Total Review
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show | His assassination in Sarajevo provoked Austria to declare war on Serbia and sparked the beginning of WWI.
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show | His murder of Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife Sophie in Sarajevo triggered WWI by prompting Austria to declare war on Serbia for the government's apparent hand in the assassination.
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show | France, Russia and Britain entered WWI as a result of this alliance.
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Triple Alliance | show 🗑
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show | Germany's guaranteed of support of Austria. So they could take action against Serbia after the assassination of Archduke Frans Ferdinand.
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Dreadnought | show 🗑
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show | A German war plan: wage war against one enemy at a time (first France), win quickly, and then move on to the next opponent (Russia). This failed at the Battle of the Marne as France was stronger than expected and Russia mobilized quicker than expected.
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First Battle of the Marne | show 🗑
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Tanks | show 🗑
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Gas | show 🗑
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Airplanes | show 🗑
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show | The German called them U-boats. Because the German U-boats destroyed American ships, the United States entered the war.
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show | A battle tactic first used in World War I which found both sides digging ditches in order to defend themselves from the enemy. This led to a war of attrition where little ground was ever gained and the amount of causalities were high.
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show | A military engagement in which neither side has any tactical advantage, so that the only result of the fighting is the great loss of men and material on both sides. One side tries to outlast the other.
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show | In 1916, it was one of the largest battles of WWI. The battle resulted with more than a million casualties and was the bloodiest battle for the British army. They suffered 60,000 casualties on the first day. No decisive advances were made.
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Battle of Verdun | show 🗑
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Russian Revolution | show 🗑
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show | Unrestricted German submarine warfare resulted in the sinking of the Lusitania and raised tensions between Germany and the US. Germany's attempt for a military alliance with Mexico against the States, led to this event which was the turning point in WWI.
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show | Senseless battles of attrition led to this mutiny in 1917.
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show | A 1915-16 battle that took place in Turkey. The battle was an absolute failure for the Allies. The ANZAC forces were decimated after they landed at an impossible cliff-side location. An entire generation of Australian and New Zealand men were killed.
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Balfour Declaration | show 🗑
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show | A treaty signed by Lenin and the Central Powers on March 3, 1918, which marked Russia's exit from WWI.
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Battle of Jutland | show 🗑
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show | Name given to members of the British women's movement who during the early twentieth century fought for the vote.
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show | When an entire country consecrates themselves to a war effort. When most production sectors change their production to war supplies. From shells to guns and tanks. Also the government is allowed to make decisions without the regular steps and stages.
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Propaganda | show 🗑
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show | In WWI it was used to cover up the truth in letters coming from the front. They would all be proofread and the parts that the masses shouldn't know were eliminated.
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The Paris Peace Conference | show 🗑
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Treaty of Versailles | show 🗑
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Treaty of St.Germain | show 🗑
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show | The peace treaty signed with Bulgaria after World War I. It was part of the Paris Peace Conference.
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show | The peace treaty signed with Hungary after World War I. It was part of the Paris Peace Conference.
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show | The peace treaty signed with the Ottoman Empire after World War I. It was part of the Paris Peace Conference.
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show | They were the most significant policy makers at the treaty of Versailles. Clemenceau, Lloyd George, Woodrow Wilson.
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Woodrow Wilson | show 🗑
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David Lloyd George | show 🗑
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Georges Clemenceau | show 🗑
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Fourteen Points | show 🗑
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show | Allows people of similar background the right to their own state or nation. Was the basis for many of the new countries formed after WWI but was overlooked in places such as the Polish corridor, the Sudetenland, and Yugoslavia.
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Diktat | show 🗑
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show | International organization formed after the Paris Peace Conference, intended to help maintain peace and the balance of power but lacked an armed force to ensure this. It was an unsuccessful attempt at collective security.
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Collective Security | show 🗑
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War Guilt Clause | show 🗑
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show | Germany was told to pay 132 billion gold marks to the Allies under the Treaty of Versailles because of the damage they had caused during World War I.
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show | World War II military alliance of Britain, France, the Soviet Union, the United States, Canada, China, and 45 other countries
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Axis | show 🗑
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Battle of Midway | show 🗑
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Invasion of Poland | show 🗑
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show | "lightning war " German military tactic for quick victory by use of massed airplanes, tanks and mobile infantry.
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Phony War | show 🗑
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Dunkirk | show 🗑
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show | Germany's failed attempt to subdue Britain in 1940 in preparation for an invasion (Operation Sealion). This was the first battle fought entirely in the air and the first time that Hitler suffered a military setback.
