Read A Peace to End all Peace Online
Authors: David Fromkin
Taylor, A. J. P.,
Beaverbrook
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 1972).
______,
English History 1914–1945
(Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1965).
______,
Englishmen and Others
(London: Hamish Hamilton, 1956).
______,
The First World War: An Illustrated History
(London: Hamish Hamilton, 1963).
______,
From Saravejo to Potsdam
(Harcourt, Brace & World, 1966).
______,
How Wars Begin
(London: Hamish Hamilton, 1979).
______,
How Wars End
(London: Hamish Hamilton, 1985).
______,
The Last of Old Europe: A Grand Tour
(London: Sidgwick & Jackson, 1976).
______,
Politics in Wartime and Other Essays
(London: Hamish Hamilton, 1964).
______,
Revolutions and Revolutionaries
(London: Hamish Hamilton, 1980).
______,
The Struggle for Mastery in Europe 1848–1918
(Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1954).
______,
The War Lords
(London: Hamish Hamilton, 1977).
______, (ed.),
Lloyd George: Twelve Essays
(New York: Atheneum, 1971).
______, (ed.),
My Darling Pussy: The Letters of Lloyd George and Frances Stevenson 1913–1941
(London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1975).
Taylor, Robert,
Lord Salisbury
(London: Allen Lane, 1975).
Temperley, Harold,
The Foreign Policy of Canning 1822–1827: England, the NeoHoly Alliance, and the New World
, 2nd edn (Hamden, Connecticut: Archon, 1966).
______, (ed.),
A History Of The Peace Conference Of Paris
, 6 Vols (London: Henry Froude and Hodder & Stoughton, 1920–24).
Temperley, Harold, and Penson, Lillian M. (eds.),
Foundations of British Foreign Policy From Pitt (1792) to Salisbury (1902)
(New York: Barnes & Noble, 1966).
Teveth, Shabtai,
Ben-Gurion and the Palestinian Arabs
(Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 1985).
Thomas, Lowell,
With Lawrence in Arabia
(New York and London: The Century Co., 1924).
Tidrick, Kathryn,
Heart-beguiling Araby
(Cambridge, London, New York, New Rochelle, Melbourne, and Sydney: Cambridge University Press, 1981).
Townshend, Charles, “Civilization and ‘Frightfulness’: Air Control in the Middle East Between the Wars,” in Chris Wrigley, (ed.),
Warfare Diplomacy and Politics: Essays in Honour of A. J. P. Taylor
(London: Hamish Hamilton, 1986).
Townshend, Charles Vere Ferres,
My Campaign
(New York: James A. McCann, 1920).
Toynbee, Arnold J.,
The Western Question in Greece and Turkey
, reprint of 2nd edn (1923) (New York: Howard Fertig, 1970).
Troeller, Gary,
The Birth of Saudi Arabia: Britain and the Rise of the House of Sa’ud
(London: Frank Cass, 1976).
Trumpener, Ulrich,
Germany and the Ottoman Empire: 1914–1918
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1968).
Tuchman, Barbara W.,
Bible and Sword: England and Palestine from the Bronze Age to Balfour
(New York: Funk & Wagnalls, 1956).
______,
The Guns of August
(New York: Dell, 1962).
______,
The Zimmerman Telegram
(New York: Bantam Books, 1971).
Ullman, Richard H.,
Anglo-Soviet Relations, 1917–1921
, 3 Vols (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1961–72).
U.S. State Department,
Papers Relating to the Foreign Relations of the United States: The Paris Peace Conference 1919
, 13 Vols (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1942–47).
Vansittart, Lord,
The Mist Procession
(London: Hutchinson, 1958).
Varé, Daniele,
Laughing Diplomat
(London: John Murray, 1938).
Vatikiotis, P. J.,
The History of Egypt
, 2nd edn (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1980).
Vereté, Mayir, “The Balfour Declaration and its Makers,”
Middle Eastern Studies
(January 1970).
______, “Kitchener, Grey and the Question of Palestine in 1915–1916: A Note,”
Middle Eastern Studies
(May 1973).
Warner, Philip,
Kitchener: The Man Behind the Legend
(London: Hamish Hamilton, 1985).
Watson, David Robin,
Georges Clemenceau: A Political Biography
(London: Eyre Methuen, 1974).
