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  • Nazi Germany — Territorial expansion: Rhineland to Poland
    2026/04/18
    Nazi Germany's territorial expansion did not begin in secret. The ideology driving it — Lebensraum, the doctrine that Germanic civilisation required vast new living space seized from others — was written into Mein Kampf, spoken aloud in speeches, and heard by the world. Episode 7 of The History of Nazi Germany examines how Hitler translated that ideology into action, and how the international community failed, step by step, to stop him.

    By 1936, the machinery of Hitler's dictatorship was fully assembled. The Reichstag Fire Decree, the Enabling Act, the Nuremberg Laws — each had stripped away the legal and political foundations of democratic Germany. What Hitler turned to next was geography. The remilitarisation of the Rhineland in March 1936 was the first major test: a direct violation of the Treaty of Versailles, executed with troops under orders to retreat if France pushed back. France didn't push back. Britain hesitated. The League of Nations proved toothless. Hitler moved through the gap, and the lesson he drew — that Western democracies would flinch — shaped every gamble that followed.

    Two years later, Austria ceased to exist as an independent state. The Anschluss of March 1938, preceded by Hitler's brutal ultimatum to Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg at Berchtesgaden, absorbed Austria into the German Reich within hours of troops crossing the border. For some Austrians, the reception was enthusiastic. For Vienna's Jewish population, the violence began the same day the soldiers arrived.

    This episode examines the psychology of appeasement, the collapse of the post-war international order, and the human cost of a world that kept assuming Hitler had made his last move.

    This episode was produced using artificial intelligence. A YesOui production.

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    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    14 分
  • Nazi Germany — How propaganda shaped German public opinion
    2026/04/18
    Nazi propaganda is one of the most studied and most misunderstood forces in modern history. Most people assume it worked through outright lies — but the truth is far more unsettling. In Episode 6 of The History of Nazi Germany, we examine how the Third Reich built its propaganda machine on genuine public grievances: economic collapse, hyperinflation, mass unemployment, and the humiliation of the Treaty of Versailles that had already hollowed out faith in the Weimar Republic.

    At the centre of this story is Joseph Goebbels, appointed Reich Minister of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda in March 1933. Goebbels understood that controlling the emotional landscape came first — facts could follow. His ministry rapidly consolidated power over every medium through which ideas could travel: radio, film, newspapers, theatre, music, and the visual arts. Through the Reich Chamber of Culture, anyone deemed ideologically unreliable — Jews, political opponents, dissidents — was quietly expelled from public life. The result wasn't censorship in the traditional sense. It was the wholesale reconstruction of the informational environment.

    We explore how the subsidised Volksempfänger — the People's Receiver — brought Hitler's voice directly into sixteen million German homes by 1939, while being engineered to block foreign broadcasts. We look at the Nuremberg rallies, designed by Albert Speer as cathedrals of light that engineered belonging on a mass scale. And we analyse Leni Riefenstahl's Triumph of the Will — the masterpiece of political filmmaking that projected Nazi power far beyond Germany's borders.

    This episode asks a question that remains deeply relevant: how does a modern state manufacture consent, and what conditions make ordinary people vulnerable to it?

    This episode was produced using artificial intelligence. Script, research, and audio are entirely AI-generated. A YesOui production.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    14 分
  • Nazi Germany — Racial laws: from discrimination to genocide
    2026/04/18
    The step from discrimination to genocide was not a sudden leap — it was a sequence, and understanding that sequence is essential to understanding Nazi Germany. Episode 5 of The History of Nazi Germany examines how racial ideology moved from doctrine to policy to mass murder, tracing the legal and bureaucratic machinery that made persecution not just possible, but official.

    Beginning with the early years of the Nazi regime, this episode covers the 1933 boycotts of Jewish businesses, the dismissal of Jewish civil servants under the Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service, and the gradual exclusion of Jews from professional and public life. These were not random acts of street violence — they were opening moves in a deliberate campaign.

    The central focus is the Nuremberg Laws of September 1935: two pieces of legislation that permanently restructured the legal status of Jews in Germany. The Reich Citizenship Law stripped Jews of German citizenship. The Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honour banned marriage and relations between Jews and non-Jewish Germans. Together, they gave persecution a legal foundation and brought the full apparatus of bureaucratic precision to racial classification — defining Jews by grandparent fractions, creating categories of Mischlinge, and making discrimination not merely permitted, but codified.

    The episode then traces the tightening economic exclusion of Jews through Aryanisation, the regime's push for emigration, and the events of November 1938 — Kristallnacht — when a nationwide pogrom signalled a decisive and violent escalation. This is essential history for anyone seeking to understand how a modern, literate state can destroy a population through its own institutions.

    This episode was produced using artificial intelligence. Script, research, and audio are entirely AI-generated. A YesOui production.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    13 分
  • Nazi Germany — The Enabling Act: legalizing dictatorship
    2026/04/18
    On March 23, 1933, inside the Kroll Opera House in Berlin — surrounded by SS guards and Storm Troopers — the German Reichstag was asked to vote itself out of existence. The result was the Enabling Act, the law that gave Adolf Hitler the legal authority to govern without parliament, without checks, and without limits. It was not a coup. It was a vote.

    In Episode 4 of The History of Nazi Germany, we examine the Enabling Act in full — what it was, how Hitler secured the two-thirds supermajority required to pass it, and what it replaced. To understand its significance, we trace the fragility of the Weimar Republic: a democracy born from the wreckage of the First World War, battered by the Treaty of Versailles, hyperinflation, political violence, and the catastrophic unemployment of the Great Depression.

