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Summary Edexcel a-level history: germany, : united, divided and reunited - Depth 3 The third Reich 1933-35

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Depth 3 The third Reich 1933-35

Nazi consolidation of power

- Totalitarian – unrestricted centralised power
- 30th January 1933 – Hitler becomes chancellor – Has mass support and a private army the SA
which allows him to apply terror BUT controlled by conservative elites/the president who
didn’t like him as thought he was too radical – Power far from total
- Why did Hitler become chancellor?
 government couldn’t control both Nazis and communists – communism a bigger
problem which Hitler could help combat - Unrest, street violence and fears of
revolution
 Elites pressured Hindenburg as they thought they could control him – Von Papen as
vice chancellor
 Mass support
 Difficulty of minority government - 4 Chancellors 1930-32 (Muller, Bruning, von
Papen & von Schleicher) - unstable
 SPD went into opposition – refused to form coalition government as didn’t want to
cut unemployment benefit which every other party did
 Economic circumstance – depression and unemployment
- The position of Hitler and the Nazis 1933

Obstacles Strengths
-Hindenburg and the elites – Can fire him -Most popular/biggest party (33% of the vote Nov 1932)
-No majority/coalition rule - 3/12 cabinet members were -Shared values with the elites – anti-communist/democratic
Nazis (Hitler/Frick (interior minister controls police)/Goering -Resources of state - key cabinet posts/state media
(minister without portfolio so has no job – in Prussian region (government owned and controlled e.g. radio and
government is the Prussian interior minister) – will have to newspaper)
work with other parties -Propaganda – marches and organised events – gives people
-Public concerns (2/3 had not voted Nazi) – vote had the impression that this is a party of strength – run by Joseph
dropped Goebbels
-The Army – more loyal to Hindenburg – distrust Nazis as -Limited resistance from the Left – thought Hitler would fail
they are violent and undisciplined and they’d take power
-Other independent organisations - trade unions (strikes to -Terror and violence (SA, SS, Stahlhelm) – give impression of
disrupt economy – churches (people more loyal to them) - order
the press (free press can report badly on them) -Tactical– smarter than he’s given credit for
-International opinion



- ‘Legal revolution’ – a mix of legitimate methods and violence/intimidation

, March 1933

The Reichstag Fire and Reichstag Fire Decree

- An arson attack on the Reichstag - by lone Dutch communist party member Marinus van der
Lubbe in February 1933
- Allowed the Nazi propaganda to stir up fears of communism
- Hindenburg convinced to pass the decree ‘For the Protection of People and State’/Reichstag
fire decree - Allowed Hitler to use emergency power Article 48 and also:
 Removed many freedoms (speech, assembly, press freedom)
 Extended power of the Nazis to deal with communist threat
 SA made auxiliary (support) police officers
 Banned critical journalism
 Law enforcement agencies given the power to take suspects into ‘protective
custody’ (arbitrary arrest) – within a few weeks 25,000 arrests made of communists
and socialists

The Day of Potsdam

- Reopening of the Reichstag March 1933
- Used propaganda to present themselves as a moderate conservative party - presented an
image of respectability and moderation - Event shown in cinemas and broadcast on the
radio
- Hitler wore Morning dress (suit and tie) rather than SA Nazi uniform to reassure the public
and conservative elites – Gave moderate speech - Respectful to Hindenburg, the old Kaiser’s
son and other elites in attendance – showing deference
- In the same month the first concentration camp opened in Dachau and the first political
opponents of the Nazis were detained there

The March 1933 Reichstag elections

 Hitler wanted to reduce his dependence on other parties and alter the constitution
 Despite feverish electioneering the Nazis only polled 43.9% - No 2/3 majority so
can’t alter the constitution
 Nazis maintained the edge as they had conservative partners like the DNVP - The
KPD (communists) was banned - its 81 deputies denied their place in the Reichstag -
Many leading KPD figures moved to concentration camps (e.g. Dachau)

The Enabling Act

 Didn’t have majority but pushed through enabling act which meant he could pass
laws without consulting Reichstag for four years
 Used the support of other nationalist parties (used his links with von Papen) and the
Centre party (Concordat with Rome - deal with pope in which he promised to
respect the Church if they stayed out of politics)
 Combined with intimidation from the SA - only the 94 SPD deputies voted against
the Act but were intimidated (Reichstag decorated with swastikas and filled with SA
members- When SPD discusses vote the SA chanted ‘we want the enabling act or
there’ll be hell to pay’)- 444 in favour
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