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Totalitarianism . 1919-1939. What is totalitarianism?. A one-party dictatorship that attempts to regulate every aspect of citizens’ lives First developed in the 1920s by Italian fascists.
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Totalitarianism 1919-1939
What is totalitarianism? A one-party dictatorship that attempts to regulate every aspect of citizens’ lives First developed in the 1920s by Italian fascists. Western anti-communists frequently compared this type of government to Nazism and Soviet Communism during the Cold War era.
Characteristics of Totalitarianism Run by a centralized government Involves a single-party dictatorship Personality cultism (creating a heroic public image of the ruler) State control of the economy Strong military presence Use of terror & fear Use of propaganda Attacks on religion
What led to Totalitarianism? • Mass destruction & devastation of World War I • HUGE DEBT for many nations • HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT • DISSATISFACTION over peace agreement (Germany) • SOCIAL UNREST • POOR LEADERSHIP
Attempts at Peace League of Nations (1919, Geneva, Switzerland): an intergovernmental organization founded as a result of the Paris Peace Conference that ended the First World War, whose principal mission was to maintain world peace. Locarno Treaty (1925): settled Germany border disputes & “banned war” Kellogg-Briand Pact (1928): promised to “renounce war as an instrument of national policy” Disarmament: reduction of forces & weapons (no real number set though, so impossible to impose specific limits)
Manchuria, 1931 Mukden Incident, aka the Manchurian Incident, was a staged event engineered by Japanese military personnel as a pretext for invading the northern part of China, known as Manchuria, in 1931. Japan occupied Manchuria through WWII League of Nations chastised Japan (only verbally) Japan withdrew from Manchuria after WWII
The Great Depression Major economic boom in the 1920s (particularly USA) Overproduction of goods & much higher wages Stock market crashed 1929 World-wide depression 1930s International response: high tariffs, which made it worse
Western Europe during the Depression • England struggled with high unemployment • Ireland became independent from England in 1922 (northern states remained under English rule) • Canada, Australia, New Zealand & South Africa became independent in 1931 (became self-governing dominions within the British Commonwealth) • French economy not as rough, but they distrusted Germany • Maginot Line (military fortifications along border with Germany)
Mussolini: Il Duce Italy felt betrayed after WWI Benito Mussolini formed Fascist Party in 1919 Promised to return Italy to Roman “greatness” By 1922, Mussolini was prime minister Economy corporate state Individuality = BAD National Identity = GOOD Hated Communism & Socialism
Hitler: the Fuhrer After WWI, Germany went through the Weimer Republic & economic instability Austrian Adolf Hitler formed the National Socialist German Workers party NAZI Hitler elected chancellor 1933 and formed the totalitarian Third Reich (1933-1945)
Adolf Hitler • In the midst of the Great Depression, the Nazi government restored prosperity and ended mass unemployment: • heavy military spending • a mixed economy of free-market and central-planning practices • extensive public projects, including the construction of the Autobahns • Return to prosperity gave the regime enormous popularity and made Hitler's rule mostly unchallenged • Purged German culture • Attacked religion (Christianity and Judaism)
Francisco Franco: His Excellency Generalísimo • A Spanish general, dictator and the leader of the Nationalist military rebellion in the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) • Franco and the military participated in a coup d'état against the Popular Front government. The coup failed and evolved into the Spanish Civil War. • After winning the civil war with military aid from Italy and Germany (as exemplified in the Bombing of Guernica), he dissolved the Spanish Parliament. • Franco established a right-wing authoritarian regime and was Head of State until 1978, when a new constitution was drafted.
April 26, 1937: Bombing of Guernica During the Spanish Civil War, the town of Guernica was bombed by Nazi Germany. 1654 civilians were killed. The Germans were attacking to support the efforts of Francisco Franco to overthrow the Basque Government and the Spanish Republican government
Franco during World War II During World War II, Franco officially maintained a policy of non-belligerency and later of neutrality, in part because Spain had not recovered from the considerable damage of the civil war. However, he supported the Blue Division, a unit of Spanish and Portuguese volunteers that served in the German Army on the Eastern Front.