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Which region and years define the Hitler case study?
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All Flashcards in Topic 15.4
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15.4.112 cards
Which region and years define the Hitler case study?
Region: Europe. Adolf Hitler led Nazi Germany from 1933 to 1945.
What was the Munich (Beer Hall) Putsch of 1923?
Hitler's failed armed attempt to seize power; it led him to prison and to adopting a legal route to power.
When and how did Hitler become Chancellor?
On 30 January 1933, appointed legally by President Hindenburg amid the Depression and Weimar weakness.
What did the Reichstag Fire Decree (Feb 1933) do?
It suspended civil liberties and allowed the arrest of opponents, especially Communists.
What was the Enabling Act (March 1933)?
A law letting Hitler's cabinet make laws without parliament — the legal foundation of his dictatorship.
Define Gleichschaltung.
'Coordination' — bringing all institutions (states, unions, parties, media) under Nazi control, creating a one-party state by July 1933.
What was the Night of the Long Knives (30 June 1934)?
The murder of SA leaders and other rivals; it removed threats and reassured the army.
How did Hitler become Führer in August 1934?
On Hindenburg's death he merged the offices of Chancellor and President, taking total power as Führer.
What were the Nuremberg Laws (1935)?
Antisemitic laws stripping Jews of citizenship and rights — a step escalating toward the Holocaust.
What was the Four-Year Plan (1936)?
An economic plan aimed at autarky and rearmament, preparing Germany's economy for war.
What did 'Kinder, Küche, Kirche' mean for women?
'Children, kitchen, church' — Nazi policy pushing women out of work and back into traditional domestic roles.
How should Hitler be paired in Paper 2, and what themes is he strong for?
Pair with a leader from a different region (e.g. Mao, Castro). Strong for methods of consolidation, propaganda/terror, and policies toward women and minorities.
15.4.212 cards
Stalin: country, region and years in power?
USSR; region Europe; in power c1928–1953.
Define cult of personality.
State-organised worship of a leader, portraying them as wise and infallible — central to Stalin's image.
What was the NKVD?
The Soviet secret police that carried out arrests, the purges, and the running of the Gulag labour camps.
Define collectivisation.
Forcing peasants off their own land into large state-controlled collective farms.
How did Stalin rise to sole power (1924–29)?
As General Secretary he controlled appointments; after Lenin's death he defeated Trotsky, Zinoviev, Kamenev, then Bukharin.
What was the Great Terror (1936–38)?
Mass NKVD arrests, executions and show trials that destroyed any possible opposition to Stalin.
What were the Moscow show trials?
Public trials (1936–38) where leading communists 'confessed' to invented plots and were executed — making the purges look legal.
What were the Five-Year Plans (from 1928)?
State plans setting huge production targets to industrialise the USSR rapidly into a superpower.
What was the Holodomor (1932–33)?
The catastrophic famine, especially in Ukraine, caused by collectivisation and grain seizures, killing millions.
How did Stalin's policies affect women?
Women were mobilised into the workforce in large numbers — factories, farms and professions — raising output and literacy.
Stalin's successes vs human cost (one line)?
Built an industrial superpower (Five-Year Plans) but at the cost of millions dead from famine, terror and the camps.
Why pair Stalin with Mao or Castro in Paper 2?
Paper 2 needs two examples from different regions — Stalin (Europe) pairs with Mao (Asia) or Castro (Americas).
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Who was Mao Zedong and what region/years define him?
The leader of the CCP who founded the People's Republic of China. Region: Asia; in power 1949–1976.
When and what was the founding of the PRC?
Mao proclaimed the People's Republic of China on 1 October 1949, after winning the Chinese Civil War.
What was the Long March (1934–35)?
The CCP's 9,000 km retreat to escape Nationalist forces; it confirmed Mao as leader and became a founding myth.
How did Mao take power?
By building a peasant-based guerrilla movement and winning the Chinese Civil War against the Nationalists.
How did Mao consolidate power?
Land reform, campaigns against 'counter-revolutionaries', the 1957 Anti-Rightist Campaign, terror, and a cult of personality.
What was the cult of personality around Mao?
Worship of Mao as the infallible 'Great Helmsman', spread through the Little Red Book of his sayings.
What was the Great Leap Forward (1958–62)?
Mao's drive to industrialise fast via communes and backyard furnaces; it caused the worst famine in history, killing tens of millions.
What was the Cultural Revolution (1966–76)?
A campaign using the Red Guards to purge rivals and 'old' ideas, causing mass persecution and over a million deaths.
What were the overall results of Mao's rule?
