Test review sheet
test oct 31 - tuesday
History 12 Test Review
Fascist Italy & NAZI Germany
Nationalism in Middle East
History 12 Student Workbook: Unit 2 Promise & Collapse:1919-1933 Page 46-61
The World This Century: Chapter 7 page 93 - 102
Test Format: Multiple Choice - Matching - Short Answer - Long Answer
Totalitarianism
Post WWI Italy
Mussolini’s Rise to Power
How did Mussolini take total Power?
The Weimar Republic
Enabling Act, brake union powers, Political Powers outlawed, Night of the Long Knives, Nuremberg Laws, President Hindenburg Dies
Totalitarian State
Secret Police, Purging civil service, Banning all other political parties, Abolished Freedom of Speech, Controlled media, film, newspapers etc., Nazi Youth Education
Conflict in the Middle East
Fascist Italy & NAZI Germany
Nationalism in Middle East
History 12 Student Workbook: Unit 2 Promise & Collapse:1919-1933 Page 46-61
The World This Century: Chapter 7 page 93 - 102
Test Format: Multiple Choice - Matching - Short Answer - Long Answer
Totalitarianism
- Characteristics of totalitarianism
- What about the 20th Century helped dictators turn their countries into totalitarian state?
- Fascism - Characteristics of fascism
- Communism - Characteristics of communism
- Democracy - Characteristics of Democracy
Post WWI Italy
- What happened to Italy after WWI?
- What did the Italians want but did not get after WWI?
- Italia Irredenta, 600 000 casualties, economic collapse
- Why were Italians upset with democracy when it was introduced after WWI?
- Why was democracy weak in Italy?
- Describe the Fascist movement in Italy after WWI?
- When did Mussolini become leader of the Fascists?
Mussolini’s Rise to Power
- What was Mussolini’s and his party’s platform?
- Describe the the party and the events that lead to Mussolini taking power
- Blackshirts, March on Rome, minority coalition government, Mare Nostrum
How did Mussolini take total Power?
- Acerbo Law, elimination of opposition, secret police, civil rights take away, media censorship, trade unions abolished, The Fascist Grand Council, civil service purged, the Lateran Accords,
The Weimar Republic
- Germany at the end of WWI
- Why did the Germans dislike the Weimar Republic
- Germany had to accept the blame for starting the war.
- Germany’s military power was reduced
- £6,600 million ‘reparations’.
- Germany lost land. Finally, Germany’s colonies were given to France or Britain.
- Germany was not allowed to join the League of Nations.
- Revolution Attempts
- Germany economy in the early 1920’s. Hyperinflation
- Golden Years of Weimar Republic
- Impact of Stock Market Crash on Germany
- Attitude towards Weimar Republic
- German Worker’s Party → NAZI Party, Brownshirts, NAZI Platform
- Lebensraum, Beer Hall Putsch
- NAZI Party Growth in 1930’s
- Stock Market Crash 1929, Elections, Mass Appeal
- Appointed Chancellor, coalition government, Reichstag burns down,
Enabling Act, brake union powers, Political Powers outlawed, Night of the Long Knives, Nuremberg Laws, President Hindenburg Dies
Totalitarian State
Secret Police, Purging civil service, Banning all other political parties, Abolished Freedom of Speech, Controlled media, film, newspapers etc., Nazi Youth Education
- The Strumabteilung (SA), The Schutzstaffel (SS), Secret State Police - Gestapo
- Autarky
Conflict in the Middle East
- Jewish and Palestine Claim to the land (state)
- 3 conflicting agreements Britain made about Palestine before and after WWI
- World Zionist Organization
- Ottoman Empire
- Sykes-Picot Agreement
- Balfour Declaration
- McMahon Letters
- Treaty of Sevres
- Turkey & Greece, Egypt
Thursday oct 26
middle east
Homework
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Class 6 wednesday Oct 25
in the computer lab
class 5
hitler & totalitarianism
Homework:
Create a Venn Diagram comparing the totalitarian methods used by Mussolini and Hitler to gain and to hold onto power. Add a third circle to include the United States currently |
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class 4
rise of hitler and the nazi's
WorkSheet:
Exercise 12: Hitler Comes to Power - chronological order Exit Slip: Answer the Question below . Would you say that the success of a politician has more to do with the current political climate of the nation or does it have more to do with the individual politician? Explain your reasoning using historic or present day examples. |
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