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"The Fall of the Weimar Republic in Germany: Causes and Lessons for Modernity"

Pogorelsky, Alexander Valerevich

Abstract

In January 1933, Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany. Almost 90 years have passed since those events, and many historians still wonder: how did it happen that a nation with rich cultural traditions, a developed legal consciousness, and experience of civil self-government succumbed to the calls and promises of the person who brought the country and the German people to national disaster? According to the author, in all societies there will always be a place for a talented demagogue who will lead his people to the abyss. It was on these painful complexes of the German people that Adolf Hitler played after coming to power in 1933. In addition, a well-developed civil society and a democratic political culture are needed to defend democracy. Unfortunately, none of this happened in the Weimar Republic. Weimar democracy was stillborn from the very beginning of its existence and its fall sooner or later was inevitable.

Keywords: Weimar Republic, Third Reich, national humiliation, German people, national disaster.

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Citation

Pogorelsky, Alexander Valerevich "The Fall of the Weimar Republic in Germany: Causes and Lessons for Modernity" Bulletin Social-Economic and Humanitarian Research, Volume 5, Number 7, (January 2020) P. 106 - 112. doi: 10.5281/zenodo.3700699