chancellor, who in turn had control over the appointment of the government and
its ministers. The Chancellor was answerable only to the Kaiser.
There was a parliament, but it had very little actual power.
In the 1870s and 1880s, Otto von Bismarck was the chancellor, and had a lot of power.
He achieved:
The introduction of a new currency and coinage to unify Germany
The creation of a national postage service
A new legal system
A railway network
A strong army
The assimilation of national minorities in the new empire.
In 1888, Wilhelm II became the Kaiser when his father died. He wanted to be more
involved in ruling Germany and did not like the power that the chancellors had.
His personality was not suited to ruling though. He had a bad temper and was prone to
rash decisions. He was also known to fly into violent rages,
Kaiser Wilhelm II wanted a policy of WELTPOLITIK. He believed that with Germanys
rising industrial growth, rising population and nationalist ambition, Germany should have
its PLACE IN THE SUN.
He wanted Germany to build an overseas empire, so needed to build Germanys navy to
match her imperial ambitions.
Many Germans agreed with Wilhelm IIs ambitions.
Germany had a growing number of industrial workers, making the SDP appeal to more
people, as they represented the rights of the workers.
Each of Germanys 25 states had control over their own domestic matters, but this
control diminished with the national government organising a national army,
communications and social insurance schemes.
All of this meant:
Most men were eligible to vote but had little real impact
The Kaiser and his ministers controlled almost everything in Germany
The middle classes liked this, because they were afraid of the growing strength of the
industrial workers and the left wing.
Industrialisation
In 1880, Germany were producing half the amount of steel that Britain was, but by 1914
they were producing twice as much. This showed rapid industrialisation.
By 1914, Germany was producing 1/3 of the worlds electrical goods, and had the most
advanced telephone system in the world.
Germany had leading chemical and steel industries, and foreign trade and exports
flourished.
The population grew from 40million in 1871 to 68million in 1914, which provided the
manpower for the growth of industrial cities.
By 1914, only 1/3 of the labour force was working in agriculture, and as a result, food
imports rose rapidly.
German society was dominated by elite ruling classes who favoured RIGHT WING
policies, and an AUTHORITARIAN style of rule.
The growing nubers of industrial workers posed a possible threat to this structure of
society, and the ruling classes were fearful of the SOCIALIST movement.
Each German government tried to pacify the demands of the workers through social
reforms such as:
Old age pensions
Sickness and accident insurance schemes
Many workers remained dissatisfied, and this led to continual growth I support for the
SDP, and the COMMUNIST ideology of Karl Marx.
In 1912, the SDP gained nearly 1/3 of the seats in the Reichstag. This shows how
widespread socialist sentiment was becoming.
Admiral von Tirpitz argued that Germany needed battleships that could compete with
Britains, as success over the British Navy would ensure Germanys place as a world
power.
A large ship-building programme would also frighten the British government, and the
hope was that this would make the British government more open to Germanys
colonisation of overseas territory and less likely to stand in their way.
After Tirpitz became State Secretary of the Navy in 1897, several NAVAL LAWS
were passed which had a profound effect on Anglo-German relations,, as well as
affecting the lives and attitudes of many Germans.
1898 The First Naval Law
Passed in spite of opposition from the SDP and the Conservative Party
Allowed for the building of SEVEN new battleships in addition to the TWELVE Germany
already possessed.
This would not be enough to match Britain or France, but was a turning point.
1900 The Second Naval Law
Passed during the Boer War in South Africa
Germany took the opportunity to sympathise with the Boers, who were fighting against
the British.
This law doubled the size of the German fleet to 38 battleships.
This made it clear that the German navy was not just patrolling the coastline, but was
directly attemptin to rival Britain.
This ENCOURAGED NATIONALIST ATTITUDES IN GERMANY, and created a fear of
British ambitions.
Early 1900s- more Naval Laws were passes in the Reichstag
Increased size of German Navy
Illustrated its importance
Encouraged the belief amongst Germans that Britain was attempting to become even
more powerful, and prevent Germany becoming a Colonial Empire.
From 1902 onwards, a Naval Arms Race developed between Britain and Germany.
