Reichstag Essays

  • The Reichstag Fire

    1687 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Reichstag Fire 1. Source A was written by Rudolf Diels, who was the head of the Prussian political police at the time of the fire. In his account of events, he explains that he caught Van Der Lubbe red handed, the suspect was alone and there was no evidence that he could see that involved other people, even other communists. He strongly disagreed with Goring and Hitler's theory that Van Der Lubbe was aided in some way, and that the whole affair was a communist plot to seize power. During the

  • Reichstag Fire Essay

    1271 Words  | 3 Pages

    was eradicated as the flames devoured the structure of the German parliament. This point in history is known to as “the Reichstag fire”. Even though a series of accusations where thrown to frame the communist party and Van der Lubbe (Dutch communist) who was caught red handed on the day of the fire, Historians still struggle and disagree to decide who was to blame for the Reichstag fire. This event is unclear and brings uncertainty, its is obvious that this event was crucial on Hitler’s road to power

  • Comparing The Weakness Of The Weimar Republic And Hitler's Rise To Power

    685 Words  | 2 Pages

    Numerous elections were held and this allowed Hitler to scheme his way to the top by 'wheeling and dealing'. Although by 1928 hitler's party only has 12 seats in the Reichstag but their was another additional factor which made all the difference. Hitler s efforts and the parties drive to succeed The use of propaganda was a clever tactic of Hitler 's. he promoted ideas to the German people that they wanted

  • SA Purge - June 1934

    1008 Words  | 3 Pages

    complete control of 60% of Germany's police force. The police support of the Nazi Party was the backing for a violent terror campaign against other political parties, again particularly against the KPD. This campaign of terror resulted in the Reichstag fire, blamed on the Communists. Some historians believe the fire was started by the Nazis, and was all a ruse to lose more Communist votes and exploit fears of a mass left-wing uprising. Whatever the case, Hitler claimed that the Communists were

  • Evaluation of Weimar Germany

    2278 Words  | 5 Pages

    Evaluation of Weimar Germany The Weimar Republic was an extremely complex and diverse place throughout the entirety of the interwar years. The society and the culture that the Weimar created had several different facets and frontiers according to how one chooses to approach it. The fundamental themes of the period evolve around Political conflict, economic instability, social unrest and diverse ideologies. In relation to this essay I shall be focusing my attention on the latter themes

  • Why the Nazis and not the Communists?

    1833 Words  | 4 Pages

    political alternatives other than Hitler and the Nazis. There could have been a return to parliamentary Party politics. There were some signs to show that democracy may have been revived. During the continuous utilisation of Article 48 to govern, the Reichstag gave their vote of no confidence in challenging the executive use of it. Also, a section of the public appeared to still support the Republic; the Centre Party and SPD continued to have steady support until 1932. However, it seems that any chances

  • Hitler In germany

    1812 Words  | 4 Pages

    was Chancellor and in control of police and local government, all legally and not within the spirit of the constitution. On the 27th of February 1933 a half-mad Dutch Communist called Van der Lubbe was found wondering in the ashes of the burning Reichstag. This provided the Nazis with the opportunity to persuade Hindenburg to sign an emergency decree (composed by Frick) on February the 28th, suspending civil liberties and allowing the central Government to run regional governments deemed unable to

  • 9/11 Was an Inside Job

    889 Words  | 2 Pages

    not the first time something like this has happened. On Febuary 27 1933, the German house of parliament, the Reichstag, caught fire and burned down. It is believed the Gestapo secret police covered the ground under the Reichstag in gasoline through tunnels. Hitler, later that day, rounded up communists and executed them in front of the building. The day after, Hitler issued the Reichstag Fire Decree which censorsed publications against the nazi party and limited most civil liberties. Hitler then

  • Reichstag Burning In Germany Essay

    692 Words  | 2 Pages

    Such an argument would claim that it was this event that led to Hitler and his Nazi army gaining power. The Reichstag was a German parliament building that was set ablaze. With the burning of the building, Hitler was given the opportunity to blame a scapegoat. In this case, the one in which all the blame fell upon was communists. People believe that without the

  • Assesment of Adolf Hitler's Speech Giving Tactics

    1339 Words  | 3 Pages

    The investigation evaluates the significance the change in speech tactics Adolf Hitler used in his speech on the 26th, of April 1942 to the Reichstag. To assess the speech tactics Hitler employed in this particular speech, the investigation will look at what tactics were used and how they differed from speeches Adolf Hitler had given previously. Psychoanalysis documents and the original translated speech were primarily used throughout the investigation. Two of the sources used in this investigation

