Versailles and After, 1919-1933Ruth Henig's fully revised and extended second edition of Versailles and After includes a new chapter on recent historiography of the subject and provides students with concise coverage of the following topics: |
Contents
Making the peace | |
Military and naval terms | |
Frontiers in the Adriatic and Mediterranean region | |
Keeping the peace | |
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Common terms and phrases
A.J.P. Taylor accept achieved aggression agreed agreement alliance allied and associated American amongst argued armistice army Austria-Hungary Belgium Bolshevik Britain Britain and France British government challenge claims Clemenceau colonies compromise conflict Covenant criticism Czechoslovakia debts defeat delegates demanded difficult Diplomacy diplomatic disarmament eastern Europe empire enforcement established forced Fourteen Points France France’s French government French leaders frontiers German government Germany Germany’s Habsburg historians interests issues Italian Italy January Japan Japanese leading powers League of Nations limitation Lloyd George Locarno major military million Mussolini nationalist naval November occupation Ottoman empire Paris peace conference peace negotiations peace programme peace settlement peace terms peace treaties peacemakers plebiscite Poland policies political and economic problems reluctant reparations clauses Reparations Commission reparations payments Rhineland Ruhr Russia secret self-determination Shantung signed territorial settlement treaty of guarantee Treaty of Versailles troops Turkish United Upper Silesia wartime Wilson Wilson’s Fourteen Points