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Topic 13.9History (2028+) HL36 flashcards

Europe and the Second World War (1918–1949)

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Card 1 of 3613.9.1
13.9.1
Question

What were the League of Nations' four main organs?

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All Flashcards in Topic 13.9

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13.9.112 cards

Card 1concept
Question

What were the League of Nations' four main organs?

Answer

The Assembly (all members, annual meeting), the Council (permanent + rotating members, handled crises), the Secretariat (administration), and special agencies (e.g. the International Labour Organization).

Card 2concept
Question

Why was the League structurally weak from the start?

Answer

The USA never joined; it had no standing army of its own; and Council decisions generally needed unanimous agreement, making fast action very difficult.

Card 3example
Question

Åland Islands dispute (1921)

Answer

Sweden and Finland both claimed the islands; the League awarded them to Finland with protections for Swedish-speakers, and both sides accepted the ruling — a genuine League success.

Card 4example
Question

Vilna dispute (1920–23)

Answer

Poland seized Vilnius from Lithuania; the League condemned it but could not force Poland to withdraw, showing its limits even against smaller states.

Card 5example
Question

Corfu incident (1923)

Answer

Italy bombarded and occupied the Greek island of Corfu after an Italian general was murdered; Mussolini bypassed the League and settled it through the Conference of Ambassadors on his own terms.

Card 6process
Question

What happened during the Abyssinia crisis (1935–36)?

Answer

Italy invaded Abyssinia (Ethiopia); the League imposed sanctions that excluded oil, coal and steel, and Britain/France secretly tried to give Mussolini much of the territory via the Hoare-Laval Pact — Italy completed its conquest by May 1936.

Card 7concept
Question

Why did the Hoare-Laval Pact damage the League's credibility?

Answer

It revealed that Britain and France were secretly willing to reward Italy's aggression rather than enforce collective security, undermining trust in the League when it leaked to the public.

Card 8definition
Question

Define appeasement.

Answer

A policy of giving in to some demands of an aggressive power in order to avoid war, associated especially with Neville Chamberlain in the 1930s.

Card 9example
Question

What was agreed at the Munich Conference (September 1938)?

Answer

Britain, France, Germany and Italy agreed Germany could annex the Sudetenland region of Czechoslovakia, without Czechoslovakia being present — in exchange for Hitler's promise of no further territorial demands.

Card 10definition
Question

What was the Nazi-Soviet Pact (August 1939)?

Answer

A non-aggression treaty between Germany and the USSR with a secret protocol dividing Poland and Eastern Europe into spheres of influence, freeing Hitler from a two-front war fear before invading Poland.

Card 11process
Question

Sequence of steps from Rhineland to war in Europe

Answer

Rhineland remilitarised (1936) → Rome-Berlin Axis (1936) → Anschluss with Austria (March 1938) → Munich Agreement/Sudetenland (Sept 1938) → rest of Czechoslovakia seized (March 1939) → Nazi-Soviet Pact (Aug 1939) → invasion of Poland (1 Sept 1939) → Britain/France declare war (3 Sept 1939).

Card 12comparison
Question

League's response to Manchuria (1931) vs Abyssinia (1935) — what's the comparison?

Answer

Both showed the same pattern: strong condemnation (Lytton Report for Manchuria) but no effective enforcement, so Japan and Italy both simply left or ignored the League and kept their conquests.

13.9.212 cards

Card 13definition
Question

What was Lend-Lease (1941)?

Answer

A US programme supplying Britain and, from late 1941, the USSR with weapons, food and equipment without requiring immediate payment, keeping them in the fight before the US formally joined.

Card 14example
Question

What was agreed at the Tehran Conference (1943)?

Answer

Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin agreed the Western Allies would open a second front in France, relieving pressure on the Red Army — this became D-Day in June 1944.

Card 15concept
Question

Why was Allied industrial production a decisive economic factor?

Answer

By 1943–44 combined Allied output (led by the US 'Arsenal of Democracy') vastly exceeded Axis production, while Germany suffered chronic fuel shortages after losing Romanian oil fields.

Card 16example
Question

What happened at Stalingrad (1942–43)?

Answer

Hitler refused to allow a German retreat; the 6th Army was encircled and destroyed (~300,000 losses), and the USSR gained the strategic initiative on the Eastern Front for the rest of the war.

Card 17process
Question

How did Operation Barbarossa (1941) weaken Germany strategically?

