TAZ-TFG-2020-2682


La Primera Guerra Mundial: derrota y paramilitarismo.

Morillas Herrero, Juan
Casanova Ruiz, Julián (dir.)

Universidad de Zaragoza, FFYL, 2020
Historia Moderna y Contemporánea department, Historia Contemporánea area

Graduado en Historia

Tipo de Trabajo Académico: Trabajo Fin de Grado
Notas: Resumen disponible también en inglés (abstract): World War I caused, even in its course, the Russian Revolution - a multipolar revolution that ultimately ended with the Bolsheviks' takeover of power and Russia's departure from the Great War after the signing of the Brest-Litovsk treaty in 1918. Russia's abandonment of the conflict led to high expectations of victory in the Central Powers, which did nothing but aggravate the impact of the final defeat, reaching the point of not accepting such defeat and giving place to the emergence of the myth of the «backstab». On the other hand, the end of the war triggered the disintegration of the Central Powers and the construction of new nation-states built under the idea of ethnic homogeneity. The expansion of bolshevism, the exacerbated nationalism, the non-acceptance of defeat, the paramilitarism and the purported ethnic homogeneity as a hallmark of the new states made central and Eastern Europe a hotbed of violence that continued to prolong the one experienced during the Great War until 1923.

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El registro pertenece a las siguientes colecciones:
trabajos-academicos-universidad-zaragoza > centro > facultad-de-filosofia-y-letras
trabajos-academicos-universidad-zaragoza > trabajos-fin-grado




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