null
US
Sign In
Sign Up for Free
Sign Up
We have detected that Javascript is not enabled in your browser. The dynamic nature of our site means that Javascript must be enabled to function properly. Please read our
terms and conditions
for more information.
Next up
Copy and Edit
You need to log in to complete this action!
Register for Free
909856
The Weimar Republic 1918-33
Description
A mind map summarising all the key details of the Weimar Republic 1918-33 for EdExcel GCSE History A Unit 2: Modern World Depth Study - Germany.
No tags specified
history
a-level
Mind Map by
Matthew T
, updated more than 1 year ago
More
Less
Created by
Matthew T
over 10 years ago
888
19
0
Resource summary
The Weimar Republic 1918-33
Origins
Abdication of Kaiser Wilhelm II
Revolution with sailors in Kiel
"Turnip winter" 1917-18 - little food
Defeat to Allies imminent
Flu epidemic
Chancellor Ebert signed the armistice
Weimar Constitution
Bicameral - Reichstag and Reichsrat
Secret ballot + universal suffrage (men + women over 20)
President - head of state, Chancellor - head of affairs
Proportional representation - although each vote counted, led to small parties + coalitions (weak governments)
Article 48 - allowed President to rule by decree
Army + judges opposed to republic
Early weaknesses, 1919-20
Treaty of Versailles
Association of government with humiliation
"November Criminals" - nickname from opposition
Dolchstoss - government "stabbed in the back" German army
Reparations further crippled economy - especially as Saarland had been removed
Spartacist Revolution 1919
Wanted a similar revolution to Bolshevik revolution in 1917
Communist - left-wing
Karl Liebknecht + Rosa Luxemburg took power in Berlin + Baltic ports
Bavaria: independent socialist state led by Kurt Eisner
Crushed by the Freikorps (ex-soldiers)
Kapp Putsch 1920
Nationalist - right-wing
Wanted a strong, autocratic government
Wolfgang Kapp + Freikorps seized power in Berlin
Government fled but encouraged strikes - capital stopped
Kapp had little support and fled
Economic crisis, 1923
Ruhr invasion
Germany missed second reparations payment
France + Belgium sent troops to take goods in kind
Passive resistance encouraged - invasion stopped
But economy stopped too...
Hyperinflation
Due to passive resistance, more + more money printed
By 1923, $1 = 4.2bn marks
Cost of living outstripped income - no food or fuel
Workers paid twice/day
Savings and pensions worthless
Businessmen and borrowers profited
Stresemann's reforms in the Golden Era
Stresemann - German Chancellor
Economic reform
Rentenmark - temporary replacement of old mark
Reset Reichsmark by gold standard
Dawes Plan 1924 - US loans in exchange for sliding scale of reparations
Young Plan 1929 - reparations cut by 67%
Leading industrial power 1930
Political reform
Governments more stable
Moderate parties (Social Democrats, Centre Party etc.)
Extremists unpopular (Nazis, Communists etc.)
Foreign policy reform
1925 Locarno Pacts - borders guaranteed
1926 entered League of Nations - permanent seat on Council
1928 Kellogg-Briand Pact - peaceful solutions to dispute
Cultural flowering
Film: Marlene Dietrich, Fritz Lang
Philosophy: Theodor Adorno, Martin Heidegger
Science: Werner Heisenberg, Albert Einstein
Art: Walter Gropius (Bauhaus), Otto Dix, Paul Klee
Music: Arnold Schoenberg
Literature and theatre: Erich Maria Remarque, Bertolt Brecht
Problems 1924-33
Dependent on US loans - "dancing on a volcano"
Agricultural output fell
President Hindenburg opposed to Republic
Wall Street Crash 1929 - loans recalled
Unemployment rose to 4mn by 1930
Extremist parties (particularly Nazis) rose to power
Show full summary
Hide full summary
Want to create your own
Mind Maps
for
free
with GoConqr?
Learn more
.
Similar
World War II Notebook
jenniferfish2014
Implications of War- Causes, Practices, and Effects Unit
AlisonH
Causes and Practices of War Quiz
AlisonH
The Weimar Republic, 1919-1929
shann.w
Why the Nazis Achieved Power in 1933 - essay intro/conclusion
Denise Draper
Why did Chamberlain's Policy of Appeasement fail to prevent the outbreak of war in 1939?
Leah Firmstone
Weimar Revision
Tom Mitchell
Hitler's Chancellorship
c7jeremy
Hitler and the Nazi Party (1919-23)
Adam Collinge
Germany 1918-39
Cam Burke
The Berlin Crisis
Alina A
Browse Library