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Mike 03

(17,361 posts)
Thu Dec 24, 2020, 09:16 AM Dec 2020

The Origins of World War I (Yale lecture)

A basic but fascinating introduction to the decades leading up to WWI. The professor explains that most Europeans had "expected" a war for the preceding two or three decades, but predicted a war between Britain and France. This fear was so endemic it spawned a genre of horror/sci-fi type novels predicting a fantastical invasion of Britain by France. Brits feared they were underprepared for a war they felt was inevitable. Throughout this period tensions rose as Germany rattled its sabers, and unlikely alliances formed, first between France and Russia, then between France and Britain. Russia was anxious about Austria-Hungary. Ethnic and nationalistic tensions, economic competition and also old resentments, figured into the toxic mix. As for Germany, Germany believed they had two weeks to conquer France before Russia would leap in (something they wanted to avoid), foreshadowing the same bizarre and unrealistic calculations that Hitler would later demonstrate in WW2.

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The Origins of World War I (Yale lecture) (Original Post) Mike 03 Dec 2020 OP
This message was self-deleted by its author CatLady78 Dec 2020 #1
I belong to the same minority. Staph Dec 2020 #2
This message was self-deleted by its author CatLady78 Dec 2020 #3

Response to Mike 03 (Original post)

Staph

(6,355 posts)
2. I belong to the same minority.
Thu Dec 24, 2020, 01:46 PM
Dec 2020

I can read the same amount of information so much more quickly than I can hear it. Unless you are giving me tons of visuals with a very dynamic speaker, I'd prefer to read it.


Response to Staph (Reply #2)

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