Weber, Frank G.,
Eagles on the Crescent: Germany, Austria, and the Diplomacy of the Turkish Alliance 1914–1918
(Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press, 1970).
Webster, Sir Charles,
The Foreign Policy of Palmerston, 1830–1841, Britain, The Liberal Movement and the Eastern Question
, 2 Vols (New York: Humanities Press, 1969).
Weizmann, Chaim,
The Letters and Papers of Chaim Weizmann
, Vol. 8, series A,
November 1917–October 1918
, edited by Dvorah Barzilay and Barnet Litvinoff (Jerusalem: Israel University Press, 1977).
______,
Trial and Error: The Autobiography of Chaim Weizman
(New York: Harper & Brothers, 1949).
Whiting, Allen S.,
Soviet Policy in China 1912–1924
(Stanford University Press Paperback Reprint, 1968).
Wilson, Edmund,
To the Finland Station: A Study in the Writing and Acting of History
(Garden City: Doubleday, Anchor Books, 1953).
Wilson, J. M., “Sense and Nonsense in the Biography of T. E. Lawrence,”
T. E. Lawrence Studies
(spring 1976).
Wilson, Trevor,
The Myriad Faces of War: Britain and the Great War, 1914–1918
(Cambridge: Polity Press, 1986).
Wilson, Woodrow,
The Papers of Woodrow Wilson
, edited by Arthur S. Link
et al
., Vol. 41,
January 24–April 6, 1917
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1983).
Winstone, H. V. F.,
Captain Shakespear
(London: Jonathan Cape, 1976).
______,
Gertrude Bell
(London: Jonathan Cape, 1978).
______,
The Illicit Adventure
(London: Jonathan Cape, 1982).
______,
Leachman: ‘OC Desert’
(London, Melbourne, and New York: Quartet Books, 1982).
______ (ed.),
The Diaries of Parker Pasha
(London, Melbourne, and New York: Quartet Books, 1983).
Wolfe, Bertram D.,
Three Who Made a Revolution: A Biographical History
, 4th rev. edn (New York: Dell Publishing, Delta Books, 1964).
Wolfers, Arnold,
Britain and France Between Two Wars
(New York: W. W. Norton, 1966).
Woodward, E. L., and Butler, Rohan,
Documents On British Foreign Policy 1919–1939
, First Series, Vols 1–24 (London: His Majesty’s Stationery Office, 1947; Her Majesty’s Stationery Office, 1983).
Woolley, C. Leonard, and Lawrence, T. E.,
The Wilderness of Zin (Archaeological Report)
(London: Palestine Exploration Fund, 1914).
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Geoffrey Dawson and Our Times
(London: Hutchinson, 1955).
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The Independent Arab
(London: John Murray, 1933).
Zeine, Zeine N.,
The Emergence of Arab Nationalism with a Background Study of Arab-Turkish Relations in the Near East
(Beirut: Khayats, 1966).
Zeldin, Theodore,
France 1848–1945
, 2 Vols (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1973–77).
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The Merchant of Revolution: The Life of Alexander Israel Helphand (Parvus) 1867–1924
(London: Oxford University Press, 1965).
Zeman, Z. A. B. (ed.),
Germany and the Revolution in Russia 1915–1918
(London: Oxford University Press, 1958).
Zurcher, Erik Jan,
The Unionist Factor: The Role of the Committee of Union and Progress in the Turkish National Movement 1905–1926
(Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1984).
“The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.”
