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The student will explain conflict and change in Europe to the 21st century.

SS6H7. The student will explain conflict and change in Europe to the 21st century. Political cartoon on the causes that led to World War I. Imperialism.

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The student will explain conflict and change in Europe to the 21st century.

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  1. SS6H7 The student will explain conflict and change in Europe to the 21st century.

  2. Political cartoon on the causes that led to World War I

  3. Imperialism European nations ruled smaller countries, called colonies, and competed with each other to amass more colonies.Germany and Italy decided they wanted a colonial empires like France and Great Britain.

  4. Arms Race The more one nation built up its army and navy, the more other nations felt they had to do the same. Nations needed bigger and better armies and navies to protect their colonies.

  5. Nationalism Nationalism gave groups of subject peoples (those people who were under the control of another country’s government) the idea of forming independent nations of their own.

  6. Alliance System Central PowersGermany Austro-Hungarian Empire Ottoman Empire Triple EntenteBritain France Russia For Twenty years, the nations of Europe had been making alliances. The danger of these alliances was that an argument between two countries could draw all the other nations into a fight.

  7. Assassination of Franz Ferdinand On July 28, 1914, Gavrilo Princip, a member of the Serbian Black Hand, assassinated Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary in Sarajevo. In response, Austria-Hungary issued the July Ultimatum to Serbia which made demands that no sovereign nation could accept (they blamed Serbia for the assassination) The Serbian government refused to comply and the alliance system mobilized with Russia coming to the aid of Serbia. This led Germany to come to the aid of Austria-Hungary and then France to support Russia.

  8. Major developments following World War I: The Russian Revolution The Treaty of Versailles Worldwide depression The rise of Nazism.

  9. The Russian Revolution 1904-1917 – A series of Crises 1905 – Russo-Japanese War WWI – 1914-1917 Japan wins some key islands once owned by Russia An unmitigated disaster for Russia. Weak generals, poorly equipped troops (some sent with no gun!) 4 million Russian soldiers die in the first year. The war drained the government money reserves and food shortages begin. Bloody Sunday (January 22, 1905) Peasants approach the Czar’s winter palace in St. Petersburg with a petition asking for better work conditions and food. Troops opened fire on the crowd of women and children and as many as 1000 die. Rasputin The Duma Nicholas II goes to the front, his wife turns to a holy man/psychic for help in running the government. Russians are furious about this. a legislative body made by the Czar in response to national unrest – he dissolved it weeks later. Others met, yet did nothing. Czar Nicholas II is overthrown. He and his family are executed.

  10. The Treaty of Versailles In 1919, this treaty put an official end to World War I. Since Germany was the loser, they had to agree to its provisions: Restricted German armed forces Created the League of Nations Loss of Territory The purpose of the organization was to arbitrate conflicts between nations before they lead to war. Loss of German colonies around the world, and loss of German territory to France, Denmark, and Poland. Reparations It required that Germany accept responsibility for the war and was thus obliged to pay large amounts of compensation to other countries. Officially put at $33,000,000,000, a sum that many economists deemed to be excessive. The economic problems that the payments brought are cited as one of the causes of the rise of dictator Adolf Hitler, and inevitably led to the outbreak World War II.

  11. Worldwide Depression Stock Market crash of 1929 – the financial affects were felt around the world. Street scene on Black Thursday, Oct. 24, 1929, the day the New York stock market crashed and the day that many mark as the beginning of the Great Depression. Depression Work Sheet http://www.chs.chicousd.org/teachers/DanielWebb/documents/Chapter_15/Section_2/Study_Guide_15_2.pdf

  12. The Rise of Nazism After the defeat in the First World War, Germany becomes a democracy. Social Democrats and Liberal parties form the new government. The enormous costs of the war cause rampant inflation. Unemployment rises to over five million. Large parts of the population live in fear of falling back into 19th-century poverty. Nationalist parties and the newly founded National Socialist German Workers Party (NSDAP) blame the democratic constitution, the parties supporting the new republic and the unjust provisions of the peace treaty of Versailles for the chaos.

  13. The Nazi Party put forth these ideals.

  14. The Nazi party under the leadership of Adolph Hitler gained more votes in every election. He appealed to the poor and the powerless. They promised to "restore honor" to Germans, to renew political order and to bring back "work and bread." "Women! Millions of men without work. Millions of children without a future. Save the German family. Vote for Adolf Hitler!"

