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World War 1 & 2


Question: How far did the experience of the First World War enable women in the combatant states to extend their political rights?

Answer: The extension of women’s political rights is described as crucial to “further improvements in the role and status of women” . In Europe, the early twentieth century saw significant extensions in the political rights of women (and previously excluded men). Debate surrounds how far the experience of the First World War contributed to these extensions or whether they were bought about by femini......(short extract) to download the full answer, please Sign in or Register then make a payment or submit an essay

Details: Mark: 72% | Subject: World War 1 and 2 | Course: AA312 | Level: Degree | Year: 2nd/3rd | Document type: Essay* | Words: 1986 References: Yes | Date written: April, 2007 | Date submitted: January 13, 2009 | Essay ID: 89

Question: Write a commentary on the extract, saying what the document is, setting it in its historical context, commenting on specific points in the text, and summing up the historical significance of the extract for the study of total war and social change.

Answer: The extract is from a letter by James Ellis, World War I veteran, to the producers of a BBC television series “The Great War” dated July 1963. The 26 part television series was broadcast in 1964 to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the outbreak of World War I . As the series was televised in 1964, Ellis was presumably aware of its production and so wrote the letter relating his experiences......(short extract) to download the full answer, please Sign in or Register then make a payment or submit an essay

Details: Mark: 71% | Subject: World War 1 and 2 | Course: AA312 | Level: Degree | Year: 2nd/3rd | Document type: Essay* | Words: 1000 References: Yes | Date written: February, 2007 | Date submitted: January 13, 2009 | Essay ID: 87

Question: What does the 1949 Basic Law tell us about the perceived flaws of the Weimar Constitution? Are constitutional weaknesses, by that token, an adequate explanation for the emergence of fascism in Germany?

Answer: The basis for the Basic Law of 1949 was very much a reaction to the events in Germany over the previous three decades. The crisis of the early 1920’s and early 1930’s eventually brought down the Weimar Republic, which at the time was “widely acclaimed as one of the most democratic in the world” . The economic and political situation of the Republic must be considered, as well as the appare......(short extract) to download the full answer, please Sign in or Register then make a payment or submit an essay

Details: Mark: 69% | Subject: World War 1 and 2 | Course: Military History | Level: Degree | Year: 2nd/3rd | Document type: Essay* | Words: 2062 References: No | Date written: Not available | Date submitted: September 03, 2009 | Essay ID: 2077

Question: How far were the revolutions in Germany (1918) and Russia (1917) the consequence of defeat in war?

Answer: Whilst there are many definitions of the term “revolution”, it is generally considered to be a process involving total governmental breakdown which destroys the states monopoly over their armed forces and leads to a struggle between armed blocs for state control. Revolution ends when a power bloc is able to assume sovereign control of the state . Kaplan adds to this by arguing that modern rev......(short extract) to download the full answer, please Sign in or Register then make a payment or submit an essay

Details: Mark: 68% | Subject: World War 1 and 2 | Course: AA312 | Level: Degree | Year: 2nd/3rd | Document type: Essay* | Words: 2164 References: Yes | Date written: May, 2007 | Date submitted: January 13, 2009 | Essay ID: 91

Question: “Whilst all major European powers bear a share of responsibility for the commencement of hostilities in 1914, the largest must be allotted to Austria-Hungary.” Discuss.

Answer: The outbreak of hostilities in 1914 resulted from both long and short term factors, the final trigger being the assassination of Austria-Hungarian Archduke Ferdinand by Serbian terrorists. Whilst the Austria-Hungarian response to this leads to conclusions that Austria- Hungary should be allotted the largest responsibility for the outbreak of war, it will be argued that this responsibility was only......(short extract) to download the full answer, please Sign in or Register then make a payment or submit an essay

Details: Mark: 67% | Subject: World War 1 and 2 | Course: AA312 | Level: Degree | Year: 2nd/3rd | Document type: Essay* | Words: 1992 References: Yes | Date written: March, 2007 | Date submitted: January 13, 2009 | Essay ID: 88

Question: What might have motivated Nazi Doctors in their experiments on concentration camp inmates?

