The Rise of Adolf Hitler
Adolf Hitler was born in Braunau, Austria on April 20, 1889 and spent most of his childhood in Linz. He was not a very good student and dreamt of becoming a painter. In 1913 he moved to Munich and volunteered for the Germany Army when World War I broke out.
Germany lost the war and the Treaty of Versailles punished the country very strictly . It lost its overseas colonies and had to give up its Saar coal region to France. It was only allowed to have a small army and building ships was forbidden . The treaty also made Germany pay a lot of money to Great Britain and France for the damage caused by the war. Hitler was angry at the Allies because he thought they had treated his homeland in an unfair way.
After the war life became very difficult for the Germans. The Great Depression forced many of them out of work and made money almost worthless . Many Germans believed that only a strong leader could make their nation proud again.
After returning to Munich Hitler became the leader of the National Socialist German Worker’s Party, or Nazis. The party’s emblem was an old hooked cross called swastika . Hitler was a powerful speaker and crowds of followers came to his meetings.
In 1923 Adolf Hitler tried to overthrow the German Government . He failed and had to go to prison for nine months. There he wrote his book “Mein Kampf”. In it he looked for solutions to Germany’s problems.
Hitler spoke in a style that many people liked. He blamed Jews , Communists and other groups for all the problems that the country had and said that only if pure Germans, which he called Aryans, controlled the country it would return to greatness .
By January 1933 Adolf Hitler and his National Socialist party took over power. He became a dictator, a leader with complete control and created the Third Reich . The Nazis acted quickly against everyone who was against them. They outlawed all other political parties. People who opposed the new government were often murdered.
Once in control he started persecuting the Jews. He also began strengthening the German army and creating jobs for the population . This made him increasingly popular among many Germans.
The Nazis tried to get teenagers to follow Adolf Hitler and his party. These teenagers were organized in groups called the “Hitler Youth” where they chanted Nazi slogans and sang songs in honour of the Fuehrer.
By 1944 the war was going badly for Hitler and the Third Reich . Some of his officers wanted to end the war and save the country from destruction . They tried to kill him by planting a bomb in his office, but Hitler escaped without injuries . Eventually he realized that Germany had lost the war . He committed suicide on April 30th 1945 in Berlin . Eva Braun, his mistress , died with him.
World War II - Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Causes of World War II
- The Rise of Adolf Hitler and the NSdAP
- Blitzkrieg and the Battle of Britain
- Battle of the Atlantic
- The Holocaust
- Operation Barbarossa - The German Invasion of the Soviet Union
- Attack on Pearl Harbour - America Enters the War
- D-Day - Allied Invasion of Europe
- Hiroshima and Nagasaki - Japan Surrenders
- Life During World War II
- End of World War II
- Key Figures of World War II
- Results and Aftermath of World War II
Online Exercises
- Multiple Choice Exercise 1
- Multiple Choice Exercise 2
- Multiple Choice Exercise 3
- Crossword Puzzle 1
- Crossword Puzzle 2
- The Holocaust - Gap Fill Exerercise
- World War II - Gap Fill Exercise
- World War II - Name Matching Exercise
- Match the Sentence Halves 1
- Match the Sentence Halves 2
- Vocabulary Matching Exercise 1
- Vocabulary Matching Exercise 2
- World War II - What Happened When - Match the Dates
Downloadable PDF Text- and Worksheets
- Rise of Adolf HItler and the NSdAP - Text (PDF - 123 KB)
- Rise of Adolf HItler and the NSdAP - Exercises (PDF - 151 KB)
- Rise of Adolf HItler and the NSdAP - Key (PDF - 144 KB)
Related Topics
- Facism
- Hunt For Nazi Gold Train in Poland
- Thousands of Nazis Escaped to South America After World War II
- Hitler Exhibition Opens in Berlin
Words
- blame = to say that a person is responsible for something bad
- cause = lead to
- chant = to say a phrase or a word again and again
- childhood = the time when you are a child
- commit suicide = to kill yourself
- create = make
- crowd = a large group of people
- damage = if something is hurt or ruined
- destruction =if something is damaged or ruined completely
- emblem = a picture or object that is used to show a country, organization or a party
- escape = to get away from
- eventually = finally, in the end
- forbid-forbade-forbidden = not allow
- force =to make someone do something
- government = people who rule a country
- Great Depression = the time that followed the Wall Street crash in 1929 ; millions of people lost their jobs around the world and many factories and businesses had to close
- greatness = here: being important and powerful
- homeland = country where someone is born
- hooked = curved , bent
- in honour =to show respect for someone
- increasingly = more and more
- injury =harm that you do to someone
- Jew =member of a group of people who come from ancient Hebrews; many of them live in Israel
- mistress = a woman that a man has a sexual relationship with
- officer = someone who is in a high position in the army
- oppose = to be against
- outlaw = forbid
- overseas colonies = countries that are controlled by their mother countries in other continents
- overthrow = to remove from power
- persecute = to treat someone unfairly
- plant = put
- popular = liked by a lot of people
- population = the people of a country
- prison = place where people go to when they have committed a crime
- proud =to feel satisfied and important
- punish = to make someone suffer because they have done something wrong
- pure = not mixed, real
- realize = understand
- slogan = motto
- solution = the answer to a problem
- strengthen = to make stronger
- strict =here: very much, very badly
- swastika = the sign of the Nazi Party
- Third Reich = the period of Nazi government , led by Adolf Hitler from 1933 to 1945
- treat = care for
- treaty = agreement between two people or countries
- volunteer = to do something without getting paid for it
- worthless = not worth anything