  15. Explain the impact of WWII in terms of the Holocaust, the origins of the Cold War, and the rise of Superpowers. Movie poster: The Eternal Jew German Propaganda The United States and the Soviet Union Vie for power.

  16. Most Nazi propaganda was directed at Jews. This early image appeared in the Nazi magazine Der Stürmer in 1930, before the Nazis came into power. It states “The year has ended, the struggle continues”. In such propaganda, Germans are shown as a strong, handsome and superior race. Jews are shown as ugly, weak, deceitful and conniving.

  17. Holocaust Hitler blamed Germany’s problems on the Jews. As Hitler's plan unfolded, mass arrests of Jews were ordered. Men, women and children of all ages were herded into town squares and railway yards in cities throughout Europe. Adults with a trade and in good physical health were taken to work camps where they were forced to work as slaves to supply the German army with food, clothing, weapons and ammunition. Adults who were sick or too weak to work were taken to death camps where they were either hanged, shot or gassed to death by the thousands. Their bodies, stripped of clothing, jewelry and even the gold fillings in their teeth, were either dumped and buried in mass graves or cremated in large ovens and open pits. Many school-aged children suffered the same fate as the sick and elderly. Some were spared the death camps, but their fate was just as horrible. They were used as subjects in all kinds of medical experiments. Some were given germs that caused diseases, and once sick, injected with experimental medicines to study how the human body would respond. An estimated 12 million people died in the holocaust. http://www.cdli.ca/CITE/ns_camps.htm The full story.

  18. Europe became divided after World War II

  19. Origins of the Cold War The cold war began with mistrust between the Soviet Union and the western democracies especially the United States. So why were these two super powers so distrustful of the other?

  20. Causes of the Cold War * American fear of communist attack * Truman’s dislike of Stalin * Russia’s fear of the American's atomic bomb  * Russia’s dislike of capitalism * Russia’s actions in the Soviet zone of Germany * America’s refusal to share nuclear secrets * Russia’s expansion west into Eastern Europe + broken election promises * Russia’s fear of American attack * Russia’s need for a secure western border * Russia’s aim of spreading world communism

  21. The Rise of Superpowers To be a superpower, a nation needs to have a strong economy, an overpowering military, immense international political power and, a strong national ideology. United States Soviet Union British Empire British Commonwealth World Superpowers in 1945

  22. Explain how the collapse of the Soviet Union led to the end of the Cold War and German reunification. Reasons for the collapse of the Soviet Union First, the Soviets underestimated the degree to which the non-Russian ethnic groups in the country (which was more than fifty percent of the total population) would resist assimilation into a Russianized State. Second, their economic planning failed to meet the needs of the State, which was caught up in a vicious arms race with the United States (more spending on military needs than the peoples needs). This led to gradual economic decline, eventually necessitating the need for reform. Finally, the ideology of Communism, which the Soviet Government worked to instill in the hearts and minds of its population, never took firm root, and eventually lost whatever influence it had originally carried. In December of 1991, as the world watched in amazement, the Soviet Union disintegrated into fifteen separate countries.

  23. German Reunification From 1945 until 1990, Germany was divided into two countries: East Germany and West Germany. East Germany had a Communist government and West Germany was a democracy. The city of Berlin was also divided. East Berlin became the capital of East Germany and West Berlin was a part of West Germany. Unification means making two or more parts as one. The German reunification took place on October 3, 1990, when East Germany again became a part of the Federal Republic of Germany. The wall that divided East and West Berlin, a symbol of the Iron Curtain that divided the country, came down. People were now free to travel all over Germany.

  24. The End Created by Debra Harrington – Yeager Middle School

  25. References • http://www.geocities.com/SouthBeach/Palms/2460/causes.html • http://www.cim.edu/download/dlEvRevRusOutline.pdf • http://encyclopedia.kids.net.au/page/tr/Treaty_of_Versailles • http://images.encarta.msn.com/xrefmedia/aencmed/targets/maps/mhi/00157eea.gif • http://www.coldwar.org/articles/90s/fall_of_the_soviet_union.asp • http://www.studyworld.com/newsite/ReportEssay/History/General%5CRise_of_Superpowers_After_WWII-81.htm • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Superpower_map_1945.PNG • http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/what%20was%20the%20cold%20war.htm • http://crookedtimber.org/wp-content/uploads/2007/04/versailles.jpg • http://www.annefrankguide.net/en-US/content/struggle.jpg • http://www.ushmm.org/propaganda/assets/images/500x/poster-women-save-family.jpg

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