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  1. Interwar period. Silesia tension between the Poles and Germans. In the history of the 20th century, the interwar period (or interbellum) lasted from 11 November 1918 to 1 September 1939 (20 years, 9 months, 21 days) – from the end of World War I to the beginning of World War II.

  2. Home Geography & Travel Countries of the World. 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.

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  4. Popular Front: 1936–1937. Appeasement and war: 1938–1939. Overseas empire. See also. Notes. Further reading. Scholarly studies. Historiography. Interwar France covers the political, economic, diplomatic, cultural and social history of France from 1918 to 1939.

  5. By Igors Rajevs, Colonel, Latvian Army. Marshal Ferdinand Foch once described Versailles Treaty as “not a peace but an armistice for twenty years.”1 The majority of Frenchmen agreed to the bitter truth that Germany would never accept its defeat. The upcoming war with Germany was expected to be different from World War One.

  6. Europe's interwar period, we argue, was a laboratory for the testing of new ‘cultural’ tools in international politics. Like all laboratories, this one saw many failed experiments. But a striking number of the ideas and practices of cultural diplomacy that emerged to meet the period's challenges outlived the conditions of their emergence ...

    • Benjamin G. Martin, Elisabeth Marie Piller
    • 2021
  7. the interwar period. Ownership of land provided substantial political power and allowed the landowning class to inuence the political process. Land reform was needed to get the talent from the lower strata of rural society to improve their and society’s living conditions. Transfer from the war economy into a civilian economy was difcult as

  8. Aug 26, 2010 · international relations in the interwar period: the International Studies Conference MICHAEL RIEMENS* Abstract. Based on considerable archival research in Switzerland and France, this article considers the creation of specialised institutions and centres for scientific research, discussion

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