Locarno Treaties Facts & Worksheets

Locarno Treaties facts and information plus worksheet packs and fact file. Includes 5 activities aimed at students 11-14 years old (KS3) & 5 activities aimed at students 14-16 years old (GCSE). Great for home study or to use within the classroom environment.

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Locarno Treaties Worksheets

Do you want to save dozens of hours in time? Get your evenings and weekends back? Be able to teach about the Locarno Treaties to your students?

Our worksheet bundle includes a fact file and printable worksheets and student activities. Perfect for both the classroom and homeschooling!

Resource Examples

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Fact File

Locarno Treaties Resource 1

Locarno Treaties Resource 2

Student Activities

Locarno Treaties Activity & Answer Guide 1

Locarno Treaties Activity & Answer Guide 2

Locarno Treaties Activity & Answer Guide 3

Locarno Treaties Activity & Answer Guide 4

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Summary

Key Facts And Information

Let’s know more about the Locarno Treaties!

The Locarno Treaties or the Locarno Pact were a series of treaties made in Locarno, Switzerland, between 5 and 16 October 1925. Officially signed in London on 1 December, the treaties aimed to finalise territorial settlements of the First World War and improve foreign relations with Germany. At the time of Gustav Stresemann’s leadership of Germany, the country began to open its doors to the international community through foreign affairs and treaties. Germany agreed to settle border disputes with France, Belgium, Poland and Czechoslovakia in 1925 through the Locarno Treaties.

PLANNING BEFORE THE PASSING OF THE LOCARNO TREATIES

OCCUPATION OF RHINELAND

The Imperial German Army’s defeat in 1918 forced Germany’s provisional government to accept the terms of the 1918 armistice, which led to the occupation of the Rhineland from 1 December 1918 until 30 June 1930.

OCCUPATION OF THE RUHR

  1. The Locarno Treaties meant Gustav Stresemann acknowledged Germany’s western boundary as specified in the Treaty of Versailles.
  2. The withdrawal of Allied forces from the Rhineland was also agreed upon at Locarno.
  3. Despite the fact that Germany’s eastern border was not confirmed in Locarno, the country signed arbitration accords with Czechoslovakia and Poland.

TERMS OF THE LOCARNO TREATIES

DAWES PLAN

The Dawes Plan was a 1924 plan that partially handled the issue of the First World War reparations owed by Germany. It brought an end to a diplomatic crisis in Europe following the First World War and the Treaty of Versailles.

Germany’s Western Borders

The Rhineland

CORDON SANITAIRE

Referred to the system of alliances instituted by France in post-World War I Europe that stretched from Finland to the Balkans and which ‘completely ringed Germany and sealed off Russia from Western Europe, thereby isolating the two politically “diseased” nations of Europe.’

Arbitration Treaties with Poland and Czechoslovakia

EFFECTS OF THE LOCARNO TREATIES ON GERMANY

LEAGUE OF NATIONS

The League of Nations was the first global intergovernmental organisation whose primary aim was to keep the globe at peace. The Paris Peace Conference that ended the First World War established the League of Nations on 10 January 1920.

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