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The First World War [PDF]

open access: possible, 2018
Karl Ludwig Bonhoeffer becomes involved in research into a new battlefield psychosis called shell shock or male hysteria. The question is whether it is caused by physical trauma, such as from a shell exploding over a narrow trench, or is a form of malingering. How this question is answered has far-reaching consequences.
Keith Laybourn, Jack Reynolds
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The First World War

2001
As many of his colleagues recognised, in Otto Hahn there was nothing of the true character of war, in which the leading industrial nations wrestled over a new division of the world. Above all else, Germany, which had come too late to the division of the world into colonial regions, wanted new sources of raw materials and market outlets.
Nicholas Tarling, Margaret Lamb
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The first world war

The English Historical Review, 1968
In 1909 Norman Angell published his polemic The Great Illusion, in which he argued that the increasingly international character of trade, commerce and finance had rendered wars between sovereign states not merely unprofitable, but positively harmful to victors and vanquished alike.
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The First World War

1987
On 28 June 1914 a nineteen-year-old Bosnian named Gavrilo Princip shot and killed the heir to the Habsburg throne, Franz Ferdinand, and his wife Sophie in Sarejevo, capital of the Austrian province of Bosnia-Herzegovina. After a flurry of diplomatic activity and a series of ultimatums and mobilisations, the First World War broke out 39 days later ...
Frank B. Tipton, Robert Aldrich
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THE FIRST WORLD WAR

The Historical Journal, 2000
The arming of Europe and the making of the First World War. By David G. Herrmann. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1996. Pp. xiii+307. ISBN 0-691-03374-9. £29.50.Armaments and the coming of war: Europe 1904–1914. By David Stevenson. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1996. Pp. xi+463. ISBN 0-19-820208-3. £48.00.Authority, identity and the social history
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The First World War

The Charleston Advisor, 2014
This chapter weaves together details of the Federation’s responses to the coming of war, providing an overview of the issues it pursued with government and employers on behalf of its membership. It also explores its position within the labour movement, including the reasons why, in 1915, it entered into an agreement with the all-male Amalgamated ...
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