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How did world war 1 contribute to the events leading up to world war 2

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Answer:

The Treaty of Paris, which ended World War 1, actually played a large part in setting the stage for World War 2.

Step-by-step explanation:

Humiliated in defeat, crushed by debilitating war reparation payments, and angered by the war guilt clause, Germany came out of the war a truly weak nation. Not only did they suffer the most dead during the war, but now they had to deal with all the pain of the peace treaty. The economy collapsed, caused in huge part to the payments Germany had to make to the Allies as a sort of compensation. The treaty forced Germany to admit to causing the war, even though there were plenty of other people involved - further angering the German people.

The worldwide Great Depression of the 1930s essentially nailed the coffin for postwar Germany. Their already brutal economic situation, caused by perhaps the worst inflation in history, became worse. Unemployment skyrocketed. The German people needed a leader to bring them out of the hole, who they found in Adolf Hitler. He stoked the people's fire, appealing to their anger from defeat in World War 1 and their hopelessness from their financial crisis. He eventually rallied enough support to take over the government.

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