Hitler's Germany essay topics

You are welcome to search the collection of free essays and research papers. Thousands of coursework topics are available. Buy unique, original custom papers from our essay writing service.

145 results found, view free essays on page:

  • Six Months Hitlers Forces
    698 words
    World War II began to take shape when Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany on January 30, 1930. Soon after, the German Parliament suspended the constitution making Hitler Fuhrer and dictator. Hitler was angered by the Treaty of Versailles and he blamed Germany defeat on the Communists and the Jews. In 1934, Hitler announced a program of rearmament that violated the Treaty of Versailles. At the same time Mussolini was building a powerful army in Italy and threatened to invade Ethiopia. In may 19...
  • World War II
    2,373 words
    Attack on Poland At daybreak on the first day of September, 1939, the residents of Poland awakened to grave news. A juggernaut force of tanks, guns, and countless grey-clad soldiers from nearby Germany had torn across the countryside and were making a total invasion of the Pole's homelands. Germany's actions on that fateful morning ignited a conflict that would spread like a wildfire, engulfing the entire globe in a great world war. This scenario is many people's conception of how World War II c...
  • Popular In Germany Before Hitler
    1,076 words
    "The following asocial elements are to be transferred from the prison to the Reichsfuehrer S.S. to be worked to death: persons under protective arrest, Jews, Gypsies, Russians, Ukrainians, Poles... Czechs, and Germans with sentences of more than eight years... quoted by Reichsfuehrer S.S. Himmler, on September 18, 1942". When author Ina R. Friedman wrote this book, by accumulating stories from people in various parts of Germany and the U.S., she unveiled hidden truths that not many people had ev...
  • Germany And Russia
    1,058 words
    Analyze the similarities and the differences between single party rule in Hitler's Germany and Stalin's Russia between 1933 and 1945. Answers should consider: methods of dealing with opposition, control of media and education, control of the economy, and war time planning. Fascism as apposed to Communism Why is it that Germany's fascism lasted a relatively short time compared to Russia's communism? The regimes established under Hitler and Stalin were incredibly similar with respect to the rise a...
  • Germany And Russia Being
    1,837 words
    The year is 1933. An Austrian radical named Adolf Hitler takes over the troubled country of Germany and sets forth on a jihad of Aryan conquest that ultimately results in the deaths of over 50 million people and affects the entire world. The most destructive war in the whole of human history, started by a nationalist Austrian painter, who took advantage of a grave situation in a country filled with hard working, strong people. Some claim that the cause of the ascent of Hitler was due to his incr...
  • Support Of Many Germans
    2,417 words
    Reasons for the increasing support given to NSDAP by the German people in the period 1923-1936. The NSDAP (Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei), who were in the early 1920's, "a small and not particularly distinctive element in the multifarious and fragmented German movement" had become by 1936 the ruling organisation of German society. There were many factors influencing the German mass support to swing towards the party during 1923-36. In the face of economic turmoil, the overbearin...
  • Republic
    362 words
    Adolf Hitler The Rise Of Adolf Hitler On the very eve of the birth of the third reich a feverish tension gripped Berlin. The Weimar Republic seemed obvious to almost everyone, that it was about to expire. For more than a year it had been fast crumbling. General Kurt von Schleicher, who like his immediate predecessor, Franz von Papen, cared little for the Republic and less for its democracy, and who, also like him, had ruled as Chancellor by presidential decree without recourse to Parliament, had...
  • Germany's Dictator When Hitler
    1,048 words
    EARLY YEARS Adolf Hitler was born in Austria, on the 20th of April 1889. His father was a customs officer and his mother a peasant girl, he was a poor student who never completed high school. He lived in Vienna until 1913 and lived off his orphans pension and money from pictures he drew. He read a lot of books and began to develop anti-Jewish and antidemocratic beliefs, a like to outstanding individuals and a dislike for ordinary working people. In World War I Hitler, who was in Munich, voluntee...
  • Propaganda Of The Nazi's Made Hitler
    4,715 words
    Peter Hernandez Music 310 MWF 9: 00-10: 00 Dr. Knitter 5/11/01 Holocaust Paper In 1933, the Jewish population of Europe was about 9.5 million people. The number represented more than 60 percent of the world's Jewish population at that time, estimated at 15.3 million. So how could two out of every three European Jews be dead by the end of World War 2? The answer to this question lies in the hand of Adolph Hitler. Adolph Hitler has helped destroy the lives of millions of families around the world,...
  • Two Possible Views Of Chamberlain
    2,176 words
    CHAMBERLAIN AND APPEASEMENT When studying Arthur Neville Chamberlain, it is at least as important to understand his personality, as well as his political achievement. The Prime Minister of Great Britain between 1937 and 1940, he was an intensely idealistic man, one who believed that he alone could bridge the gap between Germany and the rest of the World. His subsequent policies of appeasement towards Nazi Germany, a policy based upon pragmatism, fear of war, or moral conviction that lead to the ...
