Showing 681 - 700 results of 888 for search '"World War One"', query time: 0.22s Refine Results
  1. 681

    Балканските војни и проекциите за Македонија (македонски поглед) by Билјана [Biljana] Ристовска-Јосифовска [Ristovska-Josifovska]

    Published 2015-08-01
    “…The appeals of the Macedonian intellectuals were not enough influential and Macedonia entered in World War I with all the consequences: the confirmation of the borders from the separation and the collapse of the Ottoman Empire. …”
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    Article
  2. 682

    Architectures of identity: English modernism, domesticity, and imperial decline by Ketteringham, SD

    Published 2022
    “…Against the backdrop of several social and economic shifts – imperial overextension, the end of the Pax Britannica with World War I, women’s suffrage, and Britain’s abandonment of the Gold Standard amid the Great Depression – it argues for a new appreciation of how domestic space became a critical forum in which the renegotiation and reformation of English national identity took place. …”
    Thesis
  3. 683

    AMERICAN SPORT AND THE SPORTS HEROES OF THE ROARING TWENTIES by Michał Mazurkiewicz

    Published 2014-04-01
    “…The author presents different aspects of popular culture, which was in full bloom on account of the following factors: the joy after World War I, a sense of optimism, the development of the economy and industry, the growth of big cities, and the greater affluence of the citizens. …”
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  4. 684

    Die Russische Freiwillige Westarmee in Kurland 1919. Regionale Besatzungspraxis im Spannungsfeld zwischen Imperialismus und Selbstbestimmung by Thomas Rettig

    Published 2024-03-01
    “…The terms “self-determination,” “democracy,” and “national autonomy” were omnipresent after the end of World War I. Yet it was not only actors with revolutionary or nation-state agendas who used these popular slogans. …”
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  5. 685

    O dwóch cywilizacjach w myśli Michała Pawlikowskiego (1887–1970) by Katarzyna Wrzesińska

    Published 2022-02-01
    “… On Two Civilizations in Michał Pawlikowski’s Thought Michał Pawlikowski (1887–1970) was a Polish essayist, poet, publisher, editor, and bibliophile. Since World War I, he was an activist of the National Democratic Party (later the National Party). …”
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  6. 686

    American Sport and the Sports Heroes of the Roaring Twenties by Michał Mazurkiewicz

    Published 2014-04-01
    “…The author presents different aspects of popular culture, which was in full bloom on account of the following factors: the joy after World War I, a sense of optimism, the development of the economy and industry, the growth of big cities, and the greater affluence of the citizens. …”
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    Article
  7. 687

    From Kabul to Cairo and Back Again: The Afghan Women’s Movement and Early 20th Century Transregional Transformations by Marya Hannun

    “…The “Balkans-to-Bengal complex” identified by Shahab Ahmad has galvanized scholars of the early modern Islamic world to think through new spatial frameworks, and the Ottoman-Indian nexus continues to provide a useful frame of reference for understanding women’s reform between the two World Wars. I discuss methodological approaches to locating women and their voices in male-dominated archives, as well as the theoretical insights provided by this endeavor. …”
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    Article
  8. 688

    CROATIAN AND INTERNATIONAL COPPER AND SALT ROUTES IN THE PART OF EUROPE by Berislav Šebečić

    Published 2001-12-01
    “…From ancient times up until the mid-nineteenth century copper was pro-duced from copper ores in Rude near Samobor and from the mid-nine-teenth century until the beginning of the World War I mostly in Trgovi and Bešinac in Trgovska gora. …”
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  9. 689

    Reproduction of Post-Colonial Mental Codes in Modern Turkey by Barış Erdoğan

    Published 2015-04-01
    “…In establishing their new nation-state by waging war against the occupant Western countries during the aftermath of the World War I, the secular nationalist cadres who were educated in the Western-modern schools of the semi-colonial Ottoman State implemented a modernization project that acknowledged the superiority of Western values in order to “civilize” the society that they were attempting to build. …”
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  10. 690

