Authors: Christopher Clark
182
. Buchanan to Nicolson, St Petersburg, 16 April 1914,
BD
, vol. 10/2, doc. 538, pp. 784â5.
183
. Nicolson to Goschen, 15 April 1912, ibid., vol. 6, doc. 575, p. 747; Steiner,
Foreign Office
, p. 131; see also Wilson,
The Policy of the Entente
, p. 78; Zara S. Steiner, âThe Foreign Office under Sir Edward Grey', in Francis Harry Hinsley (ed.),
British Foreign Policy under Sir Edward Grey
(Cambridge, 1977), pp. 22â69, here p. 45.
184
. Williamson,
Politics of Grand Strategy
, pp. 108â14, 167â204.
185
. Eyre Crowe minute to Buchanan to Grey, St Petersburg, 24 July 1914,
BD
, vol. 11, doc. 101, pp. 80â82, here p. 82.
186
. Isabel V. Hull,
Absolute Destruction. Military Culture and the Practices of War in Imperial Germany
(Ithaca, 2005), pp. 160â81; Mombauer,
Helmuth von Moltke
, pp. 102, 105, 164â7, 225.
187
. Alfred von Tirpitz,
Erinnerungen
(Leipzig, 1920), pp. 241â2.
188
. Note presented on 2 August at 7 p.m. by M. Below Saleske to M. Davignon, [Belgian] Minister of Foreign Affairs, cutting from the Belgian âGrey Book' in TNA, FO 371/1910 (2 August 1914) viewed online at
http:// www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/pathways/firstworldwar/first_world_war/p_ ultimatum.htm.
189
. Jean Stengers, âBelgium', in Wilson (ed.),
Decisions for War,
pp. 151â74.
190
. Ibid.; reply of the Belgian government to the German ultimatum, 3 August 1914 at 7 a.m., in Hugh Gibson,
A Journal from Our Legation in Belgium
(New York, 1917), p. 19.
191
. Stengers, âBelgium', pp. 161, 162.
192
. Gibson,
A Journal
, p. 15.
193
. Stengers, âBelgium', p. 163.
194
. Gibson,
A Journal
, p. 22.
195
. Cited in Stengers, âBelgium', p. 164.
196
. Maurice Paléologue, diary entry 1 August 1914,
An Ambassador's Memoirs 1914â1917
, trans. Frederick A. Holt (London, 1973), pp. 38â9.
197
. Prince Max von Lichnowsky,
My Mission to London
,
1912â1914
(London, 1918), p. 28.
198
. Gibson,
A Journal
, p. 21.
199
. Bernd F. Schulte, âNeue Dokumente zu Kriegsausbruch und Kriegsverlauf 1914',
Militärgeschichtliche Mitteilungen
, 25 (1979), pp. 123â85, here p. 140.
200
. Report from Colonel Ignatiev, 30 July 1914, RGVIA, Fond 15304 â Upravlenie Voennogo Agenta vo Frantsii, op. 2, d. 16 â Reports and communications made with special notebooks, l. 38.
201
. Cited in Hew Strachan,
The First World War
(Oxford, 2001), p. 103.
202
. V. I. Gurko,
Cherty i Siluety Proshlogo, Pravitel'stvo i Obschchestvennost' v Tsarstvovanie Nikolaya II Izobrazhenii Sovremennika
(Moscow, 2000), p. 651.
203
. W. Mansell Merry,
Two Months in Russia: JulyâSeptember 1914
(Oxford, 1916), pp. 76â7.
204
. Thus Richard Cobb's summary of the impressions recorded in Roger Martin du Gard,
L'Ãté 1914
(4 vols., Paris, 1936â1940), in Cobb, âFrance and the Coming of War', in Evans and Pogge von Strandmann (eds.),
The Coming of the First World War
, pp. 125â44, here p. 137.
205
. Strachan,
The First World War
, pp. 103â62, esp. p. 153; on draft riots in Russia, see Joshua Sanborn, âThe Mobilization of 1914 and the Question of the Russian Nation',
Slavic Review
, 59/2 (2000), pp. 267â89.
206
. Neiberg,
Dance of the Furies
, p. 128.
207
. Gibson, diary entry 2 August in id.,
A Journal
, p. 8.
208
. See Adrian Gregory,
The Last Great War. British Society and the First World War
(Cambridge, 2008), esp. pp. 9â39; id., âBritish War Enthusiasm: A Reassessment', in Gail Braybon (ed.),
Evidence, History and the Great War. Historians and the Impact of 1914â18
(Oxford, 2003), pp. 67â85; for an extraordinarily textured account of reactions to the news of war in provincial France, see Becker,
1914: Comment les français
, pp. 277â309; id.,
L'Année 14
(Paris, 2004), pp. 149â153; Stéphane Audoin-Rouzeau and Annette Becker,
1914â1918
:
Understanding the Great War,
trans. Catherine Temerson (London, 2002), p. 95; on the âshock, sadness and consternation' with which most people greeted the news of war, see Leonard V. Smith, Stéphane Audoin-Rouzeau and Annette Becker,
France and the Great War
(Cambridge, 2003), pp. 27â9; P. J. Flood,
France 1914â1918: Public Opinion and the War Effort
(Basingstoke, 1990), pp. 5â33; Jeffrey Verhey,
The Spirit of 1914. Militarism, Myth and Mobilization in Germany
(Cambridge, 2000), pp. 231â6.
