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Topic 13.8History (2028+) HL36 flashcards

European totalitarianism (1918–1941)

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Card 1 of 3613.8.1
13.8.1
Question

What was the biennio rosso (1919-1920)?

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All Flashcards in Topic 13.8

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13.8.112 cards

Card 1definition
Question

What was the biennio rosso (1919-1920)?

Answer

The 'two red years' — mass strikes and factory occupations in northern Italy that terrified landowners and industrialists into seeing Fascism as their protection against Bolshevik-style revolution.

Card 2example
Question

What was the March on Rome (October 1922)?

Answer

A mass show of force by roughly 30,000 Fascist Blackshirts converging on Rome. King Victor Emmanuel III refused to declare martial law and instead invited Mussolini to become prime minister.

Card 3definition
Question

What did the Acerbo Law (1923) do?

Answer

Gave the party winning most votes (if over 25%) two-thirds of all parliamentary seats, letting the Fascists convert a minority vote into a supermajority in the 1924 election.

Card 4concept
Question

Who was Giacomo Matteotti and why does he matter?

Answer

A Socialist deputy who publicly exposed Fascist election fraud in 1924; his murder by Fascist thugs nearly toppled Mussolini but he survived the crisis and used it to seize full dictatorial power.

Card 5definition
Question

What were the 'leggi fascistissime' (1925-1926)?

Answer

The 'super-Fascist laws' that banned opposition parties, censored the press, abolished free trade unions, and gave Mussolini power to rule by decree — completing the legal one-party dictatorship.

Card 6concept
Question

What was the corporate state?

Answer

Mussolini's system of organizing employers and workers into 22 industry 'corporations' that supposedly settled disputes for the national good — in practice controlled by the state and stripping workers of independent bargaining power.

Card 7example
Question

What was the Battle for Grain?

Answer

A propaganda-driven push for wheat self-sufficiency; it cut imports but pushed farmers away from more profitable crops and often lowered soil quality, so the real economic gain is disputed.

Card 8example
Question

What did the Lateran Treaty (1929) achieve?

Answer

Ended the decades-long rift between the Italian state and the Papacy — recognized Vatican City, paid compensation, made Catholicism the state religion, and won Mussolini huge popularity and Church cooperation.

Card 9definition
Question

What was OVRA?

Answer

Mussolini's secret police, created in 1927 to spy on and suppress political opponents through surveillance, imprisonment on remote islands (confino), and occasional assassination.

Card 10comparison
Question

Compare: totalitarian ambition vs. reality in Fascist Italy.

Answer

Ambition — total control of the state, economy, culture and private life ('everything within the state'). Reality — the Monarchy, the Papacy, and big business kept independent power, so many historians call it authoritarian rather than fully totalitarian.

Card 11concept
Question

What was the cult of the Duce?

Answer

A propaganda campaign presenting Mussolini as an infallible, superhuman leader — via slogans, posters, staged photographs, and controlled radio/newsprint — to build personal loyalty beyond the Fascist Party itself.

Card 12process
Question

Name one method and one limit of Fascist repression.

Answer

Method — OVRA surveillance and the Special Tribunal jailed or exiled active opponents (e.g. Antonio Gramsci). Limit — repression was selective, not universal terror; most Italians who kept quiet were left alone.

13.8.212 cards

Card 13definition
Question

What was Article 48 of the Weimar constitution?

Answer

A clause letting the president rule by emergency decree, bypassing the Reichstag — meant to protect democracy in a crisis, but later used to undermine it.

Card 14process
Question

Name the four pillars of Stresemann's Golden Era recovery.

Answer

Rentenmark (1923, fixed the currency), Dawes Plan (1924, US loans), Locarno Treaties (1925, secured borders), Young Plan (1929, cut reparations further).

Card 15concept
Question

What triggered the end of the Golden Era in 1929?

Answer

The Wall Street Crash — US banks recalled short-term loans to Germany, collapsing the recovery that depended on them.

Card 16concept
Question

How did Hitler legally become chancellor?

Answer

Appointed on 30 January 1933 by President Hindenburg, persuaded by Franz von Papen that Hitler could be controlled within a coalition cabinet.

Card 17definition
Question

What did the Reichstag Fire Decree (Feb 1933) do?

Answer

Suspended civil liberties and allowed mass arrests of communist opponents, following the Reichstag Fire blamed on a Dutch communist.

Card 18definition
Question

What did the Enabling Act (March 1933) achieve?