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Operation Barbarossa | show 🗑
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show | The surprise attack by Japan on U.S naval base in Hawaii, December 7, 1941. This brought the United States into World War II.
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D-Day | show 🗑
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show | City in Russia, site of a Red Army victory over the Germany army in 1942-1943. The turning point in the war between Germany and the Soviet Union, this battle is marked by heavy losses on both sides and fierce combat--much of it hand to hand.
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El Alamein | show 🗑
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show | The American effort to develop the first nuclear weapons. Leads to the dropping of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki and Japan's surrender during World War II.
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Hiroshima | show 🗑
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Nagasaki | show 🗑
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Lend-Lease Act | show 🗑
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Battle of the Bulge | show 🗑
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show | Allied strategy of capturing Japanese-held islands. From these bases the United States could bomb the main islands of Japan, including the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
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show | During World War II Japanese pilots were trained to make a suicidal crash attack, upon American ships. Very successful and had huge effect of allied moral.
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Holocaust | show 🗑
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show | 22 leading representatives of the Nazi regime had to answer to the International Military Tribunal of the victorious powers on four counts: conspiracy, crimes against peace, war crimes and crimes against humanity.
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Adolf Hitler | show 🗑
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Invasion of Norway | show 🗑
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Fall of France, 1940 | show 🗑
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show | Was thought of as a satellite state or "puppet state" of Germany after the fall of France in 1940.
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show | A World War II Nazi Germany plan to invade the United Kingdom, beginning in 1940. It never actually happened because Germany lost the Battle of Britain.
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show | The German airforce during the Second World War.
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Radar | show 🗑
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The Blitz | show 🗑
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General Rommel | show 🗑
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Winston Churchill | show 🗑
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show | At the beginning of the war German U-boats devastated Allied shipping and navies. Nearly cut off Britain from supplies and support but was eventually slowed and halted by Allied weapon advances.
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show | One of the turning point battles of World War II. A German defeat by Soviets. Afterword Germany was totally on the defensive. The largest tank battle in history.
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Operation Torch | show 🗑
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show | The Allied invasion of Sicily which leads to an Allied victory in Italy, July 1943.
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show | Germans besieged this city for 3 years, from 1941-1944. The Soviets were able to stop the German advance in the north here. The German plan was coded as Operation Nordlicht. The siege lasted from September 8, 1941 to January 18 1944.
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show | In May 1940, a battle between Japan and the USA; a battle at sea but fought entirely by aircraft carriers. A tactical victory for the United States as the Japanese plan for the invasion of Australia was cancelled.
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show | Invasion of Normandy, France in June of 1944.
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Strategic Bombing | show 🗑
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Battle for Leyte Gulf | show 🗑
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Auschwitz | show 🗑
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show | The 'big three' (Churchill, Stalin and Roosevelt) met to decide how to divide up Europe after the defeat of Germany.
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Harry Truman | show 🗑
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show | The Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, and the U.S represented by Joseph Stalin, Prime Minister Clement Attlee, and President Harry S. Truman. They tried to decide what to do with a defeated Germany but couldn't come to an agreement.
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show | A war fought between a rising Eastern imperial power and a decaying European empire. The first time an Asian country defeated a European power in a war.
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show | In 1905, in front of the Winter Palace in St. Petersburg, protesters brought a petition to the Tzar. They were gunned down by the Imperial Guard, sparking the Revolution of 1905.
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show | As a result of the Revolution of 1905, Tzar Nicholas II created this elected parliament to appease the people. In reality however, the group had virtually no power and the Tzar could dissolve it at any time.
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Romanov Dynasty | show 🗑
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show | The government that was set up at the onset of the Russian Revolution. It was made up of the members of the old Duma with Alexandr Kerensky as PM. It lasted less than a year.
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Lenin | show 🗑
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Bolsheviks | show 🗑
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Tsar Nicholas II | show 🗑
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show | A Russian mystic who held an influence over the Tsar and Tsarina in the later days of Russia's Romanov dynasty for his alleged ability to cure Alexis, their only son, who suffered from hemophilia.
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show | A Russian revolutionary leader who was instrumental in toppling the Russian monarchy. He served as the second Prime Minister of the Russian Provisional Government until Vladimir Lenin seized power following the October Revolution.
