Tuesday, May 12, 2026

The Rise of Fascism, Nazism, and Militarism before WWII

In our previous posts, we talked about the world economy's collapse under the weight of Black Thursday, leaving millions desperate and governments powerless. But history has a cruel pattern: where poverty and humiliation take root, extremism finds fertile ground. The 1930s produced dictators; they produced several, and almost simultaneously, on opposite ends of the globe. In Italy, a former journalist transformed street violence into state power. In Germany, a failed artist rewrote the rules of democracy until there were no rules left. In Spain, a civil war became the world's dress rehearsal for the catastrophe ahead. And in the Far East, an island nation decided that the only answer to economic desperation was conquest.

Generated by AI

The Rise of Fascism in Italy: Il Duce and the Blackshirts

Despite being one of the victors of World War I, Italy was dominated by massive disappointment and an economic crisis because it could not get what it wanted at the peace table. This negative atmosphere in the country mostly benefited one man and his ideology: Benito Mussolini, known as “Il Duce” (The Leader), and his Fascist Party.

Following the 1921 elections, the radical ideas of the Fascist Party began to spread rapidly among the masses. Taking advantage of this momentum, Mussolini organized the famous March on Rome in 1922 with the “Blackshirts”, a violent group of volunteer fascist militias. After seizing power that same year following this massive show of force, Mussolini's very first action was to ruthlessly put an end to all democratic practices in the country, establishing his absolute dictatorship.

Having completely silenced the opposition at home, Mussolini turned his eyes to the Mediterranean basin for his foreign policy. Calling the Mediterranean “Our Sea” (Mare Nostrum), just like in Ancient Rome, Il Duce began to pursue an aggressive and expansionist colonial policy aimed at resurrecting the glory of the ancient Roman Empire.

Generated by AI

The Rise of Nazism in Germany: From Weimar to Dictatorship

The political and economic chaos during the early years of the German Republic, established by the Weimar Constitution in 1919, incredibly accelerated the rise of right-wing movements and Adolf Hitler’s National Socialist German Workers’ Party (Nazi Party). To increase its power on the streets and violently intimidate its political rivals, the Nazi Party created its own paramilitary forces known as the SA (Storm Detachment) and the SS (Protection Squadron).

Entering the German parliament for the first time in the 1924 elections, the Nazi Party made very clear and radical promises to a desperate public: tearing up the humiliating conditions of the Treaty of Versailles, fighting a relentless battle against communism, and asserting the absolute superiority of the German (“Aryan”) race to the world.

After completely seizing power in the 1933 elections, the Nazi Party used the heavy pressure of these armed forces to ban all other political parties, establishing an absolute Nazi dictatorship in the country. The regime wanted to control the present as well as the future. It went so far as to place special propagandists in party schools and youth organizations established in 1934 to indoctrinate the younger generations. The party established the ruthless secret state police known as the Gestapo to silence opposition and strictly control all public activities.

Germans were developing industry in underground bunkers, defying the strict restrictions imposed by the Treaty of Versailles. Generated by AI

Hitler's Foreign Policy: Tearing Up Versailles and “Lebensraum”

Having completely consolidated his dictatorship at home, Adolf Hitler turned his eyes outward. During this period, the German foreign policy shaped by the Nazis was built on three main, aggressive objectives that would drag the world into a new catastrophe:

  • Breaking the Chains of Versailles: To completely break free from all the heavy conditions and restrictions of the Treaty of Versailles, which strangled Germany militarily and economically and was seen as a massive humiliation by the public.
  • One Nation, One State: To unite all ethnic Germans scattered across different regions of Europe (such as Austria, Czechoslovakia, Poland, etc.) under the roof of a single, massive state.
    Living Space (Lebensraum): This was the most dangerous principle of the regime. It aimed to conquer and annex the vast territories (especially in Eastern Europe) that the superior German (Aryan) race needed to live comfortably, multiply, and be agriculturally and industrially self-sufficient.
Generated by AI

The Spanish Civil War and the Franco Era: A Nation Divided

Another country affected by this totalitarian storm in Europe was Spain. The process, which began with the army seizing power in 1923, failed to solve the country’s socio-economic problems and pushed social polarization to its peak. This growing crisis dragged the nation into a bloody civil war in 1936.

The Spanish Civil War was fundamentally fought between two irreconcilable factions: the left-leaning Republicans, who formed a government in Valencia, and the right-wing Nationalists, led by General Francisco Franco.

Franco in a meeting of his government, 1939

This war remained solely an internal Spanish issue; it practically turned into an international rehearsal for the approaching World War II. While the Republicans received ideological support from France and military backing from the USSR, General Franco's Nationalist forces received massive weapons and air power support from the Nazi regime in Germany and the Fascist regime in Italy.

This bloody civil war, which lasted for three years and left the country in ruins, ended in 1939 when Franco's forces captured the capital, Madrid. Emerging victorious and seizing absolute power, Franco made a highly cunning move, even though he had come to power with the help of Germany and Italy. Knowing that his country could not survive another devastation, he did not enter Spain into World War II. This strategy of neutrality prevented him from being overthrown like Hitler and Mussolini, and Franco ruled Spain with an iron fist until his death in 1975.

Generated by AI

The Rise of Militarism in Japan: From Washington to the Great Depression

While totalitarian regimes were gaining power in Europe, a different kind of storm was brewing in the Far East. Japan’s aggressive and expansionist policy in Asia from the 1920s onwards drew massive backlash from Western powers (especially the US and Britain) who wanted to protect their interests in the region.

To halt this escalation, the Washington Naval Conference was held in 1922. The primary goal of the Western powers at this conference was to impose strict limits on Japan's rapidly growing naval forces, thereby preventing a potential attack on China.

However, these diplomatic efforts did not last long. The 1929 Great Depression struck Japan, a nation desperate for raw materials and new markets. The desperation caused by the economic crisis incredibly increased the military's power in politics. Seeing the conquest of new territories as the only way out of the crisis, Japan accelerated its expansionist policies and began to base its entire state policy heavily on military power (militarism). This shift would inevitably turn the Pacific into one of the bloodiest theatres of World War II.

The stage was set. The players were in position. Italy was dreaming of a new Roman Empire, Germany was rearming in the shadows, Spain had just emerged from a bloody rehearsal, and Japan was eyeing the vast territories of the Pacific. The world had seen the warning signs and ignored every single one of them.

In the next chapter, we arrive at the moment history had been building toward for two decades: World War II.

See you in the next part.

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Black Thursday: The Great Depression of 1929 and the Collapse of the World Economy

In our previous posts, we examined how empires fell, how maps were redrawn at conference tables, and how new superpowers emerged in the Far East. Actually, I had briefly touched upon this dark era when writing about American Culture and Literature in my previous blogs, because this massive collapse in 1929 did bankrupt the economy, as well as it profoundly shaped the spirit and the literary works of the period. However, in this specific blog series, we will leave the literary analysis aside and focus entirely on the historical context.

The 1920s were a golden era for the United States, famously known as the “Roaring Twenties,” a time of jazz music, endless parties, and boundless consumerism. Everyone believed the stock market would go up forever, and people recklessly bought stocks with borrowed money. That is, until that dark day... October 24, 1929, went down in history as “Black Thursday.” In just a few hours, billions of dollars vanished into thin air, banks closed their doors, and the world plunged into an economic crisis of unprecedented scale: The Great Depression

Generated by AI

The roots of the 1929 crash actually lay in the massive destruction left by World War I and the distorted economic order established in its aftermath. Even the European countries that seemed to be the victors of the war were economically exhausted. For instance, Britain, “once the empire on which the sun never sets,” was struggling just to pay the interest on the loans it had taken from America during the war. With its exports melting away day by day, Britain was forced to borrow from the US once again just to survive.

However, the real tragedy was unfolding in defeated Germany. Unable to pay the massive war reparations demanded by the Allies, which the US expected to be repaid in turn, Germany resorted to printing unbacked money. The result was one of the most terrifying hyperinflations in history. The German Mark became so worthless that people started burning stacks of money in their stoves instead of wood just to keep warm.

Generated by AI

The Dawes Plan

Realizing that the total collapse of the European economy would jeopardize its own receivables, America stepped in and proposed the Dawes Plan in 1924. According to this plan, a perfect yet highly dangerous cycle was established: America would provide massive loans to Germany for its reconstruction; once its factories were running, Germany would pay its war reparations to Britain and France; and these countries, in turn, would use that money to pay off their war debts to America.

The system worked wonderfully, but it had a fatal flaw: The entire world’s economy was now dependent on America keeping the financial taps open. If America sneezed, the whole world would catch a cold.


German External Loan, issued 15 October 1924

Black Thursday and the Market Crash

Until the beginning of October 1929, the New York Stock Exchange was living a dream, bringing unprecedented profits to its investors. However, on October 3, 1929, partly due to the reflection of the fragile economic issues America had with Germany and Britain, the stock prices of some giant holding companies, once seen as unshakable pillars of trust, began an unexpected decline.

This minor tremor turned into an avalanche on October 21, when panicked foreign investors rapidly started selling off their shares. And when the calendar turned to Thursday, October 24, 1929, the dreaded moment arrived: On the day forever etched in history as “Black Thursday,” the stock market hit rock bottom. In just a matter of hours, billions of dollars were wiped out, and the life savings of thousands of people turned into absolute nothingness.

As cash literally evaporated from the market, the economy came to a standstill, and people became unable to meet even their most basic food needs. Facing starvation, thousands tried to survive by growing and selling fruits and vegetables in their own yards. The desperation caused by the absence of cash reverted the system centuries back; people resorted to a barter (exchange) economy just to survive. The devastating impacts of the Great Depression brought nations to the brink of bankruptcy and dragged humanity into the darkest depths of poverty, which would persist until the outbreak of World War II triggered a new era of industrial and military mass production.

Crowd gathering on Wall Street after the 1929 crash

Roosevelt and the “New Deal” Era

In the darkest days of the crisis, a political earthquake occurred in America in 1933. Franklin D. Roosevelt came to power promising radical changes to this collapsed economic system and a new pledge, launching his massive project known in history as the “New Deal.” Roosevelt's plan meant breaking a huge taboo for American capitalism. The traditional “laissez-faire” (let them do it) free-market mind-set was set aside, and for the first time, the state intervened in the economy so comprehensively and directly.

To rebuild the public's completely shattered trust, the first major surgery was performed on the banking system. The structure of the Central Bank (FED) was strengthened to regulate the system, and strict laws were passed to prevent banks from making speculative investments. They even introduced state insurance for bank deposits to secure people's money. Roosevelt's statist and interventionist "New Deal" not only saved America from the brink of collapse but also laid the foundations of the modern state concept in the lead-up to World War II. 

In our next post, we will focus on the dark shadows rising from this economic wreckage: The Establishment of Totalitarian Regimes in Europe. We will explore how Mussolini's Fascism in Italy, Hitler’s Nazism in Germany, and Franco’s rise in Spain dragged the world step-by-step toward a devastating second global war. See you then!

Sunday, May 3, 2026

Science and Culture in the Shadow of Crises

The period between 1918 and 1939 was not merely a political transition phase where empires fell and fascist dictatorships rose. On the contrary, those same years witnessed a kind of “renaissance” where the human mind and creativity pushed their absolute limits, laying the very foundations of the modern world.

While new theories in physics were radically overturning our perception of the universe, radios were taking centre stage in living rooms, sound cinema was mesmerizing the masses, and modern art movements were unlocking the doors of our subconscious. Furthermore, giant leaps in medicine were creating miracles that would save millions of lives. But as the world outside was rapidly drifting toward a political catastrophe, what kind of future were scientists and artists building behind closed doors?

Generated by AI

It was an era where human intelligence pushed its absolute limits. Emerging from the destruction of war, the world was practically being rebuilt in laboratories and art studios.

Inventions Changing Daily Life and the Communication Revolution

During this period, technology created a revolution not only in factories but also in the homes of ordinary people:

Ø 1920: The first radio broadcast began in the USA, taking mass communication to a whole new dimension.

Ø 1923: Electric traffic lights, which changed the flow of streets, were developed, and the very first refrigerator was produced.

Ø 1924: A breakthrough in the food industry occurred with the beginning of frozen food production.

Ø 1925 - 1935: Electric audio recording devices were developed, followed by the invention of magnetic tape for audio recording by the German company AEG in 1935.

Ø 1926 - 1936: John Logie Baird successfully transmitted the first television image. Exactly ten years later, in 1936, the first TV broadcast was made in the UK.

Ø 1927: Cinema broke its silence, and the first sound motion picture hit the silver screen.

Generated by AI

Giant Leaps in Science, Space, and Medicine

News coming from laboratories was both extending lifespans and unlocking the secrets of the universe:

Ø Medical Miracles: The tuberculosis (TB) vaccine was developed in France in 1921. While Vitamin C was discovered in 1928, Alexander Fleming found penicillin in the exact same year, rewriting the history of medicine.

Ø The Golden Age of Physics: The secrets of the atom began to unfold with the discovery of the proton in 1919 and the neutron by James Chadwick in 1932. Albert Einstein, who won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1922, laid the definitive foundations of modern physics.

Ø Military and Civil Technology: In 1926, American Robert Goddard launched the first liquid-fueled rocket, heralding the space age. The electron microscope was built in 1933. Radar, which would change the fate of aviation, was developed in 1935, and Russian engineer Igor Sikorsky built the first helicopter in 1939. The most chilling development was the discovery of nuclear fission (the splitting of the atom) in 1938.

The Persistence of Memory by Salvador Dali

New Horizons in Art, Architecture, and Literature

The chaotic mood the world was experiencing shaped art and literature:

Ø In architecture, the famous Bauhaus movement, which combined functionality and aesthetics, was born.

Ø Surrealism and Expressionism, art movements focusing on the human inner world and subconscious, emerged. The greatest genius of surrealism in painting, Salvador Dali, reflected the approaching footsteps of war on canvas with his masterpiece Soft Construction with Boiled Beans (Premonition of Civil War).

Ø The literary world also mirrored the economic collapses of the era. John Steinbeck's unforgettable novel, The Grapes of Wrath, documented the socio-economic misery in the US following the Great Depression of 1929, securing its place in history as one of the most striking literary testimonies of the time.

In the next part of our series, we turn to the event that made the catastrophe inevitable: The Great Depression of 1929, the economic earthquake that shook the foundations of the global order and opened the door to the deadliest conflict in human history.

Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Japan's Meiji Restoration and the Birth of a Modern Empire

In our previous chapters, we examined how European powers redrew the maps of the Middle East and how the Soviet Union transformed Central Asia. Now, we turn our gaze to the Far East to an isolated island nation that defied the fate of colonization and instead became a formidable global power.

For over two centuries, Japan had locked its doors to the outside world. But in the late 19th century, the arrival of foreign warships forced a dramatic awakening. This sudden shock triggered the Meiji Restoration, one of the most astonishingly rapid modernizations in human history. How did a feudal society of samurai and shoguns transform into an industrialized, modern empire in just a few decades?

Portrait of Emperor Meiji in 1880

The year 1867 marked the beginning of a special 45-year reign under Emperor Mutsuhito, known in history as the Meiji Period. Unlike his isolationist predecessors (the Shoguns), the young emperor realized a harsh truth. He understood that if Japan did not open its doors to the West and implement radical reforms, it would inevitably become a colony of imperialist powers, just like many other Asian nations.

Rejecting this dark fate, Emperor Mutsuhito initiated a massive and unprecedented transformation to modernize his country. The term “Meiji,” which translates to “Enlightened Rule,” became the ultimate symbol of how an isolated island nation rapidly evolved into a formidable global power.

Emperor Meiji travels from Kyoto to Tokyo, late 1868.

The Charter Oath and the Collapse of the Traditional Order

Lasting from October 23, 1868, to July 30, 1912, this era saw Japan rapidly modernize and rise to a powerful status on the world stage. Radical changes were announced by issuing the historic “Charter Oath” (Five-Article Oath) in 1868, a declaration that would alter the destiny of the nation forever.

With this oath, the entire structure of the state was redesigned:

  • The centuries-old feudal land system (the Shogunate domains) was completely abolished.
  • A new, modern national school system modelled after Western standards was established.
  • A Western-style cabinet system was adopted in the government.
  • Taking a massive step towards the rule of law, the Meiji Constitution was enacted, and a national parliament was created.
A Japanese print depicting the arrival of Perry's fleet (1854)
Samurai Resistance

However, such a massive and radical westernization process was not painless. These reforms were initially met with fierce anger and armed rebellion from segments of the public and, most notably, the Samurai, the traditional aristocratic warrior class, who had stood at the top of society for centuries. Stripped of their stipends and their exclusive right to carry swords, the Samurai revolted to protect their ancient traditions. Despite this fierce resistance, the Meiji government maintained a decisive, uncompromising stance. Facing a newly formed, modern-equipped conscript army, the traditional resistance was crushed, and the reforms were successfully implemented.

The Meiji Restoration was literally a total mobilization for national development. The incredible speed and scale of this miraculous transformation can be best understood through these concrete steps:

Industrial and Infrastructure Revolution: While the construction of the first railway began in 1870, this network was built at an astonishing pace, reaching thousands of kilometres in length by 1890. Furthermore, in the critical 30-year period between 1868 and 1898, exactly 2,190 new factories were established, turning the country into an industrial giant.

Administrative and Political Transformation: In 1871, the feudal domain system ruled by the Daimyo was officially abolished, and the country was reorganized in a modern administrative manner. In 1889, a new constitution was proclaimed, carefully modelled after the German state structure and the French legal system. During this process, a national parliament (Diet), political parties, and an advisory council were created.

Education and Society: The strict, centuries-old "caste" (class) system was abolished to ensure social equality. Major reforms were carried out in the land and tax systems, and the country's first daily newspaper was published in 1871. As one of the most critical steps, a law passed in 1872 made primary education compulsory for all children.

A Modern Military: The swords of the Samurai were replaced by modern weaponry. With the conscription law passed in 1873, a professional national army was established up to Western military standards.

Allegory of the New fighting the Old, in early Japan Meiji, around 1870

Culture, Religion, and a New Capital

While Japan absorbed Western technology, it took strict measures to preserve its soul. Shintoism, the ancient and national faith of the Japanese, was promoted as the state religion, while foreign-influenced Buddhism was actively suppressed. The heart of the country, along with the imperial palace, was moved from Kyoto to its new home, Tokyo.

Daily life also experienced a massive transformation. The traditional calendar was abandoned in favour of the Gregorian calendar, and the dress code for government officials was completely redesigned according to Western styles. To support the booming economy, a modern banking system, mirroring those in Europe, was rapidly developed.

The Tokyo Koishikawa Arsenal was established in 1871.

The New Superpower of the Far East

Having modernized its conscript army, Japan sent its officers to Western military and naval academies for elite training. However, this rapid industrialization brought a massive crisis: Japan was an island nation, severely lacking in raw materials. To feed its factories and sustain its growth, it had to adopt an expansionist (imperialist) policy towards the Asian mainland.

·      Setting its sights on Chinese-ruled Korea, Japan achieved a decisive victory in the First Sino-Japanese War (1894-1895). However, under heavy political pressure from Western powers and Russia, Japan was forced to return some of the territories it had won. This diplomatic humiliation sparked deep outrage in Japan.

The time for reckoning came soon enough. The Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905) ended with a result that shocked the entire world. The modern Japanese army and navy utterly decimated the Russian Empire, a massive European power. Following this monumental victory, Japan officially annexed Korea. It had emerged not just as an Asian power, but as a new, terrifying global superpower.

In the next part of our series, we are going to search the “Great Depression of 1929” the economic collapse that shook the entire world to its foundations and changed the course of history forever.

