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Comparacion De Adolf Hitler Y Napoleon Bonaparte (En Ingles)


Enviado por   •  13 de Mayo de 2013  •  866 Palabras (4 Páginas)  •  498 Visitas

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Adolf Hitler & Napoleon Bonaparte

From the perspective of many people, both Adolf Hitler and Napoleon Bonaparte have one obvious similarity; immensely, oppressing tyranny. However, after completing organized research, one will be able to distinguish the differences and similarities which exposes the size of the gap that will determine who of the two absolutists was better or worse. Adolf Hitler, known to be the most infamous political German leader of the twentieth century, used his political authority to try to create a German rule that would be absolute in the entire world. Napoleon Bonaparte, recognized as one of the greatest military conquerors in history, tried to establish a French world power by invading and conquering all other countries.

In 1919 Hitler joined an organization which he was originally ordered to spy on by his political leaders. This organization then renamed itself the National Socialist German Worker’s Party, or the Nazi Party for short. Within only two years after he joined the organization, Hitler became the leader of this organization and transformed it into a military-like organization, one in which his word was absolute rule. After a failed attempt to gain power, the organization finally managed to defeat and punish its political enemies, and become the only political party of Germany. Having succeeded in becoming an absolute dictator, Adolf Hitler could now, with his power, kill and impose heavily strict restrictions on all political enemies who could pose some sort of threat to his beliefs as well as the Jews and other “impure” groups. In 1935 he passed the Nuremburg Laws, which took away nearly all civil rights from the Jews. To ensure that no one would try to break his laws he created the Geheime Staatspolizei, a secret police force better known as the Gestapo. Those who objected or resisted against the Gestapo were tortured to death or instantly killed. Hitler also established the Concentration Camps which held prisoners under extremely harsh conditions. Jews, Slavs, Gypsies, Soviet civilians, Soviet prisoners of war, Jehovah witnesses, homosexuals, and even people with disabilities were obligated to work in harsh conditions and were then executed or burned alive in these concentration camps that were scattered across the country. By 1945, an estimated 11 million to 17 million people had been brutally murdered; about 6 million of them were Jews. Meanwhile, he also triggered World War II in 1939 when his troops invaded Poland. Britain and France responded with a declaration of war. This war lasted until 1945. Hitler committed suicide before Soviet troops could reach him and his body was, by his orders, taken out to a yard and burned. Hitler’s belief of nationalism and desire to “save” and make German culture superior to all other countries and races had grown enormously, and in the process it triggered WWII and left behind more than 50 million

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