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show | A constitutionally socialist state that existed in Eurasia from 1922 to 1991. It was created by Lenin and his Bolsheviks, based on the writings of Karl Marx and would be the primary model for future communist states.
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Leon Trotsky | show 🗑
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show | Lenin's revolutionary slogan
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Russian Civil War | show 🗑
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Treaty of Brest-Litovsk | show 🗑
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show | An ideology that seeks to establish a classless, stateless social organization, based upon common ownership of the means of production. It can be classified as a branch of the broader socialist movement.
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show | Britain, France, Canada and the United States, along with other World War I Allied countries, conducted a ______________, entering the Russian Civil War on the side of the White Army.
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show | The armed forces first organized by the Bolsheviks during the Russian Civil War in 1918. Sometimes known as the Peasants' and Workers' Army.
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White Army | show 🗑
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show | The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics or the Soviet Union. A constitutionally socialist state that existed in Eurasia from 1922-1991 often incorrectly referred to as Russia. It was one of the world's two superpowers at that time, along with the USA.
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show | Harsh economic policies adopted by the Bolsheviks during the Russian Civil War in which everything (food, munition, clothes) went to the army. One of the first signs of totalitarian communism.
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New Economic Policy | show 🗑
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show | General Secretary of the Communist Party from 1922 until 1953. After Lenin's death he eventually became the de facto party leader and dictator of the Soviet Union. Ruled with an iron grip, modernizing the country with his ruthless five year plans.
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"Socialism in one Country" | show 🗑
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General Secretary of Communist Party | show 🗑
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show | Agricultural plan introduced by Stalin in which peasants were required to put their lands together to form large joint farms. This was meant to increase productivity and thus finance industrialization through export of surplus food.
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show | Generally created by the state when confiscating large estates, workers were paid regular wages that differed from those on a collective farm.
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show | A government owned farm where peasants worked on a quota system. Animals and machinery were pooled together to increase productivity.
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show | Literally meaning tight-fisted, it is a term referring to the relatively wealthy peasants in the Russian Empire who owned larger farms and used hired labourers.
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Resistance to collectivization | show 🗑
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Great Purges | show 🗑
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show | Loyal Bolsheviks and party members that Stalin saw as any kind of threat, were subject such great stress, fear, and abuse that they made public confessions to crimes against the state of which they were innocent.
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Five Year Plans | show 🗑
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show | An international Communist organization founded in March 1919, in the midst of the "war communism" period (1918-1921), by Vladimir Lenin and the Russian Communist Party. It's aim was to spread communism worldwide.
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show | Military agreement between Germany and the Soviet Union under which each renounced all territorial and financial claims against the other following the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk and WWI. A secret annex allowed Germany to train their military in Russia
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show | A non-aggression treaty between the German Third Reich and the Soviet Union, signed in Moscow on August 23, 1939. Short-lived, it lasted only as far as Operation Barbarossa.
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Operation Barbarossa | show 🗑
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show | During the boom, there is a high level of aggregate demand, inflation increases, unemployment falls, and growth in national income accelerates. "Bubble of prosperity"
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Henry Ford | show 🗑
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show | During the 1920s when everyone was buying products with money earned from the stock market. People want to own the newest thing available. Was one of the main reasons for the "boom" of the 1920's.
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show | A manufacturing process in which interchangeable parts are added in a sequential manner to create a finished product. In 1913 the engineers of Henry Ford applied the concept to automobile assembly, revolutionizing industry and sparking mass production.
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Buying On Margin | show 🗑
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show | The rapidly increasing agricultural production lead to a glut and prices stagnated. The one area of the US economy that did not prosper during the boom times of the 1920's.
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show | October 29, 1929, when general panic set in that everyone with investments in the market tried to pull out of the market at once. This week and its aftermath marked the start of the Great Depression.
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show | He was put to the test with the onset of the Great Depression in 1929. It was his vocal stance on non-intervention that led to Democratic attacks that he was a laissez-faire, 'do nothing' president, which his supporters denied.
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Isolationism | show 🗑
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Bust | show 🗑
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show | A series of villages appearing during the Great Depression in the U.S. They consisted of ramshackle houses for those left unemployed and homeless, and were named after the U.S. president of the time for his unwillingness to respond to the Depression.
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FDR (Roosevelt) | show 🗑
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show | The first three months of Roosevelt's administration during which numerous bills to fight the Depression were proposed and passed and a national bank holiday declared after which only stable banks were reopened.