Total one-party control and a transformed, unified China — at a catastrophic human cost of tens of millions of deaths.
Why does Mao suit Paper 2's two-example rule?
He is from Asia, so he pairs with a leader from a different region (e.g. Stalin/Hitler in Europe, Castro in the Americas).
Compare how Mao and Stalin consolidated power.
Both used terror, purges and a personality cult; but Mao secured a freshly won revolution through mass mobilisation, while Stalin captured an existing party from within.
What was the Anti-Rightist Campaign (1957)?
A purge of critics and intellectuals; hundreds of thousands were silenced, imprisoned or sent to labour camps.
15.4.412 cards
Mussolini: country, region and years in power?
Italy (region: Europe), in power 1922–1943.
What was the 'mutilated victory'?
Nationalist grievance that Italy gained little territory despite winning WWI; Mussolini exploited the resentment.
March on Rome (Oct 1922) — what happened?
Mass Fascist show of force; King Victor Emmanuel III appointed Mussolini Prime Minister rather than resist.
What did the Acerbo Law (1923) do?
Rigged the electoral system so the largest party won two-thirds of seats, giving Fascists a majority.
Matteotti crisis (1924) — significance?
Fascists murdered socialist deputy Giacomo Matteotti; Mussolini survived the outcry and declared dictatorship in 1925.
What was the OVRA?
Mussolini's secret police, used to monitor, arrest and silence opponents of the regime.
What was the corporate state?
Economic system grouping workers and employers into state-controlled corporations; strikes and free unions banned.
Battle for Grain vs Battle for the Lira?
Drives to raise wheat output and strengthen the currency; gained prestige but hurt exports and other crops.
Lateran Pacts (1929) — what and why?
Agreement reconciling the regime with the Catholic Church; gave Mussolini major legitimacy among Italians.
Mussolini's policy toward women?
Pronatalism (Battle for Births): pushed women into motherhood and out of paid work to grow the population.
How did Mussolini consolidate power overall?
Combined legal moves (Acerbo Law, 1925 dictatorship), coercion (Blackshirts, OVRA) and persuasion (propaganda, Lateran Pacts).
Which leaders pair well with Mussolini in Paper 2?
Leaders from different regions, e.g. Mao (Asia) or Castro/Perón (Americas), since Mussolini represents Europe.
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In which region and years did Lenin rule?
Europe — Soviet Russia/USSR — from 1917 to 1924.
What was the October Revolution (1917)?
The Bolshevik seizure of power from the Provisional Government in November 1917 (October old-style) in Petrograd.
What was the Cheka?
The Bolshevik secret police, founded December 1917, used to arrest and execute opponents — the tool of the Red Terror.
What happened to the Constituent Assembly in 1918?
Lenin dissolved the freely elected Assembly by force, ending democracy and beginning the one-party state.
Who fought in the Russian Civil War (1918-21) and who won?
The Bolshevik Reds against the divided Whites; the Reds won by 1921, securing Bolshevik power.
What was the Kronstadt revolt (1921)?
A rebellion by naval sailors demanding freedoms; the Red Army crushed it, showing even former supporters could not challenge the party.
What was War Communism?
The harsh 1918-21 economy: grain seized from peasants and most industry nationalised to supply the Red Army.
What was the New Economic Policy (NEP)?
Lenin's 1921 retreat allowing limited private trade and farming to rescue a collapsed economy.
Why did the October Revolution succeed?
The Provisional Government was weak and unpopular, still fighting WWI, while Lenin's promises of peace and land had mass appeal.
How did Lenin consolidate power? (main methods)
The Cheka and Red Terror, dissolving the Constituent Assembly, winning the Civil War, and crushing Kronstadt.
Compare War Communism and the NEP.
War Communism seized grain and nationalised industry (survival in war); the NEP reopened limited private trade (economic recovery) — a pragmatic retreat.
How should you pair Lenin in a Paper 2 essay?
As the European example, paired with a leader from a different region — e.g. Mao (Asia), Castro (Americas) or Nasser (Middle East).
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Who was Fidel Castro and which region/years does he cover for Paper 2?
Leader of Cuba (region: the Americas), in power 1959–2008; a one-party socialist authoritarian state.
What was the 26th of July Movement?
Castro's revolutionary group, named after his 1953 Moncada attack, which led the guerrilla war against Batista.
How did Castro come to power?
Guerrilla war from the Sierra Maestra overthrew the US-backed dictator Batista; he took Havana on 1 January 1959.
What were the CDRs?
Committees for the Defence of the Revolution — neighbourhood watch groups that policed Cubans and reported 'counter-revolutionaries'.
