Resentment towards Gov for
signing into such a humiliating
contract
Germans forced to live with and follow the terms of
the Treaty following their defeat in ww1 - if they
resisted, they ran the risk of another war erupting
Germans believed they had
been 'stabbed in the back' by the
'November criminals'
Government had no other
option but to sign into TOV
and were given only a month
to do so
June 28th, 1919
German army faced collapse
Loss of Territory
The Saar Coalfields were given
to France for 15 years due to the
German destruction of the
French coalfields during their
1918 retreat.
Serious blow to
German economy
and loss of natural
resources
Loss of land to Belgium, Denmarck and Poland -
all of Germany's colonies were taken away from
her control and given to her former enemies.
The Appeal of The Nazi
Party and Hitler's
Leadership
By 1930 the Nazis had 108 seats in the
Reichstag
The Economic Crash was the catalyst that
transformed the apeal of the Nazis.
"it was the Great Depression that
put the wind in Hitler's sails." - AJP
Taylor
American Banks demanded
the return of Loans they had
made to Germany following
the Wall Street Crash
Unemployment in Germany rocketed
after the returns and economic crash
and German citizens were desperate
for a saviour to help them out in their
economic chaos.
Although Hitler's Beer Hall Putsch at Munich
failed, his actions gained a great deal of support
and publicity for the Nazi Party
While in prison, Hitler decided that
in order to gain power, he would
campaign for power legally and
destroy the system he desipsed so
much.
Flaws in the Constitution
The Spartacists (or KPD) tried
to start a revolution to create
a new communist Germany in
1919
Spartacist ring was defeated with
great brutality by an aliiance between
the new socialist Gov and gangs of
ex-soldiers called Freikorps.
10 years later the hatred felt by the
communists towards the SPD for
destroying the ring prevented the left
wing from uniting against Hitler in
Elections
Equally
hated by
Right-wing
Kapp Putsch supported by German
Officers and Right also included many
professionals whose early careers
had been spent within the imperial
Germant of the Kaiser
They were very unlikely to support the new
democracy when a crisis arose in the early
1930s
Blamed for Weakening
German Politics
Weimar meant to be fair to all -
but new voting system produced a
series of short-lived, indecisive
Governments
Gave Representation in the
Reichstag to minority parties such
as the Nazi's whose main aim was
to destroy the new Republic
Blamed for
Confusion within the
new democratic
system
Confusion about the
voting system and power
of the President
increased discontent
The System allowed small, extremist parties
to gain some representation in the
Reichstag. Article 48 gave the President the
power to rule in an emergency without
needing approval.
The Use of Propoganda and the SA
By 1930, Nationalist Groups led by
Alfred Hugenberg saw the Nazis
as a possible rute to power
Hitler was happy to use Hugenberg - owner
of most of Germany's new Cinema industry
and hundreds of local Newspapers - to gain
more support for the Nazis
Hitler saw his friendship with
Hugenberg as a way of becoming a
'nationally-known figure very quickly in
a pre-television age'
As unemployment rose towards
6Million, Nazi posters claimed 'Hitler -
Our Last Hope'.
Rallies began to
spread throughout
Germany which were
in support of the Nazi
Party
Many Germans approved of the SA (a
Nazi parliamentary group) attacking
communists.
it appeared to many that the Nazis were a strong,
positive force, especially when compared to the weak
and divided political parties of the Weimer Republic
Economic Crisis
Germany were to pay
£100million per year for
66years as part of the
TOV terms
This was virtually
impossible for Germany
to afford as they now
lacked resources and
land
Severely weakened
the German
Economy
The 1923 Hyperinflation resulted in
the economy's dramatic collapse and
the German Marck became worthless
In Nov 1923, $1 = 4,420
MILLION marcks
M/C families lost everything they had gained
over the years and those on fixed incomes (e.g.
pensions) were unable to survive financially.
It appeared that the Government were
doing little to ease the 1923 crisis and many
german citizens would never forgive the
Weimer Republic for this.
Hitler's Beer Hall Putsch brought a great deal
of publicity to the Nazi Party and support for
them grew largely