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A Thirty Years' War? The Two World Wars in Historical Perspective* (The Prothero Lecture)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2009

Extract

The great Helmuth von Moltke, addressing the German Reichstag in May 1890 in the last year of his very long life, gave a sombre warning of wars to come: Gentlemen, if the war which has hung over our heads for more than ten years like a sword of Damocles—if this war were to break out, no one could foresee how long it would last nor how it would end. The greatest powers in Europe, armed as never before, would confront each other in battle. None of them could be so completely overthrown in one or two campaigns that they would have to admit defeat, accept peace on harsh terms, and not be able to revive again after a years' -long interval to renew the struggle. Gentlemen, it could be a Seven Years' War; it could be a Thirty Years' War; and woe to the man who sets Europe ablaze, who first throws the match into the powder barrel.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Historical Society 1993

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Footnotes

*

It was only some months after completing the text of this lecture that I came across the treatment of the ‘Thirty Years War’ question by Dr P. H. M. Bell in his excellent work The Origins of the Second World War in Europe (London and New York 1986). I am deeply ashamed of this oversight. Had I read Dr Bell's work, I would have adopted a different approach, if indeed I had tackled the problem at all. But I hope that I have provided at least a tentative answer to some of the questions he raised.

References

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5 In British Documents on the Origins of the War 1898–1914, eds. Gooch, G. P. and Temperley, Harold, III (1928), 397420Google Scholar.

6 Quoted by Geiss, Immanuel in The Origins of the First World War: Great Power Rwialry and German War Aims, ed.Koch, H.W. (2nd edn., 1984) 50–2Google Scholar. see also Smith, Woodruff D., The Ideological Origins of Imperialism (Oxford, 1984)Google Scholar and Kennedy, Paul, The Rise of the Anglo-German Antogonism (1980)Google Scholar.

7 Ernst Lissauer, Germany's Hymn of Hale first appeared in the Munich journal Jugend and was published in an English translation by Barbaba Henderson in 1914 by the Gental Commitee for Politcal Organisations, Leaflet No. 112. Its refrain ran:

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We have all but a sigle hate

We love as one, we hate as one

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