45d ago

Key Historical Terms and Events

Irish Republican Army (I.R.A.)Mustafa Kemal (Atatürk)Locarno Treaties (1925)Kellogg-Briand Pact (1928)Washington Naval Conference (1921–22)Années follesFlappersGuglielmo MarconiB.B.C. (British Broadcasting Corporation)Lumière BrothersJosephine BakerNew PhysicsPostmodernismMarie CurieMax PlanckAlbert EinsteinTheory of RelativityFriedrich NietzscheNihilismÜbermenschGeorges SorelSigmund FreudPsychoanalysisYoung FascistsMarch on Rome (1922)O.V.R.A.Lateran Accords (1929)FascismHerbert SpencerSocial DarwinismDadaismSurrealismSalvador DalíVirginia WoolfJames JoyceCarl Jung"Black Tuesday"John Maynard KeynesLabour PartyPopular FrontBank RunsDust Bowl"New Deal"SquadristiIl DuceNight of the Long Knives (1934)AutobahnSchutzstaffeln (SS)GestapoHermann GöringHeinrich HimmlerJoseph GoebbelsBenito MussoliniGerman Revolution (1918–1919)Weimar RepublicPaul von HindenburgRentenmarkDawes Plan (1924)Freikorps"Stab-in-the-back" mythAdolf HitlerMein KampfSturmabteilung ("brown shirts")Beer Hall Putsch (1923)N.S.D.A.P. (Nazi Party)Reichstag Fire (1933)Enabling Act (1933)Society of the GodlessKomsomolSpanish Civil War (1936–1939)Francisco FrancoAbraham Lincoln BrigadeAppeasementLebensraumRome-Berlin Axis (1936)BlitzkriegNeville ChamberlainSudetenlandAryanismFührerprinzipNuremberg Race Laws (1935)Triumph of the WillKristallnacht (1938)HyperinflationU.S.S.R.Joseph StalinGreat PurgeCollective farmFive Year PlansHolodomorGulagSiege of LeningradBattle of StalingradPearl Harbor (1941)Erwin RommelAfrika KorpsEl Alamein (1942)Dwight D. EisenhowerD-Day (June 6, 1944)George S. PattonBattle of the Bulge (1944–45)V-E Day (May 8, 1945)Josip Broz (Tito)Charles de GaulleFrench ResistanceBernard Law MontgomeryMunich Conference (1938)LuftwaffeDunkirkVichy FranceWinston ChurchillOperation Barbarossa (1941)Axis PowersBattle of Britain (1940)"The Blitz"Zyklon BDietrich BonhoefferManhattan ProjectYalta Conference (1945)Potsdam Conference (1945)Lend-LeaseOperation ValkyrieHolocaustEinsatzgruppen"Final Solution"Auschwitz-Birkenau

Irish Republican Army (I.R.A.)

  • Militant group fighting for Irish independence from Britain, especially active during the early 20th century.

Mustafa Kemal (Atatürk)

  • Founder of modern Turkey; led reforms to secularize and modernize the nation after WWI.

Locarno Treaties (1925)

  • Agreements to guarantee European borders and promote peace after WWI.

Kellogg-Briand Pact (1928)

  • International agreement to outlaw war as a means of national policy.

Washington Naval Conference (1921–22)

  • Meeting to limit naval arms among major world powers to avoid conflict.

Années folles

  • "Crazy years" in 1920s France, marked by cultural, artistic, and social dynamism after WWI.

Flappers

  • Young women of the 1920s who defied traditional norms with bold fashion and behavior.

Guglielmo Marconi

  • Italian inventor of wireless telegraphy; pioneer of modern radio communication.

B.B.C. (British Broadcasting Corporation)

  • Britain’s main public broadcaster, established in 1922.

Lumière Brothers

  • Early French filmmakers who helped invent motion pictures.

Josephine Baker

  • American-born entertainer who became a French icon and civil rights activist.

New Physics

  • Revolutionary 20th-century developments in physics, including relativity and quantum theory.

Postmodernism

  • Cultural movement rejecting absolute truths, emphasizing fragmentation and skepticism.

Marie Curie

  • Physicist and chemist who discovered radioactivity; two-time Nobel Prize winner.

