Wednesday, May 22, 2019
Treaty of Versailles and the Nazi Rise
The Treaty of Versailles played a significant role in plentiful the German nation a reason to elect into power the Nazis and their ideas on nationalism. The Treaty essentially laid beak on Ger some for causing the First World War, which historians have come to conclude was a blatant untruth that humiliated the Germans. Germany had 13 percent of its land interpreted away along with 10 percent of the population, its army reduced to a maximum of 100 thousand soldiers including police and other security officials, submarines were banned from its nautical fleet and massive reparations amounted to multiple billions of British pounds.Between Germanys forced agreement in May of 1919 and the peak of the great depression in 1930, little of the undue reparations were ever made. It is during this time that Germans had come to realize they would be under an impossible debt for decades, leaving the general populous to put great faith in the ideas of Adolf Hitler.His blame for the economys down fall rested on the Jews in political power for which their actions, so thoughtless of the true German supremacy, had kept Germany in economical plunder for so many years. His plan for swift economic recovery through the use of military power and authority gave hope to so many Germans who were starving for a powerful Germany, one that would not stand for French and British jurisdiction. Hitler used these ideas to assure the people that Germany would be back on its feet, and the people trusted him.It is said that there existed a belief within the German people that the powers of the Nazi party could be retracted if ever it was to escalate turn up of control, but such a belief had surpassed feasibility as soon as he been elected chancellor in 1933 and established the Third Reich. German Economy in the 1920s, Daniel Castillo, Dec. 2003, http//www. history. ucsb. edu/faculty/marcuse/classes/33d/projects/1920s/Econ20s. htm Treaty of Versailles, A&E Television Networks, accessed October 23, 2012, http//www. history. com/topics/treaty-of-versailles
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