Answer

Let Hitler's cabinet pass laws without Reichstag approval for four years — the legal end of German democracy.

Card 19example
Question

What happened on the Night of the Long Knives (June 1934)?

Answer

Hitler ordered the murder of SA leader Röhm and other rivals, ending the SA's power and securing the army's loyalty.

Card 20concept
Question

What was the Hitler Oath (August 1934)?

Answer

After Hindenburg's death, Hitler merged the presidency and chancellorship into 'Führer'; the army swore personal loyalty to him.

Card 21comparison
Question

Compare Schacht's New Plan (1934) and Göring's Four-Year Plan (1936).

Answer

Schacht's New Plan cautiously controlled trade/currency to fund rearmament; Göring's Four-Year Plan pushed aggressive self-sufficiency (autarky) for war-readiness by 1940, sidelining Schacht.

Card 22definition
Question

What was Volksgemeinschaft?

Answer

The Nazi vision of a unified, racially 'pure' German 'people's community', excluding Jews, Roma, disabled people, and other groups labelled 'undesirable'.

Card 23example
Question

How did the Nazis use propaganda to build a cult of personality?

Answer

Goebbels used mass rallies (e.g. Nuremberg), radio, and film (e.g. Riefenstahl's documentaries) to present Hitler as Germany's saviour.

Card 24comparison
Question

Give one piece of evidence for AND against the idea that Nazi control was 'total'.

Answer

For: Gestapo/SS surveillance and banned rival parties/unions. Against: churches retained some independent influence, and much compliance came from genuine popularity, not just fear.

13.8.312 cards

Card 25concept
Question

What post did Stalin hold from 1922 that became his power base?

Answer

General Secretary of the Communist Party — it let him control Party appointments and build a large network of loyal officials.

Card 26definition
Question

Define: Ryutin Platform

Answer

A 1932 document by Party official Martemyan Ryutin attacking Stalin's forced collectivization and calling for his removal; Stalin wanted Ryutin executed but the Politburo initially refused.

Card 27example
Question

Who was assassinated in December 1934, giving Stalin a pretext for mass repression?

Answer

Sergei Kirov, the popular Leningrad Party boss — many historians suspect Stalin's involvement, though it remains unproven.

Card 28process
Question

Describe the process by which Stalin eliminated his rivals, 1923–1929.

Answer

He allied with Zinoviev and Kamenev to isolate and expel Trotsky (1927); then allied with Bukharin to remove Zinoviev and Kamenev; then turned on Bukharin, defeating him over the 'Right Deviation' (1929).

Card 29comparison
Question

Compare Trotsky's and Stalin's positions after Lenin's death in 1924.

Answer

Trotsky had prestige as Red Army organizer and was a brilliant speaker, but was arrogant, disliked, and a Bolshevik latecomer. Stalin had less charisma but controlled Party appointments through the General Secretary post — administrative power beat personal reputation.

Card 30example
Question

What were the Moscow Show Trials (1936–38)?

Answer

Staged public trials where Stalin's former rivals (Zinoviev, Kamenev, later Bukharin) were forced, often through torture, to confess to fabricated charges of treason; all were executed.

Card 31definition
Question

Approximately how many people were arrested and executed in the Great Terror of 1937–38?

Answer

About 1.5 million arrested and around 680,000 executed in 1937–38 alone.

Card 32process
Question

How did the Great Terror weaken the Red Army before 1941?

Answer

Around 34,000 officers were purged, including three of the five marshals and most senior generals, badly damaging Soviet military leadership just before WWII began.

Card 33definition
Question

Define: collectivization

Answer

Stalin's policy from 1929 forcing peasants to merge small farms into large state-run collective farms (kolkhozes) to feed cities and fund industry.

Card 34example
Question

What was the human cost of collectivization, especially in Ukraine?

Answer

Resistance, dekulakization (arrest/deportation of wealthier peasants), and a catastrophic famine — the Holodomor — that killed an estimated 5–7 million people by 1933.

Card 35concept
Question

What were the Five-Year Plans and what did they achieve?

Answer

State-set targets (from 1928) for rapid heavy industrial growth (coal, steel, iron); real industrial output multiplied several times over, but at the cost of harsh conditions and low-quality goods.

Card 36comparison
Question

Compare the two historical arguments about the cause of the Great Terror.

Answer

One view: it responded to genuine threats (foreign danger, proven dissent like the Ryutin Platform). Other view: its huge scale and fabricated confessions show it was really about eliminating anyone with independent power or popularity.

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