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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page paper which examines how the Great War, WWII, was a war that was 500 years in the making and thus a war that had to take place eventually. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAwr500.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
European conflict. The same could perhaps be said for many other wars, for everything seems to be interconnected in one way or another with no single war beginning over one
single incident. For example, while the Trojan War was supposedly fought because one man stole Helen of Troy, the truth is that many other long lived conflicts merely waited for
one event to trigger long held resentments and conflicts. With that in mind the following paper examines how and why the Great War, WWI, was a war that was 500
years in the making and an inevitable war. The Great War One author notes that "After nearly 500 years of conflict, progress and rivalry, Europe itself had become
the Balkans, a powder keg ready to explode" (The Great War, 2005). The Great War began in 1918 and if we go back 500 years that would put us in
the year 1418. Of course that is not necessarily a year that showed any particular event that began struggles, but rather the notion of tensions having begun 500 years prior
to the Great War. The tensions could likely be traced even further back to the Greek and Romans and their struggles and invasion of Britain. However, in the 15th century
in Europe there was a great civilization and a great deal of conflict in relationship to property, economics, politics, and religion. The many European nations were constantly, it seems, at
each others throats, or allies, for one reason or another and these dividing lines were constantly changing. The same author notes that, "Driven by an aggressive German desire for
a place in the sun, the Great War represents the cumulative effect of revolution, militarism, nationalism and imperialism" (The Great War, 2005). No longer content to sit back and not
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