Top Banner
The 1923 Hyperinflation
17

The 1923 Hyperinflation. Aims: Explain what the word ‘hyperinflation’ means. Identify the effects of the 1923 hyperinflation.

Dec 15, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: The 1923 Hyperinflation. Aims: Explain what the word ‘hyperinflation’ means. Identify the effects of the 1923 hyperinflation.

The 1923 Hyperinflation

Page 2: The 1923 Hyperinflation. Aims: Explain what the word ‘hyperinflation’ means. Identify the effects of the 1923 hyperinflation.

Aims:

• Explain what the word ‘hyperinflation’ means.

• Identify the effects of the 1923 hyperinflation.

Page 3: The 1923 Hyperinflation. Aims: Explain what the word ‘hyperinflation’ means. Identify the effects of the 1923 hyperinflation.

Inflation

• Inflation is when there is a general rise in prices – this causes the value of money to fall.

• The inflation rate in a country is usually measured on a yearly basis.

• Hyperinflation is when prices rise rapidly in a short space of time.

Page 4: The 1923 Hyperinflation. Aims: Explain what the word ‘hyperinflation’ means. Identify the effects of the 1923 hyperinflation.

The Treaty of Versailles

• Germany was forced to pay for all the damage caused during the war. This was known as Reparations.

• In 1921 the amount was fixed at £6,600 million. This would take 66 years to play.

• In 1922 the Germans did not make their reparations payments.

• At the beginning of 1923 they announced that they couldn’t afford to pay any more.

Page 5: The 1923 Hyperinflation. Aims: Explain what the word ‘hyperinflation’ means. Identify the effects of the 1923 hyperinflation.

The Invasion of the Ruhr• The French and Belgians

decided to take what was owed to them by force.

• In January 1923, 60,000 French and Belgian soldiers marched into the Ruhr.

• The Ruhr was a rich industrial area full of coalmines and factories.

• The German government ordered its workers in the Ruhr to go on strike. This was called the policy of ‘Passive Resistance’.

• Around 150,000 people were thrown out of their homes as a punishment.

Page 6: The 1923 Hyperinflation. Aims: Explain what the word ‘hyperinflation’ means. Identify the effects of the 1923 hyperinflation.

Hyperinflation 1923

Germany cannot afford to pay reparations

French and Belgian troops invade the Ruhr

Government orders the workers to go on strike – ‘passive resistance’.

Government prints money to pay the workers in the Ruhr

The workers began to spend money quickly – shopkeepers put prices up

Prices were rising so fast across Germany - hyperinflation

Workers were paid twice a day and money became virtually worthless

Government calls off passive resistance and prints a new currency - Retenmark

Page 7: The 1923 Hyperinflation. Aims: Explain what the word ‘hyperinflation’ means. Identify the effects of the 1923 hyperinflation.

Effects of Hyperinflation

Page 8: The 1923 Hyperinflation. Aims: Explain what the word ‘hyperinflation’ means. Identify the effects of the 1923 hyperinflation.

Who Was Adolf Hitler?

Aim:

• Identify the key events in the early years of Hitler’s life.

Adolf Hitler is one of the most infamous men in history. To understand how he became leader of Germany you must first understand his background. What do you know about Hitler so far?

Page 9: The 1923 Hyperinflation. Aims: Explain what the word ‘hyperinflation’ means. Identify the effects of the 1923 hyperinflation.

Adolf Hitler’s Early Life 1889-1919

1889

1903

1905 1918

1914

1913

1906

1907

1919

Beside each date write a brief sentence explaining what happened in each year.

Page 10: The 1923 Hyperinflation. Aims: Explain what the word ‘hyperinflation’ means. Identify the effects of the 1923 hyperinflation.

Adolf Hitler – His Early Life

• 1889 – Born in Brunau, Austria• 1903 – Father died• 1905 – Failed exams and left school• 1906 – Mother died• 1907 – Went to Vienna, failed exams for

Art School, lived on the streets• 1913 – Left Austria to avoid military service• 1914 – Joined German army when war

broke out. Won six medals for bravery• 1918 – In hospital when the war ended.• 1919 – Worked for the government as an

army spy investigating new political groups.

Page 11: The 1923 Hyperinflation. Aims: Explain what the word ‘hyperinflation’ means. Identify the effects of the 1923 hyperinflation.

Who Was Adolf Hitler?

• Hitler was a vicious racist who was filled with hatred from an early age.

• Hitler had a good family background and had led a perfectly normal life up to 1919.

• Hitler was a brave man who had had a tough life up to 1919.

Page 12: The 1923 Hyperinflation. Aims: Explain what the word ‘hyperinflation’ means. Identify the effects of the 1923 hyperinflation.

The Nazi Party

Aims:

• Identify the main beliefs of the Nazis.• Examine how Hitler changed the

party in the 1920s.

Page 13: The 1923 Hyperinflation. Aims: Explain what the word ‘hyperinflation’ means. Identify the effects of the 1923 hyperinflation.

The Nazi Party

After Hitler became the leader of the Nazis party he introduced a number of important changes:

• A new name – National Socialist German Workers’ Party – NSDAP or Nazis.

• The swastika became the party’s symbol.• Hitler set up a private army – the Sturm

Abteilung (SA).

Page 14: The 1923 Hyperinflation. Aims: Explain what the word ‘hyperinflation’ means. Identify the effects of the 1923 hyperinflation.

The Twenty-Five Point Programme

• The Treaty of Versailles should be destroyed.

• The Government must provide jobs for everyone and everyone must work.

• There should be higher old age pensions.

• There should be a large army.

• There should be strong, tough central government for Germany, led by one man.

Page 15: The 1923 Hyperinflation. Aims: Explain what the word ‘hyperinflation’ means. Identify the effects of the 1923 hyperinflation.

All Germans all over the world must be united under one leader

All Jews and Communist, must be destroyed, as they are the cause of many of Germany’s problems including their loss in the Great War

The Germans are a master race of super-humans called Aryans. The must have whatever land they need to breed and expand

The Treaty of Versailles is unfair and too harsh. It must be ignored

Page 16: The 1923 Hyperinflation. Aims: Explain what the word ‘hyperinflation’ means. Identify the effects of the 1923 hyperinflation.

The Munich Putsch 1923

• When hyperinflation was at its worst, Hitler and the Nazi party tried to seize power in November 1923.

• He burst into a meeting at a Beer Hall in Munich and said he was going to take over Bavaria and then rest of Germany.

• The Nazis had 2000 supporters and the support of General Ludendorff.

• The next day armed police were sent in.

• 16 Nazis were killed, Hitler and Ludendorff were arrested and put on trial for treason.

Page 17: The 1923 Hyperinflation. Aims: Explain what the word ‘hyperinflation’ means. Identify the effects of the 1923 hyperinflation.

The Outcome• Hitler used his trial to his

advantage – everything he said was reported in the press.

• This was the perfect opportunity to put across his views.

• Ludendorff was set free and Hitler was sent to prison for 5 years – he could have been executed!!

•Hitler served 9 months in prison. During this time he wrote a book called ‘Mein Kampf’ (My Struggle).•He realised that a new strategy was needed – the Nazis would have to win peoples’ votes at elections in order to achieve power.