Fiche de révision : The Road to World War II

📋 Course Outline

  1. Failure of appeasement and Versailles violations
  2. Munich Agreement and Sudetenland crisis
  3. Outbreak of war and Phoney War
  4. Blitzkrieg and German victories in Europe
  5. Battle of Britain and the Blitz
  6. Living under the Blitz and wartime home front
  7. Churchill, resistance, and Allied cooperation
  8. Atlantic Charter and Yalta Conference

📖 1. Failure of appeasement and Versailles violations

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Appeasement : A policy used by Britain and France to avoid war by accepting some of Hitler’s demands.
  • Treaty of Versailles : A post–World War I treaty that limited Germany and was later violated by Hitler’s rearmament.
  • German rearmament : The rebuilding of Germany’s military power, including army and air force, carried out after Hitler’s rise.
  • Conscription : A system of compulsory military service that Hitler reintroduced in Germany, breaking Versailles limits.

📝 Essential Points

  • Britain and France used appeasement because they feared another world war after WWI and were not militarily ready.
  • Economic strain after the Great Depression and the belief that Versailles was too harsh also pushed appeasement.
  • Hitler became Chancellor in 1933 and began rebuilding German military power, violating Versailles limits.
  • In 1935 Hitler reintroduced conscription and Germany rebuilt its army and air force, which the treaty had restricted.
  • In 1938 Germany annexed Austria through the Anschluss, with Britain and France taking no action.

💡 Memory Hook

Appeasement = “give in to demands” to dodge war, but Versailles violations kept escalating.

📖 2. Munich Agreement and Sudetenland crisis

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Sudetenland : A region of Czechoslovakia with many German speakers that Hitler demanded.
  • Munich Conference : The September 1938 meeting where major European leaders decided to accept Hitler’s Sudetenland demand.
  • Czechoslovakia abandonment : The outcome of Munich where Czechoslovakia was left to face Hitler’s demands without protection.
  • Symbol of failure of appeasement : The Munich Agreement as the clearest example showing appeasement did not stop Hitler.

📝 Essential Points

  • Hitler demanded the Sudetenland, using the German-speaking population as justification.
  • The Munich Conference took place in September 1938 with Hitler, Mussolini, Neville Chamberlain, and Daladier.
  • Britain and France accepted Hitler’s demands at Munich.
  • As a result, Czechoslovakia was abandoned.
  • After Munich, Hitler became more confident and Britain realized he could not be trusted, making war unavoidable.

💡 Memory Hook

Munich = “Sudetenland ceded,” and confidence grows for Hitler, not peace.

📖 3. Outbreak of war and Phoney War

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Blitzkrieg tactics : A fast, surprise-based German method of warfare using tanks, aircraft, and motorized divisions.
  • Outbreak of World War II : The start of the war marked by Germany’s invasion of Poland and the subsequent declarations by Britain and France.
  • Phoney War : A period from September 1939 to spring 1940 with little fighting on the Western Front.
  • Western Front inactivity : The lack of major operations in Western Europe while Germany prepared new offensives.

📝 Essential Points

  • In March 1939 Germany invaded the rest of Czechoslovakia, showing it wanted more territory.
  • On 1 September 1939 Germany invaded Poland using Blitzkrieg tactics.
  • On 3 September 1939 Britain and France declared war on Germany.
  • The Phoney War lasted from September 1939 to spring 1940 with little fighting in the West.
  • During the Phoney War, Britain and France waited while Germany prepared new offensives.

💡 Memory Hook

Phoney War = “waiting game” in the West while Germany plans the next blow.

📖 4. Blitzkrieg and German victories in Europe

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Blitzkrieg : A German military tactic combining speed, surprise, tanks, aircraft, and motorized divisions to strike quickly.
  • Speed and surprise : Core features of Blitzkrieg that aim to overwhelm enemies before they can organize a response.
  • Motorized divisions : German mobile units used in Blitzkrieg to move rapidly and support fast attacks.
  • Iron ore supplies : A strategic resource from Norway that mattered for Germany’s war industry.

📝 Essential Points

  • Blitzkrieg aimed to destroy enemy forces quickly before they could react.
  • Germany’s Blitzkrieg relied on speed and surprise to disrupt defenses.
  • In April 1940 Germany invaded Denmark and Norway.
  • Norway was important because it helped Germany secure iron ore supplies essential for war production.
  • After the Norway campaign, Chamberlain lost support and Winston Churchill became Prime Minister in May 1940.