Kaiser was in full support of Naval Expansion, it was seen as key to fulfilling German
ambitions and a more powerful German empire.
war weariness
economic problems
defeat
the end of the monarchy
How far do the early problems of the Weimar Republic suggest that
it was doomed from the start?
Content Focus:
The origins of the Weimar Republic; the armistice; the effects of the Treaty
of Versailles
Political problems: the constitution and its consequences for government;
political instability
Challenges to Weimar, 19191923: the Spartacists; attempted takeovers
by the right-wing: the Freikorps; Kapp Putsch; Munich Putsch
Economic problems leading to hyperinflation; the invasion of the Ruhr.
So What?
The early Weimar Republic was an unstable place with many different political groups
believing that they knew what was best for the future of the country. In addition the
Allies made sure that Germany got a different kind of government and was involved in
deciding how to set up the new Weimar; this meant that many Germans had little
respect for the new system. Germany was forced to abandon almost a military
autocracy; after 1919, it was a parliamentary democracy.
the armistice
What?
The armistice ended fighting in World War I on the 11th November 1918. The Germans
signed an agreement which meant a cease-fire. However, the terms of Germanys
surrender were not agreed until the following May when the Treaty of Versailles was
signed.
So What?
Although the German government had accepted that Germany could no longer fight, due
largely to the British Naval Blockades of German seas which stopped supplies getting to
the soldiers and civilian population, many of the German people were surprised when the
armistice was signed, especially those fighting on the Western front where German
troops had made some recent advances. One such soldier was Adolf Hitler who was later
able to present the signing of the armistice as a betrayal of the German people,
referring to the signatories as the November Criminals who had stabbed in the back
the German soldiers; Dolchstosslegende.
So What?
The terms of the Treaty hit Germany hard and many suffered as a result of the
economic hardships. Many Germans were displaced and now found themselves living
outside Germany. Over time, the German people grew to resent the Treaty of Versailles
and regard it as unfair and too harsh. Although in the Stresemann years, the terms and
effects of the Treaty were modified, when depression hit after 1929, the Nazis were
still able to blame the Treaty for Germanys hardship.
So What?
The problem for the Weimar Republic was that it was potentially weak from within. The
president and the army had a lot of power and because of the voting system
proportional representation the Reichstag could have lots of small parties with seats
and therefore it was difficult to get agreement to do anything and made the Reichstag
divided and weak. In addition there were extreme parties on both the left and right
who were challenging the new democracy.
So What?
The French were legally permitted under the Treaty of Versailles to enter the Ruhr and
take payment in kind instead of reparations. This was depicted by the Germans as an act
of aggression and oppression against a struggling Germany.
Hyperinflation ruined the German economy but not before some in big business had
benefited by paying off debts with worthless money. Those who suffered most were
the middle classes who had saved modestly and then found their savings were worthless.
Pensioners also suffered as their pensions which previously had bought them enough to
live on, now wouldnt buy a loaf of bread.
Key issue: How far did the Weimar Republic recover under
Stresemann?
Content Focus:
What?
Stresemanns list of achievements include:
The Dawes Plan, 1924
Stresemann called off the 1923 Ruhr strike and started to pay reparations again
but the American Dawes Plan gave Germany longer to make the payments (and the
Young Plan of 1929 reduced the payments).
Inflation brought under control
Stresemann called in all the old, worthless marks and burned them. He replaced
them with a new Rentenmark (worth 3,000 million old marks).
French leave the Ruhr, April 1924
Stresemann persuaded the French to leave.
10
In Foreign policy
Stresemann signed the Locarno Treaty in 1925 agreeing to the loss of AlsaceLorraine. This treaty meant that Germany was now accepted the territorial changes
of the Treaty of Versailles. In 1926, Germany was allowed to join the League of
Nations. Germany had become a world power again.
Economic Growth
Germany borrowed 25,000 million gold marks, mainly from America. This was used
to build roads, railways and factories. The economy boomed and led to
prosperity. Cultural life also boomed (the Roaring Twenties).
Reforms
Stresemann introduced reforms to make life better for the working classes Labour Exchanges (1927) and unemployment pay. Also, 3 million new houses were
built.
And Stresemann arranged a 'Great Coalition' of the moderate pro-democracy
parties (based around the SDP, the Centre party and Stresemann's own 'German
people's Party', the DVP). United together, they were able to resist the criticism
from smaller extremist parties, and in this way, he overcame the effects of
proportional representation - the government had enough members of the
Reichstag supporting it to pass the laws it needed.
