THE INTERNATIONAL CATASTROPHE OF 1914

Written by hgwells | Published 2023/01/30
Tech Story Tags: non-fiction | history | hackernoon-books | project-gutenberg | books | h.g.-wells | ebooks | the-outline-of-history

TLDRFor thirty-six years after the Treaty of San Stefano and the Berlin Conference, Europe maintained an uneasy peace within its borders; there was no war between any of the leading states during this period. They jostled, browbeat, and threatened one another, but they did not come to actual hostilities. There was a general realization after 1871 that modern war was a much more serious thing than the professional warfare of the eighteenth century, an effort of peoples as a whole that might strain the social fabric very severely, an adventure not to be rashly embarked{v2-476} upon. The mechanical revolution was giving constantly more powerful (and expensive) weapons by land and sea, and more rapid methods of transport; and making it more and more impossible to carry on warfare without a complete dislocation of the economic life of the community. Even the foreign offices felt the fear of war.via the TL;DR App

no story

Written by hgwells | English novelist, journalist, sociologist, and historian best known for such science fiction novels as The Time Machine.
Published by HackerNoon on 2023/01/30