Papers On European History
Page 47 of 84
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Is Devolution Breaking Up The United Kingdom?
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This 9 page paper considers the argument that the current political trend of devolution will be responsible for the break up of the United Kingdom. The writer argues that the opposite may be true, with devolution saving the union. The history of devolution as well as the current economic and nationalistic issues are all discussed. The bibliography cites 6 sources.
Filename: TEdevolu.wps
Islam in Russia : Before and After
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This 10 page paper examines how Muslims have fared through the break up of the Soviet Union. How things have changed, and what the fall of the Berlin Wall has meant to Russians who want to practice their religion, are explored. An overview of how Muslims have been treated under communist rule is also included. Bibliography lists 8 sources
Filename: SA132Mus.rtf
Italian and German Unifications
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This 5 page paper compares and contrasts the history of these two nations in respect to their unifications. The history surrounding the events as well as political implications are discussed. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Filename: SA043Uni.wps
Ivan the Terrible.
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(6 pp). Ivan IV or Ivan the Terrible,1530-84,
grand duke of Moscow (1533-84), was the first
Russian ruler to assume formally the title of czar. Ivan the Terrible, the most famous tsar before Peter the Great and the most brutal ruler of Russia before Stalin, inherited the throne as a three-year-old boy on the death of his father, Vasily III, in 1533. Officially the new tsar became Ivan IV; he was awarded the title of Terrible (in Russian, ???????, "threatening" "inspiring awe or fear") by later historians.
Ivan IV enjoyed the longest reign in Russian
history--to the distress of his people.
Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Filename: BBivanTT.doc
Ivan the Terrible.
[ send me this paper ]
(6 pp). Ivan IV or Ivan the Terrible,1530-84,
grand duke of Moscow (1533-84), was the first
Russian ruler to assume formally the title of czar. Ivan the Terrible, the most famous tsar before Peter the Great and the most brutal ruler of Russia before Stalin, inherited the throne as a three-year-old boy on the death of his father, Vasily III, in 1533. Officially the new tsar became Ivan IV; he was awarded the title of Terrible (in Russian, ???????, "threatening" "inspiring awe or fear") by later historians.
Ivan IV --to the distress of his people --enjoyed
the longest reign in Russian history.
Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Filename: BBivanTR.doc
Jack A. Goldstone and the Causes of Revolution
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This 6 page
report discusses Goldstone’s model of how political and social
revolution occurs. In his 1991 book “Revolution and Rebellion in
the Early Modern World,” he outlines four specific factors that
are in place and encourage a revolution to take place. He
explains that at some point in the past 500 years, early every
nation on Earth has experienced some form of revolution. He
believes that those revolutions either began inside of their own
boundaries or they were transmitted because of a revolution
occurring in a neighboring country. His analysis of revolution
and rebellion in England, France, and the Ottoman and Chinese
empires provides a framework for examining the development of
human history in terms of the interactions between ideologies and
cultures. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: BWgoldst.wps
Jewish Resistance Movements in the Holocaust
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This 30 page paper considers the nature of the Jewish resistance movements during the Holocaust, and reflects on the significant issues raised during this era and the attempts to quell the German objectification and murder of millions of Jews in Germany and Poland. This paper assesses the success of resistance movements, including those that occurred in concentration camps and those in the ghettos, and suggests that these movements brought the struggle of the Jews to an international light. Bibliography lists 25 sources.
Filename: MHHolRes.wps
Josef Stalin 1879-1953
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A 24 page paper. Josef Stalin was born Ioseb Dzhugashvili in 1879. He died under vague circumstance in 1953. He ruled the Soviet Union for almost a quarter of a century. Tens of millions died under his rule. This essay presents a biography of Stalin and includes an introduction, his early years, including his education, his beginning involvement in revolutionary activities, his rise to power, his activities after he succeeded Lenin, the purges he ordered, participation in World War II, his last years and an analysis. There is also a short comparison of Stalin, Hitler and Mao Tse-tung. Bibliography lists 16 sources.
Filename: PGstaln.wps
Joseph Conrad: Supporter or Opponent of Imperialism as Read in “Heart of Darkness”
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This is a 5 page paper discussing whether or not Joseph Conrad was a supporter or an opponent of imperialism as taken from a reading of his “Heart of Darkness”. Despite the fact that Conrad related the story from a white narrator’s perspective which was often hard to decipher, the exposure of the horrors of the impact that Imperialism had on the Congo was a clear political statement on the need for change in Imperial policy and an acceleration in humanitarian support.
Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: TJConra1.rtf
Joseph de Maistre/Consideration on France
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A 6 page essay that examines De Maistre's Considerations on France, specifically focusing on De Maistre's view of custom in his political philosophy. No additional sources cited.
Filename: khjdmcof.rtf
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