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The Road to World War I: The Middle East in History E-BOOK

The Middle East in History, #2

Hui Wang
E-book | Engels | The Middle East in History
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Omschrijving

The Road to World War I: The Middle East in History, plunges you into the years when Europe and the Ottoman world were already fraying at the edges, even as many people still believed that peace could hold. I wrote this book to insist that World War I did not spring fully formed from a single gunshot in Sarajevo. Its origins run deeper — in the Ottoman Balkans, in the contested lands of Macedonia, and across a region worn down by crisis, ambition, and fear.

At the heart of the story lie the Balkan Wars of 1912–1913. Italy's assault on Ottoman possessions in the Italo‑Turkish War (1911–12), the brutal scramble for control of Macedonia, and the slow unravelling of Ottoman authority turned the peninsula into a grim testing ground for modern war. Those conflicts stripped away old illusions and made large‑scale violence feel inevitable. By the time Sarajevo entered history in 1914, the fuse had already been burning for years.

This book follows the men and women who tried to keep empires alive. Emperor Franz Joseph I presided over an old world slipping from his grasp; Empress Elisabeth — "Sisi" — came to embody the fragile, human side of imperial power. Archduke Franz Ferdinand hoped that reform might rescue Austria-Hungary, yet his choices — and his assassination in Sarajevo — hurled the empire straight into the coming storm. Their private lives and political calculations altered the course of history far more than they ever imagined.

I then turn to the Ottoman side of the story. Enver Pasha rose with startling speed and audacity, moving from youthful military acclaim to a central role among the Three Pashas and helping drag the empire from cautious neutrality into a wartime gamble that changed everything. Across Europe the balance was breaking: Otto von Bismarck's careful system unraveled after his fall, while Kaiser Wilhelm II chased power and prestige. And Winston Churchill, by steering the Royal Navy from coal to oil as First Lord of the Admiralty and by pressing Britain to secure reliable oil supplies, quietly reshaped the future of global warfare.

This book digs deeper into the past to show why identity and belief came to mean so much. Gregory the Illuminator and the emergence of Christian Armenia illustrate how faith became bound up with survival — how a nation's religion could be its shield and its stake. The reign of Abdul Hamid II, and the bloody episodes of the 1890s that followed, demonstrate how fear, state policy and sectarian suspicion can turn whole communities into targets — setting a brutal precedent that helped make the later catastrophe of 1915–17 possible.

Specificaties

Betrokkenen

Auteur(s):
Uitgeverij:

Inhoud

Taal:
Engels
Reeks:

Eigenschappen

Productcode (EAN):
9789190115763
Verschijningsdatum:
16/12/2025
Uitvoering:
E-book
Formaat:
ePub
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