This lesson contains 26 slides, with text slides and 2 videos.
Items in this lesson
Tweede wereldoorlog
3.2. Begin van de oorlog
Slide 1 - Slide
Hitler aan de macht in 1933
Start Jodenvervolging in Duitsland.
Hitler zorgt voor meer banen (Economische crisis 1929).
Houd zich niet aan het Verdrag van Versailles.
Slide 2 - Slide
Oct. 1938: Het verdrag van Munchen.
Groot Brittannie
Frankrijk
Duitsland
Italië
Slide 3 - Slide
Chamberlain: "Peace in our time"
Slide 4 - Slide
Maart 1939: Duitsland annexeerd de rest van Tsjecho-Slowakije
Slide 5 - Slide
No more Appeasement
Slide 6 - Slide
Hitler's volgende doel: Polen.
Slide 7 - Slide
Chamberlain
'Appeasement did not work.'
Vertrouwd Hitler niet meer
Heeft Polen beloofd dat GB zal helpen als Duitsland aanvalt.
Vertrouwt Stalin ook niet, maar hoopt op een bondgenootschap met de SU om Hitler te verslaan.
Slide 8 - Slide
Stalin
Vertrouwd Hitler niet.
Vertrouwd FR en GB ook niet.
Is niet klaar voor oorlog. (Vervolging van concurrenten, waaronder generaals)
Heeft geen bondgenoten.
Slide 9 - Slide
Hitler
Denkt dat FR en GB niks zullen doen (Appeasment politiek)
Weet niet wat Stalin zou doen.
Wilt Polen overnemen, maar wilt een twee fronten oorlog vermeiden.
Slide 10 - Slide
Maar toen...
Hitler en Stalin sluiten een verbond:
Molotov-Ribbentroppakt: Monsterverbond tussen Hitler en Stalin
august 1939
Slide 11 - Slide
Waarom?
Stalin:
Heeft tijd nodig om zich op oorlog voor te bereiden.
Vertrouwd GB en FR niet.
Hitler:
Wilt niet op twee fronten vechten.
Kan zo Polen binnenvallen.
Slide 12 - Slide
Slide 13 - Video
Tweede Wereldoorlog
1939:
Sept 1: Duitsland valt Polen binnen.
Sept 3: GB en FR verklaren oorlog aan Duitsland.
Sept. 17: SU bezet Oost-Polen.
Slide 14 - Slide
Tweede Wereldoorlog
1940 Duitse Blitzkrieg in:
April 12: Denemarken en Noorwegen.
Mei 10: Nederland, België, Luxemburg en Frankrijk
Juni 22: Frankrijk capituleert (geeft zich over).
Slide 15 - Slide
Tweede Wereldoorlog
1940
'Battle of Britain'
Slide 16 - Slide
Slide 17 - Video
Source C
In the car: Hitler and his cronies. The roadsign: CCCP is the Soviet Union.
Source B
Slide 18 - Slide
The start of World War 2
Although Chamberlain guaranteed that Britain would defend Poland if Hitler decided to attack, Hitler had already started planning to invade Poland in the summer of 1939.
Hitler invaded Poland on 1 September 1939, just nine days after the Nazi-Soviet pact was signed. Against all Hitler’s expectations, England declared war on Germany two days later. Then France followed: the Second World War had begun.
On 17th September 1939, the Russians joined in to occupy their part of Poland; within weeks, Poland was defeated.
German bombers over Poland
Slide 19 - Slide
Blitzkrieg in the West
Hitler decided to force England and France into a peace before trying to conquer the Soviet Union as well. Therefore he had to conquer Western Europe first. Hitler was successful in a short period of time due to a new type of warfare, the so-called Blitzkrieg (‘lightning war’). This type of warfare relied on mobility and powerful, surprise attacks. Tanks and armoured trucks, supported by aircrafts, were used to break through enemy defence lines. Opponents were unable to respond to German pace, surprise attacks and deep penetrations. Hitler even ordered big cities to be bombed to force his opponents to surrender. Like most other countries, France’s strategy was defensive and relied on the Maginot Line: a ‘supertrench’ to defend its border. As a result, France was unable to attack Hitler.
The Maginot Line today: a monument, museum and tourist attraction.
Slide 20 - Slide
Slide 21 - Slide
By May 1940, Hitler had occupied Denmark, Norway, the Netherlands, Belgium and Luxemburg. Hitler was now able to concentrate completely on France. Unlike the First World War, the French were unable to resist the German Blitzkrieg. By June 1940, France asked for a truce. Most of its territory was then occupied by Germany. Only a small area in the south, Vichy France, remained independent but cooperating with Germany.
After the French capitulation Hitler visited Paris. Here he poses in front of the Eifel Tower.
Left: Albert Speer, Hitler's architect. Note the film cameraman (bottom right), filming for the propaganda newsreel.
Victory parade: German troops march along the Arc the Triomph in Paris.
Slide 22 - Slide
Britain takes a stand
In May 1940, Winston Churchill succeeded Chamberlain as Prime Minister. Churchill had opposed appeasement from the start and refused every offer of peace from the Germans. To prepare for war, conscription had been introduced in 1939.
In Britain, many people, especially children and women, were evacuated to the countryside, because bombing of cities was anticipated. Gas masks were distributed and at night there was total blackout: windows had to be covered so no light came from houses to prevent enemy aircraft locating cities or industrial centres to bomb.
Hitler wanted to invade Britain, but knew that the British navy was strong. This is why he wanted to force Britain to surrender by bombing its cities; to do this, he needed to destroy the British Royal Air Force (RAF), so German bombers could operate unopposed. In the summer of 1940, the air war called the Battle of Britain started.
Londoners sheltering on a station on the underground railway during ‘the Blitz’. London was bombed on 76 consecutive nights between July 1940 and May 1941.
Slide 23 - Slide
The Battle of Britain
At first the German Luftwaffe dominated: hundreds of RAF planes were shot down and it was hard for the British to train enough new pilots to replace those killed in air fights. But the RAF held out and Britain survived. British aircraft then bombed Germany until the end of the war.
modern painting of British spitfires.
The British airforce was known as the RAF (Royal Air Force) while the German airforce is known as the "Luftwaffe".
London was hit hard by German bombs during what the British call: "The Blitz"
RAF pilots posing for the camera before going on a mission
The Germans used special typewriters called enigma machines to send code messages. They did not know however, that the British were able to decipher their codes. Because of this, British cities could sometimes be evacuated in time if the Germans planned to bomb them.