Term
The Paris Peace Settlement |
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Definition
• The representatives of 32 countries met in 1919 in Paris to draw up the peace settlement. • The "Big Three" (France, USA and Britain) leaders were mostly in command of the decision makings and so was Italy but to a lesser extent. • The settlement was created from five treaties; the Treaty of Versailles, St Germain, Trianon, Neuilly, Sevres/Lausanne. • The Treaty of Versailles dealt specifically with Germany and was the major discussion during the draw up of the peace settlement whereas the other treaties dealt with the geo-political and economic future of Europe. • The agreement containing the principles on which the League of Nations was to operate on took into account all five treaties. |
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Definition
• June 1919 • Treaty with Germany • Was signed in the Palace of Versailles • Germany had to agree to accept full responsibility for the outbreak of the First World War |
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The Treaty of Versailles- territorial losses |
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Definition
• The Saar administered by the League of Nations • The creation of an independent Polish state • West Prussia and Posen were given to Poland • Alsace-Lorraine was given back to France • Danzig was appointed as an international city • Plebiscites in Upper Silesia, West Prussia and Schleswig • Germany lost colonies and investments |
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The Treaty of Versailles- Military Restrictions |
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Definition
• Was only allowed a regular army that was limited to 100,000 military personnel • Was not allowed an air force and only a very small fleet • End of compulsory enlistment into the armed forces • Rhineland to be occupied for 15 years by the allied military forces • All commissions in Germany controlled by the allies until 1927 |
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The Treaty of Versailles- Reparations |
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Definition
• Germany to pay £6,600 million (132 billion gold marks) • Reparations where to be paid in regular instalments, some in gold and some in goods • The Allies struggled to get payments from Germany from 1921 to 1923 • Dawes Commission 1924 • France took over Ruhr in 1923 |
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The Treaty of Versailles- League of Nations |
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Definition
• The USA refused to join which weakened the league • Collective security • New mandate principles • Germany and the defeated nations were at first left out |
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• September 1919 • Treaty with Austria • Dalmatia, Slovenia and Bosnia were given to Yugoslavia • South Tyrol, Trentino, Trieste and Istria were given to Italy • Bohemia and Moravia were given to Czechoslovakia • Galicia was given to Poland • Bukovina was given to Romania • Austria was not allowed to unify with Germany |
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June 1920 • Treaty with Hungary • Hungary losses 2/3 of its territory • Slovakia and Ruthenia were given to Czechoslovakia • Transylvania was given to Romania • Burgenland was given to Austria • Slovenia and Croatia were given to Yugoslavia |
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November 1919 • Treaty with Bulgaria • Western Thrace was given to Greece • Dobrudja was given to Romania • Northern Macedonia was given to Yugoslavia |
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• 1920 • Treaty with Turkey • The Straits of the Dardanelles to be controlled by the allies • Saudi Arabia became independent • Turkey lost the rights to Sudan and Libya • Eastern Thrace and some Turkish Aegean Islands were given to Greece • Mesopotamia, Palestine and Syria became League of Nation mandates and were to be run by France and Britain. |
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1923 • Treaty of Sevres was altered at Lausanne • The Greeks were expelled • Constantinople was given back to Turkey |
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Term
Paris peace settlement issues |
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Definition
• Germany, Russia and none of the other defeated countries were allowed to take part of the discussions nor attended the Versailles conference • All the big decisions were made by the Council of four (United States, France, United Kingdom and Italy) • The aims of the major powers were often contradictory and so compromises had to be made within the treaties • Terms of the Treaty of Versailles were not soft enough to allow for reconciliation with Germany but not harsh enough to weaken Germany's power |
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Germany had hoped for a softer punishment as it had thought the treaty would have taken in much more of Wilson's Fourteen Points • Did not think it was fair to have to accept responsibility for the start of the First World War • Did not think it was fair that it had no say or that it was not part of the discussions • Did not like the fact that it was forced to sign the treaty without any negotiations of the terms • It disagreed with the reparations and especially the territorial losses • It was also angered by the exclusion from the principle of self-determination • The German population was angered by the treaty and wanted to see it revoked |
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Discussion and disagreements between the allies |
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Definition
• Some thought the treaty was too harsh, others that it was too lenient • Those who supported Wilson's Fourteen Points argued that the treaty had failed to create a peaceful world • John Maynard Keynes argued that Europe would become weaker and poorer as a result of the restrictions, territorial losses and the economic weakening of Germany • The British people started to recognise that the treaty may have to be reviewed • The US refused to agree with the treaty as it opposed to Article X of the League of Nations. This was an article under which members of the League agreed to use their powers to resist aggression wherever it might occur. • The US did not sign the Treaty of Versailles which had a big impact on the League of Nations |
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