Top Banner
The Road to War: 1919- 1939
28

The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

Dec 28, 2015

Download

Documents

Jessica Hodges
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 Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

The Road to War: 1919-1939

Page 2: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

Europe 1919-1938

Page 3: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

German Geographic Problems--World War I

• short Atlantic coast• narrow access to the North Sea• the Alps limit movement south• Britain controls Gibraltar and the seas.• Germany had inadequate resources to

fight a two front war for very long.

Page 4: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

German Geographic Problems--World War I

Page 5: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

The Treaty of Versailles

• Austria-Hungary was dissolved• Russia became communist• Germany loses land to France

and Poland

Page 6: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

The Treaty of Versailles

• This infuriated many Germans, including a young corporal named Adolf Hitler

Page 7: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

Hitler in Prison• By 1924, Hitler led

the National Socialist German Workers Party (NSDAP) or Nazis

• led an unsuccessful coup attempt

• sent to jail• wrote Mein Kampf--

or My Struggle.

Page 8: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

Mein Kampf• tells his master plan• Germans are Aryan

race

– the Master Race. – others, esp. Jews and

Slavs, are “sub-human.”

• blames the Jews

– for Germany’s defeat – links them to

communism.

• “Lebensraum”

Page 9: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

Lebensraum• “room to live” in the East • occupied by Slavs, Jews, Poles, and other

“sub-humans.”

Page 10: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

Hitler in Power

• By 1935, Hitler was “führer” or leader of Germany.

Page 11: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

The Rhineland, 1936

• No German troops allowed under the Treaty of Versailles

• Hitler marches in

Page 12: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

The Rhineland, 1936

• Hitler cancels the Treaty of Versailles

• Begins to rearm Germany

• British and French do nothing

– Want a strong Germany as a buffer between them and Soviet Union

– Felt Hitler was the lesser of two evils

Page 13: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

German Geographic Problems

• couldn’t win a two front war• Britain & France might object to plans• Britain controlled the seas.

Western Front

Eastern Front

Page 14: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

Lebensraum meant taking Poland

Page 15: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

Germany and Poland

• short border with Poland • Poles would fight fanatically.

Page 16: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

Czechoslovakia

• Hitler wanted to go around the Polish defenses.

• That meant Czechoslovakia.

Page 17: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

Czechoslovakia

• Sudetenland • mountains occupied by Germans• Czechs had it heavily fortified

Page 18: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

Austria

• would go through Austria

Page 19: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

The Anschluss of Austria--March 1938

• Austrian Nazi party wanted to join Germany.

• Italy and Spain abandoned Austria • Hitler forces Austrians to give up

planned elections • Nazi put in charge of the gov’t.• the Wehrmacht--the German army--

asked to “restore order.”

Page 20: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

The Sudetenland--Autumn 1938

• Hitler said that Germans were being persecuted

• should be part of “Greater Germany”• The Czechs--strong army and mountains

Page 21: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

The Sudetenland--Autumn 1938

• The Czechs asked for British and French help

• Hitler – said--surrender the Sudetenland or fight.– called the Munich Conference

• Germany, Italy, Britain, and France invited.

• Not Czech. or Soviet Union

Page 22: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

The Sudetenland--Autumn 1938

• Br. Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain and Fr. Premier Eduard Daldier appease Hitler

• agreed to no further expansion

Page 23: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

Appeasement• To allow an aggressor to

take what he wants rather than to fight him.

• was criticized by many, • Chamberlain and Daldier

chose to believe Hitler • The Czechs gave up in

October 1938.

Who’s this??

Page 24: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

March 1939

• March 1939, takes the rest of Czechoslovakia. • British and French again did nothing, but begin to

rearm• Poland and the Soviet Union got scared

Page 25: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

Nazi-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact

• Hitler preparing to invade Poland.

• Britain/France supported Poland

• Nazis talk to Joseph Stalin

• Stalin needed time – purges had killed off his

army officers– “commissars” controlled

officers

Page 26: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

Nazi-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact

• August 1939 – allowed Hitler to

invade Poland

• Stalin – got eastern half of

Poland, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania

– Time to prepare

• Poland would be isolated.

WONDER HOW LONG THE HONEYMOON WILL LAST?

Page 27: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

Poland--August 1939

• Hitler-- Germans in Poland were being persecuted.• staged a fake attack on a radio station

Page 28: The Road to War: 1919-1939 Europe 1919-1938 German Geographic Problems-- World War I short Atlantic coast narrow access to the North Sea the Alps limit.

September 1, 1939

• The Wehrmacht crashes into Poland.