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The New Deal | show 🗑
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show | Created by Roosevelt to deal with the Great Depression. Included AAA, Agricultural Adjustment Administration, CCC Civilian Conservation Corps, NRA National Recovery Administration, PWA Public Works Administration, TVA Tennessee Valley Authority.
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John Maynard Keynes | show 🗑
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show | President Roosevelt's radio broadcasts that were designed to explain his programs to the American people and boost their confidence.
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The Great Depression | show 🗑
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show | The steep fall in the prices of stocks due to widespread financial panic. Caused by stock brokers who called in the loans they had made to stock investors who had been "buying on margin".
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show | Historical name for the democracy that governed Germany from 1919 to 1933. The democracy was named after a German city, where a national assembly convened to produce a new constitution.
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show | A series of treaties signed by the Allied powers and the countries of Europe in an attempt to ensure peace after the tragedy of World War I.
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Young Plan, 1929 | show 🗑
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Dawes Plan, 1924 | show 🗑
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show | Troops from France and Belgium took over this area when the German Weimar Republic failed to make reparation payments in the aftermath of World War I.
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show | Following the First World War, the Treaty of Versailles forced Germany to pay significant reparations to the nations that won the war. Germany printed worthless paper money which soon lost it value and prices dramatically increased.
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show | The third failed attempt to overthrow the Weimar republic, but Hitler's first attempt to gain power. Ended when Hitler was arrested.
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show | This was a failed attempt to overthrow the Weimar Republic by communists led by Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht.
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show | Adolf Hitler's book which was written in jail after the failed Beerhall Putsch. Combining elements of autobiography with an exposition of Hitler's political ideology of Nazism.
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show | Led Italy from 1922 to 1943. He created a Fascist state through the use of diplomacy and propaganda. Using his charisma, total control of the media, outright violence and intimidation against political rivals, he disassembled the democratic government.
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Black Shirts | show 🗑
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show | Three agreements made in 1929 between the Kingdom of Italy and the Catholic Church. The church recognized Mussolini as the leader of Italy and Vatican City was created.
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Chamberlain | show 🗑
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show | An agreement between Chamberlain and Hitler that was part of the policy of appeasement. It gave the Sudatenland (Part of Czechoslovakia) to Nazi Germany.
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show | The 1938 joining of Austria and Germany by the Nazi Regime. Originally the joining of these 2 countries had been banned by the Treaty of Versailles.
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Sudentenland | show 🗑
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Rhineland | show 🗑
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show | A conflict in which the Spanish Republic and political left-wing groups fought against a right-wing nationalist insurrection led by General Francisco Franco, who eventually succeeded winning the war with the help of Germany and Italy.
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Hitler | show 🗑
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Brown shirts | show 🗑
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Enabling Act | show 🗑
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show | These laws were passed by the government of Nazi Germany. They were the basis for the racial discrimination against Jews.
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Night of Long Knives | show 🗑
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Kristallnacht | show 🗑
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show | Messages, directly aimed at influencing the opinions of people, rather than telling the truth. Throughout the twentieth century this was a common tactic of political leaders particularly during periods of war.
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Lebensraum | show 🗑
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Aryan Race | show 🗑
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Final Solution | show 🗑
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Holocaust | show 🗑
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show | Very large-scale events that took place in Germany that relied mostly on propaganda. They were used to provide support for the Nazis and to develop ultra nationalism.
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show | The beliefs of Adolph Hitler and his followers.
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show | A political system in which the state, or the governing branch of the state, holds absolute authority, not allowing any opposition group.
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show | Germany's greatest military hero of World War I who served as president under the Weimar government from 1925 to 1933. He hated the Nazis, but was forced to appoint Hitler as chancellor after the burning of the Reichstag.
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show | The military alliance between Germany and Italy signed by Hitler and Mussolini.
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show | Generalisimo Francisco Franco, was dictator of Spain from 1939 until his death in 1975. His army won the Spanish Civil War.
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show | Giving in to the demands of aggressive powers to avoid war, as long as those demands appear reasonable. Such a policy was pursued by Britain and France in dealing with Germany in the latter half of the 1930s.
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show | An agreement between Nazi Germany and the USSR not to attack each other and to split up Poland after Germany invaded it.
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Kapp Putsch | show 🗑
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show | A group of ex-army veterans who put down the Sparatcist Putsch and then tried to take over the Weimar Republic themselves. They failed because they did not have the support of the army or the general public.
