Current Search: Germany--Foreign relations--Great Britain (x)
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Title
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THE NAVAL QUESTION AND EFFORTS AT AN ANGLO-GERMAN RAPPROCHEMENT: 1908-1912.
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Creator
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LUIKART, GORDON AUGUSTUS, III., Florida Atlantic University, Portnoy, Samuel A.
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Abstract/Description
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Given that the Anglo-German naval rivalry was one of the most important causes of antagonism between Germany and Great Britain prior to World War One, it is highly plausible that a mutual agreement to end the naval race may have brought about a rapprochement which in turn might have prevented World War One from ever occurring. Unfortunately, all efforts toward a negotiated settlement of this rivalry between the years 1908 and 1912 failed; and their failure left Anglo-German relations as...
Show moreGiven that the Anglo-German naval rivalry was one of the most important causes of antagonism between Germany and Great Britain prior to World War One, it is highly plausible that a mutual agreement to end the naval race may have brought about a rapprochement which in turn might have prevented World War One from ever occurring. Unfortunately, all efforts toward a negotiated settlement of this rivalry between the years 1908 and 1912 failed; and their failure left Anglo-German relations as uneasy as ever. For many years historians have been too quick to blame Germany exclusively for the failure of the 1908-1912 naval negotiations. This paper will attempt to correct that misconception by providing the evidence which proves that Great Britain must share at least part of the responsibility for their failure.
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Date Issued
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1983
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dt/14166
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Subject Headings
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Germany--Foreign relations--Great Britain, Great Britain--Foreign relations--Germany
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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Title
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My Struggle: Hitler's Olive Branch to England and the Foundation for British Appeasement.
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Creator
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Phinney, Doug, Kollander, Patricia A., Florida Atlantic University
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Abstract/Description
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This thesis proves Adolf Hitler went to much greater lengths in the early 1930s to wm England's friendship than historians previously realized. It argues Hitler commissioned a custom-made English abridgement of his bestselling book Mein Kampf in 1931 hoping to appeal directly to the British people for an Anglo-German military alliance. This thesis does what no other scholarly examination of the Nazi era has yet done: directly compare Hitler's original Mein Kampfto the official British and...
Show moreThis thesis proves Adolf Hitler went to much greater lengths in the early 1930s to wm England's friendship than historians previously realized. It argues Hitler commissioned a custom-made English abridgement of his bestselling book Mein Kampf in 1931 hoping to appeal directly to the British people for an Anglo-German military alliance. This thesis does what no other scholarly examination of the Nazi era has yet done: directly compare Hitler's original Mein Kampfto the official British and American translations to show how Hitler changed his own book to make himself and his Nazi movement less objectionable to the British people. Hitler was so eager to win over the British that he ordered another revision to that 1931 abridgement over the summer of 1933 to ensure the text made the maximum appeal to its intended audience. The resulting popularity of this twice-censored English Mein Kampf, finally published during the autumn of 1933, shows the British people's receptiveness to Hitler's early diplomatic efforts and begins to explain why three different Prime Ministers pursued the policy of appeasement throughout the 1930s.
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Date Issued
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2007
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FA00000949
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Subject Headings
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Hitler, Adolf,--1889-1945--Mein Kampf, Germany--Politics and government--20th century, Germany--Foreign relations--Great Britain, Great Britain--Foreign relations--Germany, Deterrence (Strategy)
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Format
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Document (PDF)