Aaronsohn, Aaron: his pro-Allied position; his achievements; his espionage activities
Aaronsohn, Sarah
Abbas II (Abbas Hilmi Pasha), Khedive of Egypt
Abd el Kader, Emir;
Abd el Kader, Said
Abdul Hamid II, Sultan
Abdullah, son of Hussein of Mecca: meets with Kitchener and Storrs in Cairo before the war; corresponds with Kitchener on his father’s behalf; meets Storrs and Lawrence in Jeddah, and permits Lawrence to go up country; leads postwar expedition against Ibn Saud; his candidacy for the throne of Mesopotamia; in Transjordan
Abdul Said Mir Alim Khan, Emir of Bukhara
Addison, Dr Christopher
Aden: administered by British India; included by Storrs in his plan for a new British Vice-Royalty
Afghanistan: British-Russian rivalry in; becomes a British protectorate; German wartime expeditions to; Ottoman designs on; the Third Afghan War and its settlement; and communist Russia; and Enver’s revolt in Bukhara; current conflicts in
Ahd, al-
Ahmed Mirza, Shah of Persia
Aitken, Sir Max, later 1st Baron Beaverbrook
Albania: revolts against Ottoman rule; occupied by Habsburg Empire
Aleppo
see
“Damascus, Homs, Hama and Aleppo”
Alexander, King of Greece
Alexandretta (Iskenderun): plans to use as British base in the postwar Middle East
Ali, son of Hussein of Mecca
Ali, Mehemet
Allenby, Sir Edmund, later 1st Viscount Allenby of Megiddo and Felixstowe: appointed to command Egyptian Expeditionary Force in invasion of Palestine; approves Lawrence’s plan for use of Arab irregulars in Palestine campaign; leads Palestine campaign; plans attack on Syria; and plans for administration of territories taken from the Ottoman Empire; leads Syrian campaign; and the question of French or Arab rule in Syria and Lebanon; dines with Feisal in Damascus; and French claims to Syria; statement at Peace Conference; and location of Dan (“Dan to Beersheba”); sent to take charge in Egypt (1919); warns superiors not to disregard Feisal and Syrian Congress; and administration of Palestine 445: his policy as British High Commissioner in Egypt
Allenby Declaration (1922)
Amanullah Khan, King of Afghanistan
Amery, Leopold S.: at War Cabinet secretariat; his British imperial vision and the question of a Jewish Palestine; and the Imperial War Conference; quoted on importance of a Jewish Palestine; helps draft Balfour Declaration; evaluates his accomplishments in 1917; discusses Sykes-Picot Agreement with Sykes; sees a war for Asia at hand; seeks immediate British possession of the Middle East before a cease-fire; fears US may accept trusteeship of Palestine
Amet, Vice-Admiral Jean F. C.: and armistice negotiations with the Ottoman Empire
Amritsar Massacre
Anglo-French Declaration (1918)
Anglo-Iraqi Treaty (1922)
Anglo-Persian Agreement (1919)
Anglo-Russian Agreement (1907)
Angora Accord (1921)
Antonius, George
Aqaba expedition
Arab Bulletin
: described; quoted; reports Hussein threatened by Ibn Saud; and Lowell Thomas
Arab Bureau, the: creation of; opposes Sykes; aids in talks at Kut; views on Hussein’s revolt; and the
Arab Bulletin
; views; and Allenby’s use of Feisal’s forces; reports quoted; asked by Sykes to arrange meeting with Arab leaders; and the Foreign Office’s policy; and Arab independence; and Hussein as Caliph; reports (1919) on plans for a Pan-Islamic revolt against Britain; charged with “endangering world peace”
see also
Clayton; Herbert; Hogarth; Lawrence; Walrond
Arab Club, the (Syria)
Arab Executive, the (Palestine)
Arab Legion, the (Transjordan)
Arabia
see specific headings
Arabian Report
(Sykes)
Armenia: proposed US Mandate
Armenian Massacres (1915)
Armenian Revolutionary Federation
Armstrong Whitworth
Askari, Jaafar al-
Asquith, Herbert Henry: cruises with Churchill and others aboard
Enchantress
(1912); and the modern Middle East; harbors no designs on the Middle East; and Churchill; quoted on the Turkish war; and appointment of Kitchener as War Minister; quoted; favors conceding Constantinople to Russia; and Britain’s Middle East goals; appoints de Bunsen committee; and the Dardanelles campaign; quoted on the perils of attacking Gallipoli; forms Coalition Cabinet; and the questions of what to do about Kitchener and Gallipoli; orders study of “an Islamic Bureau” his faltering war leadership attacked; overthrown as Prime Minister; and Churchill; on Herbert Samuel’s plan for a Jewish Palestine and Lloyd George’s support of it; defeated in the elections (1918); and Russia’s grievances in the Middle East; leads his party to defeat in the elections (1922); his underestimation of the Ottoman Empire; and Churchill
Asquith, Margot
Asquith, Violet
Auda abu Tayi
Australia: role in the British imperial system; and the Chanak crisis;
see also specific wartime campaigns
Austria-Hungary (Habsburg Empire): and annexation of portions of the Ottoman Empire; and outbreak of First World War; vulnerable, says Lloyd George; and the Armenian Massacres; US delays declaration of war against; prisoners of war in Russia; Allied offensive against (1918); and the Peace Conference; dissolved
Auto-Emancipation
(Pinsker)
Azerbaijan: Enver’s forces fight for; British occupy; Russians recapture
Bagehot, Walter
Baghdad Railway project
Bailey, Colonel Frederick Marshman
Baku: campaigns; congress
Baldwin, Stanley
Balfour, Arthur James, later 1st Earl of Balfour
Balfour Declaration (1917)
Balkan Confederation
Balkan League
Balkan Wars
Barrow, Major-General Sir George
Beaverbrook, Lord
see
Aitken, Sir Max
Bedford, A. C.
Beha-ed-Din
Belgium: German invasion of
Bell, Gertrude
Ben-Gurion, David
Ben Zvi, Itzhak
Bethmann Hollweg, Chancellor Theobald von
Bey, Halil
Bey, Rauf
Birdwood, General William
Birkenhead, Lord
see
Smith, F. E.
Bismarck, Prince Otto von
Boer War
Bonaparte, Napoleon, Egyptian expedition
Bonar Law, Andrew
Borden, Robert
Bosnia: annexation of by Austria-Hungary
Botha, Louis
Brandeis, Justice Louis D.
Bray, Major N. N. E.
Brazil: and the Turkish battleships
Breasted, James Henry
Brémond, Lieutenant-Colonel Edouard
Breslau
(ship)
Brethren (Ikhwan)
Briand, Aristide
Britain/British Empire
see specific headings
British East Africa
Bronstein, Lev Davidovich
see
Trotsky, Leon
Brunton, Captain C. D.
Bryant, Louise
Bryce, James
Buchan, John
Bukhara
Bulgaria
Bunsen, Sir Maurice de 142
see also
de Bunsen Committee
Cadman, Sir John
Caillard, Vincent
Cairo
see
Egypt/Cairo
Cairo Conference (1921)
Caix, Robert de
Calthorpe, Vice-Admiral Somerset Arthur Gough
Calwell, General Sir Charles
Cambon, Jules
Cambon, Paul
Campbell-Bannerman, Sir Henry
Canada: role in the British imperial system; and Chanak crisis
Canning, George
Capitulations
Carasso, Emmanuel
see
Karasu, Emmanuel
Carden, Admiral Sackville
Carnegie Endowment: survey of changes resulting from the war
Carson, Sir Edward
Carter, Howard
Cartwright, Joanna and Ebenezer
Cavour, Count Camillo di
Cecil, Lord Robert
Chamberlain, Austen
Chamberlain, Joseph
Chanak (Canakkale) crisis
Chauvel, General Harry
Cheetham, Sir Milne
Chelmsford 3rd Baron (Frederic John Napier Thesiger)
Chicago
Daily News
Chicago, University of
Chile: and the Turkish battleships
Churchill, Winston Spencer: his character and characteristics; his earlier political career; becomes First Lord of the Admiralty (1911); cruises with the Prime Minister and others aboard
Enchantress
(1912); his role in creating the modern Middle East; and Turkish entry into the war; his role in the appointment of Kitchener as War Minister; initial views on postwar division of Middle East; plans to end stalemate in the war by flanking attack; and the Dardanelles campaign; and Sykes; and the Other Club; and Gallipoli campaign; loses position at the Admiralty in the Fisher resignation crisis; serves in the army; quoted on Clemenceau; and the importance of oil; returns to office as Minister of Munitions; aware of concerns of Jewish constituents; and Young Turk ideology; and France and Syria; and 1918 elections; becomes both War Minister and Air Minister (1919); demobilization and his warning of its effects on the peace negotiations; and the Russian civil war; quoted on the death of King Alexander; and the problem of Palestine; and troop withdrawals from Asia; views on and policy towards Bolshevik Russia; dissents from Lloyd George’s Middle East policy; appointed Colonial Secretary (1921); his policy as Colonial Secretary; the Cairo Conference; his White Paper for Palestine (1922); dissents from Lloyd George’s Turkish policy; and French support for Kemal; comes to the rescue of Lloyd George’s Turkish policy; defeated in the 1922 elections; his subsequent career
Cilicia
Clayton, Gilbert: his military career and official positions; his abilities and his outlook; his views and plans for Britain in relationship to the Arab world during and after the war; the al-Faruqi episode, the McMahon negotiations, and the Arab Revolt; policy differences with Sykes; and T. E. Lawrence; policies as chief political officer to Allenby; urges British annexation of Egypt; his policies attacked; on Richmond’s role in the Palestine administration
Clemenceau, Georges
Colby, Bainbridge
Colonial office
see
Churchill
Columbia University
Comité de l’Afrique Française
Comité de l’Asie Française
Committee of Imperial Defence
Committee of Union and Progress (C.U.P.)
see
Young Turkey Party
Congreve, General W. N.