What?
The Young Plan was the work of another American, Owen Young. He was sent to
Germany in 1929 by the Committee in charge of reparations to investigate the effects
of the Wall Street Crash on the German economy. Young's report suggested that the
total amount of reparations should be reduced by about three-quarters and that
Germany should make annual payments on a sliding-scale up to 1988. The Young Plan was
accepted by all the governments concerned.
So What?
11
The Young Plan gave Germany time to recover and much longer to pay the reparations.
However, it did not actually abandon the principle and that meant it was severely
criticized in Germany by right-wing politicians such as politicians like Adolf Hitler and
Alfred Hugenberg. The President of the Reichsbank, Hjalmar Schacht, also disagreed
with the plan and resigned from office.
So What?
This treaty meant that Germany was allowed to join the League of Nations in
1926. Germany had become a world power again.
What?
The Kellogg-Briand Pact, 1928 was a pledge made by 65 nations to condemn war and
resolve any dispute by peaceful means.
So What?
Whilst this was a diplomatic pledge, there was nothing in the pact about what would
happen if a nation broke the terms of the agreement. All the states said that they were
keeping their armies for self-defence. However, at the time the pact was seen as the
start of a new age of peaceful cooperation.
12
by Jews. Many people started to think that the Weimar government had nothing to
offer them.
Culture - The 1920s became in Germany a time of real cultural creativity, with
developments in Architecture, Art, Books, Films and Cabaret.
Famous names of this period include:
the Bauhaus school of architecture, the artist Paul Klee, the singer and film star
Marlene Dietrich and the artist Otto Dix (famous for his harsh paintings of World
War One trenches).
So What?
The recovery of Germany under Stresemann was precarious. The benefits in the
economy were not enjoyed by all and politically there was still division. Even the rich
cultural developments of the 1920s were enjoyed by only a minority and regarded by
some as signalling moral decline.
Key issue: How far did the Nazi Party develop its ideas and
organisation up to 1929?
Content Focus:
The Allies.
The Jews.
Twenty-five Point Programme
In 1920, the party renamed itself the National Socialist German Workers Party
(Nazis), and announced its Twenty-Five Point Programme.
13
At first, the Nazis were both nationalist (they believed in Germanys greatness) and
socialist (they believed the state should benefit the less well off and create jobs for
everyone).
So What?
Hitler used his trial as a publicity stunt for Nazi ideas and the trial made him well known
throughout Germany. He gained a following who thought he was a hero for standing up to
the Weimar government. Even the judge at his trial for treason must have thought him
plausible as Hitler was only gagged (forbidden from making speeches) and imprisoned in
Landsberg prison for 9 months. Whilst in prison, Hitler wrote Mein Kampf which set out
his ideas about Aryan supremacy and anti-Semitism. He also decided that to overturn
the Weimar democracy by force would not work and that he would have to work within
its legal framework to gain power.
May
1924
Dec 1924
May
1928
Sep 1930
Jul 1932
Nov 1932
Mar 1933
NSDAP (Nazis)
Jun 1920
Date of Election
SPD Social Democrats
Communists KPD/USPD
Centre Party (Catholics)
DDP (Democrats)
Right-wing parties (BVP/
DVP/DNVP)
Jan 1919
The prosperity of the Stresemann years meant that the Nazis message became less
appealing and the party lost support.
165
22
91
75
102
88
64
39
100
62
65
28
131
45
69
32
153
54
62
25
143
77
68
20
133
89
75
4
121
101
70
2
120
81
74
5
63
157
156
174
134
90
66
83
72
32
14
12
107
230
196
288
14
Others
Total Deputies
7
423
9
459
29
472
29
493
51
491
72
577
11
608
12
584
7
647
So What?
Hitler set about reorganising the Party. He put in place many of the things which
helped it take power after 1928. He reduced the number of Stormtroopers (SA) and
set up the SS, a personal bodyguard fanatically loyal to himself. He set up a network of
local parties and merged with other right-wing parties, then took them over. He set up
the Hitler Youth, which attracted young people to the party. Perhaps most importantly,
he put Josef Goebbels in charge of propaganda. Goebbels and Hitler believed that the
best way to get the support of the masses was by appealing to their feelings rather
than by argument. They waged a propaganda campaign using posters, leaflets, radio
and film, and organised rallies. Hitler also won political and financial support of wealthy
businessmen promising them that, if he came to power, he would destroy Communism
and the Trade Unions.
