Chapter 26 Review: Important Events
1929 | U.S. stock market crashes; global depression begins; Soviet leadership initiates “liquidation of the kulaks”; Stalin’s first five-year plan officially begins |
1931 | Japan invades Manchuria; Spanish republicans overthrow monarchy |
1933 | Hitler comes to power in Germany |
1935 | German government enacts Nuremberg Laws; Italy invades Ethiopia |
1936 | Purges and show trials begin in USSR; Hitler remilitarizes Rhineland; Spanish Civil War begins |
1937 | Japan attacks China |
1938 | Germany annexes Austria; European leaders meet in Munich to negotiate with Hitler; Kristallnacht in Germany |
1939 | Germany invades Czechoslovakia; Spanish Civil War ends; Nazi-Soviet Pact; Germany invades Poland; Britain and France declare war on Germany; World War II begins |
1940 | France falls to German army |
1940–1941 | British air force fends off German attacks in the battle of Britain |
1941 | Germany invades Soviet Union; Japan attacks Pearl Harbor; United States enters war |
1941–1945 | The Holocaust |
1942–1943 | Siege of Stalingrad |
1944 | Allied forces land at Normandy, France |
1945 | Berlin falls; United States drops atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki; World War II ends |
Consider three events: Global depression begins (1929), Stalin’s first five-year plan officially begins (1929), and Hitler comes to power in Germany (1933). How did the global depression contribute to the initial success of Hitler and Stalin?