|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
This essential text provides a clear and engaging introduction to
the history of modern Germany. The updated and expanded new edition
now takes the story back to 1789 and brings it right up to the
present day, adopting a controversy-led approach throughout. Visual
evidence, maps, documents and key event boxes support the text and
aid learning.
This essential text provides a clear and engaging introduction to
the history of modern Germany. The updated and expanded new edition
now takes the story back to 1789 and brings it right up to the
present day, adopting a controversy-led approach throughout. Visual
evidence, maps, documents and key event boxes support the text and
aid learning.
The Third Reich is a succinct, comprehensive examination of the
major debates surrounding this crucial period in modern German
history. The character and operation of the Nazi state, and of its
global consequences, have been discussed and disputed since 1933.
David G. Williamson's Seminar Studies text, now in its fifth
edition, provides students with a lucid introduction to the Third
Reich and highlights the relevant research, scholarship and
controversies. The new edition has been expanded to give increased
coverage to such topics as: ethnic cleansing in Poland and Russia,
the role of the Wehrmacht, the Holocaust, attitudes of ordinary
Germans to the Third Reich, the German opposition, Nazi foreign
policy and the German economy. Accompanied by a wide range of
primary sources, a timeline, maps and a glossary, The Third Reich
remains the best available introduction to this short-lived but
enormously impactful period in world history.
The British in Interwar Germany analyses the British presence in
Germany from the armistice until the end of the Rhineland
occupation in 1930. It looks at British involvement in the
Rhineland, Danzig, Upper Silesia, Schleswig and East Prussia and on
the inter-Allied Control Commissions (IAMCC), which were
supervising German disarmament. Drawing widely on a range of
primary sources, David Williamson explores the problems facing
British military and civil officials, their attitudes towards the
Germans and their relations with their allies - particularly the
French. The book also examines the everyday lives of the British
soldiers and administrators in Germany and their interaction with
the Germans, with particular attention being paid to the city of
Cologne and the British colony that developed there. This new
edition brings David Williamson's study fully up-to-date and now
contains a greater coverage of the relevant social history, as well
as maps, illustrations and a useful glossary. The British in
Interwar Germany will be of great interest to students and scholars
of Weimar Germany and Britain and Europe during the interwar years.
The British in Interwar Germany analyses the British presence in
Germany from the armistice until the end of the Rhineland
occupation in 1930. It looks at British involvement in the
Rhineland, Danzig, Upper Silesia, Schleswig and East Prussia and on
the inter-Allied Control Commissions (IAMCC), which were
supervising German disarmament. Drawing widely on a range of
primary sources, David Williamson explores the problems facing
British military and civil officials, their attitudes towards the
Germans and their relations with their allies - particularly the
French. The book also examines the everyday lives of the British
soldiers and administrators in Germany and their interaction with
the Germans, with particular attention being paid to the city of
Cologne and the British colony that developed there. This new
edition brings David Williamson's study fully up-to-date and now
contains a greater coverage of the relevant social history, as well
as maps, illustrations and a useful glossary. The British in
Interwar Germany will be of great interest to students and scholars
of Weimar Germany and Britain and Europe during the interwar years.
|
|