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artcher [175]
3 years ago
15

Which event completes this timeline PLEASE HELP!

Social Studies
2 answers:
elena-14-01-66 [18.8K]3 years ago
5 0
Lol her D. is the nswer
aleksandrvk [35]3 years ago
4 0

D. George Washington is elected president.

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Who influenced Max weber
Scilla [17]
Weber was strongly influenced by her views and approach to life. ... Weber studied religion extensively, and The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, his most famous work, is a model of Weber's historical and sociological method.

Hope this helped!
7 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
_______ became the leader of the Soviet Union after Vladimir Lenin died.
Monica [59]
Joseph Stalin took over after Lenin died in 1924
5 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
What was the book that blamed Jews for Germany’s troubles ?
Thepotemich [5.8K]

Answer:

5

During World War I, almost 100,000 German Jews proudly served in military uniform as soldiers, sailors, airmen and administrators. But far from a better public opinion of Germany’s Jewish citizens, after Germany’s crushing loss there was instead a subsequent rise in anti-Semitic narratives.

Among the common myths circulated at the time were assertions — based on real-life examples — that Jews were war profiteering at home. On top of that, it was rumored that Jews were “war shirking” — a term used to describe avoiding military responsibilities at the front lines.

The potent mix of prejudices and stereotypes quickly led a battered post-WWI German people to pin all their troubles on a ready-made scapegoat: the Jews.

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“If we want to clearly understand how the Nazis came to power, we need to see it was the events of WWI that were fundamental to their rise,” says British historian Tim Grady, whose latest book is “A Deadly Legacy: German Jews and the Great War.”

Tim Grady, author of ‘A Deadly Legacy: German Jews and the Great War.’ (Courtesy)

“The legacies that come out of WWI — such as total war and a culture of destruction — are extremely important,” says Grady. “These remain after 1919, into the Weimar Republic, which never really becomes a proper postwar society. And so the Nazis build and develop out of this defeat and legacy.”

Therefore, while the wartime experience of German Jews “was almost the same as other Germans,” says Grady, the instability and chaos that resulted from some prominent Jews’ legacies were eventually exploited by the National Socialists as the party made its bid for power.

Through the figure of Adolf Hitler, the Nazi party became what Grady calls “the personification of WWI.”

“They are the party that will avenge Germany’s defeat,” says Grady, “and part of their legacy of WWI involves targeting Jews.”

Adolf Hitler, far right, with his war comrades of the Bavarian Reserve Infantry 16th Regiment, in 1914. (Bundesarchiv bild)

WWI, when Jews were leaders in German society

Grady believes there is an understandable inclination to approach the history of Jewish life in Germany from the perspective of what he calls a “vanishing point” — whether it’s 1933, 1938 or 1941. However, the historian says it’s important to trace the WWI culture that Jews, as well as other Germans, helped to define.

One crucial step toward scapegoating the Jews is the “stab in the back” myth, which originated in 1917 in the wake of German parliament’s peace resolution that sought to quickly end WWI. Major-General Hans von Seeckt complained that the “home [front] has stabbed [Germany] in the back.”

“For the Nazis, the ‘stab-in-the-back theory’ is the crucial legacy of WWI,” says Grady.

The myth really began to gain momentum, however, when Paul von Hindenburg and Erich Ludendorff testified to the National Assembly in the new Weimar Republic in 1919.

“They suggest that someone has stabbed Germany in the back,” the historian explains. “And while they don’t identify anybody in particular, they certainly hint that some Jews could have been responsible for this.”

General Paul von Hindenburg, Kaiser Wilhelm II, and General Erich Ludendorff in German headquarters, January 1917. (Public domain)

This mythology gained even more traction in the Weimar Republic throughout the 1920s. Grady’s book recalls how in April 1924 an infamous image appeared on the cover of the front page of a German magazine called Süddeutsche Monatshefte, which had a Jewish editor, Paul Nikolaus Cossmann.

Explanation:

4 0
3 years ago
If a roasting is 600mm x 500mm how many 25cm cake time will fit on it?
Butoxors [25]
This is what i got
Only 2 of the 25cm cake will fit in a 600mm x 500mm

600mm=60cm
500mm=50cm

60 divided by 25 : 2.4
50 divided by 25 : 2
so the best it could fit is 2 of the 25cm cakes
3 0
3 years ago
Details in the face and headdress support the malagan masks' cultural purpose to?
Volgvan

memorialize an ancestor

Most often, males create and act with masks. Malagan's primary goal is to commemorate the deceased and help their spirits enter the afterlife. The ancestors' spirits are symbolized by the mask. They are frequently embellished with simple, repeated designs.

The largest and most well-known of the several occasions that occur within the malagan culture are the ceremonies. They happen sporadically, are often big, complicated events that last several days and need months or years of planning.

A malagan ritual is never only a funeral rite, even though it is always performed in honor of one or more recent deceased individuals.

To know more about Malagan culture brainly.com/question/28314869

#SPJ4

5 0
1 year ago
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