The impact of the Wall Street Crash and Depression in Germany; growth in
support for the Nazis and other extremist parties
The Weimar system of government and the failure of democracy; the
elections of 1930 and 1932; invitation to lead a coalition government,
1933; reactions among German people.
The impact of the Wall Street Crash and Depression in Germany; growth
in support for the Nazis and other extremist parties
What?
After the Wall Street Crash of 1929, the USA called in its loans to Germany, and the
German economy collapsed. The Number of unemployed grew; people starved on the
streets. The world-wide depression hit Germany very hard. In the crisis, people wanted
someone to blame, and looked to extreme solutions Hitler offered them both, and
Nazi success in the elections grew. Hitler appealed to businesses as he promised
protection from Jewish competition. He appealed to the young and unemployed as he
promised a future for Germany after the Treaty of Versailles had been abolished and
he appealed to the Junkers (the aristocracy) as they felt that the democracy of
Weimar had let them down and they longed for the strong government of the Kaisers
years. Germans turned to Nazism because they were desperate.
So What?
15
The number of Nazi seats in the Reichstag rose from 12 in 1928 to 230 in July 1932.
See the chart on page 11 the electoral fortunes of the Nazis increased as did
unemployment. Other parties such as the Communists (KPD) also increased their share
of the vote in the Reichstag. This actually made it easier for Hitler to become
Chancellor as the growth of extremist parties in the Reichstag made it increasingly
difficult to achieve consensus to deal with the problems facing Weimar. This led to
Hindenburg resorting to appointing Hitler to the job of Chancellor in the hope of him
being able to restore control to government.
So What?
In the end, Hitler did not TAKE power at all he was given it because the system of
Weimar democracy was failed when faced with extreme economic conditions which
enabled lots of different parties to win seats in the Reichstag. It also provided, under
Article 48 for the president to rule without democratic consent which meant that the
undermining of Weimar democracy served to put Hitler into power.
The Reichstag Fire; the election of March 1933; the Enabling Act
The elimination of political opposition: political parties, trade unions; the
Night of the Long Knives; the death of Hindenburg; Hitler becomes Fhrer
One party law and order: SS and Gestapo; concentration camps;
propaganda; censorship; the media; control of education; youth
movements; control of the churches.
The Reichstag Fire; the election of March 1933; the Enabling Act
16
What?
On the 27th Feb 1933 the Reichstag burned down. A Dutch Communist named van der
Lubbe was caught red-handed with matches and fire-lighting materials. Hitler used it
as an excuse to arrest many of his Communist opponents, and as a major platform in his
election campaign of March 1933. The fire was so convenient that many people at the
time claimed that the Nazis had burned it down, and then just blamed the
Communists. However, there is no evidence of this and it is now widely believed that van
der Lubbe did cause the fire, and that Hitler just took advantage of it.
So What?
Hitler held a general election on the 5th March appealing to the German people to give
him a clear mandate (a majority). Only 44% of the people voted Nazi so Hitler arrested
the 81 Communist deputies on the grounds that they were terrorists who were
responsible for the attack on the Reichstag. This did give him a majority.
What?
On 23 March 1933 the Reichstag voted to give Hitler the power to make his own
laws. This was the Enabling Act. Nazi stormtroopers stopped opposition deputies going
in, and beat up anyone who dared to speak against it.
So What?
The Enabling Act made Hitler the dictator of Germany, with power to do anything he
liked - legally. He did not need the agreement of the other parties in the Reichstag to
make new laws.
The elimination of political opposition: political parties, trade unions; the Night
of the Long Knives; the death of Hindenburg; Hitler becomes Fhrer
What?
Hitlers first move was to take over the trade unions on 2 May 1933. Leaders were sent
to concentration camps and the organization was put under the control of the Nazi
Party. The trade union movement now became known as the Labour Front.
On the 14th July the Communist Party and the Social Democrat Party were banned.
