The Treaty of Versailles
A Reassessment After 75 Years
Herausgeber: Boemeke, Manfred F.; Glaser-Schmidt, Elisabeth; Feldman, Gerald D.
The Treaty of Versailles
A Reassessment After 75 Years
Herausgeber: Boemeke, Manfred F.; Glaser-Schmidt, Elisabeth; Feldman, Gerald D.
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Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 688
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. April 2009
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 45mm
- Gewicht: 1251g
- ISBN-13: 9780521621328
- ISBN-10: 0521621321
- Artikelnr.: 22336712
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Acknowledgments; Introduction Manfred F. Boemeke, Gerald D. Feldman, and
Elisabeth Glaser; Prologue: 1919-1945-1989 Ronald Steel; Part I. Peace
Planning and the Actualities of the Armistice: 1. Germany's peace aims and
the domestic and international constraints Klaus Schwabe; 2. 'Had we known
how bad things were in Germany, we might have got stiffer terms': Great
Britain and the German Armistice David French; 3. French war aims and peace
planning David Stevenson; 4. Wilsonian concepts and international realities
at the end of the war Thomas J. Knock; 5. A comment Alan Sharp; Part II.
The Peacemakers and their Home Fronts: 6. Great Britain: the home front
Erik Goldstein; 7. The French peacemakers and their home front
Georges-Henri Soutou; 8. The American mission to negotiate peace: an
historian looks back Lawrence E. Gelfand; 9. Between Compiègne and
Versailles: the Germans on the way from a misunderstood defeat to an
unwanted peace Fritz Klein; 10. A comment Antony Lentin; Part III. The
Reconstruction of Europe and the Settlement of Accounts: 11. The Minorities
question at the Paris Peace Conference: the Polish Minority Treaty, June
28, 1919 Carole Fink; 12. The Rhineland question: West European Security at
the Paris Peace Conference of 1919 Stephen A. Schuker; 13. The Polish
question Piotr S. Wandycz; 14. Smoke and mirrors: in smoke-filled rooms and
the Galeries des Glaces Sally Marks; 15. The making of the economic peace
Elisabeth Glaser; 16. The balance of payments question: Versailles and
after Niall Ferguson; 17. A comment Gerald D. Feldman; Part IV. The Legacy
and Consequences of Versailles: 18. The Soviet Union and Versailles Jon
Jacobson; 19. Versailles and international diplomacy William R. Keylor; 20.
The League of Nations: toward a new appreciation of its history Antoine
Fleury; 21. A comment Diane B. Kunz; Part V. Antecedents and Aftermaths:
Reflections on the War Guilt Question and the Settlement: 22. Max Weber and
the Peace Treaty of Versailles Wolfgang J. Mommsen; 23. The construction of
the American interpretation: the pro-Treaty version William C. Widenor; 24.
British revisionism Michael Graham Fry; 25. Woodrow Wilson's image of
Germany, the war-guilt question, and the Treaty of Versailles Michael
Graham Fry; 26. A comment Gordon Martel; Bibliography; Index.
Elisabeth Glaser; Prologue: 1919-1945-1989 Ronald Steel; Part I. Peace
Planning and the Actualities of the Armistice: 1. Germany's peace aims and
the domestic and international constraints Klaus Schwabe; 2. 'Had we known
how bad things were in Germany, we might have got stiffer terms': Great
Britain and the German Armistice David French; 3. French war aims and peace
planning David Stevenson; 4. Wilsonian concepts and international realities
at the end of the war Thomas J. Knock; 5. A comment Alan Sharp; Part II.
The Peacemakers and their Home Fronts: 6. Great Britain: the home front
Erik Goldstein; 7. The French peacemakers and their home front
Georges-Henri Soutou; 8. The American mission to negotiate peace: an
historian looks back Lawrence E. Gelfand; 9. Between Compiègne and
Versailles: the Germans on the way from a misunderstood defeat to an
unwanted peace Fritz Klein; 10. A comment Antony Lentin; Part III. The
Reconstruction of Europe and the Settlement of Accounts: 11. The Minorities
question at the Paris Peace Conference: the Polish Minority Treaty, June
28, 1919 Carole Fink; 12. The Rhineland question: West European Security at
the Paris Peace Conference of 1919 Stephen A. Schuker; 13. The Polish
question Piotr S. Wandycz; 14. Smoke and mirrors: in smoke-filled rooms and
the Galeries des Glaces Sally Marks; 15. The making of the economic peace
Elisabeth Glaser; 16. The balance of payments question: Versailles and
after Niall Ferguson; 17. A comment Gerald D. Feldman; Part IV. The Legacy
and Consequences of Versailles: 18. The Soviet Union and Versailles Jon
Jacobson; 19. Versailles and international diplomacy William R. Keylor; 20.
The League of Nations: toward a new appreciation of its history Antoine
Fleury; 21. A comment Diane B. Kunz; Part V. Antecedents and Aftermaths:
Reflections on the War Guilt Question and the Settlement: 22. Max Weber and
the Peace Treaty of Versailles Wolfgang J. Mommsen; 23. The construction of
the American interpretation: the pro-Treaty version William C. Widenor; 24.
