Progarchives.com has always (since 2002) relied on banners ads to cover web hosting fees and all. Please consider supporting us by giving monthly PayPal donations and help keep PA fast-loading and ad-free forever.
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
Posted: September 17 2015 at 11:20
GKR wrote:
Dean wrote:
One bullet = 17 million dead + 20 million casualties.
Do you REALLY think that the whole WWI was based in only the first bullet? As a historian I must say: nope, its not that simple.
No I REALLY didn't think that and I know full well it's not that simple but the equation is still valid. As an Engineer, I couldn't give a crap what historians think.
Joined: January 22 2013
Location: Brazil
Status: Offline
Points: 1376
Posted: September 17 2015 at 12:57
Dean wrote:
GKR wrote:
Dean wrote:
One bullet = 17 million dead + 20 million casualties.
Do you REALLY think that the whole WWI was based in only the first bullet? As a historian I must say: nope, its not that simple.
No I REALLY didn't think that and I know full well it's not that simple but the equation is still valid. As an Engineer, I couldn't give a crap what historians think.
So you shouldnt talk about history at all. Go back to your machines.
- From each according to his ability, to each according to his need.
Joined: January 25 2015
Location: kentucky
Status: Offline
Points: 2223
Posted: September 17 2015 at 13:36
Dean wrote:
GKR wrote:
Dean wrote:
One bullet = 17 million dead + 20 million casualties.
Do you REALLY think that the whole WWI was based in only the first bullet? As a historian I must say: nope, its not that simple.
No I REALLY didn't think that and I know full well it's not that simple but the equation is still valid. As an Engineer, I couldn't give a crap what historians think.
As Adam Gopnik noted, the Archduke and his wife “were
notably unmourned: Ferdinand, a difficult and unpopular figure, was no
J.F.K.The only important personage who
seemed really offended was Kaiser Wilhelm, of Germany, who had a class interest
in protecting Germanic royalty from Slavic terrorists.”
My argument is that the assassination provided the Austro-Hungarian empire (egged on by the Germans) the excuse they needed to take on the Serbs. In which case Princip's action totally backfired.
Is there a reason that engineers and historians can't be simultaneously right?
Joined: April 03 2010
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 18016
Posted: September 17 2015 at 13:56
GKR wrote:
Dean wrote:
GKR wrote:
Dean wrote:
One bullet = 17 million dead + 20 million casualties.
Do you REALLY think that the whole WWI was based in only the first bullet? As a historian I must say: nope, its not that simple.
No I REALLY didn't think that and I know full well it's not that simple but the equation is still valid. As an Engineer, I couldn't give a crap what historians think.
So you shouldnt talk about history at all. Go back to your machines.
durrrrrrrr only historians know anything about history
Joined: January 22 2013
Location: Brazil
Status: Offline
Points: 1376
Posted: September 17 2015 at 14:07
emigre80 wrote:
Dean wrote:
GKR wrote:
Dean wrote:
One bullet = 17 million dead + 20 million casualties.
Do you REALLY think that the whole WWI was based in only the first bullet? As a historian I must say: nope, its not that simple.
No I REALLY didn't think that and I know full well it's not that simple but the equation is still valid. As an Engineer, I couldn't give a crap what historians think.
As Adam Gopnik noted, the Archduke and his wife “were
notably unmourned: Ferdinand, a difficult and unpopular figure, was no
J.F.K.The only important personage who
seemed really offended was Kaiser Wilhelm, of Germany, who had a class interest
in protecting Germanic royalty from Slavic terrorists.”
My argument is that the assassination provided the Austro-Hungarian empire (egged on by the Germans) the excuse they needed to take on the Serbs. In which case Princip's action totally backfired.
Is there a reason that engineers and historians can't be simultaneously right?
Yes, but my point is that you cant blame a bullet for the whole thing. Europe was boiling back there. We can even argue that if not one thign, another would trigger the whole thing. Look at the growing economic rivalries. There was plenty reasons for wars.
We cant see history with scape goats, thats my point.
- From each according to his ability, to each according to his need.
Joined: January 25 2015
Location: kentucky
Status: Offline
Points: 2223
Posted: September 17 2015 at 14:14
GKR wrote:
emigre80 wrote:
Dean wrote:
GKR wrote:
Dean wrote:
One bullet = 17 million dead + 20 million casualties.
Do you REALLY think that the whole WWI was based in only the first bullet? As a historian I must say: nope, its not that simple.
No I REALLY didn't think that and I know full well it's not that simple but the equation is still valid. As an Engineer, I couldn't give a crap what historians think.
As Adam Gopnik noted, the Archduke and his wife “were
notably unmourned: Ferdinand, a difficult and unpopular figure, was no
J.F.K.The only important personage who
seemed really offended was Kaiser Wilhelm, of Germany, who had a class interest
in protecting Germanic royalty from Slavic terrorists.”
My argument is that the assassination provided the Austro-Hungarian empire (egged on by the Germans) the excuse they needed to take on the Serbs. In which case Princip's action totally backfired.
Is there a reason that engineers and historians can't be simultaneously right?
Yes, but my point is that you cant blame a bullet for the whole thing. Europe was boiling back there. We can even argue that if not one thign, another would trigger the whole thing. Look at the growing economic rivalries. There was plenty reasons for wars.
We cant see history with scape goats, thats my point.
I get your point. I just wrote a book discussing why the simplistic view of WWI is wrong. Germany wanted a war, Princip obliged by giving them an excuse to back Austro-Hungary's claims against Serbia. The dominoes fell from there. As Gopnik further put it, "The
Germans thought that, more or less, it would be like 1870; the French thought
that, with the help of the English, it wouldn’t
be like 1870; the English thought that it would be like a modernized 1814, a
continental war with decisive interference by Britain’s professional military;
and the Russians thought that it couldn’t be worse than just sitting there.”
Everyone had their reasons for getting involved in WWI, but nobody actually got the war - or result - they wanted.
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
Posted: September 17 2015 at 21:32
emigre80 wrote:
Is there a reason that engineers and historians can't be simultaneously right?
I would imagine that depends on the topic. Though I would never discount the possibility that a historian could talk about some aspect of my particular engineering discipline (and GKR got that wrong btw).
Joined: September 20 2010
Location: Serbia
Status: Offline
Points: 10213
Posted: September 18 2015 at 02:01
emigre80 wrote:
dr wu23 wrote:
Svetonio wrote:
dr wu23 wrote:
Politics is not one of my strong suits but it seems to me that half of the ones listed in the poll aren't even true revolutionaries by definition (primarily associated with politics..?)....at least based on what I read and the list at Wiki.....but then maybe I just don't know who they are.
So since we are using loose definitions here I vote for Louis Pasteur because I love what he did for milk and other dairy products...as well as his medical discoveries.
Thank you for posting the link but at that wiki page, although it's not a bad article, the list is not really valid because Gavrilo Princip is not on that list.
As I said I'm no expert in politics but I looked him up and he's an assassin not a 'revolutionary' by anyone's standard. By your criteria John Wilkes Booth would also be a revolutionary since he also assassinated an important leader.
But if you need a better explanation , I'm sure someone here will provide it.
Princip is, in fact, a terrorist and assassin and your explanation is spot on.
Gavrilo Princip couldn't be a terrorist in 1914 because such a "profession" wasn't existed at the time. Or, if Gavrilo was a terrorist, then whole Austro-Hungarian Empire was a terrorist state something like ISIL now; because there high in the Bosnian mountains, after annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina by Austro-Hungaria, the Austro-Hungarian officers had have the orders (luckily, those pedantic Autro-Hungarians officers were saved all the orders same as the photos of killings what I posted here but it's ereased now) from official Vienna to terrorize and to kill as much as they can of Bosnian Orthodox Slavs, i.e. Serbs, very poor and un-armed peasant men and woman just because they weren't in mood to be baptised at all as the Roman-Catholic as they were keeping to be Orthodox Christians over the centuries ( Ottoman Empire let them over 400 years to be just what they wanted to be).
Gavrilo Princip was a member of a revolutionary pan-Slavic group Young Bosnia (the members were Serbs, Croats and Muslims) who was leading by an idea of an united state of South Slavs i.e. Yugoslavia. So he was the revolutionist and assasin - what was coming from his revolutionary work and idea. "Terrorist" is something else, and I repeat, that what we call "terrorism" and "terrorist"now, simply doesn't extisted back in the day. Terror always existed, but "terrorism" and "terrorist" as a, say, "proffesion", simply wasn't.
And about exactly how The Great War started, without a hint of revisionism created by fascists, I do shamelessly quoted my opening post from an earlier thread:
Post Options
Thanks(0)
QuoteReplyTopic: 100 years since The Great War Posted: July 28 2014 at 04:11
On this daya century agostartedthe First World War, a month after the assassinationin Sarajevo, which killed throne, Archduke FranzFerdinandand his wife.
Austria-Hungarywasthe28th of July2014, declared war to Serbia, and thus, as it turned out, they started the First World War. A declaration of warwas sent toBelgradein the morning, an ordinarytelegraphpost.The telegram containedthreesentences.
The firststated thatthe Serbian governmentis not"satisfactorily respondedto the letter" in Vienna, submittedon 23 July, that theultimatum. Thenfollowed theview thathencethe Austro-Hungarian Empire "forced to rely on theforceof arms," and the third, the last sentencewas: "Austria-Hungary believe thatas of this momentisat warwith Serbia."
The next day,Franz Joseph, Emperor of Austria andKing of Hungary, released adeclarationof war"people"of his country, in which hestated thathe was forced"to tackle the swordin defense ofhonor", and that "the imperial-royal government attempted tocalmway toresolve the dispute, "but without success, and tosomeone else's guilty".The goverment officials in Viennawereassassinatedin Sarajevoused them asan excuseto go to theshowdownwith Serbia, convincedthat Serbia wouldbequicklydefeated,andit would be a "small war"that will verysoonto be completedsuccessfully.
ThereforethetextnoteorultimatumBaronGiesldeliveredthe Serbian governmenton July 23,waswordedso that meantit is almost impossiblethat anysovereign country to accept whatitisrequired. The goal, certainly, wasit to berejected, as evidencedby the fact thatBaronGiesl, when he wason July 25,NikolaPasić,gavea very conciliatoryresponseserbiangovernmentimmediatelyrespondedthat he was"not satisfactory".
This was followed byan officialletter tothe Austrian MinisterSerbianMinistry ofForeign Affairsof identicalcontent, andembassystaffandBaronGieslsoonafterthat nightleft the territoryof the Kingdom ofSerbia. Astothis acttook the severance of diplomaticrelations, the government of the Kingdom ofSerbiaannounced, alsoin a veryconciliatorytone, a manifestoin which hestated: "Trusting inthe helpof God, inhis justiceandfriendshipinthe greatcountrythatwe are convincedthey wantalso to keep thepeace, we hope that it willendthe conflictpeacefully, but astheAustro-Hungarian Ministersaidtonighton behalf ofhis governmentwas not satisfiedwith our response, and finallybreaks off diplomatic relations, the government of theSerbianforced to, just in case, just take themost necessarymilitarymeasuresto defend the country. considered adutyto invitethe people todefendthe homeland, believing thatourpatrioticcall eachhappy tooblige.If wewere attacked, the military willdo my duty... ".
The following day, on July 26, followed by themobilization, on the same dayitannouncedthe mobilization. Actaully decree on themobilizationof the entirearmywas issuedon July 25to22hours, andfor the first dayof mobilizationwas determinedafter26jul. PromptlyformedtheSupreme Command of theserbian armyled bygeneralfoundStepaStepanović, as agentcurrentlyabsentDukeRadomirPutnik;teamimmediately movedinto the interiorof the country, inKragujevac, as Belgrade waslocatedright on theborder line.
At the same timecame theorderis that the court, the government, state government offices, thevaults ofthe National Bank, State Archives andPress office, operating inside of country. A decision of the governmentin Viennato go to warwas preceded by thesupportof Germany, suchas the7 Julyat the ministerialmeetingViennadecided tosend anotewithSerbiawouldbeunacceptablecontent, which isthenworked outat a meeting. It was supposed thatBerlin andViennawasthattheybe able toinstantlymakethe mobilizationandconcentration ofpower, beforethe French,especially theRussians.
It was intendedto bea lightning thrustthroughBelgium,broke France. The German govermentbelievedtobe repeatscenarioof the Franco-Prussian war of 1870/71. when Francedefeatedtremendously. Only thenthey were goingto getall the powertodirectRussia. A dayafter thedeclaration of war, on July 29, regentAleksandar Karadjordjevićissued aproclamationto the people:
"OurSerbia is assaulted under the great evil. Austrougarskahasdeclared war(...) I am compelledto callall mydear andbraveSerbsunder theSerbian flag..."Thaton July 29, the Russian TsarNicholas IIissued apartial mobilization. The next day, 30 July, Germanyhas introduceda generalmobilizationon 1 Augustdeclared war to Russia. Alreadyon August 2,GermanyinvadedLuxembourg, andon August 3,declared war to France. BecauseBelgiumrejectedthe Germanrequestfortransit throughitsterritory, Germany declared waron August 4and Belgium, then immediately United Kingdom, due to non-compliance withthe Germanneutralityof Belgium, on August 4, 1914. declared war to Germany. TheGreat War begins, laterknown asthe First World War.
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot create polls in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum
This page was generated in 0.281 seconds.
Donate monthly and keep PA fast-loading and ad-free forever.