Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Munic Putsch 1923
- What happened?
- 1. Hitler assembled the SA. He hoped to take power
by starting a revolution. During the crisis of 1923,
therefore, Hitler plotted with two nationalist politicians
- Kahr and Lossow - to take over Munich.
- 2. But then, on 4 October 1923, Kahr and Lossow called off the
rebellion. This was an impossible situation for Hitler, who had
3,000 troops ready to fight.
- 3. On the night of 8 November 1923, Hitler and 600 storm troopers burst
into a meeting that Kahr and Lossow were holding at the local Beer Hall.
Hitler forced them to agree to rebel - and then let them go home. The SA
took over the army headquarters and the offices of the local newspaper.
- 4. The next day, 9 November 1923, Hitler and his Nazis went into Munich on
what they thought would be a triumphal march to take power. However, Kahr had
called in police and army reinforcements. There was a short scuffle in which the
police killed 16 Nazis. Hitler fled, but was arrested two days later.
- Why did Hitler
attempt the Munic
putsch?
- By 1923, the Nazi party
had 55,000 members
and was stronger than
ever before.
- The Weimar
Republic was
in crisis and
about to
collapse.
- In September 1923,
the Weimar
government had called
off the general strike,
and every German
nationalist was furious
with the government.
- Hitler thought
he would be
helped by
important
nationalist
politicians in
Bavaria.
- Hitler had a huge
army of storm
troopers, but he
knew he would
lose control of
them if he did not
give them
something to do.
- Hitler hoped to copy
Mussolini - the Italian
fascist leader - who
had come to power in
Italy in 1922 by
marching on Rome.
- What were the results
of the Munic Putsch?
- The Nazi party was banned, and Hitler was
prevented from speaking in public until 1927.
- Hitler went to prison,
where he wrote 'Mein
Kampf'. Millions of
Germans read it, and
Hitler's ideas
became very
well-known.
- Hitler decided that he would
never come to power by
revolution; he realised that he
would have to use constitutional
means, so he organised:
- The SS as his personal bodyguard,
which was set up in 1925 It was this
strategy of gaining power legitimately
that eventually brought him to power.
- The Hitler Youth
- Propaganda campaigns
- Mergers with other
right-wing parties
- Local branches of the
party, which tried to get
Nazis elected to the
Reichstag.