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Successor States of Eastern Europe

By John Merriman - Yale
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Lecture Description

Contrary to the "Great Illusion" that the end of World War I heralded a new era of peace, the interwar period can be considered to form part of a Thirty Years' War, spanning the period from 1914 to 1945. In the wake of the Treaty of Versailles, Europe was divided both literally and figuratively, with the so-called revisionist powers frustrated over their new borders. One of the most significant and ultimately most pernicious debates at Versailles concerned the identity of states with ethnic majorities. For those nations that resented the new partition of Europe, ethnic minorities, and Jews in particular, furnished convenient scapegoats. The persecution of minority groups in Central and Eastern Europe following the First World War thus set the stage for the atrocities of World War II.

Course Description

Course Index

  1. Introduction to European Civilization
  2. Absolutism and the State
  3. Dutch and British Exceptionalism
  4. Peter the Great
  5. The Enlightenment and the Public Sphere
  6. Maximilien Robespierre and the French Revolution
  7. Napoleon
  8. Industrial Revolutions
  9. Middle Classes
  10. Popular Protest
  11. Why No Revolution in 1848 in Britain
  12. Nineteenth-Century Cities
  13. Nationalism
  14. Radicals
  15. Imperialists and Boy Scouts
  16. The Coming of the Great War
  17. War in the Trenches
  18. Sites of Memory, Sites of Mourning (Guest Lecture by Jay Winters)
  19. The Romanovs and the Russian Revolution
  20. Successor States of Eastern Europe
  21. Stalinism
  22. Fascists
  23. Collaboration and Resistance in World War II
  24. The Collapse of Communism and Global Challenges