treaty of versailles
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Natalia DelbonoSilvina Brochini
THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES
Cultura y Civilización Británica III15/5/2015
“Peace settlement” imposed by the victorious powers (Britain, France and Italy).Negotiations started on 18th JanuarySigned in June 28 th 1919 at Versailles Palace.Registered by the Secretariat of the League of Nations – October 21 s t 191970 delegates from 27 nationsGermany, Austria and Hungary were excluded. Russia too.
THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES
“Peace settlement”Inaccurately known as the agreement which ended with WWI. (Saint Germain with Austria, Trianon with Hungary, Sevres with Turkey, Neuilly with Bulgaria). It failed to make peace!
The three most important politicians
David Lloyd George (Great Britain): Public support :"Make Germany Pay”. Privately: Germany should be treated in such a way that left her as a barrier to resist the spread of communism in Russia.
Georges Clemenceau (France): Destroy Germany /Worried about neighborhood / Obtained Anglo-American support in case of a new German aggression
Woodrow Wilson (America):
Proposed his Fourteen Points before the end of the warReconciliation not revenge.Leave Europe to its own devices.Germany should be punished
The three main nations different positions
how Germany should be treated
What exactly did the treaty do to Germany?
Main clauses:
“War guilt” clause: Germany had to admit full responsibility for starting the war (Article 231)Obliged to pay indefinite “reparations” for cost of the war (20 billion gold marks)Lost territories – 25000 square miles, colonies, Alsace-Lorraine back to France, creation of the Republic of PolandSaar - region of Germany occupied and governed by theUnited Kingdom and France from 1920 to 1935 under a League of Nations mandateDeprived of an effective army and air force. Its army was limited to 100.000 men (7 infantry, 3 cavalry divisions, 3 military schools, arms trade was forbidden, surrender battleships, destroyers, etc. and could not manufacture anything for 6 months after the signing of the treaty)A League of Nations was set up to keep world peace. Many achievements, most important: created the habit of consultation and discussion between governments.
Main clauses:
Philipp Scheidemann – resigned and didn’t sign the treatyGustav Bauer – requested some articles to be withdrawnAllies sent an ultimatum-imminent invasion of Allied forces23rd June, Bauer capitulated (after Hindenburg’s advice) – 2 nd telegram accepting the treaty28 th June – the treaty was signed
Guarantee:
The Rhineland and bridgeheads east of the Rhine – occupied by Allied troops – 15 years
Reactions:
Britain: French policy was greedy and vindictiveFrance: Clemenceau was voted out in 1920 USA: Wilson claimed that “at last the world knows America as the savior of the world” – had a strokeGermany: condemned the treaty, Jews were seen as disloyal, week economy
Territorial Arrangements- Alsace and Lorraine
back to France- Czechoslovakia and
Poland were created from Austro-Hungarian territories
- Hungary became independent
- Rumania was enlarged (Transylvania)
- Baltic Republics (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Finland) became independent
- Turkey-Asia Minor- Arabia – independent
kingdom- Irak, Palestine and
Transjordania – Great Britain
- Syria- French
THE TREATY WAS A FAILURE
Isolated Germany and communist Russia. Far from restore peace, it paved the way for WWII. The problems that arose from the treaty improved relations between Germany and the other European Powers 1935 – Adolf Hitler – introduced compulsory military conscripton and rebuilt the armed forces1936 – Germany reoccupied the demilitarized zone in the Rhineland1938 – Germany annexed Austria in the Anschluss (union of Austria and Nazi Germany)
1919 peace settlement was the product of
national and imperial rivalries rather than of a
yearning for a more harmonious world
REFERENCES
Hobsbawm, Eric – Age of Extremes – The Short Twentieth Century 1914-1991 – Abacus 1995http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/treaty_of_versai
lles.htm MORGAN, Kenneth – The Oxford Illustrated History of Britain – Oxford University Press – 1987 RAYNER, Robert – A Concise History of Britain – Longmans, Green and Co. – 1951HALLIDAY, F.E. – England A Concise History – Thames and Hudson, Ltd. – London 1994
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