The Beer Hall Putsch (Munich Putsch) and Mein Kampf
The Beer Hall Putsch in 1923 was the beginning of Hitler
It was an attempt to overthrow the government after protesting the French occupation of the Ruhr
A march was created that was meant to be similar to Mussolini's but failed
Hitler and General Ludendorff were arrested and sent to Landsberg prison
While in prison, Hitler wrote "Mein Kampf" (My struggle)
Outlined his political ideologies and served as an autobiography
Germany needed to re-militarize
Made it clear that the Aryan race was superior
It was an attempt to overthrow the government after protesting the French occupation of the Ruhr
A march was created that was meant to be similar to Mussolini's but failed
Hitler and General Ludendorff were arrested and sent to Landsberg prison
While in prison, Hitler wrote "Mein Kampf" (My struggle)
Outlined his political ideologies and served as an autobiography
Germany needed to re-militarize
Made it clear that the Aryan race was superior
Summary
The Beer Hall Putsch was an attempt to overthrow the government and proved to be similiar to Mussolini's march on Rome, but the plan failed. As a result, Hitler and General Ludendorff were thrown in prison where Hitler wrote "Mein Kampf" which outlined the pillars of his political ideologies. The book shed some light on the future of Nazism, (antisemitism, anticommunism) and stressed the need to re-arm Germany as well as the superiority of the Aryan Race. This was Hitler's first step to power