    We cover the Reichstag Fire of February 27, 1933, and the emergency decree that followed within 24 hours — suspending every major civil liberty in Germany overnight. We examine the March elections, the deliberate exclusion of Communist deputies, and the fateful decision by the Centre Party to vote yes. And we hear from Otto Wels, the Social Democrat leader who stood in that hall — surrounded by SS men — and said no.

    This episode asks a question that still matters: how does a functioning democracy hand power to a dictator through its own legal mechanisms? The answer is complicated, chilling, and essential to understanding how Nazi Germany was built.

    Subscribe and join us each week as we trace one of history's most important and devastating stories.

    This episode was produced using artificial intelligence. Script, research, and audio are entirely AI-generated. A YesOui production.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    15 分
  • Nazi Germany — From economic crisis to military rearmament
    2026/04/18
    By 1933, six million Germans were unemployed. Within five years, that number had collapsed to under one million. Episode 3 of The History of Nazi Germany examines how the Nazi regime engineered one of history's most dramatic economic turnarounds — and why that recovery made the Second World War structurally unavoidable.

    This episode traces the economic transformation of Germany between 1933 and 1939, from the ruins of the Weimar Republic's failure to manage the Great Depression through to a rearmament programme so vast it could only be sustained by conquest. The discussion covers the autobahn and public works schemes that made recovery visible to ordinary Germans, the secret military build-up that preceded Hitler's open repudiation of the Treaty of Versailles in 1935, and the mefo bills financing mechanism that disguised the true scale of military spending.

    Beyond the macroeconomics, the episode explores how power was exercised over German workers and industrialists alike. Independent trade unions were abolished in May 1933, replaced by the Nazi German Labour Front. In their place, the Strength Through Joy programme offered subsidised leisure and small material comforts — a calculated exchange of collective rights for individual benefits that many workers, scarred by years of unemployment, accepted.

    The episode confronts a difficult but essential question: how did consent work in Nazi Germany? Terror and coercion were real, but so was genuine economic improvement felt at the kitchen table. Understanding both is essential to understanding how the regime maintained loyalty long enough to pursue its most catastrophic ambitions. A vital listen for anyone exploring the history of the Third Reich, World War Two origins, or the political economy of authoritarianism.

    This episode was produced using artificial intelligence. Script, research, and audio are entirely AI-generated. A YesOui production.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    11 分
  • Nazi Germany — The Night of the Long Knives: consolidating absolute power
    2026/04/18
    In the summer of 1934, Adolf Hitler ordered the murder of the men who had built the Nazi movement alongside him. This episode of The History of Nazi Germany examines one of the most chilling events of the Third Reich: the Night of the Long Knives, the brutal purge that eliminated the SA leadership, silenced political rivals, and exposed the true nature of Nazi power.

    By June 1934, Hitler faced a serious internal threat. Ernst Röhm, commander of the SA — the brown-shirted paramilitary force that had carried the Nazis to power — was pushing for a second revolution, one that would absorb the traditional German military into his own organisation. That ambition put him directly in conflict with the Reichswehr officer class, whose loyalty Hitler desperately needed for his rearmament programme and territorial ambitions. With President Hindenburg dying and the chancellorship and presidency about to merge, Hitler made a cold, calculated choice: Röhm had to go.

    Over the night of 30 June and into 2 July 1934, SS and Gestapo units moved across Germany, killing SA commanders, old rivals, and inconvenient figures — many with no connection to any conspiracy. Ernst Röhm was shot in his cell. Former Chancellor Kurt von Schleicher was murdered at home alongside his wife. The real death toll almost certainly exceeded two hundred.

    What followed the killings was perhaps even more revealing: the cabinet retroactively declared the entire purge legal. This episode explores how the Night of the Long Knives was not just a massacre but a defining moment that showed how the Nazi state weaponised law, loyalty, and public consent to sustain a dictatorship.

    This episode was produced using artificial intelligence. Script, research, and audio are entirely AI-generated. A YesOui production.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    13 分
  • Nazi Germany — How did the Reichstag Fire enable Nazi dictatorship?
    2026/04/18
    On the night of 27 February 1933, the German Reichstag building burned — and within twenty-four hours, Adolf Hitler had turned a single act of arson into the legal mechanism for destroying democracy. This opening episode of The History of Nazi Germany examines how the Nazi rise to power unfolded with terrifying precision, step by calculated step.

    To understand the Reichstag Fire, you first have to understand the Weimar Republic — Germany's fragile democracy born from the humiliation of the Treaty of Versailles, battered by hyperinflation in the 1920s, and nearly broken by the Great Depression. Hitler didn't create that crisis. He read it, exploited it, and positioned the Nazi Party as the only force that could restore order and national pride. By 1932, the Nazis were the largest single party in the Reichstag.

    When President Paul von Hindenburg appointed Hitler as Chancellor on 30 January 1933, those around him believed he was a manageable, containable figure. That miscalculation would prove one of the most consequential in modern history.

    This episode traces the chain of events that followed — the Reichstag Fire Decree, which suspended civil liberties across all of Germany overnight; the March 1933 elections; the intimidation of opposition politicians; and the passage of the Enabling Act, which legally transferred legislative power to Hitler's government. At every turn, the process was technically legal. That is precisely what makes it so important to study.

    Featuring the story of Social Democrat leader Otto Wels, who stood up in the Kroll Opera House surrounded by SA and SS troops and defended democracy anyway, this episode sets the foundation for everything that followed in Nazi Germany.

    This episode was produced using artificial intelligence. Script, research, and audio are entirely AI-generated. A YesOui production.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    14 分