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Anschluss

Anschluss is the name given to the unification of Germany and Austria which took place on 12 March 1938. The term Anschluss had been coined as part of an aim for a ‘greater Germany’. German unification under Prussian leadership excluded Austrian Germans, as the Austro-Hungarian Empire had, in 1871, been a powerful force in central Europe. Anschluss was a nationalistic ideal in which the Austrian Germans would be brought into an enlarged political union.

From the formation of Germany under Bismarck and Kaiser Wilhelm I until the end of the First World War any joining of Prussian dominated Germany and the Germanic parts of the Austrian Empire were unfeasible. Following the break up of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in the Inter-War era, the idea of Anschluss became a highly desirable aim for Nationalists within Germany and German dominated parts of Austria.

“Anschluss”, propaganda postcard for the unification of Austria with Germany, published by Göth, Vienna and Munich, 1921
“Anschluss”, propaganda postcard for the unification of Austria with Germany, published by Göth, Vienna and Munich, 1921

The Rise of the Nazi Party within Germany was accompanied by support for the parties pro-Germany agenda within Austria. Despite the union of Austria and Germany being prohibited by some International Treaties, the Nazi Party were by 1938 confident that there would be muted opposition to Anschluss from the International Community and that any Austrian opposition would be similarly easy to overcome.

As a consequence, the Nazi leadership ordered men of the Wehrmacht to march into Austria on 12 March 1938. It was presented as a union of Germanic peoples based on the wishes of the Germanic majority within Austria.

Anschluss. Adolf Hitler returns to his birth place of Braunau am Inn, Austria on 12 March 1938. Here he arrives at the Braunau end of the Inn River bridge after crossing over from Simbach, Germany. The original iron bridge has been replaced by a modern concrete span, but the Braunau buildings in the background retain their original appearance. The Austrian Doppeladler (Double Eagle) hangs at the bridgehead.
Adolf Hitler returns to his birth place of Braunau am Inn, Austria. Here he arrives at the Braunau end of the Inn River bridge after crossing over from Simbach, Germany.

Adolf Hitler, though Chancellor and by 1938 Fuhrer of Germany, was Austrian by birth. He had held the belief that there should be a political and cultural union of all Germanic people from early in his political life.

Links

EBSCO Research Starters – Anschluss

Deutsches Historisches Museum – Anschluss

International Relations in the Inter-war Years

Treaty of Versailles, 1919League of NationsThe Dawes Plan, 1924Locarno PactKellogg-Briand PactThe Young PlanLitvinov ProtocolWall Street CrashImpact of the Great Depression – Manchurian Crisis, 1931Abyssinia Crisis, 1935League of Nations response to Abyssinia and ManchuriaSpanish Civil War, 1936Hitler’s Aims: Lebensraum and GrossdeutschlandReoccupation of the Rhineland: International ResponseAnschlussAppeasementSudetenland plebisite – Munich Agreement – Allied Pre-War policy towards PolandNazi Soviet PactPact of Steel

China 1930 – 1976 – Germany 1919-1945 – USA 1919 -41 –  History of the Soviet Union