Party activists still in the country were arrested. A month later Hitler announced that
the Catholic Centre Party, the Nationalist Party and all other political parties other than
the NSDAP were illegal, and by the end of 1933 over 150,000 political prisoners were in
concentration camps.
In what was known as the Night of the Long Knives on 30th June 1934, Hitler turned
on the SA which had helped him gain power. He had used them to defend his meetings,
and attack opponents and by 1934 there were more than a million of them and they had
17
outlived their usefulness for Hitler as there was no opposition left - the SA were an
embarrassment, not an advantage. Also, Ernst Rohm, the leader of the SA, was talking
about a Socialist revolution and about taking over the army. On the night of 30 June
1934 Hitler ordered the SS to kill more than 400 SA men, including Rohm.
So What?
When Hindenburg died in August 1934 Hitler took over the office of President and
leader of the army (the soldiers had to swear to die for Adolf Hitler personally).
Hitler called himself 'Fuhrer' which means leader. His power was now without challenge.
18
Censorship was enforced by the secret police and people in general were expected to
report anything unacceptable to their local party chief. Those who knew something but
did not report it were deemed as guilty as those who went against the system.
Censorship ensured that the Nazis had the German public in their grip as they
bombarded them on a daily basis on how their lives had been improved from the day
Hitler became Germany's leader.
Education was very important in Nazi Germany. The Nazis were aware that education
would create loyal Nazis by the time they reached adulthood. The curriculum was a
propaganda tool and all teachers had to be vetted by local Nazi officials. All teachers
had to be careful about what they said as children were encouraged to inform the
authorities if a teacher said something that did not fit in with the Nazi's curriculum for
schools. Subjects underwent a major change in schools. Some of the most affected were
History and Biology in which children were taught about the supremacy of the Aryan
race.
The Hitler Jugend or Hitler youth was used to indoctrinate young people. To begin with
it tried to appeal to young people through offering a sense of adventure and outdoor
activities. Belonging to it was voluntary until, in December 1936, it was made compulsory.
The Hitler Youth was divided into different groups depending on the age and gender:
-the 'Pimpf' for boys from 6 to 10
-the 'jungvolk' for boys from 10 to 14
-the 'hitler jugend' for boys from 14 to 18
-the 'jungmdel' for girls from 10 to 14
-the 'Bund Deutcher Mdel' for girls from 14 to 18 (League of German Maidens).
The activities were mainly sporting and 'political': young people went camping, hiking,
marched in uniform, sang Hitler youth songs, made things from their hands. But in fact
discipline and requirements depended entirely on the part of Germany you lived in and
the leaders you had. Even when attending became compulsory all groups did not check
that every child enrolled came regularly.
Youth Opposition
But not all young people were happy with the Nazi regime:
SOME girls were unhappy with the emphasis on the three Cs (Church, children,
cooker). Girls who were regarded as true Aryan girls were sent off to special camps
where they were bred with selected 'Aryan' boys.
Towards the end of the war, youth gangs such as the Edelweiss Pirates and the White
Rose Movement grew up, rejecting the HJ and Nazi youth culture.
The Edelweiss Pirates were mainly working class male youths. They would gather
together and act in a manner that they would know would anger the local Nazi leaders.
They sang songs that the Nazis had banned and played music that was also banned, such
as jazz and blues tunes. They created areas within a town or city where members of the
Hitler Youth were not tolerated. However, at no stage were they ever a danger to the
Nazi regime and for years they were seen as nothing more than a youthful irritant.
19
The White Rose movement founded by Hans and Sophie Scholl. Members of this
movement openly campaigned against Hitler and the continuation of World War Two,
which they believed was lost as early as 1942. Scholl encouraged members of the White
Rose movement to engage in sabotage.
In January 1942, Hans Scholl produced a leaflet entitled A call to all Germans. It stated:
The war is approaching its inevitable end. With mathematical certainty, Hitler is leading the German nation to
disaster. Now is the time for those Germans to act who want to avoid being lumped with the Nazis barbarians
by the outside world.
Hans and Sophie Scholl were tried before the Peoples Court, they were put on trial for
treason, inevitably found guilty and executed.
The July Bomb Plot of 1944 was an attempt by senior German Army officers to
kill Hitler and end World War Two. The July Bomb Plot was not the first attempt to
kill Hitler, but it was the one that came the closest to success.