Max Planck

  • Physicist who originated quantum theory, altering our understanding of energy and matter.

Albert Einstein

  • Theoretical physicist who developed the theory of relativity, reshaping physics.

Theory of Relativity

  • Einstein’s theory that space and time are relative to the observer’s speed.

Friedrich Nietzsche

  • Philosopher who criticized religion and morality; promoted ideas like the "übermensch."

Nihilism

  • Belief in the absence of objective meaning, purpose, or value in life.

Übermensch

  • Nietzsche’s ideal superior individual who creates their own values beyond traditional morality.

Georges Sorel

  • French thinker who emphasized the power of myth and violence in political movements.

Sigmund Freud

  • Austrian founder of psychoanalysis, exploring the unconscious mind’s role in behavior.

Psychoanalysis

  • Freud’s method of treating mental illness by exploring the unconscious.

Young Fascists

  • Youth organizations in Fascist Italy aimed at indoctrinating children with fascist ideology.

March on Rome (1922)

  • Mussolini’s mass demonstration that led to his appointment as Prime Minister of Italy.

O.V.R.A.

  • Mussolini’s secret police force that suppressed political opposition in Fascist Italy.

Lateran Accords (1929)

  • Agreements between Mussolini and the Catholic Church recognizing Vatican City as an independent state.

Fascism

  • Far-right, authoritarian political ideology emphasizing nationalism, dictatorship, desires and conflicts.

Herbert Spencer

  • Philosopher who applied evolutionary theory to human societies ("Social Darwinism").

Social Darwinism

  • Application of "survival of the fittest" ideas to justify social inequality and imperialism.

Dadaism

  • Avant-garde art movement rejecting logic and embracing absurdity and chaos post-WWI.

Surrealism

  • Art and literary movement exploring dreams, the unconscious, and irrational imagery.

Salvador Dalí

  • Spanish surrealist artist known for bizarre, dreamlike paintings like The Persistence of Memory.

Virginia Woolf

  • British modernist writer known for novels using stream-of-consciousness technique (Mrs. Dalloway).

James Joyce

  • Irish modernist writer, author of Ulysses, known for complex language and stream-of-consciousness style.

Carl Jung

  • Swiss psychologist who developed theories of archetypes, the collective unconscious, and personality types.

"Black Tuesday"

  • October 29, 1929, the day the U.S. stock market crashed, sparking the Great Depression.

John Maynard Keynes

  • British economist advocating for government intervention to stabilize economies.

Labour Party

  • British political party promoting workers' rights and social justice; gained strength after WWI.

Popular Front

  • Leftist coalition governments in Europe (notably France and Spain) opposing fascism in the 1930s.

Bank Runs

  • Mass withdrawals of money from banks during financial crises, often causing bank collapses.

Dust Bowl

  • Severe droughts and dust storms during the 1930s that devastated U.S. farming regions.

"New Deal"

  • Franklin D. Roosevelt’s program to provide economic relief, recovery, and reform during the Great Depression.

Squadristi

  • "Black shirts" – Fascist paramilitary groups in Italy that used violence to intimidate political opponents.

Il Duce

  • Title meaning "The Leader," used by Benito Mussolini, head of Fascist Italy.

Night of the Long Knives (1934)

  • Purge in which Hitler eliminated SA leaders and other political enemies.

Autobahn

  • German highway system expanded under Hitler as a symbol of national strength and to reduce unemployment.

Schutzstaffeln (SS)

  • Elite Nazi military organization responsible for enforcing Nazi policies and running concentration camps.

Gestapo

  • Nazi secret police force tasked with suppressing opposition and enforcing Nazi rule.

Hermann Göring

  • High-ranking Nazi official, head of the Luftwaffe (Air Force), and a key figure in the regime.

Heinrich Himmler

  • Leader of the SS and a principal architect of the Holocaust.

Joseph Goebbels

  • Nazi Minister of Propaganda who controlled media and promoted Nazi ideology.

Benito Mussolini

  • Italian dictator and founder of Fascism; ruled Italy from 1922 to 1943.

German Revolution (1918–1919)

  • Political upheaval that ended the German Empire and led to the Weimar Republic.

Weimar Republic

  • Democratic government of Germany between WWI and the rise of Hitler (1919–1933).