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Rearming of Germany | show 🗑
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Chamberlain | show 🗑
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Munich Agreement | show 🗑
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Anschluss | show 🗑
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show | The area of Czechoslovakia that was primarily German speaking. Hitler wanted to annex this territory and it led to the Munich Crisis of 1938.
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Rhineland | show 🗑
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show | A civil war in which Germany was able to test out its new weapons before WWII. Eventually won by General Francisco Franco.
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show | Chancellor of Germany from 1933 Leader of Germany from 1934 until his death. He was leader of the National Socialist German Workers Party, better known as the Nazi Party. He was responsible for the death of millions of Jews and other minorities
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Brown shirts | show 🗑
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Enabling Acts | show 🗑
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show | Passed by Nazi Germany they discriminated against Jewish citizens.
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Night of Long Knives | show 🗑
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show | The Night of Broken Glass, was a massive nationwide pogrom in Germany on the night of November 9, 1938. It was directed at Jewish citizens throughout the country.
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Propaganda | show 🗑
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show | The German term for "living space" is used in English to refer to a motivation for Nazi Germany's expansionist policies, to provide extra space for the growth of the German population.
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show | Often intertwined with Anti-Semitic ideas. It was also referred to as the "master race"
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show | The German Nazis' plan to engage in systematic genocide against the European Jewish population during World War II.
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Holocaust | show 🗑
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Nazism | show 🗑
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The Cold War | show 🗑
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show | Made up of the countries that are between the Soviet Union and Western Europe that were under Soviet control. If there was an western invasion then the fighting would take place there.(Poland, East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Bulgaria, Romania)
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show | After World War II the world is "divided" into two camps: The USA and USSR.(communism vs. capitalism)
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show | The areas close/beside a super power. They are influenced to follow policies because of where they are located. Sometimes considered a superpower's "backyard".
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Truman Doctrine | show 🗑
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"iron curtain" | show 🗑
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Marshall Plan | show 🗑
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Berlin Blockade | show 🗑
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show | American, British and French airlifts of food and other provisions to the Western-held sectors of Berlin. 462 days that flew supplies into the Western-held sectors of Berlin.
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show | A military alliance created in 1949. Western countries agreed to support each other in case of Soviet aggression.
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Warsaw Pact | show 🗑
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show | Refers to the final stage of the fighting in the Chinese Civil War. Ended with the communist party taking over.
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McCarthyism | show 🗑
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show | Some consider this Cold War-era conflict to have been a proxy war between the U.S. and its allies and the Communist powers of the People's Republic of China and the Soviet Union. It was the first time that UN members sent a combined force a conflict.
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show | After the death of Stalin, he became the leader of the U.S.S.R. He wasn't the ruthless leader as Stalin was and ruled less intensely. He started de-stalinization and was the founder of the Warsaw Pact.
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De-Stalinization | show 🗑
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Sino-Soviet Split | show 🗑
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show | Spontaneous nationwide revolt against the communist government. When the government tried to leave the Warsaw Pact, Soviet tanks were sent in to crush the rebellion.
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Imre Nagy | show 🗑
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U-2 | show 🗑
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The Berlin Wall | show 🗑
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show | A confrontation during the Cold War between the Soviet Union and the United States caused by the Soviet deployment of nuclear missiles in Cuba.
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Fidel Castro | show 🗑
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Bay of Pigs | show 🗑
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show | Kennedy's response to the Cuban Missile Crisis. During the crisis all ships en-route for Cuba were stopped and searched for missiles and other weapons.
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Brinkmanship | show 🗑
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show | 35th and youngest ever president of the U.S.A. Major events included The Bay of Pigs invasion, Cuban Missile Crisis and the starting of the Space Race. Assassinated on Nov. 22, 1963.
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show | Worlds first satellite placed into space by Russia in 1957.
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Space Race | show 🗑
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Yuri Gagarin | show 🗑
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show | First American in space.
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You may also shuffle the rows of the table by clicking on the "Shuffle" button.
Or sort by any of the columns using the down arrow next to any column heading.
If you know all the data on any row, you can temporarily remove it by tapping the trash can to the right of the row.
To hide a column, click on the column name.
To hide the entire table, click on the "Hide All" button.
You may also shuffle the rows of the table by clicking on the "Shuffle" button.
Or sort by any of the columns using the down arrow next to any column heading.
If you know all the data on any row, you can temporarily remove it by tapping the trash can to the right of the row.
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Created by:
alfromcanada