100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Lecture notes

IGCSE Year 10 History FULL notes

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
44
Uploaded on
18-09-2024
Written in
2023/2024

This document includes full notes for the IGCSE board History. Notes covered in year 10, spanning across The treaty of Versailles, League of Nations, Foreign Policy, USA in the 1920s, Great depression, as well as the Presidency of FDR. Notes are concise, and completed, with some example questions and model answers.

Show more Read less
Institution
GCSE
Module
History











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Document information

Uploaded on
September 18, 2024
Number of pages
44
Written in
2023/2024
Type
Lecture notes
Professor(s)
Mr g noble
Contains
All classes

Content preview

Topics at a Glance:
1. Paris Peace Conference
- Who?
- Ideas?
- Outcomes? 5. USA in the 1920s
- Reactions? - Economic Boom
- Effects? - Government Ideology
- Other Treaties? - Henry Ford and the Car Industry
- Mass Production
2. League of Nations - Different Industries
- Dates - The monkey Trial
- Aims - Impact on Women and the
- Methods used Emergence of Flappers
- Organisations - African Americans and
Sharecropping
3. Successes and Failures of the - Ku Klux Klan
League - Native Americans
- Corfu - Prohibition
- Aaland Islands
- Socio-Economics 6. The Great Depression
- Japan and Manchuria - Characteristics of Economic
- Abyssinian Crisis Depressions
- Unemployment
4. Nazi Foreign Policy 1933-1939 - How lives were affected
- Background
- Key Dates 7. President Roosevelt
- Aims of the Foreign Policy - Election
- Reasons for Anschluss - The Hundred Days
- Consequences of the Spanish Civil - Agriculture in the 1930s
War - The New Deal and Industries
- Appeasement: Justified or - Impact of the Hundred Days
Unjustified? - The Second New Deal
- Nazi Soviet Pact - Oppositions to the New Deal
- Impact of the New Deal



Tips for Answering (Exam) Questions:
- Give Direct answers, Names, Numbers and explanations
Question B:
- give TWO reasons
- Identify reasons
- Explain Reasons
- FULL Explanations
Question C:
- Give 3 explanations: (2 for the side you support more, 1 for the
opposition)
- Have two sides to the point given: Agree and Disagree
- FULL Explanations
- Conclusion (Evaluation/ Summary)

,Paris Peace Conference:

Who was involved?
- Leading figures of three countries: Britain, France and USA came together to
form the Big Three.
- Woodrow Wilson was the representative of the USA
- David Lloyd George was the representative of Britain
- Georges Clemenceau was the representative of France.

Profiles:

1. Woodrow Wilson
- Motivated by Peace
- Was an Idealist Reformer
- He used Britain’s debt to the USA to manipulate them to get what he wanted.
- Very Obstinate

Aims:
● To have his 14 points passed into the Treaty of Versailles
● For the Treaty to be less harsh toward Germany
● Increase Democracy in the defeated countries
● Self-Determination in Small Countries (independence)
● International Cooperation

Motivations:
● Improvement to trade in the USA
● Destroy the European Empires, allowing the USA to emerge as the strongest
● Idealism: to make the world peaceful (worldwide disarmament)

Opinions on the outcomes of the Treaty:


Pleased: Displeased:

- Alsace Lorraine was returned to - Only Germany had disarmed
France - German colonies were not given
- Germany was given Democracy self determination
- Germany was not crushed by the - Reparations were extremely
Treaty high
- Poland was given access to the - The League of Nations had
sea excluded the defeated countries.

, 2. David Lloyd George
- Was a Realist and Experienced Politician
- Was open to compromises
- Acted as the Middle ground between France and the USA

Aims:
● For Germany to avoid undergoing heavy punishments
● Germany to lose its navy and colonies
● To continue trading
● Prevent a Communist revolution
● Keep jobs in Britain
● Expand and Protect the British Empire

Motives:
● Preventing a Revolution as it would destroy trade relations between Britain
and Germany
● Losing navy and colonies: Germany had previously threatened Britain with
its Navy
● He prioritised the needs of the British People (Protect and expand)

Opinions on the outcome of the Treaty:
Pleased: Displeased

- Germany had lost its Navy - High reparations
- German colonies had been taken
- It had limitations on its army
- Germany was NOT crushed



3. Georges Clemenceau
- Wanted fair and eternal peace, but found Wilson hard to work with
- Realist and Uncompromising
- Stubborn
- Constantly disagree/clashed with Wilson
- Fought the 1870 Alsace Lorraine War

Aims:
● For the treaty to cripple Germany
● Prevent an invasion of France
● Take back Alsace Lorraine
● High Reparations to be imposed
● Demilitarise Germany
● To have River Rhine be installed as a border

, Motives:
● To exact revenge on Germany
● Stop or Prevent future invasions on France

Opinions on the outcome of the treaty:


Pleased: Displeased:

- Alsace Lorraine was returned to - The German industry was not
France completely destroyed yet
- Germany underwent - Germany was not totally taken
Disarmament apart.
- The Saar was given to France for
15 years: Increased mining
benefits - was left doubtful that Germany
- High Reparations of £6.6 Billion was completely stopped.
- Demilitarisation of the
Rhineland


The Big Three:
Purpose:
- To make decisions on Reparations, Military restrictions and Land removals
involved in the Treaty

- Make Germany pay Reparations
- Limit their Military
- Have land be removed

- To ensure that the Victors of the war are satisfied with the terms and the
Defeated countries are accepting of those terms
- Ensure that the treaty is fair to both sides

Restrictions on the German Empire and German Reactions:
1. Army was limited to 100,000 soldiers
2. No conscription was allowed
3. The Navy was given 6 Battleships
4. NO submarines were allowed

Reactions:
- Germans saw the loss of Navy as a loss of pride and purposefully sunk their
ships on their own
- They believed that the War Guilt Clause should be shared by all defeated, not
just Germany
£6.72
Get access to the full document:

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
luatrinity

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
luatrinity
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
0
Member since
1 year
Number of followers
0
Documents
1
Last sold
-

0.0

0 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their exams and reviewed by others who've used these revision notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No problem! You can straightaway pick a different document that better suits what you're after.

Pay as you like, start learning straight away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and smashed it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions