Front cover image for Armaments and the coming of war : Europe, 1904-1914

Armaments and the coming of war : Europe, 1904-1914

The global impact of the First World War dominated the history of the first half of the twentieth century. This major reassessment of the origins of the war, based on extensive original research in several countries, is the first full analysis of the politics of armaments in pre-1914 Europe. David Stevenson directs attention away from the Anglo-German naval race towards the competition on land between the continental armies. He analyses the defence policies of the Powers, and the interaction between the growth of military preparedness and the diplomatic crises in the Mediterranean and the Balkans that culminated in the events of July-August 1914. Drawing on insights from political science, the book offers a fresh conceptual framework for the origins of the First World War, and provides a thought-provoking case-study of the broader relationships between armaments and international conflict
Print Book, English, 1996
Clarendon Press ; Oxford University Press, Oxford, New York, 1996
History
xi, 463 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm
9780198202080, 9780198208310, 0198202083, 0198208316
33079190
1. Arms and the Men
2. Continental Equilibrium? 1904-1908
3. The Breakdown of Equilibrium in the East: From the Bosnian Crisis to the Balkan Wars, 1908-1912
4. The Breakdown of Equilibrium in the West, 1908-1912
5. The Great Acceleration, 1912-1913
6. Vials of Wrath, 1913-1914
hdl.handle.net Rutgers restricted Available from ACLS Humanities