• Asignatura: Castellano
  • Autor: samuelcaleb
  • hace 7 años

• How many dictatorships did Spain have
in the 20th century?
• What was happening in Spain during the
two world wars?
When were there events in Europe
and Spain that shared the same
years? How did these events influence
one another?​

Respuestas

Respuesta dada por: neider30
1

Respuesta:

1914 THE GREAT WAR

Germany also played a decisive role in the outbreak of the First World War, in 1914. Not because the German Government wanted the war, as some researchers have imperiously claimed, but because some of its decisions contributed to turning that war into a conflict. war that covered all of Europe. The Germans have a particular responsibility in the transformation of the regional conflict into a great war, due to the country's geopolitical location in the middle of the continent: Germany was the power that with its policy could unite or keep the various conflicts in Europe apart. , both sharp and latent. More than political decisions it was the military plans of the German Empire that in the summer of 1914 led to a regional conflict in the Balkans spreading across the continent. There is no reason to speak of the "fault of Germany" in relation to the outbreak of that war, as read in the annex to article 231 of the Treaty of Versailles, but undoubtedly a great responsibility rests on Germany regarding the possibilities of spatial limitation of the contest.

World War I arose out of (at least) three conflicts, partly overlapping and interrelated. This led to the war not being spatially limited nor could it be ended with political negotiations. Due to its long duration it deeply pierced the political order and social structures of Europe, finally destroying them from the inside out. That is why a common European memory is almost impossible. In its place, three groups of memorials have arisen, simplified: the group of those who celebrate war as a victory, the group that remembers with sadness and sadness the millions of deaths on all fronts and finally the group of those for whom war It was a decisive step towards the “rebirth of nation states”, for which consequently the end is more important than the beginning of the war. Also these differences in the memory of the "primordial catastrophe of the 20th century" make up European multi-facetism and cannot be transformed with the stroke of a pen into a common European memory.

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