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  1. Interwar France covers the political, economic, diplomatic, cultural and social history of France from 1918 to 1939. France suffered heavily during World War I in terms of lives lost, disabled veterans and ruined agricultural and industrial areas occupied by Germany as well as heavy borrowing from the United States, Britain, and the French people.

  2. The interwar years Frenchmen concentrated much of their energy during the early 1920s on recovering from the war. The government undertook a vast program of reconstructing the devastated areas and had largely completed that task by 1925.

  3. Key Points. Foreign policy was of central interest to France during the interwar period. Because of the horrible devastation of the war, including the death of 1.5 million French soldiers, the destruction of much of the steel and coal regions, and the long-term costs for veterans, France demanded that Germany assume many of the costs incurred ...

  4. Though victorious, France lost 1.5 million men in World War I, and had 3.5 million wounded. After the war, France faced an increased death rate was up and falling birth rate. The workforce accordingly declined, and France never fully recovered during the inter-war period.

  5. Oct 1, 2021 · Promising the new state would be like Switzerland, Czechoslovakia did extremely well out of the Paris treaties, which helps to explain why Hitler hated the country so much. They were likely the best liked in Paris possessing a sophisticated and cosmopolitan leadership around the Czech leaders Masaryk and Edvard Beneš and the Slovak Milan ...

    • Robert C. Austin
    • robert.austin@utoronto.ca
    • 2021
  6. Published on June 15, 2015. France, the first military power at the end of the First World War, was the first to be defeated in the Second. In this context, the French foreign policy, from 1919 to 1939, appears as a descent into the abyss.

  7. material more skilfully than did the French, the orthodox view draws the natural corollaries that the French army erred in the doctrinal choices that it made during the internal period, and that its mistakes demon strate the pernicious consequences of failure to adapt to technological change.

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