Germanylost the most land as a result of World War I. As a result of the Treaty of Versailles in 1919, Germany was stripped of 13% of its European... Is Germany to blame for WW1? The causes of World War One are complicated and unlike the causes of World War Two, where the guilty...
type of novel was Riddle of the Sands by Erskine Childers, which was made into a TV film a few years ago.From the French point of view it was a revanchist war, to get back the provinces of Alsace and Lorraine lost to Germany in the Franco-Prussian War.Was it also an imperialist war...
The Crimean War was fought between Great Britain, France, the Ottoman Empire, and the Kingdom of Sardinia against Russia, 1853-1856. One of the first conflicts to use modern warfare, both sides took heavy casualties. Russia lost the war, and as a result had to withdraw from the Black Sea...
Angela Merkel’s star is falling in Germany. Putin could well be the end of her political career. Koolz January 19, 2015 @ 5:51 am I like that you named those sites that are full of Mis-info! What he have here is a split right down the middle. You will have NATO on one side...
, both during WW1 and to a lesser extent when the Klan was riding high against immigrant schools & culture of drinking in the 20s. So then we might ask what would have happened in a further counterfactual where Germany had launched an attack on us comparable to Pearl Harbor during WW1?
to ww1 and got temporarily blinded from a poisonous gas attack. They think it somehow went to his brain and caused him tobecomepsychotic. Hitler lost a lot of money‚ fighting his way to survive. He got some help by finding and staying in a homeless shelter in 1909. Once he got ...
I went to a cancer clinic in Germany in 2012, and I met a lot of cancer patients. I asked them all for their ‘cancer stories’. ( in the smoking area outside where most of the chat went on! ) ALL of them had a huge stress incident in the months to years preceding their cancer...
France and Germany, with strong concerns about the attempts of “fake news” to influence recent elections, are taking legislative action. Beginning Jan. 1, online posts on major German social media sites (Facebook, etc.) deemed to contain “obviously illegal” material, such as hate speech ...