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841419
The peace settlement 1918-28
Descrição
A mind map summarising all the key details of the peace settlement 1918-28 for EdExcel GCSE History A Unit 1: International Relations.
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history
a-level
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Matthew T
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Matthew T
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Resumo de Recurso
The peace settlement 1918-28
Armistice
Why?
The port of Kiel was blockaded + sailors went on mutiny
Food was in short supply - winter 1917 "the turnip winter"
Kaiser Wilhelm II abdicated + fled to Holland
Terms
Withdraw troops from west
Forfeit gains from Russia
Withdraw 30 miles from east bank of Rhine
Surrender artillery, aircraft, submarines
Navy into Allied ports
11 Nov 1918
Aims of the Big Three
Clemenceau
Land devastated, millions of deaths
Wanted to make G suffer
Prevent future threats of invasion
Wilson
Idealist with little involvement in War
Harsh treaty would cause revenge
Influenced by 14 Points: self-determination, no secret diplomacy, co-operation
Lloyd George
People of B wanted revenge
Wanted trade with G
In the middle
Treaty of Versailles, May 1919
For Germany, no defeated countries allowed
Article 231
G responsible for war
aka War Guilt Clause
Military restrictions
Army 100,000
No conscription
No submarines/artillery/aircraft
Navy 6 battleships
Rhineland demilitarised
Reparations
Compensation for damage
£6.6bn set 1921
Territorial losses
North Schleswig to Denmark
Danzig and Memel free cities
West Prussia, Pomerania, Posen, Upper Silesia to Poland (Polish corridor)
Saar to League of Nations
Alsace-Lorraine to France
Eupen-Malmedy to Belgium
Anschluss forbidden
Forbidden from L of N
German reactions
War guilt clause unjust
Not all Germans right to self-determination
Reparations excessive for a crippled economy
Army too small for a large country
Insulted by not being in L of N
Should have joined negotiations
BUT Brest-Litovsk (Mar 1918) much harsher than Versailles - G imposed on R
Other peace treaties
St Germain-en-Laye, Sep 1919
Austria
Austro-Hungarian empire broken up
Hungary, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia new countries
Land to Italy
Army 30,000
Reparations (cancelled due to collapse of Bank of Vienna)
Neuilly-sur-Seine, Nov 1919
Bulgaria
Land to Yugoslavia and Greece
$400mn reparations
Army 20,000
Trianon, Jun 1920
Hungary
Land to Czechoslovakia, Romania, Yugoslavia, Austria (40% of original size)
Army 35,000
Reparations (cancelled)
Sevres, Aug 1920
Turkey
Limited European possessions around Constantinople
Iraq, Transjordan, Palestine British mandates
Syria, Lebanon French mandates
Arabia independent
Lausanne, 1923
Turkey
Overruled Sevres (more European land)
Control of Bosphorus and Dardanelles
Events 1919-28
Reparations vastly reduced
Ruhr occupation 1923 - F + Belgium enter G to take payment but passive resistance forced them out
Dawes Plan 1924 - reparations fixed to a sliding scale, US loans
Locarno Pacts 1925 - borders respected
G enters L of N 1926
Kellogg-Briand Pact 1928 - avoid war at all costs
Organisation of the League of Nations
Covenant laid out aims
Built upon collective security - members defend one another
Assembly: Geneva, debating chamber, all members, met annually - powers to admit members and suggest changes
Council: five permanent B, F, G, I, J, four temporary, 3 times/year, made decisions
Secretariat: civil service, administration
Permanent Court of International Justice: the Hague, judges gave decisions without power
International Labour Organisation: tried to improve working conditions
Commissions: mandates, slavery, refugees (Nansen)
Peacekeeping: moral condemnation, economic sanctions, military force
Successes and failures of the League of Nations
Vilna, 1920: rightfully belong to Lithuania, but B + F wanted Polish ally so Poland won
Aland Islands, 1921: disputed between Sweden + Finland, plebiscite held + Finland won
Upper Silesia 1921: plebiscite in favour of Germany, but split between G + Poland
Corfu 1923: Mussolini invade after supposed threat to surveyors, but B + F wanted Mussolini as ally so Greeks forced to compensate Italy
Greek-Bulgarian dispute 1925: Greece invade Bulgaria but condemnation stopped them
League lacked key members
Defeated countries - too belligerent
Russia - fear of Communism
USA - Harding's isolationist policies (a strong ally)
Dependent on B + F
Veto made it difficult to carry out action
Sanctions applied half-heartedly
Depression led to rise of dictators
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