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The Rise of Fascism

How economic crisis, national humiliation, and weak democratic institutions enabled fascist movements to seize power in Europe.

Conditions for Fascism

Fascism did not emerge in a vacuum. The Treaty of Versailles (1919) imposed crushing reparations on Germany, creating widespread resentment. The Great Depression devastated economies across Europe, discrediting democratic governments that seemed unable to respond. Italy's Benito Mussolini seized power in 1922, establishing the model that Hitler would later adapt.

Adolf Hitler's Nazi Party exploited economic despair, antisemitic conspiracy theories, and fear of communism to build a mass movement. The Weimar Republic's proportional representation system and Article 48 (allowing emergency presidential decrees) provided the institutional weaknesses Hitler exploited. He was appointed Chancellor in January 1933 and dismantled democracy within months through the Reichstag Fire Decree and the Enabling Act.