Paul von Hindenburg

  • German general and president who appointed Hitler as Chancellor in 1933.

Rentenmark

  • Currency introduced in Germany (1923) to stabilize hyperinflation during the Weimar Republic.

Dawes Plan (1924)

  • U.S.-backed plan to restructure Germany’s reparations and stabilize its economy.

Freikorps

  • Right-wing paramilitary groups composed mainly of WWI veterans; fought against communists in Germany.

"Stab-in-the-back" myth

  • False belief that Germany was betrayed internally (especially by Jews and communists) in WWI, rather than militarily defeated.

Adolf Hitler

  • Leader of the Nazi Party who became dictator of Germany and instigated WWII and the Holocaust.

Mein Kampf

  • Hitler’s autobiography outlining his ideology of Aryan supremacy and anti-Semitism.

Sturmabteilung ("brown shirts")

  • Nazi paramilitary force used to intimidate rivals and protect Nazi rallies.

Beer Hall Putsch (1923)

  • Failed Nazi coup attempt in Munich; Hitler was arrested and imprisoned.

N.S.D.A.P. (Nazi Party)

  • National Socialist German Workers' Party; Hitler’s political party in Germany.

Reichstag Fire (1933)

  • Fire at the German parliament building, used by Nazis to justify cracking down on communists and consolidating power.

Enabling Act (1933)

  • Law giving Hitler dictatorial powers by allowing him to enact laws without parliamentary approval.

Society of the Godless

  • Soviet organization promoting atheism and opposing religious institutions during Stalin’s rule.

Komsomol

  • Communist youth organization in the Soviet Union aimed at training young people in party loyalty.

Spanish Civil War (1936–1939)

  • Conflict between Republicans and Nationalists in Spain; Nationalists under Franco ultimately won.

Francisco Franco

  • Spanish general who led the Nationalists to victory in the Spanish Civil War and ruled as dictator until 1975.

Abraham Lincoln Brigade

  • American volunteers who fought for the Republicans against fascism in the Spanish Civil War.

Appeasement

  • Policy of making concessions to aggressive powers (like Nazi Germany) to avoid conflict.

Lebensraum

  • Hitler’s idea of "living space" for Germans, used to justify expansion into Eastern Europe.

Rome-Berlin Axis (1936)

  • Alliance between Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany.

Blitzkrieg

  • "Lightning war"; German military strategy emphasizing rapid, overwhelming attacks.

Neville Chamberlain

  • British Prime Minister associated with the policy of appeasement toward Hitler.

Sudetenland

  • Region of Czechoslovakia with many ethnic Germans; annexed by Hitler in 1938.

Aryanism

  • Racist belief in the superiority of the "Aryan" (pure Germanic) race, central to Nazi ideology.

Führerprinzip

  • Nazi leadership principle stating that the Führer's word is absolute and unquestionable.

Nuremberg Race Laws (1935)

  • Nazi laws that institutionalized racial discrimination, especially against Jews.

Triumph of the Will

  • Propaganda film directed by Leni Riefenstahl glorifying Hitler and the Nazi Party.

Kristallnacht (1938)

  • "Night of Broken Glass," violent Nazi attacks on Jewish businesses, synagogues, and homes.

Hyperinflation

  • Extreme devaluation of currency, notably experienced in Weimar Germany in the early 1920s.

U.S.S.R.

  • Union of Soviet Socialist Republics; communist state established after the Russian Revolution.

Joseph Stalin

  • Soviet dictator who industrialized the USSR, led during WWII, and initiated mass purges.

Great Purge

  • Stalin’s campaign of political repression, involving mass arrests, executions, and labor camps.

Collective farm

  • Large government-controlled farms formed by consolidating smaller private farms in the Soviet Union.

Five Year Plans

  • Stalin’s programs for rapid industrial and economic growth in the USSR.

Holodomor

  • Man-made famine in Soviet Ukraine (1932–1933) causing millions of deaths.

Gulag

  • Soviet system of forced labor camps for political prisoners and dissidents.

Siege of Leningrad

  • Prolonged German blockade of the Soviet city of Leningrad (1941–1944) causing mass starvation.

Battle of Stalingrad

  • Major Soviet victory in WWII; turning point against Germany on the Eastern Front.