209
. Sanborn, âMobilization of 1914', p. 272.
210
. Thus the account provided by the â
instituteur
' of the village, cited in Flood,
France 1914â1918
, p. 7.
211
. Stephen Graham,
Russia and the World
(New York, 1915), pp. 2â3, cited in Leonid Heretz,
Russia on the Eve of Modernity. Popular Religion and Traditional Culture under the Last Tsars
(Cambridge, 2008), p. 195. Many Russian memoirs record confusion about the identity of the enemy, see Bertram Wolfe, âWar Comes to Russia',
Russian Review
, 22/2 (1963), esp. pp. 126â9.
1
. Rebecca West,
Black Lamb and Grey Falcon. A Journey Through Yugoslavia
(London, 1955), p. 350.
2
. The memoir is that of Prince B. A. Vasil'chiko, discussed in D. C. B. Lieven, âBureaucratic Authoritarianism in Late Imperial Russia: The Personality, Career and Opinions of P. N. Durnovo',
The Historical Journal
, 26/2 (1983), pp. 391â402.
3
. See, for example, Mark Hewitson,
Germany and the Causes of the First World War
(Oxford, 2006), pp. 3â4. On Fischer's thesis as a form of personal engagement with the contaminating legacy of Nazism, see Klaus Grosse Kracht, âFritz Fischer und der deutsche Protestantismus',
Zeitschrift für neuere Theologiegeschichte
, 10/2 (2003), pp. 224â52; Rainer Nicolaysen, âRebell wider Willen? Fritz Fischer und die Geschichte eines nationalen Tabubruchs', in Rainer Nicolaysen and Axel Schildt (eds.),
100 Jahre Geschichtswissenschaft in Hamburg
(
Hamburger Beiträge zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte
, vol. 18) (Berlin/Hamburg, 2011), pp. 197â236.
4
. Paul Kennedy,
The Rise of the Anglo-German Antagonism
(London, 1980), p. 467.
5
. See Paul W. Schroeder, âEmbedded Counterfactuals and World War I as an Unavoidable War', p. 42; for a powerful analysis that interprets the war as the unintended outcome of errors committed by a political elite that viewed a general war as a catastrophic outcome, see Gian Enrico Rusconi,
Rischio 1914. Come si decide una guerra
(Bologna, 1987).
6
. Short-war thesis: Gerhard Ritter,
Der Schlieffenplan. Kritik eines Mythos
(Munich, 1965); Lancelot Farrar,
The Short War Illusion. German Policy, Strategy and Domestic Affairs, AugustâDecember 1914
(Santa Barbara, 1973); Stephen Van Evera, âThe Cult of the Offensive and the Origins of the First World War',
International Security
, 9 (1984), pp. 397â419; critique: Stig Förster, âDer deutsche Generalstab und die Illusion des kurzen Krieges, 1871â1914: Metakritik eines Mythos',
Militärgeschichtliche Mitteilungen
, 54 (1995), pp. 61â95; excellent commentary on the debate: Holger H. Herwig, âGermany and the “Short-War” Illusion: Toward a New Interpretation?',
Journal of Military History
, 66/3, pp. 681â93.
7
. Cited in Herwig, âGermany and the “Short-War” Illusion', p. 686.
8
. âHorace Blanchon' (pseud.), âAcadémie de Médecine',
Le Figaro
, 5 March 1913, cutting in NA Archief, 2.05,03, doc. 648, Correspondentie over de Balkan-oorlog.
The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was created. To locate a specific entry, please use your e-book reader's search tools.
