To What Extent Was Hitler a Weak Dictator?

1859 Words4 Pages

To what extent was Hitler a ‘weak dictator’? The debate as to whether Hitler was a ‘weak dictator’ or ‘Master of the Third Reich’ is one that has been contested by historians of Nazi Germany for many years and lies at the centre of the Intentionalist – Structuralist debate. On the one hand, historians such as Bullock, Bracher, Jackel and Hildebrand regard Hitler’s personality, ideology and will as the central locomotive in the Third Reich. Others, such as Broszat, Mason and Mommsen argue that the regime evolved out from pressures and circumstances rather than from Hitler’s intentions. They emphasise the institutional anarchy of the regime as being the result of Hitler’s ‘weak’ leadership. The most convincing standpoint is the synthesis of the two schools, which acknowledges both Hitler’s centrality in explaining the essence of Nazi rule but also external forces that influenced Hitler’s decision making. In this sense, Hitler was not a weak dictator as he possessed supreme authority but as Kershaw maintains, neither was he ‘Master of the Third Reich’ because he did not exercise unrestricted power. Within Nazi government, Hitler acted as the final source of authority, which serves as evidence against the notion that Hitler was ‘weak’. Having consolidated power by 1934 Hitler was, at least theoretically, omnipotent, being Chancellor, Head of State and “supreme judge of the nation”. However, the notion that Nazi government systematically pursued the clear objectives of the Fuhrer is challenged by the reality of Nazi government structure. It has been widely accepted by historians that the Nazi State was a chaotic collection of rival power blocs. Mommsen’s explanation that this was the result of Hitler’s apathy towards government a... ... middle of paper ... ...versity Press, 2001 Hinton and Hite, Weimar and Nazi Germany, Hodder Education, 200, p.184 Housden, Martyn, Hitler: A weak dictator?, 2002, essay Johnson, Eric, The Nazi Terror, Basic Books, 1991 Kershaw, Ian: The 'Hitler Myth': Image and Reality in the Third Reich, Oxford Pap erbacks, 2001 The Nazi Dictatorship, Bloomsbury Academic, 2000 Layton, Geoff, Germany: The Third Reich 1933-1945, Hodder Murray, 2005 Lee, Stephen J., European Dictatorships 1918-1945, Routledge, 1999 McDonough, Frank, Hitler and Nazi Germany, Cambridge University Press, 1999 Noakes and Pridham, Nazism 1919-1945: A Documentary Reader, Exeter, 1983 Overy, Richard, The Dictators: Hitler’s Germany and Stalin’s Russia, Penguin, 2005 Von Manstein, Eric, Lost victories, TBS The Book Service Ltd, 2004 Williamson, David, Was Hitler a Weak Dictator?, History Review, March 2002, article

Open Document