💡 Memory Hook

Blitzkrieg = “fast + surprise + mobile power” to break reactions before they start.

📖 5. Battle of Britain and the Blitz

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Battle of Britain : The 1940 air campaign where Germany tried to destroy the RAF before invading Great Britain.
  • Luftwaffe : Germany’s air force that launched massive attacks on British military and support targets.
  • Radar system : Britain’s early-warning technology that helped detect German planes and coordinate RAF responses.
  • The Blitz : An intense bombing campaign against British cities between 1940 and 1941.

📝 Essential Points

  • After the fall of France, Hitler wanted to invade Great Britain and first aimed to destroy the RAF.
  • Germany targeted RAF airfields, aircraft factories, and radar stations to force Britain to surrender.
  • The RAF resisted despite being outnumbered by German forces.
  • Britain’s radar system helped detect German planes early, improving RAF readiness.
  • In August 1940 heavy raids damaged airfields, aircraft, and radar stations, bringing the RAF close to defeat.
  • After British bombings on Berlin, Hitler ordered attacks on civilian targets, marking the start of the Blitz.

💡 Memory Hook

Battle of Britain tries to break the RAF; the Blitz shifts to breaking civilians.

📖 6. Living under the Blitz and wartime home front

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Blackout : A wartime rule requiring lights to be turned off at night to prevent bombers from finding targets.
  • Air raid shelters : Places such as underground stations, public shelters, and gardens where civilians protected themselves from bombs.
  • Sandbagging operations : Civilian efforts using sandbags to protect vulnerable buildings like schools and hospitals.
  • Ration books : Documents that controlled access to limited food supplies during the war.

📝 Essential Points

  • The Blitz was an intense bombing campaign against British cities between 1940 and 1941.
  • Germany’s objectives included destroying civilian morale and reducing industrial production.
  • Bombings mainly occurred at night, causing massive destruction and thousands of civilian deaths.
  • In London there were 43,500 deaths, and across Britain there were 23,000 deaths.
  • The blackout used curtains on windows, dimmed street lights, and black-painted lamp posts.
  • Air raid shelters included underground stations, public shelters, and gardens to protect civilians from bombs.

💡 Memory Hook

Home front defenses: blackout to hide, shelters to survive, sandbags to shield.

📖 7. Churchill, resistance, and Allied cooperation

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Churchill as Prime Minister : Winston Churchill became Prime Minister in May 1940 and led Britain during WWII.
  • Resistance against Nazi Germany : The goal of uniting the British population and maintaining morale to oppose Nazi Germany.
  • Coalition government : A wartime government led by Churchill that included multiple political partners.
  • Allied cooperation : Coordination between major Allies, including Churchill’s links with Roosevelt and Stalin.

📝 Essential Points

  • Churchill became Prime Minister after the failure of Chamberlain’s appeasement policy.
  • Churchill refused to negotiate with Hitler and became a symbol of British resistance.
  • Churchill led a coalition government during WWII with the aim of uniting the population and maintaining morale.
  • Churchill used powerful radio speeches to motivate people and strengthen national unity, including the idea that Britain would never surrender.
  • Churchill criticized appeasement in the 1930s and believed Hitler had to be stopped.
  • Churchill worked with Roosevelt to obtain American financial and military support and cooperated with Stalin because defeating Nazism was the priority.

💡 Memory Hook

Churchill = “no negotiation + morale by radio,” backed by cooperation with Roosevelt and Stalin.

📖 8. Atlantic Charter and Yalta Conference

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Atlantic Charter : A 1941 agreement between Churchill and Roosevelt setting principles for the post-war world.
  • Self-determination : The right of peoples to choose their government, listed as a principle in the Atlantic Charter.
  • Yalta Conference : The February 1945 meeting of the Big Three to prepare the end of the war and post-war Europe.
  • Four occupation zones : The plan to divide Germany into zones controlled by the USA, USSR, UK, and France.