Answer

By invading the USSR while still fighting Britain, Hitler created the two-front war Germany had always tried to avoid, overstretching its resources.

Card 18comparison
Question

Compare Axis and Allied strategic coordination.

Answer

The Allies coordinated through summit conferences (Tehran, Yalta) and combined complementary strengths (US industry, Soviet manpower, British intelligence). The Axis powers barely coordinated strategy with each other.

Card 19definition
Question

What was the Beveridge Report (1942)?

Answer

A British government report proposing a state welfare system 'from cradle to grave', which became the blueprint for the postwar welfare state, including the NHS (1948).

Card 20example
Question

What was the political outcome of the July 1945 UK general election?

Answer

Clement Attlee's Labour Party won a landslide victory over Churchill's Conservatives, reflecting a public demand for social reform after wartime hardship.

Card 21concept
Question

How did women's employment change in wartime Britain, and how much of that change lasted?

Answer

By 1943 around 90% of single women worked in essential war roles, but most left factory jobs after 1945 as men returned — the lasting shift was in expectations, not permanent employment.

Card 22example
Question

How were 'enemy aliens' treated in Britain during WWII?

Answer

Tens of thousands of German, Austrian and Italian residents — many Jewish refugees from Nazism — were interned in 1940 as suspected security risks, despite most posing no threat.

Card 23concept
Question

What was the economic cost of WWII to Britain?

Answer

Britain spent roughly a quarter of its national wealth, relied on the 1946 Anglo-American Loan, and kept rationing in place until 1954, marking its decline from global superpower status.

Card 24process
Question

What is the strongest way to answer a Paper 3 'To what extent do you agree' essay on causes of Allied victory?

Answer

Weigh multiple factors (economic, strategic, political) against each other using evidence, rather than crediting one cause alone, and end with a clear, substantiated judgement.

13.9.312 cards

Card 25process
Question

What triggered the shift from Nazi discrimination to mass shooting of Jews?

Answer

The invasion of the USSR (June 1941, Operation Barbarossa), which Hitler framed as racial-ideological war and which brought in the Einsatzgruppen.

Card 26definition
Question

Einsatzgruppen

Answer

Mobile SS killing squads that followed the German army into the USSR from 1941, shooting over 1.5 million people, mostly Jews.

Card 27definition
Question

Wannsee Conference

Answer

Meeting of senior Nazi/government officials on 20 January 1942, chaired by Heydrich, that coordinated the 'Final Solution' — deportation to death camps across occupied Europe.

Card 28example
Question

Babyn Yar

Answer

Site near Kyiv where Einsatzgruppen shot over 33,000 Jews in two days in September 1941 — an example of mass shooting before the death camps existed.

Card 29example
Question

Give one example of state-level collaboration in the Holocaust.

Answer

The Vichy regime in France, which passed its own antisemitic laws and organised roundups such as the Vel' d'Hiv (July 1942).

Card 30example
Question

Warsaw Ghetto Uprising

Answer

April–May 1943 armed uprising by Jewish fighters (the ZOB) against German deportations; held out for nearly a month despite having almost no weapons.

Card 31example
Question

Name two individuals or examples of rescue during the Holocaust.

Answer

Oskar Schindler (saved Jewish workers in his factories) and the Danish rescue of Jews to Sweden (1943).

Card 32concept
Question

Why was the international response to the Holocaust limited?

Answer

Allied governments knew of mass killing from 1942 but prioritised military victory over rescue; the 1943 Bermuda Conference achieved little concrete action.

Card 33definition
Question

Nuremberg Trials

Answer

1945–46 Allied trials of 22 senior Nazis, which created the new legal category of 'crimes against humanity' but tried only a small number of top leaders.

Card 34comparison
Question

Intentionalist vs functionalist debate

Answer

Intentionalists argue Hitler always planned genocide from the 1920s; functionalists argue it 'evolved' from radicalising wartime decisions and bureaucratic momentum.

Card 35process
Question

How did Nazi ideology set the long-term stage for genocide (1933–38)?

Answer

Through the Nuremberg Laws (1935) stripping Jews of citizenship and Kristallnacht (1938) — legal exclusion and violence, not yet mass murder.

Card 36process
Question

What role did the invasion of Poland (1939) play in the Holocaust?

Answer

Brought about 2 million Jews under Nazi rule and began ghettoisation and forced labour, setting up the population later targeted for deportation.

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IB History (2028+) HL Topic 13.9 Flashcards | Europe and the Second World War (1918–1949) | Aimnova | Aimnova