    Romania during the Interwar Period: an Economic Approach by Camil-George Stoenescu

    Published 2018-12-01
    “…In the following paper I want to succinctly present the main characteristics of the Kingdom of Romania during the period between 1918 and 1940, representing the two decades after the end of the First World War (World War I, The Great War) also known as the interwar period. …”
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  11. 691

    Refugees and the “Other Hungary”: The Historiography of the Reception of Refugees in Twentieth-Century Hungary by Ágnes Katalin Kelemen

    Published 2022-12-01
    “…The country’s twentieth-century history is divided into four parts for the purposes of studying the history of refugees: World War I and its aftermath until World War II; the escape from Nazism; the period of state socialism; and the period of transition to democracy. …”
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  12. 692

    Ukrainian diaspora in Los Angeles by Iryna Hetman-Piatkovska

    Published 2017-03-01
    “…The second wave occurred between World War I and World War II. The reasons were complex economic and political conditions of Ukrainian life. …”
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  13. 693

    Playing the Part: Hungarian Boy Scouts and the Performance of Trauma in Interwar Hungary by Steven Jobbitt

    Published 2011-01-01
    “…Resulting in the loss of two-thirds of the nation’s pre-World War I territory, and one-third of its prewar population, Trianon has long stood as a symbol for Hungarian suffering and trauma in the twentieth century. …”
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    Article
  14. 694

    Vilnius and the Vilnius Region in the Period of Evacuation of Russian Army and Authorities in 1915 by Marek Przeniosło, Małgorzata Przeniosło

    Published 2014-10-01
    “…Initially, the military operations during World War I were advancing at some distance from Vilnius. …”
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  15. 695

    Distant Country, Paradise, Wilderness, or Mysterious World: The Changing Image of the South Sea (Nan’yō) Islands in Japanese Science Fiction by Hui Jiang, Lin Cheng, Nengying Chen

    Published 2023-12-01
    “…Taking the mid-Meiji period, post-World War I and II periods, and the beginning of the 21st century as its nodes, this paper examines various texts and compares the historical background of the South Sea Islands as imagined in Japanese science fiction, with a focus on both literature and films. …”
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  16. 696

    W poszukiwaniu standardów nauczania prahistorii i archeologii pradziejowej na kierunkach humanistycznych w Polsce by Adriana Ciesielska

    Published 2012-01-01
    “…From the history of archaeology we know that our discipline was first taught at the University in Lvov (Lwów), then at the University in Kraków and after the World War I the Department of Archaeology as a separate direction at the university have been established at the University in Warsaw (Warszawa) and in Poznań. …”
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  17. 697

    Failure in the Qur'an: Its Concept and Causes. [In Arabic] by Wasan Ali Hussein, Hashim Ja'afer Husein Al-Musawi

    Published 2020-03-01
    “…Germany, for example, which was at the peak of Western civilization at the beginning of the 20th century, then failed in World War I, but refused defeat, so it attacked the world again and failed. …”
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    Article
  18. 698

    FROM SOLDIERS’ ILLITERACY TO REVOLUTIONS: LOW SOLDIERS’ EDUCATIONAL LEVEL AS ONE OF THE CAUSES OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTIONS OF 1917 by Roman S Avilov

    Published 2017-12-01
    “…The article deals with the problems of the falling of the soldiers’ military literacy of the National Home Guard reserve forces and troops during World War I and their susceptibility to the revolution agitation influence. …”
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  19. 699
  20. 700

    What Should We Do With These? Challenges related to (semi-)automatically detected sites and features. A note by Niko Anttiroiko

    Published 2024-03-01
    “…In Finland, most archaeological features that meet these criteria are relatively recent features, such as tar and charcoal kilns from the 17th-20th centuries or remains of World War I and II era defensive structures. Although there are some exceptions to this rule, such as prehistoric pitfall trap systems, the archaeological features selected by the use of (semi-)automatic detections is heavily skewed towards only a handful of relatively recent feature types. …”
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