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Posts Tagged ‘Lebensraum’

29
Sep

Appeasing Hitler: The Failure of The Munich Agreement

   Posted by: Trish    in Historical Events, History Blog, History Today, Modern History, World History, World War II

Neville Chamberlain makes a brief speech announcing 'Peace in our Time' on his arrival at Heston Airport after his meeting with Hitler at Munich. September 1938Many historians have often asked the question of whether or not World War II could have been avoided. Some scholars of military history point to the British led policy of appeasement that existed just before the war and culminated with the Munich Agreement on September 29, 1938, as one way in which the allies failed to realize the threat of Hitler’s regime.

Europe in the aftermath of the First World War was a place full of debt, indignation and upset. Many felt Germany had unfairly taken the blame for a global war; other countries were bankrupt having put everything into the four year war that had killed millions and millions of soldiers and civilians. Many countries, their leaders and their people were sick and tired of violence and death and wanted anything but more war.

Germany for its part was living under the economic pressures of paying for a war they did not start and frustrated at the outcome of the Versailles Treaty which included the payment of reparations, the demilitarization of the Rhineland and the clause that Germany could not build up her army for the foreseeable future.

Map of Czechoslovakia after 1939Hitler came to power in Germany in 1933 and immediately set about reversing all the conditions of the Versailles Treaty. Neighboring nations complained but did not take military action against Hitler when he began to build the new German, remilitarize the Rhineland or even annex Austria (Anschluss) in March of 1938.

Every time the powers in Europe drew the line and told Hitler not to cross he ignored them and they ended up drawing a new line. This police became known as “appeasement” and was a way a continent financially weak and morally exhausted could avoid war. And anyway, Hitler promised he would not attack, invade or occupy any other countries. He wrote a friendly note to then British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain assuring him of his good intentions.

Hitler in Munich 1939On September 29, 1938, Hitler met with British leader Neville Chamberlain and French leader Edouard Daladier. The meeting was mediated by Italian leader Benito Mussolini and ended in an agreement which Hitler drafted and the other leaders simply agreed to. The treaty stated that the German people of Czechoslovakia in an area known as the Sudetenland would be annexed to Germany in stages during October of the same year. This was in line with Hitler’s policy of Lebensraum and uniting all German peoples every where.

The treaty stated that Czechoslovakia would hand the land over to Hitler despite the fact that the Czech leader was not invited to the discussion and treaty signing but was told of their responsibilities by their allies. The land exchange would occur with Czechoslovakia’s help or they alone would be left to fight Hitler. They had little choice.


Six months after the signing of the Munich Agreement, Hitler had taken the Sudetenland and divided Czechoslovakia between Germany, Poland and Hungary. The country had no strength to fight and within a year, Europe was at war once again. The Munich Agreement was the last stance in a failed appeasement policy and the nations of Europe would take six years to get Hitler’s Germany under control.
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Tags: 1933, 1938, 1939, Adolf HItler, Anschluss, Appeasement, Austrian Annexation, Benito Mussolini, Britain, Chamberlain, Czechoslovakia, demilitarization of the Rhineland, Edouard Daladier, France, German Luger Pistol, German World War II Helmet Replica - Plain Rim, Germany, Great Britain in World War II, Hitler, Lebensraum, Munich Agreement, Neville Chamberlain, News of the Day 1939-1941 DVD, September 29, Sudetenland, Treaty of Munich, Versailles Treaty, Wehrmact, World War II - Nazi Hungarian Russian Invasion Money, World War II Store, WW2, wwi

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1
Sep

World War II Begins: Germany Occupies Danzig, Poland - September 1, 1939

   Posted by: Trish    in English History, French History, Historical Events, History Blog, History of England, Modern History, World History, World War II

Adolf Hitler addressing the Reichstag on October 6, 1939There are few dates in recent human history that cause more of an emotional stir in historians than that of September 1, 1939. On this day, Adolph Hitler, then chancellor of Germany declared to his parliament (Reichstag) that enough was enough that Danzig in Poland was a German city full of German people and should be taken back. The culmination of the Nazi ideology of “Lebensraum,” in which all lands currently or formerly belonging to Germany should be returned to Germany and inhabited by German people, would soon signal the death of millions of Jews, Russians, homosexuals, gypsies, agitators, allies and non combatants.

The fact that it is the date that signals the beginning of World War II and the dramatic reformatting of the European landscape and culture is a matter of hindsight. In 1939, Hitler invaded Poland. It would have been difficult to imagine then the true scope of that decision.

It all began with the Treaty of Versailles. The document signed in 1919 in a rail car in France where the then German leaders were forced to admit their wrong doing in World War I and accept a significant loss of formerly German land.

The delegations signing the Treaty of Versailles in the Hall of Mirrors - June 28, 1919Adolph Hitler fought in World War I and like many Germans felt that the treaty of Versailles was a slap in the face to the German nation making them wholly responsible for a war that involved many nations that came into conflict because of the multitudinous pacts that punctuated European politics.

Whether the Germans were simply assisting their allies or whether they were the instigators of the Great War, in which 20,000 a day killed at the Battle of the Somme, is a matter of opinion. Hitler attempted many times to instill a sense of injustice in the German people because of the humiliation of Versailles. His work of propaganda and surreptitious influence came to an end during the speech he made on September 1, 1939.

“Poland has directed its attacks against the Free City of Danzig. Moreover, Poland was not prepared to settle the Corridor question in a reasonable way which would be equitable to both parties, and she did not think of keeping her obligations to minorities. I must here state something definitely; German has kept these obligations; the minorities who live in Germany are not persecuted. No Frenchman can stand up and say that any Frenchman living in the Saar territory is oppressed, tortured, or deprived of his rights. Nobody can say this.” - Adolf Hitler

German soldiers crossing the border into Danzig, Poland - September 1, 1939German troops marched into Danzig to reclaim the city and the Danzig Corridor on September 1 by force. It was not the first act by Germany in regards to nullifying the Versailles Treaty but it would become the most significant. The invasion of Poland was a direct result with Hitler’s Non Aggression Pact with Russia and the secret plan for the two nations to invade Poland and divide her up between the to powers. Because of a pact Britain and France had with Poland, they were forced to declare war on Germany on September 3 and just like the First World War, nation after nation followed suit until the disastrous global conflict was played out once again, only this time religion and ethnic persecution would play a large and deadly role.


All in all the Second World War took the lives of an estimated 22 million people. We see its legacy in the faces of aging veterans, in the gray wash memorial in town parks across the world and in the uncomfortable relationships of several nations. The significance of World War II will never be fully known in our lifetime, only becoming clear as the long line of modern history reaches its inescapable conclusions. What we do know now however is that the actions of one individual, good or bad, can change the world forever.
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Tags: 1919, 1939, Adolf HItler, Battle of the Somme, Beginning of World War 2, Dagger - SS WWII Elite Guard with chain, Danzig, Free city of Danzig, German Luger Pistol, German World War II Helmet Replica - Plain Rim, Germany invades Poland, Germany non-aggression pact with Russia, Hall of Mirrors, Hitler, Holocaust, Ju-87 D-5 Stuka Scale Model Kit Italeri 1:72 (25mm), June 28, Lebensraum, Nazi ideology, Nazis, October 6, Poland, September 1, September 3, the Reichstag, Treaty of Versailles, world war 2, World War II, World War II Store, World War One, World War two, wwi, WWII

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