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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

2002
In August 1914 what had been threatened half a dozen times over the previous decade actually occurred: a war began in Europe that involved the great powers and soon became world-wide. The war was hardly a surprise, for Europe was armed to the teeth. In order to maintain the largest armies possible with the latest military equipment, governments had ...
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The First World War

2017
A study of Franz Kafka in the context of the First World War, using the social, economic and military context to explain his perspective.
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The First World War

2023
Stephanie Barczewski   +4 more
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The First World War

1998
Analysis of the political impact of naval force enters a new dirnension when this is applied to the causes and conduct of the Great War of 1914–18. In earlier wars navies had often been important in the actual fighting and the victories they won at sea sometimes had significant political consequences.
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An overview of real‐world data sources for oncology and considerations for research

Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2022
Lynne Penberthy   +2 more
exaly  

The First World War

1994
Abstract In the weeks following the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand on 28 June 1914 King Charles and Liberal and Conservative politicians watched the deteriorating international situation with increasing anxiety. They had good reason to fear war, for Rumania’s geographical position made it inevitable that she would find herself
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The First World War

1977
THE First World War did much to develop the pre-war system of collective bargaining. Hitherto employers’ organisations had played a major role in developing the system, but the initiative now passed to the state [20:127]. In 1915 the government introduced compulsory arbitration as a means of resolving disputes during wartime.
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