Abbott, George Frederick 242â3
Abdul Hamid II, Sultan 145
Addison, Christopher (
later
1st Viscount Addison) 545
Adrianople (Edirne) 252, 256
Adriatic Sea:
   Italian-Austrian rivalries 86, 92, 93, 109, 121, 226
   Serbian access 43, 80, 112, 256, 257, 265, 282, 289, 354
Aegean islands 444, 485
Aehrenthal, Count Alois, Austrian foreign minister 35, 82â3, 84, 107, 356
   Agram-Friedjung treason trials 88, 89, 231
   annexation of Bosnia-Herzegovina 35, 83â7, 395
   death 90
   Libyan War (1911-12) 246
   Morocco question 211
   relations with Berchtold 110â111
   relations with Conrad von Hötzendorf 105
   relations with Izvolsky 90, 111, 188
   views on Serbia 99, 279, 395
Afghan War (1878-79) 173â4
Afghanistan 87, 130, 143, 158, 174, 322
Africa, colonial rivalries in 121, 125, 128, 129, 133, 134, 135, 138, 141, 142â3, 145, 155, 158, 166, 180, 335, 336
   Fashoda incident (1898) 132, 133, 164
  Â
see also
Libya; Morocco; South Africa
Agadir crisis (1911) 162, 196, 204â213, 220â21, 227, 228, 233, 234, 241, 295, 326, 334, 441, 536
Agence Havas
(news agency) 230, 550
Agram (Zagreb) 68, 87â8, 425
air warfare 243â4, 479
Albania:
   Austro-Italian interests 93, 247
   Balkan Wars (1912-13) 42, 112â13, 253, 255, 256â7, 282, 283â4
   independence question 282, 283â5, 357, 461, 557
   monarchy 170
   Montenegrin occupation 283, 284â5, 330
   Ottoman control 245
   political instability 114, 452
   Serbian Empire (14th century) 21
   Serbian occupation 97â8, 112, 113, 253, 256â7, 282, 284, 285â8, 292, 330, 357, 393, 484
Albert I, King of the Belgians 550
Albertini, Luigi 385, 415, 459, 460, 463, 468, 522, 565
n
12, 575
n
151, 642
n
30
Alekseev, Evgenii Ivanovich 176â7
Alessio (Lezhë) 283
Alexandar I, King of Serbia:
   assassination 3â5, 11â13, 14â15, 19â20, 79, 460
   reign 7â11, 14, 17â18, 79â80
Alexandar, Crown Prince of Serbia (
later
King Alexandar I of Yugoslavia) 40, 46, 257, 431, 460, 461
Alexandar KaradjordjeviÄ, Prince of Serbia 6, 21
Alexander III, Tsar 127â8, 128â9, 130, 227
Alexandra Feodorovna, Tsarina 173
Alexandria 243
Alexandria
(yacht) 442, 443
Algeciras conference (1906) 157, 194, 196, 199, 231
Alsace-Lorraine 124, 131, 133, 135, 294, 351, 448â9
Altai mountains 554
Ambassadors' Conference (London 1912-13) 284â5, 321, 325, 495
   peace treaty 285
Anastasia, Princess of Montenegro 447â8, 475
Anatolia 336
Anatolian Railway 145, 251, 335â6, 337
Andrássy, Gyula 66
Anglo-Congolese Treaty (1894) 145
Anglo-Japanese Alliance (1902) 138â9, 545
Anglo-Russian Convention (1907) 87, 111, 123, 139â40, 158, 167, 174, 187â8, 322â4, 325â6, 363, 536, 545â6
Angola 142
Apis
see
DimitrijeviÄ, Dragutin
Ardennes 494, 547
Armstrong (shipbuilders) 485
Artamonov, Victor 411â12
Asia, colonial rivalries in 121, 125, 129, 137â41, 142, 153, 158, 322, 546
  Â
see also
China; India
Asquith, Herbert Henry (
later
1st Earl of Oxford and Asquith):
   and assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand 490
   Irish Question 488, 489
   July 1914 crisis and outbreak of war 491, 493, 494, 535, 539, 541, 542, 544, 545, 552, 561â2
   and Lloyd George's Mansion House speech (1911) 210
   relations with Grey 200, 202, 203
   relations with Wilson 489
   Relugas Compact (1905) 202
Assad, Bashar al- 559
Associazione Nazionalista Italiana 226
Austria-Hungary:
   Agram-Friedjung treason trials (1909) 88â90, 99, 231, 260, 408, 445, 454
   Austro-German Dual Alliance (1879) 293, 296, 297
   constitution 65â6, 69, 70, 84, 100â101, 108â9
   conventions and trade treaties with Serbia 28â9, 29â30, 33, 79, 94, 228
   declaration of war against Serbia (28 July 1914) 469â70, 510
   economy 66, 69â70, 292, 350, 357, 578
n
12
   elections 67, 87
   impact of Balkan Wars 99â100, 281â92, 559
   industrialization 69â70, 350
   Mediterranean Agreement (1887) 121â2, 126
   Military Chancellery 107â8
   nationalities problem 66â9, 70â72, 81â2, 108â9, 292, 357
   occupation and annexation of Bosnia-Herzegovina 18, 24, 33â8, 62, 73â6, 79, 83â7, 109, 177, 188, 231, 258â9, 273
   âpig war' with Serbia (1906-9) 29, 31, 276
   press 88, 231, 236, 380â81, 388
   Prochaska affair (1912) 231, 283, 445
   role of Emperor 72â3, 100â101, 183
   Three Emperors' Leagues (1873/1881) 79, 83, 126, 128
   Triple Alliance (1882) 92â3, 121â3, 125â6, 129â30, 157, 249â50