  • Why Did Hitler Come Into Power

    1408 Words  | 3 Pages

    only then further gained more and more strength. The general election which took place in 1932 consolidated the Nazi’s strength within politics. Compared to the results in 1928, where Hitler and his party had only managed to gain 12 seats in the Reichstag, 1932 showed the massive effect that the Great Depression and the Wall Street Crash had had on Germany’s citizens, employment, and economy. During the

  • Why Did Hitler Lose The Reichstag

    694 Words  | 2 Pages

    elections have been held at the German Reichstag. After the Weimar Republic's Constitution of 1919, the official German voting system was changed from one person running on his own to proportional representation throughout the political party that wins the election. The German election of 1933 was the final free German election until after World War II. Shortly after Hitler’s appointment as chancellor of Germany, he suggested, to President Hindenburg, that the Reichstag be dissolved. The next German election

  • Nazis' Power Due to Use of Terror and Intimidation

    529 Words  | 2 Pages

    I do agree with this view in some ways as the Nazis did use some terror and intimidation, such as the Reichstag fire; however the Nazis did not just use terror and intimidation they also used promises and reassurances to the German people. Some methods of terror and intimidation that the Nazis did use to keep their hold on power were on the 27th February Hitler used the Reichstag fire to build up a German hatred of the Communists who he claimed had begun the fire, he also accused them

  • Weimar Government and its Weaknesses

    1359 Words  | 3 Pages

    The causes of the failure of the Weimar government are multi-faceted. However, I assert that the Weimar government's inability to keep the people's confidence in their capabilities, which eventually rendered them obsolete, was fundamentally due to the threats from within rather than the external hazards. Through exploring the flaws in the constitution and the threats to the WG's authority from the outside, it will be proven that what brought the WR down were its intrinsic vulnerabilities , and that

  • Germany's Fatal Attraction to Hitler

    684 Words  | 2 Pages

    YEAR 10 HISTORY ESSAY: GERMANY’S FATAL ATTRACTION TO HITLER Adolf Hitler, easily one of the most influential people to have ever walked on the Earth. His rise to power also one of the most oppurtunistic seized to date. How did he achieve such a powerful control over Germany and its people? Through what you could call a series of unfortunate events. After the First World War were forced to take blame for its happening. They were forced to pay ridiculous amounts in reparations & compensation

  • History of Nuclear Weapons

    834 Words  | 2 Pages

    with a positive instead of negative charge. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1933 January 30 Adolph Hitler becomes Chancellor of Germany. March 23 Following the Reichstag fire and subsequent suspension of constitutional liberties, Reichstag voluntarily gives over its powers to Hitler's cabinet. April 7 Third Reich promulgates its first anti-Jewish ordinance. September 12 Leo Szilard, a Hungarian physicist who took refuge in London from Nazi Germany

  • The Injustice of Forcing Humanity into a Totalitarian Society

    716 Words  | 2 Pages

    dictator can form a regime legally. Hitler became a dictator when the Reichstag building was set on fire on February 27, 1933 while he was currently the only leader of Germany. A Dutch communist, Marinus van der Lubbe, was tried and found guilty of the crime. Hitler used the countries fear of communism to suspend the German constitution and take executive powers. Some historians believe that a more likely culprit for the Reichstag fire was a Nazi obeying an order from Hitler himself to set fire to

  • How Did Hitler Prevent The Reichstag Fire?

    565 Words  | 2 Pages

    Firstly the Reichstag fire was a very prominent advantage to Hitler as it was a massive stage of his consolidation of power. On the 27th of February 1933 the Reichstag was set on fire and supposedly committed by Van der Lubbe who was a communist (though historians believe Hitler did it himself to rid the communists), he was executed and four other communist leaders arrested soon after. Hitler urged president Hindenburg that action must be taken and passed the Reichstag Fire Decree. Hitler could now

  • Characteristics Of The Weimar Constitution

    1298 Words  | 3 Pages

    powers were only meant to be used in times of emergency, Ebert used them 136 times during his six years as President. Many of the times, his reason for using them was simply to pass a law that he particulary wanted, but was unable to get through the Reichstag because proportional representation had given such significant representation to such a large number of ideologically opposing political parties. The use of thse powers showed that, even though he disagreed with the way in which he reached the office

  • Paul Von Hindenburg's Impact on the Weimar Republic

    1361 Words  | 3 Pages

    heavily focused on presidential power of parliamentary. During Bruning's stint as chancellor, he lacked the support of the Reichstag, and so instead relied on the power of article 48, passing emergency bills on his own and Hindenburg's powers. Bruning had to dissolve parliament, which resulted in considerable gains to the extremist right and left wings for seats in the Reichstag; an example being Hitler's Nazi party increased its seats from 12 to 107.