📝 Essential Points

  • The Atlantic Charter was signed on 14 August 1941 by Churchill and Franklin D. Roosevelt.
  • The USA had not yet officially entered the war when Churchill and Roosevelt met.
  • The Atlantic Charter included commitments not to seek territorial expansion and to support self-determination.
  • The Atlantic Charter inspired future UN organization and post-war international cooperation.
  • The Yalta Conference took place in February 1945 with Churchill, Roosevelt, and Stalin as the Big Three.
  • At Yalta, Germany was to be divided into four occupation zones: USA, USSR, UK, and France, and Berlin into four sectors.

💡 Memory Hook

Atlantic Charter = principles for peace; Yalta = how to divide Germany and manage post-war Europe.

📅 Key Dates

DateEvent
1933Hitler became Chancellor of Germany and began rebuilding German military power.
1935Hitler reintroduced conscription and Germany rebuilt its army and air force.
1938Germany annexed Austria (Anschluss).
September 1938Munich Conference where Britain and France accepted Hitler’s Sudetenland demands.
March 1939Germany invaded the rest of Czechoslovakia.
1 September 1939Germany invaded Poland using Blitzkrieg tactics.
3 September 1939Britain and France declared war on Germany.
April 1940Germany invaded Denmark and Norway.
May 1940Churchill became Prime Minister.
August 1940Heavy German raids damaged airfields, aircraft, and radar stations during the Battle of Britain.

📊 Synthesis Tables

Appeasement vs Churchill approach

LeaderApproachGoal
ChamberlainAccepted Hitler’s demandsAvoid war through appeasement
ChurchillCriticized appeasement and refused to negotiateStop Hitler and maintain resistance

⚠️ Common Pitfalls & Confusions

  1. Confusing the Munich Agreement’s target (Sudetenland) with the later March 1939 invasion of the rest of Czechoslovakia.
  2. Mixing up the Battle of Britain (aimed at destroying the RAF) with the Blitz (bombing civilian targets after strategy changed).
  3. Thinking the Phoney War involved major fighting in the West; it was defined by waiting and little action.
  4. Assuming radar was German; the source states Britain used an efficient radar system for early detection.
  5. Believing Churchill became Prime Minister before Chamberlain’s appeasement failure; the source links the change to that failure.

✅ Exam Checklist

  1. Define appeasement and explain why Britain and France used it, then list the Versailles violations (1933, 1935, Anschluss 1938).
  2. Explain the Sudetenland crisis and state what the Munich Conference decided, including who participated and the consequence for Czechoslovakia.
  3. Describe the outbreak of war: Germany’s March 1939 move, the 1 September 1939 Poland invasion, and the 3 September 1939 declarations.
  4. Define the Phoney War and state its timeframe and Western Front characteristics.
  5. Define Blitzkrieg and identify its components (speed, surprise, tanks, aircraft, motorized divisions) and its objective.
  6. List German victories in Europe in April 1940 (Denmark, Norway) and explain why Norway mattered for iron ore supplies.
  7. State Churchill’s key role: when he became Prime Minister, his refusal to negotiate, and his purpose in speeches and morale.
  8. Explain the Battle of Britain: Hitler’s objective, Luftwaffe targets, British advantages (RAF and radar), and the August 1940 outcome.
  9. Connect the Blitz to the strategy change after Berlin bombings and recall the Blitz timeframe and main targets.
  10. Describe daily-life measures on the home front: blackout, air raid shelters, and sandbagging operations.
  11. Explain wartime rationing: why rationing happened, what ration books were for, and list the foods named.
  12. Summarize evacuation and women’s roles: why children were evacuated, where they went, and how women replaced men in key jobs by 1943.
  13. Recall Atlantic Charter basics: date, participants, and at least three principles (no territorial expansion, self-determination, international cooperation/peace).
  14. Recall Yalta Conference decisions: Big Three participants, Germany and Berlin division into zones/sectors, and the free elections rule for Eastern Europe.

Testez vos connaissances

Testez vos connaissances sur The Road to World War II avec 16 questions à choix multiples avec corrections détaillées.

1. What was appeasement in the lead-up to World War II?

2. Which action clearly violated the Treaty of Versailles before the war began?

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Révisez avec les flashcards

Mémorisez les concepts clés de The Road to World War II avec 16 flashcards interactives.

Appeasement — policy?

Avoid war by conceding to demands.

Treaty of Versailles — violation?

Germany rearmed and reintroduced conscription.

Munich Agreement — purpose?

Accept Hitler’s demand for Sudetenland to prevent war.

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