Modern World History Study guide Term (2)

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48 Terms

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How M.A.I.N caused WWI?

Militarism - love and glorification to fight wars

Armistice - agreement to stop fighting

Imperialism - countries dominance over another country

Nationalism - pride and devotion to your country

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Causes of the Russian Revolution

Long term social unrest in Russia erupted into Revolution, ushering in the first Communist

The oppressive rule of most 19th century czars caused widespread social unrest for decades

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Mensheviks

a group that wanted a broad base of popular support for the revolution

willing to cooperate with the Duma

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Bolsheviks

a group who supported a small number of committed revolutionaries willing to sacrifice everything for radical change

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Marx’s influence on Russian Society

Believed in equality, and the distribution of funds

the bourgeois should not have all the wealth

idea that the working class should have some power

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Lenin’s takeover

Within days after the takeover, Lenin orders that all farmland be distributed among the peasants

gives control of factories to the workers

he was a Bolshevik

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Bolsheviks-ideology

The Bolsheviks faced a new challenge

Stamping out their enemies at home

Their opponents formed the white army

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March Revolution of 1917 and impact

Women textile workers in Petrograd lead a citywide strike

Riots flare up after food shortages of bread and fuel

Soldiers obey orders to shoot the rioters, but later they would side with them

The soldiers fire at the commanding officers and join the rebellion

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Impact of the March Revolution

Forces the czar to abdicate the thrown

Czar Nicholas II abdicates the thrown

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Bloody Sunday, 1905 and impact

brutal suppression of a peaceful workers’ demonstration in St. Petersburg, Russia, where soldiers fired on the crown, resulting in numerous deaths and injuries.

want freedoms within the political system

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Bloody Sunday impact

idea that it is going to create more tension within the Russian society

lead to the 1905 Revolution

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Pogroms of Czar Alexander III

Organized violence against Jews broke out in many parts of Russia called pogroms

Police and soldiers stood by and watched Russian citizens loot and destroy Jewsih homes, stores, and synagogues

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The Treaty of Brest-Litovsk

angers many Russians because they had to surrender a large chunk of land to Germany and their allies (Ended their involvement in WWI)

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Impact of the Russian Revolution on Russia and WWI

Serbia assainted the France Ferdinand Archduke Serbians Nationalists

pan-slavik nation in the Bulkans

based on the hardships from the war, it led to Russia’s withdrawal from the war, and the establishment of the Soviet Union, altering the course of both Russia and the war itself

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Zimmerman Note

Germany sends a telegram to Mexico stating they would help them ‘reconquer’ the land they had lost to the US

Mexico declines and passes the note on to the US

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Sinking of the Lusitania

Americans on a ship that was sunk (killing 128 people) led to the involvement of the US in WWI

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How both events led to the US involvement in WWI

US got mad

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League of Nations and Wilson’s 14 points

1918 truce agreed to stop fighting

14 points - to make peace and end war

Freedom of seas, freedom of trade

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League of Nations

Collection of countries that meet whole point of this is to find diplomatic solutions

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Treaty of Versailles

signed in 1919 officially ends the war causing 4 negative consequences on Germany

  1. Germany is officially blamed for starting the war

  2. Pay reparations and damages

  3. Demilitarize

  4. Germany had to give back land specifically the (Rhineland)

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Political failures of the Weimar Republic

idea that the President can make laws without government approvement

they can appoint Chancellors based on favortism

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German perspective of the government

Believed that the Weimar Republic “stabbed” the rest of the Germans in the back with the signing of the Treaty of Versailles

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Weimar Republics economic response to Germany’s financial crisis

Because of the Great Depression

They started to raise taxes for the unemployed

Cut unemployment benefits

Reducing unemployment benefits to make payments more affordable

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Policy aims and motives of Adolf Hitler

Hitler joins the National Socialist German Workers’ Party (Nazi Party) and created the Sturmabteilung (SA) or Stormtroopers

The party focused on German nationalism

Wanted to reunite all Germans

Believed in living space, the Germans need more space to move throughout countries

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Foreign and Domestic

Domestic: Unite all Germans

Could be living anywhere and he wanted to reunite all Germans

Gross deutschland - unite all Germans within Austria, Czech, and Poland, known as pan-germanism

Foreign: (lebensraum) means living space take territory to make a bigger living space for everyone that is German

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(lebensraum) race and living space

Germany needed more territory so they had to take over other countries

Also meant eliminating the “inferior” nations, Jews, Russians, Slavs, Ukrainians, and Gypsies (all were not German)

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Beer Hall Putsch and its impact

Germans like to drink and people discussed politics in beer halls

Used 600 SA to attempt a coup (overthrow) the Weimar government in the Bavaria region with no support from the Bavarian government, police or army

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Impact of the Beer Hall Putsch

the coup epically failed

16 SA members were killed

Hitler was arrested and tried for treason (served about 9 months in prison) and in prison he wrote his autobiography

Wrote Mein Kampf, which describes the ideology within Nazism

Promised only legal methods to gain power “doing things the right way”

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What was the intended purpose of Appeasement?

to satisfy Hitler with everything that he wanted to do

it was also to prevent another war from happening

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Why appeasement failed?

the countries miscalculated Hitler’s ambitions

Hitler tricked some of the countries to give him part of Europe and the countries thought he would stop, but he kept wanting more.

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Individuals involved with the policy of Appeasement?

Neville Chamberlain Prime Minister of Great Britain, Mussilini

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Nazi polices that enforced Jewish persecution

They had to wear the Star of David

Could not own shops

Rights were stripped away

Synangogues were burnt down

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Goal of Hitler’s Final Solution

to eliminate 11 million Jews

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Hitler’s views (25 points)

Supremacy of the state and volk (people)

Social Darwinism

Lebensraum

Blood and Soil

Pan-Germanism

Anti-Democratic

Anti-Capitalist

Anti-Feminism

Anti-Semitic

Anti-Marxism

Extreme militarism / nationalism

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Who was Neville Chamberlain?

He wants to broker peace with Germany

The cabinet is telling Neville to not make any agreements with Hitler and he did the exact opposite

He brokers peace with Czechs and the Germans

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What is the Munich Agreement?

Germany gets the Sudetenland

defecate control over Czechoslovakia

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Hitler’s appeal to the German population

he promised better rights for the workers and unemployed, he started renovating Germany, and wanted to increase the nationalism in Germany

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Start of the Cold War

Crimea conference, Ukraine

Meeting between Winston Churchill (Britain) USA and Soviets

Britain and USA want peace and democracy

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Yalta and Potsdam

Agreement at Yalta

Divide Germany into 4 zones to be occupied after the war by

Britain, France, USA, and USSR

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Soviet perspective of Germany

Intially viewed it as a potential ally for revolution and later as a major threat.

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Truman Doctrine

Containment - stopping the spread of communism, but not eliminating it from countries that already are communist

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Marshall Plan

Western European nations threatened by communism because of instability, the US should provide aid to all European nations that need it.

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Impacts on Cold War - Berlin Airlift

Germany was divided into 2 nations

West Germany - democratic

East Germany - communist

Berlin continued to be divided (creation of the berlin wall)

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Impacts on Cold War - creation of the Berlin Wall

separating the East and the West between communism and anti-communism

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Impacts on Cold War - Arms Race

(nuclear escalation) ideological competition for the minds and hearts of third world people “proxy wars”

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Formation of NATO

United States, Belgium, Britain, Canada, Denmark, France, Iceland - all were countries that did not want to have communism

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Formation of Warsaw Pact

U.S.S.R, Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Ukraine - all had communism within their countries

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