Sunday, April 26, 2026

World War I: How It Reshaped the Middle East

In our previous blog, we explored how the Soviet Union reshaped Central Asia with artificial borders and strict assimilation policies. However, they were not the only ones drawing lines on a map. At the exact same time, Western imperial powers were executing a similar “divide and rule” strategy in the Middle East.

Today, to understand the endless conflicts, border disputes, and political crises we see on the news every day, we must look back to the aftermath of World War I. The Middle East we know today was not formed by natural historical progression, but by the pens and rulers of European diplomats. 

Generated by AI

During the depressed days of World War I, Britain, France, and Tsarist Russia had already drawn the map of the Middle East behind closed doors. They divided the region among themselves through secret treaties (especially the Sykes-Picot Agreement). However, an unexpected storm broke out: Russia withdrew from the war due to the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917. The new Soviet government created a massive diplomatic crisis by exposing these secret imperialist plans to the whole world.

When US President Woodrow Wilson published his Fourteen Points (which explicitly opposed colonialism), the perfect plans of Britain and France took a heavy blow.

The San Remo Conference

However, these obstacles were not enough to stop the Western powers. The USA, disappointed by European politics, returned to its famous Monroe Doctrine (Policy of Isolation). This massive shift left the Middle Eastern stage entirely to Britain and France. Breathing a sigh of relief without the pressure of the USA, these two powers found a new disguise to achieve their goals: The Mandate System. Consequently, at the San Remo Conference in 1920, this new version of colonialism was formalized. They reached a strict consensus to officially divide the Middle Eastern territories under mandate regimes.

After the resolution on 25 April 1920, standing outside Villa Devachan, from left to right: Matsui, Lloyd George, Curzon, Berthelot, Millerand, Vittorio Scialoja, and Nitti. Enhanced by AI

Middle East Map

According to the official excuse of the League of Nations, some regions were not yet capable of “governing themselves” or “protecting their lands from attacks.” Therefore, it was argued that these nations should be managed by a “developed” state until they reached a certain level of maturity.

By the early 1920s, the Middle East was divided between two major imperial powers:

  • France: Took Syria and Lebanon under its mandate. It also strengthened its control over Algeria and Tunisia in North Africa.
  • Britain: To protect its trade routes to India and secure oil fields, it brought Iraq, Palestine, Jordan, and Kuwait into its mandate system. It also took strategic points in the Arabian Peninsula under its protection.

It was an announcement that the future of millions of people would be decided by others.

Emir Faisal's party at Versailles, during the Paris Peace Conference of 1919; left to right: Rustum Haidar, Nuri al-Said, Prince Faisal (front), Captain Pisani (rear), Lawrence, Faisal's servant (name unknown), Captain Hassan Khadri

Empty Promises and the Spark of Resistance in Egypt

While Britain and France were dividing the Middle East on paper, they needed to soften the inevitable anger of the local people. To do this, they issued a joint declaration on November 7, 1918, promising Arab nations the right to “establish their own democratic governments.” However, it soon became clear that these promises were nothing more than a stalling tactic.

The first major crack in this colonial system appeared in Egypt. Britain's attempt to establish total dominance clashed heavily with Egyptian nationalists. The Wafd Party, founded by Saad Zaghloul in early 1919, led a massive resistance movement, organizing strikes and protests throughout the country. Britain tried to extinguish this fire by exiling Zaghloul and other leaders, but this move backfired and only fueled the public's anger.

Stepping Back: The Winds of Independence

Faced with a growing and unstoppable crisis, Britain was forced to declare Egypt's independence with a declaration on February 28, 1922. The ruler of the time, Khedive Fuad I, accepted this declaration and took the title of King (Melik). At the end of this long struggle, Egypt completely abolished capitulations in 1937 and became a member of the League of Nations.

It wasn't just Britain; France also had to bow to the resistance in the region. Due to increasing nationalist pressures, France was forced to sign treaties paving the way for independence for Syria in 1930 and Lebanon in 1936.

The Middle East we know today was manufactured in European conference rooms. Sykes-Picot, San Remo different names for the same ambition. However, the wounds never healed. In our next post, we turn eastward to Japan, and the Meiji Restoration.