"Mentioned in Dispatches" Ep103 - The impact of military service for women who served in WW1 - Jane Clarke (Podcast Episode 2019) - Movies, TV, Celebs, and more...
the key aggressor, Germany was forced to give up a significant amount of its lands. One of the most important of these lands was the Alsace-Lorraine, which was given to France. Germany and France had fought over this territory for over a hundred years and Germany officially took control ...
Germany’s industrious population was growing—to 65 million in 1913—casting an ominous shadow over the French, who, for all their reputation as lovers, were not having babies; France boasted a population of only 39 million.The German education system was broad, deep, and effective, stamping ...
In a sense, the higher cost is because of “inefficiency.” As a result of depletion, it takes more hours of labor, more machine time, and a greater use of energy products to extract the same quantity of a given resource that was previously extracted elsewhere. Growing efficiency tends ...
World War I was one of the two major wars of the twentieth century. It had ramifications which would completely change the social, political and economic culture of most European nations. Answer and Explanation: The assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of the Austro-Hungarian Empire on June ...
I try not to focus too much on the war dead – it is also important to remember those who served and survived (and to remember the impact of the war at home in London) – but the centenary of the first day of that battle stands out as a day to reflect on the cost of the war ...
Example: The US shared more commonalities with Great Britain than with Germany. Such commonalities included language and government structure. Poster Prompt: Create a poster about the sinking of the Lusitania. Design the poster to convince people that the US should become involved in World War I...
Japan's participation in World War 1 has been largely relegated to the footnotes of history. The Western World has largely forgotten that the Japanese fought on the side of the Allies against the Central Powers of Germany, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire. Many are further surprised to ...
In 1919, at the end of WW1, the great British economist John Maynard Keynes taught us invaluable and lasting lessons about such hinge moments, how decisions of victors impact the economies of the vanquished, and how missteps by the powerful can set the course of future wars. ...
Concurrently, PP1cα negatively regulates integrin outside–in signaling responses such as platelet adhesion and fibrin clot retraction. Consistent with an opposing role for PP1cα in agonist-induced inside–out and integrin-induced outside signaling, loss of PP1cα did not impact in vivo ...