Slide 1OverviewHitler’s Rise to PowerSlide 4Slide 5Slide 6Adolf Hitler “A Man of Destiny” (1930-1935)Hitler from Dr. Walter LangerAdolf Hitler’s StrategyAdolf Hitler ( 1935- 1938)Adolf Hitler’s Conquest BeginsAdolf Hitler’s LebensraumNazi Troop movementsSlide 14Adolf Hitler’s StrengthsHitler’s StrengthsAdolf Hitler’s WeaknessesHitler’s WeaknessesSlide 19Two-Front WarTwo-Front warDunkirk “stop” order“no retreat” policy in StalingradHitler's “Holocaust”Slide 25Adolf Hitler’s StatureAdolf Hitler’s StatureHitler’s DeathSummaryQuestionsBibliographyAdolf HitlerDer Fuhrer: An analysis of military leadership and strategy Caleb FloydCapstone 499OverviewHitler’s Rise to PowerHitler’s Political Power over GermanyHitler’s Strategy Hitler as a Military LeaderHitler’s Military mistakesHitler’s Stature in HistoryHitler’s DeathHitler’s Rise to Power1930 Hitler makes an alliance with Nationalist Alfred Hugenberg The alliance allowed Hitler to seek support from businesses and industries who controlled political funds needed for his conquest1933 Hitler is offered the chancellorship of Germany 1934 Hitler assumes position of President as well as Chancellor of GermanyHitler’s Political Power over GermanyAdolf Hitler “A Man of Destiny”(1930-1935)One man ruling a nation Hitler was a great Orator gaining the people’s support through political speechesHitler from Dr. Walter Langer“His speeches were an instrument of political intoxication that inspired a degree of fervor in his listeners that seems to defy definition and explanation. Hitler was a master at the use of the spoken word and a genius at the art of manipulating mass propaganda for his political ends. His uncanny ability to appeal to the subconscious and irrational needs of his audience and to solicit the desired response made him a formidable political figure.”Adolf Hitler’s Strategy Dismantling of the Treaty of VersaillesHitler’s non-aggression pact with Poland (1935)March 1935 Hitler no longer honors the Treaty of VersaillesAdolf Hitler ( 1935- 1938)Believed Germany needed to take its place as a “superpower” in the worldBegan his first conquest of Lebensraum within GermanyAdolf Hitler’s Conquest BeginsMarch 1936 Hitler deploys a small German Army into the Rhineland France and Great Britain do nothing giving Hitler a Political VictoryAdolf Hitler’s LebensraumCzechoslovakia ( 1938)Poland (1939)Non-Aggression Pact with Stalin (1939)Hitler saw himself as a “Military Genius”Nazi Troop movementsHitler as a Military leaderAdolf Hitler’s StrengthsHitler’s “super mind”Technical expertHitler’s “vision” of the Germany fighting machineHitler’s StrengthsStrong will Political “manipulation”Adolf Hitler’s WeaknessesHitler’s “super mind”Hitler’s lack of trustHitler’s “micromanagement”Hitler’s “overconfidence”Hitler’s WeaknessesHitler’s Strong willHitler’s “procrastination”Hitler’s military “mistakes”:Two-Front WarHitler’s strive for more power led him to a crucial decision declaring war on RussiaWar on the Eastern front and Western front was extremely demanding for GermanyTwo-Front warDunkirk “stop” order May 1940 Hitler issued a “stop” orderAllowing over 400,000 British and French troops to retreatWhy issue the order“no retreat” policy in StalingradOctober 1942 Hitler issued a “no retreat” policy Holding Stalingrad at all cost proved to be detrimentalThousands of Germans soldiers lostHitler's “Holocaust”Extermination of the Jews Over 6 million killedAuschwitz EinsatzgruppenHitler’s stature in historyAdolf Hitler’s StatureSolely responsible for WWIIResponsible for the Holocaust Responsible for the rise of Germany in the early 1900’sAdolf Hitler’s StatureUnited Germany by himselfMade Germany the most powerful and feared nation by 1938Achieved many significant victories for Germany without firing a shotHitler’s Death During the final days of WWII Hitler committed suicide; he fired a bullet into his head while concurrently biting a cyanide capsuleSummaryHitler’s Rise to PowerHitler’s Political Power over GermanyHitler’s Strategy Hitler as a Military LeaderHitler’s Military mistakesHitler’s Stature in HistoryHitler’s DeathQuestionsBibliographyMacksey, Kenneth. Military Errors of World War Two. London: Arms and Armour, 1987. Bullock, Alan. Hitler A Study In Tyranny. London: Odhams Press, 1952. De Luca, Anthony. Personality, Power, and Politics: Observations on the Historical Significance of Napoleon, Bismarck, Lenin, and Hitler. Cambridge: Schenkman, 1983. Fest, Joachim. Hitler. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1974. Giblin, J. The Life and Death of Adolf Hitler. Clarion Books, 2002.Guderian, Heinz. Panzer Leader. Translated by Constantine Fitzgibbon. New York: E.P. Dutton, 1952. Hitler, Adolf. Mein Kampf, 15 September.Irving, David. Hitler’s War. New York: Viking Press, 1977. Langer, Walter. The Mind Of Adolf Hitler. New York: Basic Books, 1972. Liddell Hart, B.H. The German Generals Talk. New York: William Morrow, 1948. Liddell Hart, B. H. History of the Second World War. New York: Putnam’s, 1970. Schramm, Percy. Hitler: The Man and the Military Leader. Chicago: Quadrangle Books, 1971. Shirer, William. The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1960. Taylor, Telford. The March of Conquest. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1958. Waite, Robert. The Psychopathic God Adolf Hitler. New York: Basic Books,
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