How Did The Treaty Of Versailles Dbq

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The Versailles Treaty dealt Germany an unfair hand. The Versailles Treaty caused anger and humiliation within Germany and left a void that would later be filled by the Nazi Party. There were four main punishments that really damaged Germany as a whole: Size of the German Military, Payments, War Guilt Clause, Territory Losses. Germany wasn’t a fan of these rules that the Versailles Treaty which they showed it in World War II.

The Treaty of Versailles contributed to WWII by severely weakening Germany economically through territorial losses. The colonies Germany lost consisted nations of Tanzania, Rwanda, Cameroon, Namibia, and Botswana, and Samoa, the Marshall Islands which were the Pacific Territories. Losing those colonies meant that Germany had a great amount of markets that they lost control of. Germany used those markets to sell their goods but now that those colonies aren’t with Germany, the British and French ended up taking over those colonies. After the German frontiers were lost, Germany only had access to about 78,000,000 tons of coal per year which is half of what they got before the treaty. John Maynard Keynes argued the punishments were given to Germany would lead to bitterness and future conflict(Document A).

The Treaty also made the size of the German military more strict. This made the German military very
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Germany had serious economic problems, but they did not have to spend money on rebuilding bridges, roads, schools, and businesses as much as countries such as France and Belgium because there wasn’t major wars fought in Germany(Document C). Knowing that Germany wasn’t stable economically, they would pay its reparations payments in small portions. On top of that, the right wing parties wanted to overthrow the Weimar Republic, which would have made the situation even worse. Germany only just finished repaying the World War I reparations on October 3,