Respuesta :

Answer:

The history of the Holocaust is complex and vast. While The Holocaust Explained is not able to cover every aspect of Holocaust history, it does seek to aid understanding and help learners to navigate through the sequence of events. This timeline aims to take readers through the main events preceding, during, and following the Holocaust.

9 November 1923

Beer Hall Putsch

Beer Hall Putsch

Hitler and the Nazi Party unsuccessfully tried to overthrow the Weimar Republic. This event became known as the Beer Hall Putsch.

30 January 1933

Hitler appointed as chancellor

Hitler Appointed As Chancellor

Following inconclusive elections, President Hindenburg invited Hitler to become chancellor of Germany.

27 February 1933

The Reichstag Fire

The Reichstag Fire

The Reichstag building in Berlin was set on fire. Marinus van der Lubbe, a Dutch communist, was taken into custody for the crime and later executed. The Nazi government exploited the fire and declared a state of emergency.

22 March 1933

Dachau Is Established

The first Nazi concentration camp was established in Dachau. Until its liberation in 1945, more than 188,000 prisoners were incarcerated here, at least 28,000 of which died.

23 March 1933

The Enabling Act Is Passed

The Enabling Act was passed in the Reichstag, granting the government dictatorial powers for four years.

1 April 1933

Boycott of Jewish businesses

Boycott Of Jewish Businesses

The Nazis carried out a boycott of Jewish-owned businesses and shops. This was the first mass action the regime took against the Jews of Germany.

7 April 1933

The Law For The Restoration Of The Professional Civil Service

The Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service banned Jews and dissidents from the Civil Service. As a result, Jewish teachers, professors, judges and other civil servants lost their jobs.

10 May 1933

Book Burnings

Book Burnings

University students publicly burned books that were considered ‘un-German’ or written by Jewish authors in Berlin. In the following days, similar burnings were held in several German cities.

14 July 1933

The Sterilisation Law is passed

The Sterilisation Law Is Passed

The Sterilisation Law was passed, forcing compulsory sterilisation of disabled or mentally ill people. Approximately 400,000 people were sterilised as a result.

20 July 1933

Concordat with the Vatican

Concordat With The Vatican

The Roman Catholic Church signed a Concordat with the Nazi government. This made the Vatican the first state to officially recognise Nazi Germany.

4 October 1933

The Editorship Law is passed

The Editorship Law Is Passed

The Editorship Law was passed. This law imposed strict rules on what newspapers were allowed to publish. Non-‘Aryans’ were banned from working in journalism.

26 January 1934

The German-Polish Non-Aggression-Pact Is Agreed

Germany and Poland signed a 10-year non-aggression pact.

30 June 1934

The Night of the Long Knives

The Night Of The Long Knives

A purge of the SA leadership was ordered by Hitler, who falsely accused them of conspiring against the government. Over the course of three days, more than 150 people were murdered, including the SA Chief of Staff Ernst Röhm.

2 August 1934

The death of Hindenburg

The Death Of Hindenburg

The German President Paul von Hindenburg died. Following Hindenburg’s death, Hitler merged the positions of President and Chancellor.

1 May 1935

Jehovah’s Witnesses Banned

The German government issued a ban on all organisations of the Jehovah’s Witnesses.

28 June 1935

Revision Of Paragraph 175

Paragraph 175 of the German Criminal Code was revised to impose stricter penalties on any sexual contact between men, increasing the number of convictions by ten. Many of the convicted were taken to concentration camps.

Explanation:

hello, is this too much????? hope that it helps.