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Founding of NSDAP (Germany)
German Labor Nationalist Party colloquially as a Nazi party, it was an active political party in Germany between 1920 and 19445 whose ideology was based on the Nazisimo. It's predecessor was the German Labor Party, which existed entre1919 and 1920. -
Fouding of National Fascist Party (Italy)
The National Fascist Party was an Italian political party, maximum expression of fascism and only legal training during the dictatorship of Benito Mussolini, between 1925 and 1943. -
March on Rome (Italy)
The March on Rome was a Rome-bound march organized by Benito Mussolini. It marked the end of the parliamentary system and the principle of the Fascist regime. -
French occupation of the Rühr (Germany)
The occupation of the Rühr between January 11, 1923 and August 25, 1925 by the French and Belgian troops was the answer to the failure of the Weimar Republic Presedida by Friedrich Ebert in its obligation to assume the economic compensations to the Allies after the Defeat of the German Empire in the First World War. -
Death of Lenin (USSR)
The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics was established on December 30, 1922, and Vladimir Lenin died less than two years old. After his death, the power fell into the hands of Joseph Stalin, who had disputed the leadership of the USSR with Leon Trotsky. -
The Dawes Planes (USA)
It is called the Dawes Plan to the program established on April 9, 1924, under the auspices of the United States to obtain that the Allied winners of the First World War obtained their reparations of wars established in the Treaty of Versailles, while The time was sought to stabilize the economy of Germany and prevent further damage as a result of such payments. -
Forced collectivisation Gulags (USSR)
It was a policy set up by Lósif Stalin between 1928 and 1933, to consolidate the land in popular domain and labor in collective farm farms and in state-run farms. -
Black Thursday (EEUU)
The black Thursday took place on October 24, 1929, the day in which began the fall of the new York stock Exchange and with it the crack of 29 and the Great Depression. The collapse of the new York Stock Exchange on Black Thursday produced a panic situation that caused the banking crises in the United States. -
Reichstag fire (Germany)
The Reichstag fire was a fire perpetrated against the Reichstag building in Berlin on 27 February 1933. The responsibility of the fire remains a subject of permanent debate and investigation.
Marinus van der Lubbe, a young Dutch communist of 24 years, was blamed for the event by the German government of Chancellor Adolf Hitler. -
President Roosevelt (USA)
Franklin Delano Roosevelt was a U.S. politician and lawyer who became the thirty-second President of the United States from 1933 to his death in 1945 and has been the only one to win four presidential elections in that nation: the first to 1932, the second in 1936, the third in 1940 and the fourth in 1944. He was one of the great architects of the Allied victory in the Second World War. -
Hitler, Führer and Chancellor of the Third Reich (Germany)
Following the appointment of Adolf Hitler as chancellor on January 30, 1933, the Nazi state quickly became a government in which the Germans had no basic right guaranteed. -
Invansion of Ethiopia (Italy)
The Italian Invansión of Ethiopia, also called the Second Italo-Ethiopian War, was an armed conflict of seven months of duration between October 1935 and May 1936.