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In Poland in 1934 and in Western Europe in 1940, the German Army defeated its enemies quickly. Was this only because of the Blitzkrieg tactics used? Explain your answer
... to capture key targets and cause chaos. Then the German Panzer tanks and infantry vehicles would invade the weaker parts of the enemy front line. They would then surround the stronger parts of the enemy position. This cut the enemy ...
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In Poland in 1939 and in Western Europe in 1940 the German Army defeated its enemies quickly. Was this only because of the Blitzkrieg tactics used?
... Norway there were other factors such as the weakness and lack of cooperation of the allies, comparative army size and tactical mistakes that also contributed to the success of the Blitzkrieg campaigns.
The concept of Blitzkrieg was actually quite simple ...
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In the Reichstag Elections of 1932 the NSDAP became Germanys largest political party with 13,745,800 votes, some 37.4 of the total electoral vote.
... flocked in their millions to vote for a party with such cretinous ideologies that this essay intends to explore.
The most important factor in discovering who these people were and why they decided to opt for Hitler and the Nazis ...
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In what senses and to what extent are the Holocaust and Israel central to contemporary Jewish Identity?
... their focus from prayer and tradition to the rebirth of Judaism focusing on resistance, continuity and love and connection to the Jewish homeland of Israel. From Swastikas on train station walls to Arab Israeli conflicts to the commemoration of Yom-Hashoa ...
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In what ways did the work of Bletchley Park influence
... This allowed force H of Gibraltar to sink the Bismarck.
However Station X's greatest victory was the Battle of the Atlantic. The Germans were trying to stop trade between Britain and the USA. However station X managed to crack the Dolphin ...
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It must be admitted that the Republican Government of Spain has waged war very ineffectually (Liston Oak, May 1937). Comment.
... the Republic, since the reliability of the constitutional forces could not be guaranteed, was a wholesale arming of the trade unions and the left-wing parties.
Prime Minister Casares Quiroga prevaricated, confident proclamations issued forth as important time slipped by, ...
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Japanese Americans.
... ones who left Japan in search for a life of happiness and prosperity. A surge of downtrodden economic hardships heavily contributed to the steady influx of Japanese migrates. In order to support newly adopted techniques in Western industrialization, the Japanese ...
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Jewish Immigration into Britain in the 19th & 20th Centuries.
... website. (2004)
The term 'pogrom' is generally associated with attacks on Jews. Its origins can be found in Russia toward the end of the 19th Century following the assassination of Tsar Alexander II by a young Polish student.
"Under every kind ...
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Jews weren't only hated during Hitler's Germany, and the Holocaust. Christians hated the Jews ever since the belief that they had betrayed Jesus
... anti-Jewish riots spreading through the southern provinces of Russia. As a result, Jewish houses were looted, burnt, and the inhabitants beaten to death. These attacks were called 'progroms', and as the police were doing little to control the riots, the ...
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Jonnie Said That the Holocaust Did Not Happen. I an going to prove him wrong.
... deniers.
There are many facts supporting the truth that the Holocaust happened, and a result of it caused pain and suffering to the Jews. But with all the evidence given to me, I didn't find any information to make me think ...
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Kehr's concept of the Primacy of Domestic Policy in German Foreign policy
... literature of Ranke or Meinecke. Often repetitious in a way that does little for his argument, Kehr's literary style is often terse, dense and difficult to follow. It has been said that Kehr wrote in language more usually found in ...
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Kilroy Was Here
... because of Hitler's plans and his actions. For quite some time Hitler kept testing European countries to see how much and how far he could go before starting a war. At this time America stood by silent because we had ...
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Mein Kampf - a philosophical introduction to what became the Nazi fascist Third Reich under Hitler.
... big lies than little ones, Hitler wrote.
In it the full fury of Hitler's anti-Jewish hatred was made clear: he explains that he is drawing upon his personal experiences as a young man in Vienna before the first world war.1 He ...
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Middle East: A New Decade Brings on Changes of Interest.
... fail to deliver peace in the region.
The plan places irregular demands on the two parties, which will become more and more obvious with time. It requires a ceasefire from Palestinian militants but does not call for ending of ...
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Military Success of Germany
... a war. This singular position, technically, already puts the German forces in a better stead to be victorious in a combative encounter. Hitler's easy deal with Neville Chamberlain is a reflection of the stance of Germany at that point in ...
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Much of the anti Semitism which developed in the 1880's and 1890's had economic grounds (James Joll) Discuss.
... the extent to which these issues manifested themselves into anti-Semitism is different for each country across Europe. Anti-Semitism typically flares up when a country is in crisis such as in times of depression, wars and epidemics.
Through out the first ...
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Neville Chamberlain was born in 1869 and was the son of the politician Joseph Chamberlain.
... can be seen in British Foreign policy during the 1920's with the Dawes and Young plans. These policies tried to conciliate the Germans, as did the Locarno Peace treaties of 1925 - but the significant omission was that Britain did ...
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Night and Fog or the Shindler's List
... about the Holocaust compared to other representations. The talent of Steven Speilberg combined with the use of technology of the 90s resulted [ML3]in an extraordinary work, not only addressing the Holocaust, but also the human values[ML4]. The movie is about ...
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On the ninth of November, 1938, the terror of the National Socialists against Jews acquired a new dimension.
... the Polish consulate. Many Jews had no intention of returning to Poland, having fled the country and its growing anti-Semitism. However, without renewal, a Polish passport would become null and void, and return to Poland made impossible under any circumstances. ...
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Organized intelligence has long been a part of the Jewish people's struggle for a nation.
... to re-establish a Jewish homeland in Palestine. The Jewish people suffered through many perils in trying to conserve their beliefs, it became clear that the Hebrews had to gain information from their enemies to avoid being harmed and make sure ...
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Out of the rival political factions in interwar time Albania how were the communist able to take control of the country by 1944? When Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union in June 1941, there
... Albania to organise some communist cells. However Albania did not have a working class to exploit and the ideology of communism only seemed to appeal to intellectuals, peasants and miners who were not happy with Albania's obsolete social and economic ...
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Outline and explain Jewish theological and philosophical responses to the Holocaust.
... as they felt a G_d that had all of these qualities should have been able to save or protect them from the evil that was displayed through the Holocaust. Because of this people have responded differently to whether G_d exists ...
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Outline and Explain the Theological and Philosophical Responses to the Holocaust.
... they were herded like animals into gas chambers. In addition their culture too had disappeared with many of their books, paintings, music and architecture having been destroyed.
Before the Jews were sent to concentration camps, they were held in ghettos. Disease ...
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Outline the key stages in Nazis treatment to the Jews
... of Versailles.
When Hitler came to power in 1933, his anti-Semitic policy/aims were indecisive except he wanted them removed from German society explained in his book, Mein Kampf. There was no direct hint towards the creation of extermination camps. The ...
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Poland.
... included substantial numbers of Belarusians, Germans, Jews, and Ukrainians. This ethnic diversity was reduced sharply by World War II and the migrations that followed it. The Jewish population was reduced by about 3 million in the Holocaust. The resettlement and ...