- Page 2 and 3: ISBN 978-963-284-164-9
- Page 5 and 6: Unknown Clauses: The Background Dea
- Page 7 and 8: CONTENTS Foreword (István MAJOROS,
- Page 9 and 10: Foreword The world remembers in 200
- Page 11: The Historical Judgement of the Mol
- Page 14 and 15: went often on emotional instead of
- Page 16 and 17: What is much more interesting is th
- Page 18 and 19: such an international agreement as
- Page 20 and 21: Text of the Nazi-Soviet Non-Aggress
- Page 22 and 23: Done in duplicate, in the German an
- Page 25 and 26: Lachaise, Bernard Historiography of
- Page 27 and 28: Relations) are the focus of special
- Page 29 and 30: Russian agreement (…) would allow
- Page 31 and 32: Europe and on the French communists
- Page 33 and 34: adopted a stance of denying the fac
- Page 35 and 36: Ortolan, Guillaume The 70 th annive
- Page 37 and 38: government (more than twenty) came,
- Page 39 and 40: War. On the contrary, it shows that
- Page 41 and 42: this anniversary and more widely of
- Page 43: interesting: „Illusions. In summe
- Page 48 and 49: The Polish Minority in Prussia and
- Page 50 and 51: The expropriation-law and its conse
- Page 52 and 53: The positioning of German-Polish re
- Page 54 and 55: Although in 1933 Little Entente ins
- Page 56 and 57: Unlike France Great Britain did not
- Page 58 and 59: Different relations Reich had with
- Page 60 and 61: international organisations such as
- Page 63 and 64: Sterniczky, Aaron An unfortunate fa
- Page 65 and 66: (called Magyar party) and the Germa
- Page 67 and 68: stated, that it wasn’t crucial in
- Page 69 and 70: Balogh, Márton Problems at the Fin
- Page 71 and 72: conflicts. 11 When the Finnish dele
- Page 73 and 74: must be emphasized that the western
- Page 75: Stalin hoped to gain the support of
- Page 78 and 79: The goal of my work in this interna
- Page 80 and 81: For example describes Hannah Arendt
- Page 82 and 83: that part of this movement which wa
- Page 84 and 85: egime, pogrom riots began, that rem
- Page 86 and 87: („Zentralstelle für die Abwander
- Page 88 and 89: preoccupation with theory. The tran
- Page 90 and 91: („Münchner Abkommen”) and the
- Page 92 and 93: Eichmann overused his powers, the a
- Page 95 and 96:
Roesch, Claudia Spain as a battlefi
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Nationalist insurgents because the
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against Germany and Italy trying to
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and Italian governments agree to th
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does, 37 that World War Two would h
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Kałan, Dariusz The Ukrainian Quest
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were remarkably dissatisfied with t
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Hungary sought to set up a common b
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Public Reactions to the Molotov-Rib
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Baptiste, Antoine What did French M
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safe Europe, a part to say the leas
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the unique extraordinary session of
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object of all non-reactions, is the
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interpretations of the political wa
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Bruzel, Baptiste Central Europe in
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After the Pact For Bonnet, „the P
- Page 127 and 128:
Baranyi, Tamás „A Surprise of a
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22, Neville Henderson told a German
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efer to the present invasion of Eas
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Ithurburu, Caroline The reactions o
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It is the purpose of one tract foun
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Dubasque, François The German-Sovi
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country in case of aggression in th
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those of Déat, Pivert, Zoretti (a
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Conclusion In the 1930s, pacifism e
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Delmouly, Laura The German-Soviet p
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education. As a matter of fact, the
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Richaud, Romain Politics’ reactio
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is nothing surprising. Then he took
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writer affirmed that radicals „ha
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World War II on the territory of Po
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Piekarski, Michał Lviv at the Begi
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said that Germans are a common enem
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division because of the general att
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ased on oppressing non-Polish natio
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Ligeti, Dávid The German-Polish Wa
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aggressive German foreign policy. 1
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intervention, and the fruitful Germ
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Grether, Sandra Pogroms in Eastern
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The attack on Poland World War II s
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The Soviets were - officially - not
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anks of society was considered an i
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started when the Germans entered a
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atrocities were not the reason but
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On the other hand one has to be awa