The history of Nazi Germany
Nazi Germany's territorial expansion did not begin in secret. The ideology driving it — Lebensraum, the doctrine that Germanic civilisation required vast new living space seized from others — was written into Mein Kampf, spoken aloud in speeches, and heard by the world. Episode 7 of The History of Nazi Germany examines how Hitler translated that ideology into action, and how the international community failed, step by step, to stop him. By 1936, the machinery of Hitler's dictatorship was fully assembled. The Reichstag Fire Decree, the Enabling Act, the Nuremberg Laws — each had stripped away the legal and political foundations of democratic Germany. What Hitler turned to next was geography. The remilitarisation of the Rhineland in March 1936 was the first major test: a direct violation of the Treaty of Versailles, executed with troops under orders to retreat if France pushed back. France didn't push back. Britain hesitated. The League of Nations proved toothless. Hitler moved through the gap, and the lesson he drew — that Western democracies would flinch — shaped every gamble that followed. Two years later, Austria ceased to exist as an independent state. The Anschluss of March 1938, preceded by Hitler's brutal ultimatum to Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg at Berchtesgaden, absorbed Austria into the German Reich within hours of troops crossing the border. For some Austrians, the reception was enthusiastic. For Vienna's Jewish population, the violence began the same day the soldiers arrived. This episode examines the psychology of appeasement, the collapse of the post-war international order, and the human cost of a world that kept assuming Hitler had made his last move. This episode was produced using artificial intelligence. A YesOui production. 9wcFyFY7kbodZEVVxnV2 This episode includes AI-generated content.
7 episodios
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