The conditions in Germany at this time existed to enable such a revolution to take place. ... This radicalisation culminated in the formation of the Munich Soviet Republic, which formed eighteen months after the Soviet Bolsheviks seized power. ... They wanted to start a nationalist revolution in Bavaria, and let it spread all over Germany. ... Hitler and the Nazis eventually robbed a bank, started a revolution and incited murder, but Hitler only ever served nine months in prison. ... However, the revolution had already begun for the Nazis. ...
Following Lenin and Trotsky's revolution and reign in Russia, Stalin began his massive political, social, and economic changes in 1928 with the First Five Year Plan, which was designed to cause rapid industrialization and the collectivization of agriculture. After the Bolsheviks or proletariat won the Marxist theory of class war, they did not know where to go with the country. ... Using the Industrial Revolution of Great Britain as a example, Stalin caused a agricultural revolution by his process of collectivization, which created collective farms owned by the government and farmed by pea...
This resulted in the President personally thanking Hitler for saving Germany from an upcoming revolution. ... In November 1937 The External Jew exhibition was opened and professed to show the outward features of Jews, one of the exhibitions aims was to uncover a Jewish-Bolshevik connivance. ...
In all these actions, the model of the Russian Revolution, although it was only vaguely understood, encouraged the development of local radicalism. ... Neither party preached revolution, yet both urged wide-ranging social and economic reforms. The rising radical tide, especially seen against the backdrop of the Bolshevik revolution, worried other social groups. ...
The Growth and Implementation of Hitler's Continental Expansionist Foreign Policy Program One of the most interesting historiographical debates about the Second World War concerns the nature of Hitler's foreign policy. Everyone knows that the Second World War was horrible, even worse than the First, but it has yet to be unequivocally decided what exactly was Hitler's role in bringing about such a catastrophe. The most important issue relates to the question of whether or not Hitler had evolved a clear and coherent foreign policy by the time he assumed office and ...