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History the study of the past - Coggle Diagram
History
the study of the past
WW ll
Causes
The Treaty of Versailles 1919
Treaty Point
Article 231
the Great Depression
Germany was one of the most heavily affected nations during this time
German currency depreciated in value and the economy suffered as foreign investors moved their money out of Germany
mass unemployment
policy of Appeasement
where the Allies tolerates Hitlers acts of opposition because the Allies couldn't afford to go to war
Hitler and the Nazis
Nazi party
Adolf Hitler elected as chairman of the party
characterised by the strong and charismatic leadership of Hitler, supported by a, small, powerful inner circle of people
Germ,an nationalism, anti-communism, anti-antisemitism, 'Germans were more superior than all other races
The Third Reich
the Period where Hitler put his plans into affect
Rights and Freedoms of indigenous Australians
settlement
britiish explores proclaimed Australia 'Terra Nullius meaning nobody's land'
aboriginals and Torres strait islanders cutlers were not recognised , this led to public ideas such as
assimilate
aboriginal people of mixed raced were to be assimilated into white society, missions and resources were used
segregation
another form of controls was to separate the whites from the blacks
colour bar
aborignal people were banned from clubs, restaurants, theatres, public pools & public transport
the stolen generation
effects
low self esteem, loss of identity, abuse, and loss of culture
from the 1800s to the 1970s thousands of mixed - race aboriginal children were force-ably removed from there family's
concepts
evidence
information gathered from historical sources
cause and effect
effect: the outcome, what happened
causes: reason why it occurred
perspective
the position from which they see and understand event going on in the world
community and change
aspects of the past that don't stay the same (change) aspects that stay the same (community)
empathy
to walk in someones shoes
significance
the importance assigned to aspects of the past
contestabillity
Explanations or interpretations of past events that are open to debate
Theatres of war
changing roles for women
fall of Singapore
Japan wanted Singapore for the natural resources Japan lack, the defence of British base in Singapore meant a high chance of Japanese advance in Australia
pearl harbour
japan bombed pearl harbour, 7th Dec 1941
Japan had hoped to destroy Americas pacific fleet
the damage inflicted was less than originally thought
Atomic Bombs
Potsdam declaration
1945, allied leaders issued the declaration to Japan to surrender or they'ed face romped and utter destruction
Manhattan project
US research program that developed the first Atomic Bomb, they created two other bombs 'little boy' and 'fat man'
Nagasaki
Japan still hadn't surrendered so they dropped 'fat man' on the 9th of august 1945 up to 75,000 people died
Hiroshima
the US dropped 'little boy' on Hiroshima on the 6th of august 1945, 80,00 people died instantly
2nd September 1945
Japan surendered
long term effects
body burns, radiation cancer, and more
Source analysis skills
weakness- what are the weaknesses? misinformation
origin (who, when, where)
strengths- what are the strengths? reliability, usefulness
message- what is the message - what do they what you to believe?