How did Castro deal with opponents after 1959?
Revolutionary tribunals executed Batista officials; opponents were jailed or exiled; no legal opposition was allowed.
What was the Bay of Pigs (1961)?
A failed US-backed invasion by Cuban exiles; its defeat strengthened Castro, who then declared the Revolution socialist.
What was the Cuban Missile Crisis (1962)?
A US–USSR standoff over Soviet missiles in Cuba; it locked Cuba firmly into the Soviet bloc.
What were Castro's main social successes?
The 1961 literacy campaign and free universal healthcare, which sharply cut illiteracy and infant mortality.
Describe Cuba's economic policy under Castro.
Nationalisation of US firms, land reform, and a centrally-planned economy dependent on Soviet subsidies.
What happened to Cuba's economy after 1991?
Soviet subsidies ended, causing the severe 'Special Period' of economic hardship.
Aims vs results of the Cuban Revolution?
Aimed to end US domination and poverty; achieved literacy/healthcare gains but shifted dependence to the USSR and kept one-party rule.
Which leaders pair well with Castro in Paper 2 and why?
Mao (Asia) or Stalin (Europe) for communist consolidation; Hitler/Mussolini (Europe) for contrast — all from a different region.
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How did Juan Perón first build his political base?
As head of the Secretariat of Labour and Welfare (1943-45), raising wages and welfare for workers, who became known as the descamisados.
descamisados
'Shirtless ones' — Perón's poor and working-class supporters.
What happened on 17 October 1945?
Mass worker demonstrations in Buenos Aires forced the government to free Perón from arrest within a day, proving his real popular support.
When did Perón win the presidency, and how?
24 February 1946, in a genuine election, winning about 52% of the vote.
What did the 1949 constitution change?
It allowed the president to be re-elected immediately and centralised more power in the presidency.
What role did Eva Perón (Evita) play?
Ran the Eva Perón Foundation charity aiding the poor, led the campaign for women's suffrage, and became a powerful symbol of Peronism until her death in 1952.
How did Perón control the press and unions?
He fused the CGT union federation into his movement and shut down or seized independent newspapers such as La Prensa by 1951.
What was 'Justicialism'?
Perón's political programme mixing nationalism, state control of the economy, and welfare for workers.
What major right did Argentine women gain in September 1947?
The vote in national elections (women's suffrage), first used in 1951.
Why did Perón's economy struggle by the early 1950s?
Nationalisation and import substitution industrialisation brought early growth, but inflation rose and exports fell as the decade went on.
What ended Perón's first period in power?
The Revolución Libertadora, a military coup in September 1955, driven by economic strain and his broken alliance with the Catholic Church.
Compare Perón's rise with Hitler's rise to power.
Both used a mix of legal methods and mass mobilisation, but Perón won a genuine competitive election in 1946, while Hitler was appointed Chancellor in 1933 and then dismantled democracy from within.
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When and how did Nasser come to power in Egypt?
The Free Officers coup on 23 July 1952 overthrew King Farouk; Nasser became president after a 1956 plebiscite.
Free Officers
A secret group of Egyptian army officers, led by Nasser, that overthrew King Farouk in 1952.
What discredited King Farouk's regime before 1952?
Egypt's defeat in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War and widespread corruption linked to British influence.
Mukhabarat
Egypt's secret police and intelligence service, used by Nasser to watch and silence critics.
How did Nasser treat the Muslim Brotherhood?
He banned it and jailed or executed its members after a 1954 assassination attempt against him.
What was the Suez Crisis (1956)?
Nasser nationalised the Suez Canal; Britain, France and Israel invaded but were forced to withdraw by US and Soviet pressure, boosting Nasser's prestige.
Pan-Arabism
The movement to unite Arab countries into one political community, championed by Nasser.
United Arab Republic
A 1958-61 political union between Egypt and Syria under Nasser; it collapsed when Syria broke away in 1961.
What was the Aswan High Dam?
A Nile dam built with Soviet help, completed in 1970, that controlled flooding and expanded irrigation and electricity in Egypt.
What happened to Nasser's power after the 1967 Six-Day War?
Egypt's defeat and the loss of Sinai badly damaged his prestige as an Arab leader, though he stayed in power until his death in 1970.
Compare Nasser's and Hitler's route to power.
Nasser seized power through a fast military coup (1952); Hitler was legally appointed chancellor (1933) before destroying democracy from within.
Arab Socialism
Nasser's mix of state-run economy, land reform and Arab nationalism used to modernise Egypt.
Topic 15.4 study notes
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