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1 min read•june 18, 2024
📖 AMSCO p.503 - p.507
Term | Definition + Significance |
Adolf Hitler | German Chancellor who ruled from 1933 to 1945, aggressive foreign policies caused World War II. Hitler believed in the superiority of the “pure Aryan” race and therefore persecuted Jewish people and other minorities. |
Neville Chamberlain | British Prime Minister from 1937 to 1940, known for his policy of appeasement toward Germany. During the Munich Agreement, he was involved in allowing Hitler to annex Sudetenland to avoid war. |
Weimar Republic | The democratic government was established in Germany, which existed from 1919 to 1933. The republic raced political and social unrest as well as economic challenges which contributed to Hitler’s rise to power. |
Sudetenland | Region in Czechoslovakia that under the Munich Agreement Hitler was allowed to annex. |
Danzig | Polish port that Hitler used to invade all of Poland which triggered World War II. |
Nuremberg Laws | A series of anti-Semitic laws enacted by the Nazis in 1935 that discriminated against Jewish people in Germany. The laws took away citizenship and the rise of Jewish people in an attempt to push them out of German society. |
Kristallnacht | Known as the “Night of Broken Glass,” on November 9 to 10 in 1938 Nazis in Germany and Austria orchestrated attacks on Jewish-owned businesses, synagogues, and homes. They also arrested a large number of Jewish people. |
Lebensraum | Means “living space,” a term Hitler used to justify expanding as he claimed that Germany needed more land to accommodate the growth of the “Aryan race.” |
Anschluss | A term referring to the annexation of Austria into Nazi Germany in 1938, violated the Treaty of Versailles and encouraged Hitler to continue expanding. |
Munich Agreement | 1938, An agreement signed by Germany, the United Kingdom, France, and Italy which allowed Germany to annex Sudetenland. |
Rome-Berlin Axis | A coalition formed between Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy, an agreement of mutual support. |
Anti-Comintern Pact | A pact between Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan in 1936, against the spread of Communism. The pact is named after their intent to the Communist International, an organization that promoted an international communist revolution. |
Axis Powers | Coalition led by Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, Imperial Japan, and some other countries. |
German-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact | Pact signed in 1939 between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union, divided Eastern Europe between the two and allowed Hitler to invade Poland with Soviet support. |
Nazis | National Socialist German Workers’ Party, which was a national, racist, and anti-Semitic group known as the Nazis. |
Reichstag | German parliament building, known for the fire in 1933 which was orchestrated by the Nazis to incite fear into the Germans. |
Third Reich | Refers to the Nazi regime, Hitler’s vision for the third glorious phase in Germany's history. |
Scientific Racism | Pseudoscientific theory that certain racial groups are genetically superior to others. |
Anti-Semitism | Discrimination against Jewish people based on their ethnicity or religious beliefs. |
Aryans | Terms referring to people who speak Indo-European languages recreated to signify a superior Germanic race according to Hitler. |
Appeasement | A policy of granting the aggressor their wants in the hope of avoiding war, often associated with Neville Chamberlain and his policy toward Hitler before World War II. |
Ultranationalism | Extreme nationalism which promotes the interest of one group over everyone else. |
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1 min read•june 18, 2024
📖 AMSCO p.503 - p.507
Term | Definition + Significance |
Adolf Hitler | German Chancellor who ruled from 1933 to 1945, aggressive foreign policies caused World War II. Hitler believed in the superiority of the “pure Aryan” race and therefore persecuted Jewish people and other minorities. |
Neville Chamberlain | British Prime Minister from 1937 to 1940, known for his policy of appeasement toward Germany. During the Munich Agreement, he was involved in allowing Hitler to annex Sudetenland to avoid war. |
Weimar Republic | The democratic government was established in Germany, which existed from 1919 to 1933. The republic raced political and social unrest as well as economic challenges which contributed to Hitler’s rise to power. |
Sudetenland | Region in Czechoslovakia that under the Munich Agreement Hitler was allowed to annex. |
Danzig | Polish port that Hitler used to invade all of Poland which triggered World War II. |
Nuremberg Laws | A series of anti-Semitic laws enacted by the Nazis in 1935 that discriminated against Jewish people in Germany. The laws took away citizenship and the rise of Jewish people in an attempt to push them out of German society. |
Kristallnacht | Known as the “Night of Broken Glass,” on November 9 to 10 in 1938 Nazis in Germany and Austria orchestrated attacks on Jewish-owned businesses, synagogues, and homes. They also arrested a large number of Jewish people. |
Lebensraum | Means “living space,” a term Hitler used to justify expanding as he claimed that Germany needed more land to accommodate the growth of the “Aryan race.” |
Anschluss | A term referring to the annexation of Austria into Nazi Germany in 1938, violated the Treaty of Versailles and encouraged Hitler to continue expanding. |
Munich Agreement | 1938, An agreement signed by Germany, the United Kingdom, France, and Italy which allowed Germany to annex Sudetenland. |
Rome-Berlin Axis | A coalition formed between Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy, an agreement of mutual support. |
Anti-Comintern Pact | A pact between Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan in 1936, against the spread of Communism. The pact is named after their intent to the Communist International, an organization that promoted an international communist revolution. |
Axis Powers | Coalition led by Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, Imperial Japan, and some other countries. |
German-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact | Pact signed in 1939 between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union, divided Eastern Europe between the two and allowed Hitler to invade Poland with Soviet support. |
Nazis | National Socialist German Workers’ Party, which was a national, racist, and anti-Semitic group known as the Nazis. |
Reichstag | German parliament building, known for the fire in 1933 which was orchestrated by the Nazis to incite fear into the Germans. |
Third Reich | Refers to the Nazi regime, Hitler’s vision for the third glorious phase in Germany's history. |
Scientific Racism | Pseudoscientific theory that certain racial groups are genetically superior to others. |
Anti-Semitism | Discrimination against Jewish people based on their ethnicity or religious beliefs. |
Aryans | Terms referring to people who speak Indo-European languages recreated to signify a superior Germanic race according to Hitler. |
Appeasement | A policy of granting the aggressor their wants in the hope of avoiding war, often associated with Neville Chamberlain and his policy toward Hitler before World War II. |
Ultranationalism | Extreme nationalism which promotes the interest of one group over everyone else. |
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