Pearl Harbor (1941)

  • Surprise Japanese attack on U.S. naval base in Hawaii; led the U.S. to enter WWII.

Erwin Rommel

  • German general, known as the "Desert Fox," who led forces in North Africa.

Afrika Korps

  • German expeditionary force in North Africa under Rommel.

El Alamein (1942)

  • Key Allied victory in North Africa, turning the tide against Axis forces.

Dwight D. Eisenhower

  • Supreme Allied Commander in Europe during WWII; later became U.S. President.

D-Day (June 6, 1944)

  • Allied invasion of Nazi-occupied France at Normandy, crucial for liberating Western Europe.

George S. Patton

  • Aggressive and successful U.S. general during WWII, known for leading armored divisions.

Battle of the Bulge (1944–45)

  • Germany’s last major offensive in WWII, fought in Belgium’s Ardennes region.

V-E Day (May 8, 1945)

  • "Victory in Europe" Day; the official end of WWII in Europe.

Josip Broz (Tito)

  • Communist leader of Yugoslavia who resisted Nazi occupation and later ruled Yugoslavia independently from the USSR.

Charles de Gaulle

  • Leader of Free French Forces during WWII; later President of France.

French Resistance

  • Underground movement that opposed Nazi occupation in France through sabotage and intelligence.

Bernard Law Montgomery

  • Prominent British general who commanded Allied forces in North Africa and Europe.

Munich Conference (1938)

  • Meeting where Britain and France allowed Hitler to take Sudetenland in hopes of preventing war.

Luftwaffe

  • German air force during WWII.

Dunkirk

  • Site of massive Allied evacuation from France in 1940 after German forces trapped them at the coast.

Vichy France

  • Southern France under a Nazi-collaborationist government after the 1940 German victory.

Winston Churchill

  • British Prime Minister during WWII known for his leadership and defiance against Nazi Germany.

Operation Barbarossa (1941)

  • Nazi Germany’s invasion of the Soviet Union, breaking their non-aggression pact.

Axis Powers

  • Military alliance of Germany, Italy, and Japan during WWII.

Battle of Britain (1940)

  • Aerial battle where Britain’s Royal Air Force successfully defended the UK from German attack.

"The Blitz"

  • Sustained German bombing campaign against British cities, especially London, during WWII.

Zyklon B

  • Poison gas used in Nazi extermination camps to murder large groups of victims.

Dietrich Bonhoeffer

  • German theologian and anti-Nazi dissident involved in resistance; executed by the Nazis.

Manhattan Project

  • Secret U.S. project during WWII to develop the atomic bomb.

Yalta Conference (1945)

  • Meeting between Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin to plan postwar Europe and the defeat of Japan.

Potsdam Conference (1945)

  • Postwar meeting to finalize plans for Europe and issue the Potsdam Declaration to Japan demanding surrender.

Lend-Lease

  • U.S. program providing military aid to Allies before formally entering WWII.

Operation Valkyrie

  • Failed 1944 plot by German officers to assassinate Hitler and overthrow the Nazi regime.

Holocaust

  • Systematic, state-sponsored genocide of six million Jews and millions of others by Nazi Germany.

Einsatzgruppen

  • Mobile Nazi killing squads responsible for mass shootings of Jews and others in Eastern Europe.

"Final Solution"

  • Nazi plan for the systematic extermination of Europe’s Jewish population.

Auschwitz-Birkenau

  • Largest Nazi concentration and extermination camp, located in occupied Poland.


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Key Historical Terms and Events

Irish Republican Army (I.R.A.)

  • Militant group fighting for Irish independence from Britain, especially active during the early 20th century.

Mustafa Kemal (Atatürk)

  • Founder of modern Turkey; led reforms to secularize and modernize the nation after WWI.

Locarno Treaties (1925)

  • Agreements to guarantee European borders and promote peace after WWI.

Kellogg-Briand Pact (1928)

  • International agreement to outlaw war as a means of national policy.

Washington Naval Conference (1921–22)

  • Meeting to limit naval arms among major world powers to avoid conflict.

Années folles

  • "Crazy years" in 1920s France, marked by cultural, artistic, and social dynamism after WWI.