  • Place And Efforts Of Nazi Germany
    2,759 words
    Adam Phillips 12/7/04 Western Civilization How Did Nazism Rise and How Did It Lead to The Holocaust? The first World War, or the Great War, left lasting effects on the entire world, particularly Germany. During the war, the German people faced many hardships and had to sacrifice much for the war effort. The gaps between social classes widened as the working class was faced with a food shortage and a lower standard of living overall. In the winter between the years 1916 and 1917, over 700,000 Ger...
  • Conspirators Helpers At Hitler's Headquarters
    1,282 words
    From autumn 1943 on, Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg becomes a decisive factor in the struggle against Hitler. In 1933, he initially feels that National Socialist policy offers Germany favorable opportunities but is soon alienated by the regime's racial ideology. Yet Stauffenberg only assumes an active role in opposing the regime once he realizes the consequences of German policy in eastern Europe and can estimate the full extent of the damage that Hitler's war has brought upon Germany and Eu...
  • War Many Anti Alcohol And Saloon Parties
    756 words
    Prohibition came about on the 16th of January 1920 and was abolished by 1934, just 14 years later. There were many reasons that this happened. Prohibition is the banning of a certain substance from a certain area or country. In America the case was alcohol. Just after the war many anti alcohol and saloon parties had enough evidence to accuse alcohol for the problems plaguing the American public. The Anti-Liquor campaign in America dates back since 1750 when leaders of that period made repeated e...
  • Hitler In 1933 Took Power In Germany
    1,328 words
    The economic success of a country, in a sense, defines the wealth, living standards, and conditions of its general population; and in turn marks whether the country itself stands among the world as an industrial power. In a country where the economy is stable and thriving, the population tends to be happy of their government- giving the government the credit of securing the success of its economy. On the contrary, in a country where the economy is instable and on the verge of collapse, the econo...
  • Cult Status Of Adolf Hitler
    1,278 words
    What is it that makes Adolf Hitler so appealing to the public? When I say "appealing" I don't mean it in the sense that everyone likes him, but rather that he is of extreme importance even to this day. Arguments can be won or lost at the mention of his name. Call someone a "Hitler" and people notice. Because they are curious and deep down are part of the cult that surrounds this strange man. An artist who failed to get into the Academy twice, yet made an entire nation in his image. Adolf Hitler ...
  • First Listed Game Hitler
    3,297 words
    All propaganda has to be popular and has to adapt its spiritual level to the perception of the intelligent- -Hitler Persuasion is a very powerful instrument. Adolf Hitler knew that. The definition of the word "persuade" means "to induce or undertake a course of action or embrace a point of view by means of argument, reasoning, or entreaty". Hitler also used propaganda to persuade the masses. The definition of "propagate" is "1) to reproduce or cause to reproduce; breed, and 2) to make known, pub...
  • Italy Attacks Abyssinia Mussolini
    974 words
    1. Japan invaded Manchuria, China, in 1931. They felt that it was essential to have control over it, as it was a valuable trade outlet. China seemed to be growing stronger under the rule of Chiang kai-shek and the Japanese feared that they might be excluded from Manchuria. Port Arthur and a privileged position in south Manchuria were given to Japan as a result of the Russo-Japanese war. Since, Japan had invested millions of pounds on the development of industries and railways in Manchuria. In 19...
  • Appeasers Of Britain And France
    1,639 words
    Who was to blame for the outbreak of the Second World War? Was it Adolf Hitler or was it the appeasers of Britain and France? Was Hitler to blame for attacking Poland and others or was it people like Neville Chamberlain who should have taken a firmer stand against Germany. Many feel the appeasers are to blame. Appeasement is the policy of avoiding war with aggressive powers by giving way to their demands if they are not too unreasonable. Therefore during my essay I will be discussing whether app...
  • Room For Different Thought In Hitler's Schools
    636 words
    1. Hitler demanded that the nation produce a "violently active, dominating, intrepid, brutal youth. ' What part did the schools play in carrying out that goal? The schools taught the students to live a military lifestyle. Everything was very structured. Everything they did, they did mechanically. The games they played as children were war type games. They exercised and marched and drilled and saluted. 2. Write a working definition of the word indoctrinate. How does it differ from the word educat...
  • 1945 1 Web Who Was Adolf Hitler
    1,539 words
    Adolf Adolf Hitler Adolf Hitler Adolf Hitler was born on April 20th, 1889 in Braunau, Austria. He was the fourth child of Alois Schickelgruber and Klara Hitler. The couple's first three offspring's died as children, but more two more were born later, in addition to Adolf's half siblings from his father's previous marriage. A housemaid described Adolf's father as a strict but comfortable man, and his mother was known to give Adolf much love and affection. As a child, Adolf was very skilled at art...

145 results found, view free essays on page: