The War Correspondence of the "Daily News," 1877
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Page : 670 pages
File Size : 36,73 MB
Release : 1878
Category : Russo-Turkish War, 1877-1878
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Author :
Publisher :
Page : 670 pages
File Size : 36,73 MB
Release : 1878
Category : Russo-Turkish War, 1877-1878
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Page : 706 pages
File Size : 19,88 MB
Release : 1878
Category : Russia
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Collates all the previously printed reports from journalists from the London Daily News during the Russo-Turkish War of 1877-1878. The collection is organized by the big events in the war, with stories pertaining to each organized chronologically. There is also a timeline of the conflict.
Author : Archibald Forbes
Publisher :
Page : 678 pages
File Size : 47,49 MB
Release : 1878
Category : Plevna, Siege, 1877
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Contains war correspondence during 1877-1878 of members of the UK's "Daily News" newspaper regarding the Russo-Turkish War.
Author :
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Page : 312 pages
File Size : 38,50 MB
Release : 1878
Category : Russia
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Page : 652 pages
File Size : 22,55 MB
Release : 1878
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Author : London The Daily news
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Page : 350 pages
File Size : 30,29 MB
Release : 1878
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Author : Anna M. Mirkova
Publisher : Central European University Press
Page : 307 pages
File Size : 45,50 MB
Release : 2017-09-01
Category : History
ISBN : 9633861616
Focusing upon a region in Southern Bulgaria, a region that has been the crossroads between Europe and Asia for many centuries, this book describes how former Ottoman Empire Muslims were transformed into citizens of Balkan nation-states. This is a region marked by shifting borders, competing Turkish and Bulgarian sovereignties, rival nationalisms, and migration. Problems such as these were ultimately responsible for the disintegration of the dynastic empires into nation-states. Land that had traditionally belonged to Muslims?individually or communally?became a symbolic and material resource for Bulgarian state building and was the terrain upon which rival Bulgarian and Turkish nationalisms developed in the wake of the dissolution of the late Ottoman Empire and the birth of early republican Turkey and the introduction of capitalism. By the outbreak of World War II, Turkish Muslims had become a polarized national minority. Their conflicting efforts to adapt to post-Ottoman Bulgaria brought attention to the increasingly limited availability of citizenship rights, not only to Turkish Muslims, but to Bulgarian Christians as well. ÿ
Author : Public Library of Brookline
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Page : 552 pages
File Size : 40,59 MB
Release : 1881
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Author : Benjamin Lieberman
Publisher : Rowman & Littlefield
Page : 417 pages
File Size : 30,6 MB
Release : 2013-12-16
Category : History
ISBN : 144223038X
In the modern Greek city of Thessaloniki, the ruins of a vast Jewish cemetery lie buried under the city’s university. Nearby is the site of the childhood home of one of the founders of the modern Turkish state. These are tantalizing reminders of what was once the bustling cosmopolitan city of Salonica, home not just to Greeks but to thousands of Sephardic Jews, Turks, Bulgarians, and Armenians living and working peacefully alongside one another. Thessaloniki is just one example among many of what used to be. Over the past two centuries, ethnic cleansing has remade the map of Central and Eastern Europe and the Middle East, transforming vast empires that embraced many ethnic groups into nearly homogenous nations. Towns and cities from Germany to Turkey still show traces of the vanished and nearly forgotten ethnic and religious communities that once called these places home. In Terrible Fate, Benjamin Lieberman describes the violent transformations that occurred in Salonica and hundreds of other towns and cities as the Ottoman, Russian, Austro-Hungarian, and German empires collapsed, to be reborn as the modern nation-states we know today. His book is the first comprehensive history of this process that has involved the murder and forced migration of tens of millions of people. Drawing upon eyewitness accounts, contemporary journalism, and diplomatic records, Lieberman’s story sweeps across the continent, taking the reader from ethnic cleansing’s earliest beginnings in Bulgaria, Greece, and Russia in the nineteenth century, through the rise of nationalism, both world wars, the Armenian genocide, the Holocaust, and the rise and fall of the Soviet empire, up to the breakup of Yugoslavia in the 1990s. Along the way he examines the decisive roles of political leaders—not only monarchs and dictators but also those who were democratically elected—as well as ordinary people who often required very little encouragement to rob and brutalize their neighbors, or who were simply caught up in the tide of history.
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Page : 616 pages
File Size : 19,17 MB
Release : 1878
Category : Christianity
ISBN :