By the summer of 1944, some senior figures in Germanys military believed that
Hitlers leadership was dooming Germany to defeat many believed that defeat was
simply a matter of time, especially after the Russian success at Stalingrad. They
believed that the Allies would be open to negotiation with regards to a conditional
surrender once Hitler had been killed. From this belief the Bomb Plot developed.
Hitler had frequently warned those in his inner circle that they all faced the
problem of assassination attempts. Reinhard Heydrich had been assassinated in
Prague and in 1942, there had been a failed attempt on Goebbels life. However,
Hitler took great steps to prevent such attempts. No-one knew in advance his
movements, whether it was by car, train or plane. Increasingly after 1940, he locked
himself away in either the Chancellery in Berlin or his mountain home in
Berchtesgaden.
General Ludwig Beck resigned from the army after Germany defeated Austria.
He led the conspiracy against Hitler within the armed forces, together with Karl
Goerdeler. They made an unsuccessful attempt to assassinate Hitler in March
1943.
The Bomb Plot took place in July 1944. The aim of Operation Valkyrie was to kill
Hitler and take control of Berlin using the army.
On 20 July 1944, Colonel Claus von Staffenburg, a senior officer in the army,
left a leather bag under a table in Hitler's headquarters in east Berlin.
When Hitler arrived, Staffenburg left the room and the bomb exploded.
So what?
20
What?
Hitler signed a Concordat with the Pope in 1933, agreeing to leave the Roman Catholic
Church alone if it stayed out of politics - so most Catholics were happy to accept the
Nazi regime.
Hitler tried to get all Protestant Churches to unite as one official Reich Church which
was headed by Bishop Ludwig Muller. Many Germans went along with this as long as the
Nazis did not interfere too much.
There was some opposition from the churches; the Catholic Bishop Galen criticised the
Nazis. Dietrich Bonhoeffer and Martin Niemoller formed the alternative protestant
church, the Confessional Church. Niemoller was imprisoned in a concentration camp from
1938-1945. Bonhoeffer worked for the intelligence services against Hitler during the
war until his arrest in 1942. He was hanged in 1945.
So What?
Control of the media, propaganda and censorship meant that Nazis had complete control
over society as well as over government. Nazi policies affected every aspect of peoples
lives and in relation to many people, especially the young, the Nazis influenced what
people thought as well as did. It was this level of control and indoctrination that
enabled the Nazis to carry out the atrocities against the Jews and minorities both
before and during the war. The German people were conditioned not to question the
regime.
Key issue: To what extent did Germans benefit from Nazi rule in the
1930s?
Content Focus:
21
So What?
Production rose, especially of oil, steel, coal and explosives and unemployment fell from
nearly 6 million to virtually nothing. The growth was dependant on preparation for war;
Hitler built up the armed forces (e.g. conscription took 1 million unemployed). The
soldiers needed equipment, so this set steel mills, coal mines and factories back into
production. The Luftwaffe gave jobs to fitters, engineers and designers. In many ways
it worked. BUT businesses were strictly controlled; they could be told to make
something different/ were not allowed to raise wages/ workers could be sent to other
factories. There was tension in the economy which was focused on preparing for war
and the needs of the people; Goering said: Iron makes an empire strong; butter only
makes people fat. This is sometimes referred to as the guns v butter debate.
What?
In some ways there is evidence that standards of living did improve for the German
people. The lawlessness of the early 1930s was controlled and German society was more
orderly and law-abiding; few people locked their doors. People could travel more easily
due to the improved autobahns. Even propaganda had a positive effect as frequent
22
ceremonies, rallies, colour and excitement to peoples lives and gave people hope. Though
racist, the Nazi racial philosophy gave people self-belief.
However, wages fell, and strikers could be shot - the Nazis worked closely with the
businessmen to make sure that the workforce were as controlled as possible. The
improvements in law and order were at the expense of individual freedoms such as the
right to free speech and thought.
Women in Nazi Germany were to have a very specific role bringing up children. The Law
for the Encouragement of Marriage of 1933 law stated that all newly married couples
would get a government loan of 1000 marks which was about 9 months average income.
