Why this matters now
The rise of fascism explains the origins of World War II and the nature of totalitarianism. Its causes and features are common exam themes, distinct from the war itself.
Fascism in Italy
Benito Mussolini founded the Fascist movement, exploiting post-WWI economic distress and fear of communism. After the March on Rome (1922), he took power and built a one-party, ultra-nationalist dictatorship glorifying the state and the leader (Il Duce).
Nazism in Germany
In Germany, Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party (NSDAP) rose on resentment of the harsh Treaty of Versailles, the chaos of the Weimar Republic, and the mass unemployment of the Great Depression. Hitler became Chancellor in 1933 and established a totalitarian, racist dictatorship preaching extreme nationalism, anti-Semitism and expansionism (Lebensraum).
Common features and the road to war
Fascism and Nazism shared key features: extreme nationalism, totalitarian one-party rule, a cult of the leader, militarism, suppression of dissent and contempt for democracy. Their aggressive expansionism — and the failure of appeasement — led directly to World War II.
UPSC angle
Know Mussolini (Fascism, March on Rome 1922) and Hitler (Nazism, 1933), the causes (Versailles resentment + Great Depression), the shared totalitarian features, and the link to WWII.
Frequently asked questions
What is fascism?
A totalitarian, ultra-nationalist ideology glorifying the state and a single leader, hostile to democracy and communism; established by Mussolini in Italy.
How did Hitler come to power?
By exploiting resentment of the Treaty of Versailles, the instability of the Weimar Republic and the mass unemployment of the Great Depression; he became Chancellor in 1933.
What are the common features of fascism and Nazism?
Extreme nationalism, totalitarian one-party rule, a cult of the leader, militarism, suppression of dissent and aggressive expansionism.
How did the rise of fascism lead to World War II?
Through aggressive expansionism by Germany, Italy and Japan, and the failure of appeasement to contain it.