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What Is The Black Hand's Role In World War 1

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What was the Black Hand and what role did it play in spreading the ideas of pan- Serbianism and terrorism just prior to the outbreak of war and what was the Austrian response to the assassination of Archduke Francis Ferdinand? Why?

The Black hand was the Serbian secret society that reigned chaos using terrorist methods to further their agenda of liberating the Serbs from Habsburg and Ottoman rule. It was instrumental in spreading the ideology of pan-Serbianism through training and implementing guerilla fighters, saboteurs, and relied heavily on the propaganda spread from the actions they committed. The Austrians responded by invading the Kingdom of Serbia, as they viewed the assassination as an act of war.

In his popular novel, All Quiet …show more content…
What did Stalin feel had to be done in order to rapidly catch up with the West? How did he expect his program of forced collectivization to work and who did he feel would have to be sacrificed to achieve that end? In other words, what would confiscation do to those victimized by his policies of terror in the countryside? Be …show more content…
The peace process went wrong in several aspects, The League Of Nations contributing most to the problem. By having so much outside influence in the newly formed and developing countries led to deplorable conditions, economic depression, and a rise in European Nationalism. The Versailles Treaty failed by placing too much blame on certain countries, causing them to feel guilt and embarassment, adding to the fact that there was a War Guilt clause in the Treaty itself. Germany especially felt the pressure of this, both by being delt the majority of the blame, and by being handed the majority of the financial liability, si ce they were the only coubtry to emerge from the conflict with an intact financial system. This lead to growing resentments, growing distrust, and led rise to nazism in Germany.

According to Heinrich von Treitschke, what factors produced the idea of the greatness of war? What role did rising militarism play especially in Germany in bringing on World War I? How did radicals like the German Social Democrat Karl Liebknecht react to such glorification of war and militarism?

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