How bout u look in your Social Studies book. ehhh?
What was Woodrow Wilson's 14th point?
It was to start a League of Nations and to end all wars. He wanted the world to be at peace and no longer fight.
The League of Nations.
What did Joseph Stalin want out of the treaty of Versailles?
Joseph Stalin hoped that the Treaty of Versailles would result in Hitler causing a Civil War. He wanted Communists to take over the country of Germany.
What action did the western powers believe that Hitler violated the Treaty of Versailles in 1936?
They didn't believe they knew Hitler was breaking the treaty of versailled e.g. Hitler smashed the 100,000 army limit, formed an Air and Naval Force, Conquerd the Rhineland. Dispite all of this the allied forced did nothing to Germany but just talk.
What is the rise of totalitarianism?
The rise of totalitarianism happens during the Great Depression and before WWII. The governments associated are fascism, communism, the Nazi Party, and socialism. It is the rise of governments with dictators.
What types of jobs did hilter have?
e was struggling as an artist and homeless before he joined the German Army in WW1. After the war was over, and the Treaty of Versailles was signed, Hitler was outraged, and became a political activist.
How Hitler broke the terms of the treaty of Versailles between 1333 to 1939?
Hitler had nothing to do with 1333. It was well before his lifetime.
the treaty of Versailles plunged Europe into the second world war and it led to the rise of aggressors in Europe
What Terms of The Treaty of Versailles specifically affected Germany?
The Treaty of Versailles decreed that Germany pay restitution for the damage suffered by other countries in the war. She was also denied forming an alliance with her wartime ally Austria and received military rebuilding sanctions.
Did Hitler believe that the treaty of Versailles should be reversed?
yes...... because he didn't like the original treaty in the first place....thats all i know...bye
Versailles did not fix any of the problems that had caused World War I. All it did was punish Germany, which made Germany angry. When Hitler came around, he promised to undo the damage of World War I and give the people a chance at revenge and to get their national honor back. Had Versaillies not hurt them so severely, Hitler would not have had something he could give the people to make them follow him. And without Germany, Italy would have no one to support them and their weak army. If Italy and Germany didn't start a war, Japan wouldn't have felt it had to attack America at Hawaii before America attacked them.
The League of Nations had no real power. Had it stopped Mussolini's invasion of Ethiopia and Hitler's annexation of Austria and Czechoslovakia, as well as Japan's agression on Mainland Asia, there would not have been a war.
The Treaty of Versailles made the Germans take all the blame for the war and made them pay massive amounts of money. Suffice to say, Germany wasn't happy. To combat this, Germany just printed lots of money, which made the worth go down. So, Germans were all poor, poverty-stricken. Adolph Hitler came to power and used all of the resentment the Germans had against the rest of the world and began WWII
Why was the Treaty of Versailles rejected by the US Senate?
because they were very idealistic and wanted 'peace' and a 'safe place' for capitalism to grow. the terms of the treaty were mainly made by britain and france, who wanted revenge on germany, so many of the terms were going to be devastating to germany instead of promoting the vision that woodrow wilson had
Alsace-Lorraine & the extension to the west bank of the Rhine River
Why did Germany have to pay 6600 million pounds in the treaty of Versailles?
To cover the entire cost of the allied war effort in World War I
How did the Treaty of Versailles help the Armenians?
The Treaty of Versailles forced Germany to give up its influence in the Ottoman region, which included Armenia. The Treaty of Sevres was meant to specifically establish peace between the Ottomans and the Allies, but it was never signed.
Why did many us senators refuse to sign the treaty of versallies?
in the treaty of Versailles Britain and France wanted Germany to pay for damages it caused in Europe, when in fact that Germany's ally austria-Hungary and some eastern slavic nation started the war. and from that, the treaty made Germany one of the poorest European nation in the world, like the German Mark (German currency at that time) had no value in it that Germans would use it for kindling to warm their houses
How did personalities of the Big Three affect the Treaty of Versailles?
OK, let's go through each member of the Big Three in turn...
First, Woodrow Wilson, president of USA... He happened to be a bit of an idealist, and this was reflected in his aims for the Treaty of Versailles (think of the 14 points). He wanted to build a stronger world out of the carnage of the war. The other two thought his views were a bit too idealistic.
Next, Georges Clemenceau, prime minister of France... His nickname was the tiger. His country had suffered more than any other in the war, as most of the fighting took place on French soil. He and the rest of France had watched their country burn and they wanted revenge. Therefore, he helped make the Treaty harsher than perhaps the other two of the Big Three desired.
The last member, David Lloyd George, prime minister of Great Britain, had opinions and aims for the Treaty that can be considered to be 'in the middle' of the others' - but this doesn't mean to say that he wasn't biased. Britain did a lot of trade with Germany and Lloyd George wanted Germany to be able to continue with this. However, Britain had lost a huge number of soldiers and the public clamour for revenge could not be entirely ignored. This affected the Treaty in that it helped to make it harsh, but not as harsh as Clemenceau had wanted.
The culmination of all these different aims for the Treaty ended in a result which nobody out of the Big Three were satisfied with - in fact no country at all liked the Treaty. Their aims were all so varied that they could never really reach an appropriate decision.
What did the Treaty of Versailles focus mainly on?
The treaty of Versailles focussed on the following:
Evidence to say the Treaty of Versailles wasn't harsh enough?
I personally believe it was far to harsh, but as for evidence for the other side:
- It didn't keep Germany from going against it
- It didn't crack down on Bulgaria at all
- Germany didn't lose much African territory
- It didn't put a military occupation in Germany.
Which of Germany's former colonies lost with the Treaty of Versailles did Hitler recapture?
None. Germany was allied with Japan, which held some. German forces never penetrated to central or south Africa to secure the others. The Pacific colonies, islands in the Bismark Sea and other possessions, were seized without combat by the Japanese in WWI. The Japanese held these under a League of Nations mandate, with a requirement they not arm/militarize them. The Japanese violated this agreement and built fortifications extensively. The other German colonies were in Africa. The French took over Cameroon (German Equatorial Africa). Togo, a small colonial sliver near Nigeria, was also taken over by the French who also held nearby Dahomey. The South Africans, part of the British Commonwealth, took over German Southwest Africa. The British also took the most valuable German colony, Tanganyika. British forces had already attacked and defeated a native force on the island of Zanzibar (sometimes listed in the Guiness book of world records as the worlds shortest war) in the 1800s. Zanzibar is off the the coast of Tanganika. After WWI, the two colonies were combined into the new British colony, Tanzania, a combination of the two territorial names. The addition of these territories to the already massive British Empire meant that the British now controlled an unbroken strip of land from Egypt (under British rule since 1882) to Cape Town. They used this geographical advantage to begin construction of a rail system to link the far distant colonies of north and south. This construction project is noted in the Speilburg movie 'the Color Purple'. To my knowledge there were no other non-European German territories.
What was the result of the refusal to the Treaty of Versailles?
They basiacaly were tired of sleeping with dogs.