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Word War One

Word War One

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£9.99Price

World War One was the most catastrophic event in 20th century European history. The distinguished historian Max Egremont explains what caused it and why Germany lost – and assesses the disastrous consequences.

For many, before 1914, a huge European war had seemed impossible. Conflicts in the Balkans flared up yet stayed contained. The Belgian historian Henri Pirenne wrote to a friend in December 1905: “Do you really believe in the possibility of a war? For me it is impossible to have the least fear in that regard.” In March 1912, the British peer Lord Esher – an authority on defence matters – told an audience of Britain’s senior Generals that war “becomes every day more difficult and improbable”. After all, what could be gained by war? In 1909, the British writer Norman Angell claimed that with the increasing interdependence of nations war could not benefit the victor. All participating countries would be impoverished; the idea of victory was a “great illusion”.

 

In this short guide Max Egremont looks at controversies which have raged over the years. What caused the war? Who should be blamed for its outbreak? Should Britain have joined in and, after it did, were its soldiers really, as has been claimed, “lions led by donkeys”? What was America’s role? And was the final peace settlement as fair and sensible as possible in the circumstances or, by humiliating Germany, did the Allies pave the way to a Second World War, a truly global conflict which turned out to be even bloodier and more destructive than the First?

  • PRODUCT INFO

    Author: Max Egremont

    ISBN: 1911187953

    Number Of Pages: 128

    Publisher: Connell Publishing

    Release Date: 2018-09-06

    EAN: 9781911187950

  • ABOUT THE AUTHOR

    Max Egremont was born in 1948 and studied Modern History at Oxford University. As well as four nov- els, he is the author of The Cousins and Balfour: A Life of Arthur James Balfour. His acclaimed biography of Siegfried Sassoon was published in 2005 and his most recent work is Forgotten Land: Journeys Among the Ghosts of East Prussia.

  • PRESS REVIEWS

    Now, at last, there’s an answer. “Mercifully,” says Helen Brown in the Mail, a new series of short books has come along to reduce long, complex topics into short, easily digestible books.

    And they’re nothing like the “dry, bullet-pointy style” of GCSE textbooks.

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