Answer: During the Third Reich\'s 12-year reign, Germany\'s once highly respected scientific and medical community legitimised and abetted one of the world\'s greatest criminal states. Under the hands of these specialists, innocent men, women, and children were gassed, poisoned, frozen to death, and vivisected. They were injected with typhus and malaria. They were exposed to mustard gas, killed in high-pr......(short extract) to download the full answer, please Sign in or Register then make a payment or submit an essay

Details: Mark: 66% | Subject: World War 1 and 2 | Course: World War 1 and 2 | Level: Degree | Year: 2nd/3rd | Document type: Essay* | Words: 2126 References: Yes | Date written: Not available | Date submitted: January 27, 2009 | Essay ID: 2453

Question: Account for the postwar “population transfer” in Europe.

Answer: War, any war, results in population movements; soldiers mobilizing and invading, civilians fleeing the immediate conflict zones and returning once the battle is over, soldiers demobilizing and returning home. The scale of such movements was often dependent upon the scale of the war itself. A world war must, therefore, by definition involve much greater population disruption. Nevertheless, the m......(short extract) to download the full answer, please Sign in or Register then make a payment or submit an essay

Details: Mark: 66% | Subject: World War 1 and 2 | Course: World War 1 and 2 | Level: Degree | Year: 2nd/3rd | Document type: Essay* | Words: 2356 References: Yes | Date written: November, 2003 | Date submitted: August 01, 2009 | Essay ID: 1999

Question: Critically evaluate the following pair of documents placing them in their historical context and discussing their status in the historiography:

1.22: Adolf Hitler extracts from Mein Kampf (1925)
1.24 Adolf Hitler, speech to the Reichstag (7 March 1936)

Answer: Document 1.22 consists of extracts from Mein Kampf. Document 1.24 is a transcript of a speech to the Reichstag by Hitler. Eleven years apart, both are primary sources. Document 1.22 consists of extracts and the whole work should be viewed to utilise its contents as a reliable source whereas document 1.24 is a full account and can be taken as it is. Document 1.24 is a public document with an audie......(short extract) to download the full answer, please Sign in or Register then make a payment or submit an essay

Details: Mark: 66% | Subject: World War 1 and 2 | Course: AA312 | Level: Degree | Year: 2nd/3rd | Document type: Essay* | Words: 2682 References: Yes | Date written: September, 2007 | Date submitted: January 13, 2009 | Essay ID: 93

Question: Discuss the Arguments for and against the policy of Appeasement as carried out by British and French governments in the inter-war years.

Answer: Evidence of a policy of appeasement can be traced back to the 1919 Paris peace settlement however, the clearest evidence of the policy is to be found during the 1930`s. It was during this time that there was an acceptance of the growth of German power and territory as demonstrated by the appeasement policy followed by the British and French governments during German open rearmament (1935), the Ge......(short extract) to download the full answer, please Sign in or Register then make a payment or submit an essay

Details: Mark: 65% | Subject: World War 1 and 2 | Course: AA312 | Level: Degree | Year: 2nd/3rd | Document type: Essay* | Words: 5427 References: Yes | Date written: October, 2007 | Date submitted: January 13, 2009 | Essay ID: 94

Question: Comment upon the different ways the holocaust has been portrayed by historians.

Answer: The story of the six million Jews who perished during the Second World War has been retold many times through film, literature and art. The question of how the holocaust has been portrayed by historians is complex because the volume of historical work examining the extermination of the Jews has grown to immense proportions and historians have fragmented this subject into many different subfields.......(short extract) to download the full answer, please Sign in or Register then make a payment or submit an essay

Details: Mark: 64% | Subject: World War 1 and 2 | Course: World War 1 and 2 | Level: Degree | Year: 2nd/3rd | Document type: Essay* | Words: 2107 References: No | Date written: Not available | Date submitted: September 03, 2009 | Essay ID: 2082


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