The first world war was anything but inevitable. As we approach the centennial of the start of that unspeakably horrible bloodbath, there's a new book by author Jack Beatty called 1914; Reconsidering the Year the Great War Began. How much of the war was a convenient way of avoiding class struggle in Germany and England? Might the war have been stopped had an angry wife's bullet missed it's mark, the editor of a newspaper? Would the war have ended much sooner had the US not entered? And why was...
The first world war was anything but inevitable. As we approach the centennial of the start of that unspeakably horrible bloodbath, there's a new book by author Jack Beatty called 1914; Reconsidering the Year the Great War Began. How much of the war was a convenient way of avoiding class struggle in Germany and England? Might the war have been stopped had an angry wife's bullet missed it's mark, the editor of a newspaper? Would the war have ended much sooner had the US not entered? And why was the monarch of Austria-Hungary thrilled that his nephew Franz Ferdinand was assassinated? So much more. History still turns on a dime.
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