Postcard entitled "Anti-Revolution Propaganda", Berlin [1920]

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Postcard entitled "Anti-Revolution Propaganda", Berlin [1920]

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Boris Souvarine Papers - Soviet Russia Photos.graduateinstitute.ch/home/research/library/archives/boris... ( http://graduateinstitute.ch/home/research/library/archives/boris-souvarine.html ) ..Notes: This postcard shows a soldier smiling, in front of a poster stating "Die Lüge vom monarchistischen Putsch" ("The lie of the monarchist putsch"). The manuscript note was added on the original postcard. ..This postcard refers to the Kapp Putsch, which took place in March 1920 and was a monarchist coup intended to overthrow the Weimar Republic. The putsch failed after a general strike, which received massive support among the working class...Description: 1 postcard. Black and white ; 9 x 14 cm.

From November 8 to November 9, 1923, Adolf Hitler (1889-1945) and his followers staged the Beer Hall Putsch in Munich, a failed takeover of the government in Bavaria, a state in southern Germany. Since 1921, Hitler had led the Nazi Party, a fledgling political group that promoted German pride and anti-Semitism and was unhappy with the terms of the Treaty of Versailles, the peace settlement that ended World War I (1914-18) and required many concessions and reparations from Germany. In the aftermath of the failed “putsch,” or coup d’état, Hitler was convicted of treason and sentenced to five years in prison. He spent less than a year behind bars, during which time he dictated “Mein Kampf,” his political autobiography. The putsch and Hitler’s subsequent trial turned him into a national figure. After prison, he worked to rebuild the Nazi Party and gain power via legal political methods. Also known as the Munich Putsch.

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1919
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Graduate Institute Geneva
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