Overview
The armistice of November 11, 1918 ended the fighting between the Great Powers in the first world war. But for much of Europe and the Middle East, the armistice nor the peace treaties that followed failed to achieve a stable peace. The collapse of the German, Austro-Hungarian, Ottoman, and Russian Empires left an unstable power vacuum and brought opportunities for political violence. The so-called Big Four victorious powers at the Paris Peace Conference – the Americans, British, French, and Italians – didn’t have the power or political will to impose peace everywhere. The result was a series of bitter regional wars that would plunge millions into ruin, radically reshape the map, and still fire debates today.
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12 - 1Was Germany Really Starved Into Surrender in WW1? January 10, 2025 -
12 - 2Battle for Gaza 1917: The Palestinian Campaign of WW1 February 14, 2025 -
12 - 3The Irish Wars 1919-1923 March 14, 2025 -
12 - 4The Most Pointless Battle of WW1? - Passchendaele 1917 April 11, 2025 -
12 - 5Russia's Great Retreat 1915 May 09, 2025 -
12 - 6The Spanish-American War 1898 June 13, 2025 -
12 - 7Why Did the US Enter WW1? July 11, 2025 -
12 - 8The First Poison Gas Attack of WW1: 2nd Battle of Ypres 1915 August 15, 2025 -
12 - 9Why Did the First World War Break Out? September 13, 2025 -
12 - 101917: Turning Point of WW1 October 10, 2025 -
12 - 114 Wars Directly After WW1 November 21, 2025 -
12 - 12A German Soldier in WW1: Diary and Photos from 1914-1918 December 12, 2025


