Officially beginning in 1926, Hitler sought to win the children of Germany to his side through the enticing program Hitlerjugend, or Hitler Youth. As its popularity grew, the Nazi Party initiated new groups. The Bund Deutsher Mädel (BDM) for girls aged 14-18 began in 1930. The Jungvolk and Jungmädel provided a place for boys and girls aged 10-14 years old. Only sworn in on April 20th as a birthday to Hitler, children entering the Jungvolk chanted “QOUTE”. To enter these programs, the Nazi party required
Compare and contrast the reasons for the rise of Mussolini and Hitler. Benito Mussolini and Adolf Hitler were totalitarian leaders who rose into power after the end of the First World War. Mussolini seized full power in 1922 after the “March to Rome” while Hitler took control over Germany as its Chancellor in 1933. Being dictators who had become the leader at the helm in the same era, they shared many similarities between the reasons for their rise. Meanwhile, there were still some differences behind
Prompt 1: Compare and contrast the rise of and consolidation of power under Hitler with the rise of and consolidation of power under Mussolini with specific reference to conditions that led to their authoritarian states, their respective aims and ideologies, and the extent to which their totalitarian aims were achieved. Benito Mussolini was born into an Italian family that held socialist and republican beliefs and therefore, he too was raised with these beliefs in mind. After participating in
Harriette Mellor History 10L3 Hitler’s Rise to Power - Q1 During the years between the end of World War One and Adolf Hitler’s optimum years of power prior to World War Two, Germany was struggling with a great deal of political, economic and social troubles. The political confusion throughout this time was one of the predominant reasons that Hitler was able to gain such a degree of power from 1929 to 1933. The consequences of losing the Great War were disastrous and Germany faced uncertain times
explain and discuss some of the major topics that could have led to the rise of Nazism in Germany, such as the treaty of Versailles and some of the restrictions that were put on Germany, the loss of the war, and the Weimar Republic. These are just some of the reasons that are going to be looked at and discussed. Germany's beating in World War One made political, economic and social fall in the Weimar Republic and led to the rise of the National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSDAP) or Nazi party
throughout 1890-1990 stirs up many debates within historians. Supporters of the early Kaiserreich system suffered as each new regime followed; from the National Socialists policies to the denazification programme following the Second World War. The rise of Hitler and the Third Reich can be see as a key turning points as they had absolute power over the individual and responsibility was inferior to the state. The FRG and the GDR had both different political aims; however their efforts to remake political
Kekoa Blair Amanda Dibella English 10 MYP5 Hugh Jazz 14 March 2016 Hitler 's Rise to Power Hitler 's rise to power was greatly facilitated by his social mind with a theoretically high IQ of around 150 in the top 0.1% of everyone in the world. This large amount of intelligence can help him out think and keep himself one step ahead of everyone near him keeping his plans in clear site without the anyone the wiser. Hitler used two major skills to get power: persuasive rhetoric and cleverly worded statements
Adolf Hitler is one of the most notable and powerful dictators of the 20th century. In the mid 1900’s after World War I, Germany faced many hardships and economic depression. The nation was in desperate need for a new, more advanced leader to pull them out of this depression, and Adolf Hitler was the one chosen to lead the beleaguered country. One of the most interesting circumstances about the beginning of World War II that stumbles many historians, is how exactly Hitler rose to power and popularity
The film Hitler: Rise of Evil is all about the growth of Hitler from a young boy to a man. It shows how he came to have a hatred for the Jews and how he became so evil as people say. The film explained how he became to be the way people know him today, whether it be by others betraying him, attempting to kill him, or blocking his path. It displayed how he made his way to becoming the strongest man in Germany and the leader of the Nazi party. The film began with a young boy with his family, he had
simple boycott of Jewish shops and ended in the gas chambers at Auschwitz as Adolf Hitler and his Nazi followers attempted to exterminate the entire Jewish population of Europe. In January 1933, after a bitter ten-year political struggle, Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany. During his rise to power, Hitler had repeatedly blamed the Jews for Germany's defeat in World War I and subsequent economic hardships. Hitler also put forward racial theories asserting that Germans with fair skin, blond hair