5. hitler's role in the development of the nazi party

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    Hitler's Role in the Development

    of the Nazi Regime

    Nazi Germany

    For more detailed instructions, see the Getting Startedpresentation.

    This icon indicates the slide contains activities created in Flash. These activities are not editable.

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    What we will learn today

    In this presentation you will learn:

    1. How Hitlers image was created.

    2. The reality which lay behind this image.

    3. The effect of Hitler on the Nazi government, including:

    a) the Fhrer Principle (Fhrerprinzip)

    b) the Hitler Myth

    c) how Hitler controlled ministers and departments

    d)whether there was anauthoritarian anarchye) whether this chaos was intentional or not.

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    What do you think about Hitler?

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    1. Hitlers Image:

    The Fhrer Principleand the Hitler Myth

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    A strong Germany?

    From its formation in 1871, Germany had been dominated

    by strong leaders striving for national unity and globalimportance.

    The democratic Weimar Republic, with its lack of strong

    leadership and constant power struggles betweenpolitical parties, was seen as having failed to deal

    effectively with Germanys post-war problems.

    By 1932, the Weimar political system had been discredited.

    Many Germans felt that the only way to turn this situation

    around was to have one strong leader, prepared to take

    personal responsibility for running the country.

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    The Fhrer Principle

    The Fhrer Principle (Fhrerprinzip) was the belief that

    Germany needed a strong, charismatic leader who could

    unify and lead the people.

    Hitlers power came to be regarded as

    something above and beyond that of a

    normal head of state.No matter who you were in the Nazi

    party or whatever your job in the state,

    you were answerable to Hitler.

    Hans Franck, Hitlers lawyer, wrote that:

    Our constitution is the will of the fhrerit was Hitlers

    regime, Hitlers policy, Hitlers victory and Hitlers defeat

    nothing else.

    Photograph courtesy of the

    Imperial War Museum, London.

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    Fhrer power

    On the next slides you will see five statements on the

    role of the fhrer from Ernst Huber, a constitutionaltheorist of the Third Reich.

    Which quote do you think best summarizeswhat the fhrerprinzip meant to the Nazis?

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    The office of fhrer has developed

    out of the National Socialist

    movement. In its origins, it is not a

    state office.

    The fhrerprinzip

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    The position of the fhrer combines

    in itself all sovereign power of the

    Reich.

    The fhrerprinzip

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    All public power in the state, as in

    the movement, is derived from

    fhrer power.

    The fhrerprinzip

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    This is comprehensive and total

    and embraces all spheres of

    national life.

    The fhrerprinzip

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    Fhrer power is not restricted by

    safeguards and controlsbut

    rather it is free and independent,

    exclusive and unlimited.

    The fhrerprinzip

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    The Hitler Myth

    The Hitler Myth presented Hitler as an almost godlike

    figure to a German population eager for strong leadership.

    He was depicted as being

    solely responsible for the

    economic miracle of the1930s and for crushing

    threats from both the

    Communists (following the

    Reichstag Fire) andextreme Nazism (in the

    Night of the Long Knives).

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    Ian Kershaw, a respected historian of Nazi Germany, has

    investigated the way in which the Hitler Myth was built upto consolidate the Fhrer Principle.

    In his view, the Nazis took power in 1933 because of

    Hitler, not because of their ideology.

    Analysis

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    Kershaws view

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    2. The Reality:

    How did the FhrerPrinciple and the Hitler

    Myth affect government?

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    Control of departments and ministers

    Hitlers direct circle consisted of about 70 key figures.

    These people were rewarded primarily for their loyalty.

    Their talent was a secondary consideration.

    Many of their jobs overlapped, leading to confusion and

    competition.

    For example, Goerings responsibilities for militaryplanning overlapped with the work of the Ministry of

    Economics and the Reich Labour Service.

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    Some historians argue that Hitler created confusion on

    purpose, believing that competition would bring the most

    committed administrators to the foreSocial Darwinism.

    Others think

    that he

    simply madea pigs ear of

    organizing

    the state.

    Was the chaos deliberate?

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    Hitlers staff

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    Was the chaos intentional?

    The question of whether Hitler deliberately engineered

    authoritarian anarchy for his own ends, is key to themuch bigger and more serious issue of how to account for

    the terrible events of the Third Reich.

    Were they chiefly down to:

    a) the personality, ideology and the will of Hitler(so Hitler was 'Master of the Third Reich')

    b) the political culture of the German people

    (so Hitler was a 'Weak dictator')?

    Why do you think that this is such an important

    question for historians to answer?

    OR

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    Historians who think that Hitler intentionally created a

    chaotic system of government are called intentionalists.Historians who think that the chaos came about by an

    unintentional series of events are called structuralists.

    BOTH accept that there was a certain degree of chaos inthe Nazi state;

    BOTH agree that Hitler was a central figure within it;

    BUT beyond that there are essential differences of

    interpretation.

    Intentionalists and Structuralists

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    Intentionalists Structuralists

    Key argument: Key argument:

    Key quote: Key quote:

    Hitler deliberately created

    political chaos, partly to

    divide and rule and partly

    believing that Social

    Darwinism would lead to the

    best people triumphing.

    Political chaos was an

    unwelcome legacy of the

    past which shaped Hitlers

    policies. He was also

    indecisive and lazy in

    some ways.

    Hitler was master in theThird Reich (Norman Rich)

    unwilling to take decisions,frequently uncertain in

    some respects a weak

    dictator (Hans Mommsen)

    Intentionalists and Structuralists

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    What do you know now?

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    1. What is the essential difference between the

    Intentionalists and the Structuralists?

    2. How do you think each group got its name?

    3. Which argument do you find most convincing and

    why?

    Discussion point