THE year 1870 will long remain memorable in the annals of Europe. For in that year occurred a great and decisive war whose outcome was destined to exercise a large and profound influence upon the history of the subsequent period; whose consequences were to prove pervasive, far-reaching and unhappy, just as the four terrible years through which the world has recently passed will inevitably determine the future of the world for many decades to come. There was a certain tragic unity to that intervening period between the Franco-Prussian War and the World War, the shadow of the former, the dread of the latter hovering over the minds of men, full of menace, inspiring a recurrent sense of uneasiness and alarm. All the various streams of activity, all the different movements, national and international, social and economic, intellectual and spiritual, all the complex and diverse phenomena of the life of Europe during that crowded half-century took their form and color largely from the memory of war, the fear of war, the preparation for war. A period like that is surely worth studying. Indeed only if men acquire or possess a just understanding of it, only if they retain a vivid sense of its lessons and its warnings, will they be able to avert a repetition of its horrors, only thus will they have the aid of either chart or compass on their voyage into the future.
A Man of Iron : The Turbulent Life and Improbable Presidency of Grover Cleveland
Troy Senik
audiobookbookLooking for the Good War
Elizabeth D. Samet
audiobookMeininga med livet: eller, Yes, sir, I can boogie
Are Kalvø
audiobookRival Rails
Walter R. Borneman
audiobookRoma : syv vandringer
Thomas Thiis-Evensen
audiobookThe Fatal Alliance : A Century of War on Film
David Thomson
audiobookDe digitale prøvekaninene
Gaute Brochmann
audiobookThe Tsar's Last Armada
Constantine Pleshakov
audiobookNorrøn verdenshistorie og geografi
bookThe Rise of the West
William H. McNeill
audiobookThe Middle Ground
Richard White
audiobookThe Conquering Tide
Ian W. Toll
audiobook