Flappers

  • Young women of the 1920s who defied traditional norms with bold fashion and behavior.

Guglielmo Marconi

  • Italian inventor of wireless telegraphy; pioneer of modern radio communication.

B.B.C. (British Broadcasting Corporation)

  • Britain’s main public broadcaster, established in 1922.

Lumière Brothers

  • Early French filmmakers who helped invent motion pictures.

Josephine Baker

  • American-born entertainer who became a French icon and civil rights activist.

New Physics

  • Revolutionary 20th-century developments in physics, including relativity and quantum theory.

Postmodernism

  • Cultural movement rejecting absolute truths, emphasizing fragmentation and skepticism.

Marie Curie

  • Physicist and chemist who discovered radioactivity; two-time Nobel Prize winner.

Max Planck

  • Physicist who originated quantum theory, altering our understanding of energy and matter.

Albert Einstein

  • Theoretical physicist who developed the theory of relativity, reshaping physics.

Theory of Relativity

  • Einstein’s theory that space and time are relative to the observer’s speed.

Friedrich Nietzsche

  • Philosopher who criticized religion and morality; promoted ideas like the "übermensch."

Nihilism

  • Belief in the absence of objective meaning, purpose, or value in life.

Übermensch

  • Nietzsche’s ideal superior individual who creates their own values beyond traditional morality.

Georges Sorel

  • French thinker who emphasized the power of myth and violence in political movements.

Sigmund Freud

  • Austrian founder of psychoanalysis, exploring the unconscious mind’s role in behavior.

Psychoanalysis

  • Freud’s method of treating mental illness by exploring the unconscious.

Young Fascists

  • Youth organizations in Fascist Italy aimed at indoctrinating children with fascist ideology.

March on Rome (1922)

  • Mussolini’s mass demonstration that led to his appointment as Prime Minister of Italy.

O.V.R.A.

  • Mussolini’s secret police force that suppressed political opposition in Fascist Italy.

Lateran Accords (1929)

  • Agreements between Mussolini and the Catholic Church recognizing Vatican City as an independent state.

Fascism

  • Far-right, authoritarian political ideology emphasizing nationalism, dictatorship, desires and conflicts.

Herbert Spencer

  • Philosopher who applied evolutionary theory to human societies ("Social Darwinism").

Social Darwinism

  • Application of "survival of the fittest" ideas to justify social inequality and imperialism.

Dadaism

  • Avant-garde art movement rejecting logic and embracing absurdity and chaos post-WWI.

Surrealism

  • Art and literary movement exploring dreams, the unconscious, and irrational imagery.

Salvador Dalí

  • Spanish surrealist artist known for bizarre, dreamlike paintings like The Persistence of Memory.

Virginia Woolf

  • British modernist writer known for novels using stream-of-consciousness technique (Mrs. Dalloway).

James Joyce

  • Irish modernist writer, author of Ulysses, known for complex language and stream-of-consciousness style.

Carl Jung

  • Swiss psychologist who developed theories of archetypes, the collective unconscious, and personality types.

"Black Tuesday"

  • October 29, 1929, the day the U.S. stock market crashed, sparking the Great Depression.

John Maynard Keynes

  • British economist advocating for government intervention to stabilize economies.

Labour Party

  • British political party promoting workers' rights and social justice; gained strength after WWI.

Popular Front

  • Leftist coalition governments in Europe (notably France and Spain) opposing fascism in the 1930s.

Bank Runs

  • Mass withdrawals of money from banks during financial crises, often causing bank collapses.

Dust Bowl

  • Severe droughts and dust storms during the 1930s that devastated U.S. farming regions.

"New Deal"

  • Franklin D. Roosevelt’s program to provide economic relief, recovery, and reform during the Great Depression.

Squadristi

  • "Black shirts" – Fascist paramilitary groups in Italy that used violence to intimidate political opponents.

Il Duce

  • Title meaning "The Leader," used by Benito Mussolini, head of Fascist Italy.

Night of the Long Knives (1934)

  • Purge in which Hitler eliminated SA leaders and other political enemies.

Autobahn

  • German highway system expanded under Hitler as a symbol of national strength and to reduce unemployment.

Schutzstaffeln (SS)

  • Elite Nazi military organization responsible for enforcing Nazi policies and running concentration camps.

