'Full of fascinating detail, strongly argued, and lucidly written, Herwig's study is certain to force a re-evaluation of the origins and course of World War One.' Choice 'A comprehensive study...we have needed for some time...one cannot but admire the breathtaking scope of [Herwig's] scholarship. A brilliant work by one of the real giants in the field. An absolute must read for anyone with even a passing interest in the subject.' New York Military Affairs Symposium 'In making extensive use of achive material in Germany and Austria... [Herwig] is able to destroy effectively the myth of a well-run German war machine.' The Times Literary Supplement '...the most thorough and readable one-volume history of the war so far available.' History '[Herwig] makes comprehensive use of archival sources...[He] combines this original scholarship with comprehensive synthesis of a generation's worth of specialized research. When clear organization and lucid prose are added to the mix, the result is a definitive analytical overview of the Central Powers at war.' The Journal of Military History 'Historian Herwig draws primarily on German and Austro-Hungarian archival sources (many of which have become accessible only in the last decade) to analyze the surprising weaknesses and blundering of those two powers. Following an informative preface by series editor and historian Hew Strachan and an introduction by the author, Herwig presents a terse narrative of the war's course. Chapter notes and an extensive bibliography contain a large number of German and Austrian official sources, while black-and-white maps illustrate major battles and campaigns.' Harry E. Whitmore

The Great War toppled four empires, cost the world 24 million lives, and sowed some of the seeds of another worldwide conflagration 20 years later. Yet, until now, there has been no comprehensive treatment of how Germany and Austria-Hungary - two of the key belligerents - conducted the war and what defeat meant to them. How did the Hohenzollern and Habsburg empires conceive of and conduct 'total war'? What impact did the prolonged fighting have on their societies? Drawing on his own archival research over the past decade, Holger Herwig analyses why Vienna opted for war in 1914 and why Berlin took the calculated risk to back that decision. The war plans and military campaigns on both Eastern and Western fronts are examined in detail and key battles, some of the bloodiest and most wasteful in military history, are narrated and analysed. On the home front, the mobilization of the civilian populations behind the war effort had profound social consequences. The militarization of the key war-related industries led to an industrial women's labour force emerging in both countries, deeply affecting the role of women in Germanic society. "The great seminal catastrophe of the twentieth century', as American statesman George F Kennan described the war, has had no shortage of accounts seen chiefly from Allied perspectives. In using Vienna and Berlin as his vantage points, Herwig has comprehensively shown for the first time the other side of that prodigiously wasteful conflict.
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"The great seminal catastrophe of the twentieth century', as American statesman George F Kennan described the war, has had no shortage of accounts seen chiefly from Allied perspectives. In using Vienna and Berlin as his vantage points, Herwig has comprehensively shown for the first time the other side of that prodigiously wasteful conflict.
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Names, places and dates; origins - "now or never"; the plans of war; the great gamble, 1914; towards industrialized war, 1915; dual defeats, 1916 - from the Meuse to the Sereth; the long-war reality, 1915-16; survival; a sea-change 1917; the last levy, 1917-18; operation "Michael" - the "last card"; defeat, 1918-19.
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Fills a key gap in the literature by analysing the war from the German and Austro-Hungarian perspectives Based on a decade's archival research, including material recently discovered in Dresden By an author whose previous work in the field has attracted considerable critical acclaim
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Fills a key gap in the literature by analysing the war from the German and Austro-Hungarian perspectives
Covering the period from 1792 to the present day, the Modern Wars series explores the global development of modern war. Military history is increasingly an integrated part of ‘total history’, and yet this is not always reflected in the literature. The Modern Wars series addresses this need, offering well-rounded and balanced synoptic accounts of the major conflicts of the modern period. Each volume recognises not only the military, but also the diplomatic, political, social, economic and ideological contexts of these wars. The result is a series that ensures a genuine integration of the military history with history as a whole.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780340573488
Publisert
1996-11-29
Utgiver
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Vekt
810 gr
Høyde
233 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Dybde
36 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, G, 05, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
512

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Holger H. Herwig is Professor of History at the University of Calgary, Canada. Modern Wars series general editor Hew Strachan is Chichele Professor of the History of War, University of Oxford, UK. The advisory editor is Michael Howard.