Conjoint Committee
Conolly, Arthur
Constantine I, King of Greece
Constantinople Agreement (1915)
Cornwallis, Captain Kinahan
Council of Four
Cox, Sir Percy
Crane, Charles
Crewest Marquess of (Robert Offley Ashburton Crewe-Milnes)
Cromer, Earl (Evelyn Baring)
C.U.P.
see
Young Turkey Party
Curtis, Lionel George
Curzon of Kedlestonest Marquess of (George Nathaniel Curzon)
Cyprus
Czechoslovakia: French postwar relations with
Daily Express
Daily Mail
Damascus: falls to the Allies (1918)
“Damascus, Homs, Hama, and Aleppo”
Damascus Protocol, the
Daniel Deronda
(Eliot)
D’Annunzio, Gabriele
Dardanelles and the Dardanelles campaign
Dardanelles Committee
Dashnaktsutium (Armenian Revolutionary Federation)
Dawnay, Colonel Alan
Dawnay, Guy
de Bunsen Committee (on Britain’s goals in Middle East)
Declaration to the Seven (1918)
Deedes, Wyndham
Delcassé, Theophile
Denikin, General Anton Ivanovich
Derbyth Earl of (Edward Stanley)
Dhawu-’Awn clan
Disraeli, Benjamin, Earl of Beaconsfield
Djavid, Mehmed
Djemal Pasha, Ahmed (Djemal Bey)
Dodge, Cleveland
Dulles, Allen
Dunsterville, Major-General L. C.
Eastern Committee
Egypt/Cairo;
see also
Cairo Conference
El Arish
Eliot, George
Emir of Mecca
see
Hussein ibn Ali
Enver Pasha: and 1908 revolt; British information about his ethnic origins incorrect; as a Young Turk triumvir; a nationalist without a nation; seeks German alliance; personally known to Churchill; negotiates German alliance; offers
Osman
to Germany; invites sending of
Goeben
and
Breslau
to Constantinople; pushes for Turkish entry into the war on Germany’s side; and al-Masri; becomes Turkey’s “vice-generalissimo” leads Caucasus campaign; failings as War Minister; turns over command at the Dardanelles to Liman; and British capitulation at Kut; wary of German influence; and the Armenian Massacres; and Djemal’s offer to the Allies; his political position in 1917; secret talks with Lloyd George’s emissary; his new offensive against Russia; al-Masri offers to overthrow; campaigns in Armenia, Georgia and Azerbaijan; his views in 1918; Cabinet colleagues turn against and blame; flees Constantinople; War Office still controlled by his followers; rivalry with Kemal; blamed by British for Middle East disorders; dealings with Germany and Bolshevik Russia; Bukhara campaign; death of
Enzeli (Persia): Soviet Russian attack on the Caspian port of
Faruqi, Muhammed Sharif al-
Fatat, al-
Feisal, son of Hussein of Mecca, later King of Syria, and later still, King of Iraq: deputy from Jeddah in the Ottoman Parliament; mission to Constantinople and Damascus (1915); and al-Faruqi; believes 100,000 men will join Hejaz revolt (June 1916); should be field commander of the Hejaz revolt, says Lawrence; informed of British plans to recreate a Jewish homeland in Palestine (1917); campaigns in Arabia 309 and Transjordanian Palestine; expresses sympathy for Jews and Zionism; and Hussein; and the administration of liberated Syria; and the Damascus campaign; his dinner conversation with Allenby; importance of his contribution to Allenby’s campaigns deliberately exaggerated by Lloyd George; and the peace negotiations; and the Arab leadership of independent Syria; and France; caught between the Syrian General Congress and the French; proclaimed King of Greater Syria; defeated, deposed, and exiled by the French; and Iraq disorders; and Lowell Thomas; and Churchill’s plan to make him ruler of Iraq; his coronation; Churchill fears Turks, aided by France, will attack; Churchill and colleagues come to regard as “treacherous”