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#1 The Great War, which saw two and a half million Germans die and four million wounded, left a discernible line in the sand between the victors and the vanquished. For Germany, the vanquished, losing the war left the turmoil of economic uncertainty, unbridled violence, and boiling resentment.
#2 In the 1930s, the German government passed increasingly harsh laws against any perceived threats to the accelerating power of the Nazi machine. This included anti-Semitic art, which was exhibited in Munich in a show called Degenerate Art.
#3 The Weimar Republic, which was established following World War I, was a disaster for Germany, seeing two and a half million Germans die and four million wounded. The process of brutalization brought by the paramilitary groups resulted in street violence and the mass killing of civilians, as well as prominent German politicians and members of the Communist Party.
#4 The streets of German cities were marked by violence and disability following the Great War, while the streets of London were deceptively calm. The British Empire was beginning to feel the strain of maintaining a far-flung empire and the cost in human life and economic drain of fighting a total war.
#1 The Great War, which saw two and a half million Germans die and four million wounded, left a discernible line in the sand between the victors and the vanquished. For Germany, the vanquished, losing the war left the turmoil of economic uncertainty, unbridled violence, and boiling resentment.
#2 In the 1930s, the German government passed increasingly harsh laws against any perceived threats to the accelerating power of the Nazi machine. This included anti-Semitic art, which was exhibited in Munich in a show called Degenerate Art.
#3 The Weimar Republic, which was established following World War I, was a disaster for Germany, seeing two and a half million Germans die and four million wounded. The process of brutalization brought by the paramilitary groups resulted in street violence and the mass killing of civilians, as well as prominent German politicians and members of the Communist Party.
#4 The streets of German cities were marked by violence and disability following the Great War, while the streets of London were deceptively calm. The British Empire was beginning to feel the strain of maintaining a far-flung empire and the cost in human life and economic drain of fighting a total war.
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