British revisionism Michael Graham Fry; 25. Woodrow Wilson's image of
Germany, the war-guilt question, and the Treaty of Versailles Michael
Graham Fry; 26. A comment Gordon Martel; Bibliography; Index.
Acknowledgments; Introduction Manfred F. Boemeke, Gerald D. Feldman, and
Elisabeth Glaser; Prologue: 1919-1945-1989 Ronald Steel; Part I. Peace
Planning and the Actualities of the Armistice: 1. Germany's peace aims and
the domestic and international constraints Klaus Schwabe; 2. 'Had we known
how bad things were in Germany, we might have got stiffer terms': Great
Britain and the German Armistice David French; 3. French war aims and peace
planning David Stevenson; 4. Wilsonian concepts and international realities
at the end of the war Thomas J. Knock; 5. A comment Alan Sharp; Part II.
The Peacemakers and their Home Fronts: 6. Great Britain: the home front
Erik Goldstein; 7. The French peacemakers and their home front
Georges-Henri Soutou; 8. The American mission to negotiate peace: an
historian looks back Lawrence E. Gelfand; 9. Between Compiègne and
Versailles: the Germans on the way from a misunderstood defeat to an
unwanted peace Fritz Klein; 10. A comment Antony Lentin; Part III. The
Reconstruction of Europe and the Settlement of Accounts: 11. The Minorities
question at the Paris Peace Conference: the Polish Minority Treaty, June
28, 1919 Carole Fink; 12. The Rhineland question: West European Security at
the Paris Peace Conference of 1919 Stephen A. Schuker; 13. The Polish
question Piotr S. Wandycz; 14. Smoke and mirrors: in smoke-filled rooms and
the Galeries des Glaces Sally Marks; 15. The making of the economic peace
Elisabeth Glaser; 16. The balance of payments question: Versailles and
after Niall Ferguson; 17. A comment Gerald D. Feldman; Part IV. The Legacy
and Consequences of Versailles: 18. The Soviet Union and Versailles Jon
Jacobson; 19. Versailles and international diplomacy William R. Keylor; 20.
The League of Nations: toward a new appreciation of its history Antoine
Fleury; 21. A comment Diane B. Kunz; Part V. Antecedents and Aftermaths:
Reflections on the War Guilt Question and the Settlement: 22. Max Weber and
the Peace Treaty of Versailles Wolfgang J. Mommsen; 23. The construction of
the American interpretation: the pro-Treaty version William C. Widenor; 24.
British revisionism Michael Graham Fry; 25. Woodrow Wilson's image of
Germany, the war-guilt question, and the Treaty of Versailles Michael
Graham Fry; 26. A comment Gordon Martel; Bibliography; Index.
Elisabeth Glaser; Prologue: 1919-1945-1989 Ronald Steel; Part I. Peace
Planning and the Actualities of the Armistice: 1. Germany's peace aims and
the domestic and international constraints Klaus Schwabe; 2. 'Had we known
how bad things were in Germany, we might have got stiffer terms': Great
Britain and the German Armistice David French; 3. French war aims and peace
planning David Stevenson; 4. Wilsonian concepts and international realities
at the end of the war Thomas J. Knock; 5. A comment Alan Sharp; Part II.
The Peacemakers and their Home Fronts: 6. Great Britain: the home front
Erik Goldstein; 7. The French peacemakers and their home front
Georges-Henri Soutou; 8. The American mission to negotiate peace: an
historian looks back Lawrence E. Gelfand; 9. Between Compiègne and
Versailles: the Germans on the way from a misunderstood defeat to an
unwanted peace Fritz Klein; 10. A comment Antony Lentin; Part III. The
Reconstruction of Europe and the Settlement of Accounts: 11. The Minorities
question at the Paris Peace Conference: the Polish Minority Treaty, June
28, 1919 Carole Fink; 12. The Rhineland question: West European Security at
the Paris Peace Conference of 1919 Stephen A. Schuker; 13. The Polish
question Piotr S. Wandycz; 14. Smoke and mirrors: in smoke-filled rooms and
the Galeries des Glaces Sally Marks; 15. The making of the economic peace
Elisabeth Glaser; 16. The balance of payments question: Versailles and
after Niall Ferguson; 17. A comment Gerald D. Feldman; Part IV. The Legacy
and Consequences of Versailles: 18. The Soviet Union and Versailles Jon
Jacobson; 19. Versailles and international diplomacy William R. Keylor; 20.
The League of Nations: toward a new appreciation of its history Antoine
Fleury; 21. A comment Diane B. Kunz; Part V. Antecedents and Aftermaths:
Reflections on the War Guilt Question and the Settlement: 22. Max Weber and
the Peace Treaty of Versailles Wolfgang J. Mommsen; 23. The construction of
the American interpretation: the pro-Treaty version William C. Widenor; 24.
British revisionism Michael Graham Fry; 25. Woodrow Wilson's image of
Germany, the war-guilt question, and the Treaty of Versailles Michael
Graham Fry; 26. A comment Gordon Martel; Bibliography; Index.