Gestapo

  • Nazi secret police force tasked with suppressing opposition and enforcing Nazi rule.

Hermann Göring

  • High-ranking Nazi official, head of the Luftwaffe (Air Force), and a key figure in the regime.

Heinrich Himmler

  • Leader of the SS and a principal architect of the Holocaust.

Joseph Goebbels

  • Nazi Minister of Propaganda who controlled media and promoted Nazi ideology.

Benito Mussolini

  • Italian dictator and founder of Fascism; ruled Italy from 1922 to 1943.

German Revolution (1918–1919)

  • Political upheaval that ended the German Empire and led to the Weimar Republic.

Weimar Republic

  • Democratic government of Germany between WWI and the rise of Hitler (1919–1933).

Paul von Hindenburg

  • German general and president who appointed Hitler as Chancellor in 1933.

Rentenmark

  • Currency introduced in Germany (1923) to stabilize hyperinflation during the Weimar Republic.

Dawes Plan (1924)

  • U.S.-backed plan to restructure Germany’s reparations and stabilize its economy.

Freikorps

  • Right-wing paramilitary groups composed mainly of WWI veterans; fought against communists in Germany.

"Stab-in-the-back" myth

  • False belief that Germany was betrayed internally (especially by Jews and communists) in WWI, rather than militarily defeated.

Adolf Hitler

  • Leader of the Nazi Party who became dictator of Germany and instigated WWII and the Holocaust.

Mein Kampf

  • Hitler’s autobiography outlining his ideology of Aryan supremacy and anti-Semitism.

Sturmabteilung ("brown shirts")

  • Nazi paramilitary force used to intimidate rivals and protect Nazi rallies.

Beer Hall Putsch (1923)

  • Failed Nazi coup attempt in Munich; Hitler was arrested and imprisoned.

N.S.D.A.P. (Nazi Party)

  • National Socialist German Workers' Party; Hitler’s political party in Germany.

Reichstag Fire (1933)

  • Fire at the German parliament building, used by Nazis to justify cracking down on communists and consolidating power.

Enabling Act (1933)

  • Law giving Hitler dictatorial powers by allowing him to enact laws without parliamentary approval.

Society of the Godless

  • Soviet organization promoting atheism and opposing religious institutions during Stalin’s rule.

Komsomol

  • Communist youth organization in the Soviet Union aimed at training young people in party loyalty.

Spanish Civil War (1936–1939)

  • Conflict between Republicans and Nationalists in Spain; Nationalists under Franco ultimately won.

Francisco Franco

  • Spanish general who led the Nationalists to victory in the Spanish Civil War and ruled as dictator until 1975.

Abraham Lincoln Brigade

  • American volunteers who fought for the Republicans against fascism in the Spanish Civil War.

Appeasement

  • Policy of making concessions to aggressive powers (like Nazi Germany) to avoid conflict.

Lebensraum

  • Hitler’s idea of "living space" for Germans, used to justify expansion into Eastern Europe.

Rome-Berlin Axis (1936)

  • Alliance between Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany.

Blitzkrieg

  • "Lightning war"; German military strategy emphasizing rapid, overwhelming attacks.

Neville Chamberlain

  • British Prime Minister associated with the policy of appeasement toward Hitler.

Sudetenland

  • Region of Czechoslovakia with many ethnic Germans; annexed by Hitler in 1938.

Aryanism

  • Racist belief in the superiority of the "Aryan" (pure Germanic) race, central to Nazi ideology.

Führerprinzip

  • Nazi leadership principle stating that the Führer's word is absolute and unquestionable.

Nuremberg Race Laws (1935)

  • Nazi laws that institutionalized racial discrimination, especially against Jews.

Triumph of the Will

  • Propaganda film directed by Leni Riefenstahl glorifying Hitler and the Nazi Party.

Kristallnacht (1938)

  • "Night of Broken Glass," violent Nazi attacks on Jewish businesses, synagogues, and homes.

Hyperinflation

  • Extreme devaluation of currency, notably experienced in Weimar Germany in the early 1920s.

U.S.S.R.

  • Union of Soviet Socialist Republics; communist state established after the Russian Revolution.

Joseph Stalin

  • Soviet dictator who industrialized the USSR, led during WWII, and initiated mass purges.

