1st Edition

After the Versailles Treaty Enforcement, Compliance, Contested Identities

Edited By Conan Fischer, Alan Sharp Copyright 2007
    222 Pages
    by Routledge

    224 Pages
    by Routledge

    Designed to secure a lasting peace between the Allies and Germany, the Versailles Settlement soon came apart at the seams. In After The Versailles Treaty an international team of historians examines the almost insuperable challenges facing victors and vanquished alike after the ravages of WW1.

    This is not another diplomatic history, instead focusing on the practicalities of treaty enforcement and compliance as western Germany came under Allied occupation and as the reparations bill was presented to the defeated and bankrupt Germans. It covers issues such as:

    • How did the Allied occupiers conduct themselves and how did the Germans respond?
    • Were reparations really affordable and how did the reparations regime affect ordinary Germans?
    • What lessons did post-WW2 policymakers learn from this earlier reparations settlement
    • The fraught debates over disarmament as German big business struggled to adjust to the sudden disappearance of arms contracts and efforts were made on the international stage to achieve a measure of global disarmament.
    • The price exacted by the redrawing of frontiers on Germany’s eastern and western margins, as well as the (gentler) impact of the peace settlement on identity in French Flanders.

    This book was previously published as a special issue of Diplomacy and Statecraft

    Introduction.  High Politics.  The Enforcement of the Treaty of Versailles, 1919–1923.  Occupation.  The British Zone of Occupation in the Rhineland.  'Hut ab', 'Promenade with Kamerade for Schokolade', and the Flying Dutchman: British Soldiers in the Rhineland, 1918–1929.  French Policy in the Rhineland, 1919–1924.  Reparations.  The Reparations Debate.  The Human Price of Reparations.  Reparations in the Long Run: Studying the Lessons of History.  Disarmament.  Disarmament and Big Business: The Case of Krupp, 1918–1925.  Making Disarmament Work: The Implementation of the International Disarmament Provisions in the League of Nations Covenant, 1919–1925.  Self-Determination/Identities.  From Lothringen to Lorraine: Expulsion and Voluntary Repatriation.  The Versailles Settlement and Identity in French Flanders.  'The Sore which Would Never Heal': The Genesis of the Polish Corridor

    Biography

    Conan Fischer is Professor of European History at the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow. His publications include Stormtroopers: A Social, Economic and Ideological Analysis, 1929-35. (1983), The German Communists and the Rise of Nazism (1991),.The Rise of the Nazis (1995 & 2002), The Rise of National Socialism and the Working Classes in Weimar Germany (1996), and The Ruhr Crisis 1923-1924 ( 2003) . He is currently completing Europe between Democracy and Dictatorship; 1900-1945 (forthcoming 2008).

    Alan Sharp is Professor of International Relations and Provost of the Coleraine campus of the University of Ulster. His publications include The Versailles Settlement: Peacemaking in Paris 1919 (1991) – of which a new edition is appearing shortly,; Anglo-French Relations in the Twentieth Century: Rivalry and Cooperation (2000) - a collection of essays co-edited with Professor Glyn Stone and articles on various aspects of Lord Curzon’s tenure of the Foreign Office and the career of Sir James Headlam-Morley.