The Oxford History of the Third Reich, 2nd Edition

Автор: literator от 9-01-2023, 18:42, Коментариев: 0

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The Oxford History of the Third Reich, 2nd EditionНазвание: The Oxford History of the Third Reich, 2nd Edition
Автор: Robert Gellately
Издательство: Oxford University Press
Год: 2023
Страниц: 374
Язык: английский
Формат: epub (true)
Размер: 10.2 MB

Histories you can trust.

Historians today continue raising questions about the Third Reich, especially because of the unprecedented nature of its crimes, and the military aggression it unleashed across Europe. Much of the inspiration for the catastrophic regime, lasting a mere twelve years, belongs to Adolf Hitler, a virtual non‐entity in political circles before 1914.

He had been born in 1889 and was not even a German citizen. Moreover, during his largely ‘normal’ youth in Austria‐Hungary, he revealed no signs of his future, and by age 20 he was a drifter with little education and socially withdrawn. He had no passionate ambitions save to become an artist of some kind, a vocation for which he had no formal training. He dabbled in painting, vaguely aspired to become a designer of the sets for the operas he adored, yet on that score, he made no progress whatsoever, and in the autumn of 1909, he hit rock bottom when he landed in a Viennese homeless shelter. In February the next year, he left to take residence in a men’s hostel, where he stayed for just over three years, when in May 1913, thanks to receiving a tidy sum of money that was due from his father’s inheritance, ‘the artist’ Adolf Hitler left for Munich, with dreams of becoming an architect. Once more, however, he made few friends, could find no work, and again had to paint postcards to get by. He appeared doomed never to achieve much of anything, given the existing order with its rigid class and political structures that allowed relatively little social mobility. But then the coming of what would be the Great War in 1914 turned the world upside down. The prospect of fighting for Germany excited this young man’s nationalism, as it did for millions of others in nearly all parts of the globe, and he soon volunteered. The war would have revolutionary consequences, driving out the old orders, and ultimately making it possible even for social outsiders such as him to entertain lofty ambitions.

However, in November 1918, on his return from the war lost by Germany, we have no evidence that Hitler dreamed of becoming some kind of revolutionary leader, and his ambition was the more modest one of staying in the army as long as he could. Like so many in Germany, he was convinced that the Home Front had betrayed the ‘undefeated army’, had stabbed it in the back, and, like millions of others, he would believe in this legend for the rest of his life.

A little more than twenty years later and astonishingly, in autumn 1941, Adolf Hitler, now 52 years old had become Germany’s unrivalled and worshipped leader, standing at the head of a restored economic powerhouse. Moreover, by mid‐1940, he had rebuilt, armed, and used decisively the newly named Wehrmacht to defeat Poland and more remarkably still, to capture most of western Europe. Then a year later, he had directed his dynamic armies against the Soviet Union, so that in December, the Germans were at the gates of Moscow and Leningrad.

At that moment in late 1941, Hitler appeared—however briefly—to be the most powerful ruler on the planet. He could survey a vast continental empire that included nearly all of Europe from the English Channel, then north to Norway and east to Leningrad, onward far south into the Caucasus; and in a grand arc southwestwards, to the Balkans, Greece, and parts of North Africa. By now the new Germany, in its quest for more ‘living space’ had shaken the foundations of western civilization to its core, and was in the midst of a mass murder campaign aimed mainly at the Jews across eastern Europe. Before its collapse, the Third Reich’s deeds would turn it into the epitome of evil, and it would leave scars across Europe and beyond that remain visible to this day.

This rich history provides a readable and fresh approach to the complex history of the Third Reich, from the coming to power of the Nazis in 1933 to the final collapse in 1945, distilling our ideas about the period and providing a balanced and accessible account of the whole era.

In a confidential meeting in autumn 1937 Hitler established his war strategy: first of all Czechoslovakia was to be attacked, on the pretext of protecting the German minority there. That would lead to war with France, Czechoslovakia’s ally. In fact, however, the Italian leader Mussolini and the western powers intervened to prevent a war. In the Munich Agreement of September 1938 they forced Czechoslovakia to cede the Sudetenland to Germany. Hitler was robbed of his war. Even so, the annexation of Austria in March 1938 and the de facto annexation of the Czech territories in March 1939 amounted to a considerable enlargement of Germany’s economic resources and armaments base.

Hitler now turned his attention to Poland, which he had selected to be his junior partner in the war against the Soviet Union and which was also to cede territory to the German Reich. The Polish government, however, which was trying to maintain a careful balance in its relations with Germany and the Soviet Union, was not amenable to blackmail, putting its trust in support from the west. Thus from May 1939 onwards Hitler prepared for a war against Poland. He pulled off a decisive coup in August 1939, when the Molotov–Ribbentrop pact neutralized the Soviet Union as a war enemy. In return Hitler offered to carve up eastern central Europe between himself and Stalin.

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