Great Purge

  • Stalin’s campaign of political repression, involving mass arrests, executions, and labor camps.

Collective farm

  • Large government-controlled farms formed by consolidating smaller private farms in the Soviet Union.

Five Year Plans

  • Stalin’s programs for rapid industrial and economic growth in the USSR.

Holodomor

  • Man-made famine in Soviet Ukraine (1932–1933) causing millions of deaths.

Gulag

  • Soviet system of forced labor camps for political prisoners and dissidents.

Siege of Leningrad

  • Prolonged German blockade of the Soviet city of Leningrad (1941–1944) causing mass starvation.

Battle of Stalingrad

  • Major Soviet victory in WWII; turning point against Germany on the Eastern Front.

Pearl Harbor (1941)

  • Surprise Japanese attack on U.S. naval base in Hawaii; led the U.S. to enter WWII.

Erwin Rommel

  • German general, known as the "Desert Fox," who led forces in North Africa.

Afrika Korps

  • German expeditionary force in North Africa under Rommel.

El Alamein (1942)

  • Key Allied victory in North Africa, turning the tide against Axis forces.

Dwight D. Eisenhower

  • Supreme Allied Commander in Europe during WWII; later became U.S. President.

D-Day (June 6, 1944)

  • Allied invasion of Nazi-occupied France at Normandy, crucial for liberating Western Europe.

George S. Patton

  • Aggressive and successful U.S. general during WWII, known for leading armored divisions.

Battle of the Bulge (1944–45)

  • Germany’s last major offensive in WWII, fought in Belgium’s Ardennes region.

V-E Day (May 8, 1945)

  • "Victory in Europe" Day; the official end of WWII in Europe.

Josip Broz (Tito)

  • Communist leader of Yugoslavia who resisted Nazi occupation and later ruled Yugoslavia independently from the USSR.

Charles de Gaulle

  • Leader of Free French Forces during WWII; later President of France.

French Resistance

  • Underground movement that opposed Nazi occupation in France through sabotage and intelligence.

Bernard Law Montgomery

  • Prominent British general who commanded Allied forces in North Africa and Europe.

Munich Conference (1938)

  • Meeting where Britain and France allowed Hitler to take Sudetenland in hopes of preventing war.

Luftwaffe

  • German air force during WWII.

Dunkirk

  • Site of massive Allied evacuation from France in 1940 after German forces trapped them at the coast.

Vichy France

  • Southern France under a Nazi-collaborationist government after the 1940 German victory.

Winston Churchill

  • British Prime Minister during WWII known for his leadership and defiance against Nazi Germany.

Operation Barbarossa (1941)

  • Nazi Germany’s invasion of the Soviet Union, breaking their non-aggression pact.

Axis Powers

  • Military alliance of Germany, Italy, and Japan during WWII.

Battle of Britain (1940)

  • Aerial battle where Britain’s Royal Air Force successfully defended the UK from German attack.

"The Blitz"

  • Sustained German bombing campaign against British cities, especially London, during WWII.

Zyklon B

  • Poison gas used in Nazi extermination camps to murder large groups of victims.

Dietrich Bonhoeffer

  • German theologian and anti-Nazi dissident involved in resistance; executed by the Nazis.

Manhattan Project

  • Secret U.S. project during WWII to develop the atomic bomb.

Yalta Conference (1945)

  • Meeting between Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin to plan postwar Europe and the defeat of Japan.

Potsdam Conference (1945)

  • Postwar meeting to finalize plans for Europe and issue the Potsdam Declaration to Japan demanding surrender.

Lend-Lease

  • U.S. program providing military aid to Allies before formally entering WWII.

Operation Valkyrie

  • Failed 1944 plot by German officers to assassinate Hitler and overthrow the Nazi regime.

Holocaust

  • Systematic, state-sponsored genocide of six million Jews and millions of others by Nazi Germany.

Einsatzgruppen

  • Mobile Nazi killing squads responsible for mass shootings of Jews and others in Eastern Europe.

"Final Solution"

  • Nazi plan for the systematic extermination of Europe’s Jewish population.

Auschwitz-Birkenau

  • Largest Nazi concentration and extermination camp, located in occupied Poland.