The Roots of Sarajevo: Austria-Hungary and Serbia, 1867-81
A small, far-away country, but one whose tangled relations with its neighbours, Ian Armour suggests, lead inexorably to the debacle of 1914.
A small, far-away country, but one whose tangled relations with its neighbours, Ian Armour suggests, lead inexorably to the debacle of 1914.
One of history's little ironies - a period piece of First World War propaganda from a curious source which rebounded on its author.
Alan Sked looks at the sensational leaking of Austrian military secrets to Russia on the eve of the First World War.
David French presents an overview of the historiography on the subject.
If the British Empire were to be saved, it would take a renewal of Britain’s youth. Robert Baden-Powell had the answer: self-reliance, patriotism and the Boy Scouts.
Hew Strachan reviews historians' approaches to the Great War.
Daylight saving was a logical policy to manipulate the fruits of nature. Yet, as Oliver B. Pollak explains, it was opposed by farmers, trivialised by politicians, and not adopted until the First World War made it imperative to national survival.