800,000 newly weds took up this offer. This loan was not to be simply paid back. The
birth of one child meant that 25% of the loan did not have to be paid back. Two children
meant that 50% of the loan need not be paid back. Four children meant that the entire
loan was cleared. A booming population was needed with young boys being groomed into
being soldiers and young girls being groomed into being young mothers.
Womens lives were controlled. They were not expected to wear make-up or trousers and
only flat shoes were expected to be worn.
Women were not expected to work in Nazi Germany . In Weimar Germany there had
been 100,000 female teachers, 3000 female doctors and 13,000 female musicians.
Within months of Hitler coming to power, many female doctors and civil servants were
sacked. This was followed by female teachers and lawyers. By the start of the Second
World War, very few German women were in fulltime work.
Art and Culture
All culture had to be German - eg music had to be Beethoven or Wagner (who was an
anti-Semite) or German folk songs - or Nazi - eg all actors had to be members of the
Nazi party/ only books by approved authors could be read. The Nazis held bookburnings of un-Nazi books and all architecture and art had to conform to the
requirements of the Reich Ministry.
So What?
Some people did experience improvements in their standard of living and unemployment
did decrease under the Nazis but material improvements were at the expense of
freedom and control of every aspect of peoples lives. Most importantly, all aspects of
Nazi policy were aimed at preparing Germany for war and purging it of non-desirables
and ethnic groups that were non-Aryan.
Racial persecution: the Jews and other alien groups, e.g. gypsies.
What?
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The Jews in Nazi Germany suffered appallingly after January 1933. Some rich Jews
could afford to leave Nazi Germany (or were forced to) but many could not. Thugs in the
SA and SS were given a free hand in their treatment of the Jews.
Once in power, Hitler used his position to launch a campaign against the Jews that
culminated in the Holocaust after 1942. Hitler blamed the Jews for all the misfortunes
that had befallen Germany the loss of the First World War was the result of a Jewish
conspiracy the Treaty of Versailles was also a Jewish conspiracy designed to bring
Germany to her knees the hyperinflation of 1923 was the result of an international
Jewish attempt to destroy Germany
After January 1933, the Jews became the "Untermenschen" - the sub-humans. Nazi
thugs stopped Germans from shopping in Jewish shops. By 1934, all Jewish shops were
marked with the yellow Star of David or had the word "Juden" written on the window.
SA men stood outside the shops to deter anyone form entering. This was not necessarily
a violent approach to the Jews - that was to come later - but it was an attempt to
economically bankrupt them and destroy what they had spent years building up.
On buses, trains and park benches, Jews had to sit on seats marked for them. Children
at schools were taught specifically anti-Semitic ideas. Jewish school children were
openly ridiculed by teachers and the bullying of Jews in the playground by other pupils
went unpunished. If the Jewish children responded by not wanting to go to school, then
that served a purpose in itself and it also gave the Nazi propagandists a reason to
peddle the lie that Jewish children were inherently lazy and could not be bothered to go
to school.
In 1935, the Nuremberg Laws were passed. The Jews lost their right to be German
citizens and marriage between Jews and non-Jews was forbidden. It was after this law
that the violence against the Jew really openly started. Those that could pay a fine were
allowed to leave the country. Many could not and many shops refused to sell food to
those who remained. Medicines were also difficult to get hold of as chemists would not
sell to Jews.
1938 Krystalnacht - The Night of the Broken Glass
In November 1938, a Nazi 'diplomat' was shot dead by a Jew in Paris. Hitler ordered a
seven day campaign of terror against the Jews in Germany to be organised by Himmler
and the SS. On the 10th November, the campaign started. 10,000 shops owned by Jews
were destroyed and their contents stolen. Homes and synagogues were set on fire and
left to burn. The fire brigades showed their loyalty to Hitler by assuming that the
buildings would burn down anyway, so why try to prevent it? A huge amount of damage
was done to Jewish property but the Jewish community was ordered to pay a one billion
mark fine to pay for the eventual clear-up. Jews were forced to scrub the streets clean.
The final solution was agreed at the Wannsee Conference in 1942 when the Nazis
discussed using Xyclon B (the deadly gas) to begin a programme of extermination of the
Jews. This is outside the remit of your course and you will not be asked questions about
concentration camps and death squads.
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