Why was World War I called The Great War?

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yeah i'm starting to lose coherence - i meant to type world war i, or "the great war", but i mixed up my roman numerals. :) my point is there's this certain school of thought that holds that the holocaust is a unique, or at least an unprecedented, event in human history, and that hitler was a uniquely evil person, and i'm not sure i'm entirely convinced of that.

ziggy the ginhead (rushomancy), Thursday, 15 March 2018 00:56 (eight years ago)

there was definitely nothing unique about Hitler's Antisemitism, but his level of industrial murder was truly unique and still hasn't been "bettered" over such a relatively short period of time.

calzino, Thursday, 15 March 2018 01:02 (eight years ago)

Otm. The more I read about other atrocities, the more the gas chambers seem unique. There's been other camps, plenty of other genocides, but the gas chambers are something else.

Frederik B, Thursday, 15 March 2018 01:08 (eight years ago)

DV, formerly of this parish, has been blogging “100 years ago today in the Great War”, starting with the assassination (and going on until the treaty, though it’ll probably be a little quiet for the last bit).

https://ww1live.wordpress.com/

Andrew Farrell, Thursday, 15 March 2018 01:17 (eight years ago)

Traditionally, if you want to kill millions, you engineer a famine. Your victims will even voluntarily bury the dead for you. This is still the primary tool for killing people on that scale.

Hitler wanted to hand-pick his victims out of a much larger population, so a continent-wide famine was not the appropriate tool. Industrialized and particularized murder on the scale of multiple millions was indeed a new thing under the sun.

A is for (Aimless), Thursday, 15 March 2018 01:18 (eight years ago)

he had a starvation plan for Putin's dad, makes u think!

calzino, Thursday, 15 March 2018 01:29 (eight years ago)

The Dan Carlin Hardcore History “Blueprint for Armageddon” episodes are still available if you want 27 hours of WWI podcasting

President Keyes, Thursday, 15 March 2018 01:53 (eight years ago)

> (possibly inaccurate) common opinion that WWI-era Germany was much much more honorable

Rape of Belgium

6,000 Belgians were killed, and 17,700 died during expulsion, deportation, imprisonment, or a death sentence by court. 25,000 homes and other buildings in 837 communities were destroyed in 1914 alone, and 1.5 million Belgians (20% of the entire population) fled

Worth noting that Max Hasting's (Catastrophe 1914) earliest work on WWII came 56 years ago, in the 26 episode BBC series The Great War. It's all on YouTube, and benefits from having many interviews with participants.

Screaming into the void has never been easier (Sanpaku), Thursday, 15 March 2018 03:06 (eight years ago)

WWII WWI. Funny how the fingers just automatically put the second 'I' on as swiftly as they'd type a 'the'...

Screaming into the void has never been easier (Sanpaku), Thursday, 15 March 2018 03:09 (eight years ago)

anyone itt seen Westfront 1918?

flappy bird, Thursday, 15 March 2018 16:53 (eight years ago)

mookieproof I picked up Keegan's The Face of Battle today, looking forward to checking it out. (This version, maybe a first edition?)

http://mcsmith.blogs.com/.a/6a00d83451ccc469e20133ee6ae367970b-pi

The Guns of August remains completely fascinating, I'm especially intrigued by the BEF's seeming attempt at avoiding battle entirely due to needing rest for "ten days"(!) after initial battles, all at the insistence of their ironically named commander John French (who wanted to get the British back home ASAP), while the armies of France on no rest tried to figure out a way to slow down the German armies and save Paris. The fortunes of so many generals rise and fall within days.

omar little, Saturday, 24 March 2018 23:33 (eight years ago)

That book is one of my very favorite among several thousand. The descriptions of soldier level circumstances at Agincourt and Waterloo are just as immersive as those for the Somme.

You'll find, having read this, that other descriptions underplay the hopeless situation faced by the factory workers and miners who climbed over the ramparts on 1 July 1916.

Keegan's other historical works are competent, but IMO none are classics.

#DeleteFacebook (Sanpaku), Wednesday, 28 March 2018 04:06 (eight years ago)

four weeks pass...

"Around the fortress of Verdun, site of the worst French battle, not a living thing grew, not a bird sang. The coal mines on which the French economy depended for its power were flooded; the factories they would have supplied had been razed or carted away into Germany. Six thousand square miles of France, which before the war had produced 20 percent of its crops, 90 percent of its iron ore and 65 percent of its steel, were utterly ruined.

I find it interesting that parts of the Rouge Zone are still completely dangerous and uninhabitable a 100 years later. Still littered with toxic chemicals, arsenic, unexploded ordnance etc. Apparently the German's early chemical warfare game involving 65 million shells has left the place so toxic that the arsenic levels in the soil have actually risen by 17% recently. That is some apocalyptic shit! In comparison the Chernobyl site has recovered so much better + faster than this hellhole.

calzino, Wednesday, 25 April 2018 21:26 (eight years ago)

that is nuts

flappy bird, Thursday, 26 April 2018 04:34 (eight years ago)

it is one fucked up place that is still killing nature a century after the event.

omar, I'm a fan of Margaret McMillan's Paris 1919: Six Months That Changed the World , which paints indelible portraits of Wilson, Orlando, their subalterns, and the wounded Clemenceau.

― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 14 March 2018 23:45 (one month ago) Bookmark

just started this today, and am already massively enjoying the character studies of Clemenceau, Wilson and the Welsh windbag you didn't mention! Clemenceau with his one boiled egg for lunch military asceticism, comes across like a total arsehole, but an extremely interesting one.

calzino, Thursday, 26 April 2018 20:45 (eight years ago)

four months pass...

http://www.uticaod.com/news/20180924/100-years-ago-us-fought-its-deadliest-battle-in-france

100th anniversary of the Meuse-Argonne Offensive, which resulted in over 26k Americans killed (along w/28k Germans.)

omar little, Tuesday, 25 September 2018 03:09 (seven years ago)

Everyone should read The Guns of August.

El Tomboto, Tuesday, 25 September 2018 03:20 (seven years ago)

all time.

in terms of descriptive place-setting, Carlin's blueprint for armageddon podcast is very good. insanity made into an international imperative, and almost a death sentence for that generation.

Hunt3r, Tuesday, 25 September 2018 03:56 (seven years ago)

derp I just scrolled up and saw prev recommendation. yup.

Hunt3r, Tuesday, 25 September 2018 03:58 (seven years ago)

Margaret MacMillan picked The Guns of August as "the book that changed me" and was waxing lyrical about its novelistic qualities and colourful character sketches, sounds pretty good.

calzino, Tuesday, 25 September 2018 07:36 (seven years ago)

Guns of August is an all-time classic of narrative history and can withstand comparison with any history ever written.

A is for (Aimless), Tuesday, 25 September 2018 19:49 (seven years ago)

one month passes...

*impeccably-observed silence*

imago, Sunday, 11 November 2018 11:01 (seven years ago)

also lest we forget: fake tuomas

mark s, Sunday, 11 November 2018 11:05 (seven years ago)

haha wait yeah how is THIS the ww1 thread

imago, Sunday, 11 November 2018 11:15 (seven years ago)

anyway i'm paying respects the proper way

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WDmhP6YiN6s

imago, Sunday, 11 November 2018 11:15 (seven years ago)

xps

Guns of August is indeed an excellent narrative history. not got to the RIP Scandinavian sock-puppet fusiliers chapter yet.

calzino, Sunday, 11 November 2018 11:17 (seven years ago)

I was listening to someone quite bad on R4 making the observation that back in the 60's a common response was to tell WW1 veterans to stfu when the ones that weren't too shook to talk about it went into reminiscence mode.

calzino, Sunday, 11 November 2018 11:37 (seven years ago)

Kevin Coyne wrote a song about that once...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W1E_H9dBwws

ROCK MUSIC (Tom D.), Sunday, 11 November 2018 11:43 (seven years ago)

I’m pretty lucky that I don’t live/work somewhere where I’m likely to be challenged for not adequately celebrating the awesomeness of war and pinning a shitty piece of prison slave labour-produced tat to my clothes

As a happy consequence of this I have completely forgotten World War I

coetzee.cx (wins), Sunday, 11 November 2018 12:01 (seven years ago)

I don't know where that actually happens though, if it happens at all. I saw my first ever white poppy yesterday.

ROCK MUSIC (Tom D.), Sunday, 11 November 2018 12:02 (seven years ago)

ban either tuomas

unproven (darraghmac), Sunday, 11 November 2018 12:08 (seven years ago)

BREAKING: World leaders have missed the exact moment to commemorate the armistice that ended World War I.

— The Associated Press (@AP) November 11, 2018

mark s, Sunday, 11 November 2018 12:12 (seven years ago)

i mean come on

mark s, Sunday, 11 November 2018 12:12 (seven years ago)

at least putin can say "pre-gregorian calender mate, no one understands that bollox"

mark s, Sunday, 11 November 2018 12:14 (seven years ago)

You've got one thing to do and you can't even do that.

ROCK MUSIC (Tom D.), Sunday, 11 November 2018 12:14 (seven years ago)

you had 11 11/11 job

unproven (darraghmac), Sunday, 11 November 2018 12:17 (seven years ago)

lol

imago, Sunday, 11 November 2018 12:22 (seven years ago)

Putin can piss off those weirdo Romanov cultists as much as he likes. though I'm not sure they gaf either tbh!

calzino, Sunday, 11 November 2018 12:22 (seven years ago)

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DruEouKXgAIIfpj.jpg

Otto Dix otm

calzino, Sunday, 11 November 2018 12:59 (seven years ago)

otm indeed.

pomenitul, Sunday, 11 November 2018 12:59 (seven years ago)

Wonder if that etching was an influence on the editors who created the opening credits of the BBCs 1964 The Great War series.
I watched it all during a week of deep depression in 2014, it didn't help.

They Bunged Him in My Growler (Sanpaku), Sunday, 11 November 2018 14:32 (seven years ago)

So why is Theresa May in London today?

pomenitul, Sunday, 11 November 2018 15:46 (seven years ago)

brexit

mark s, Sunday, 11 November 2018 15:49 (seven years ago)

World War I, hence not all leaders in attendance are European. But I'm probably putting too much thought into this.

pomenitul, Sunday, 11 November 2018 15:53 (seven years ago)

i thought this was one correct lesson to the very high % of usa that don't understand it this way

1. It can't be underlined enough how important the First World War is to France's national self-conception. Trump's failure to attend the memorial is a huge diplomatic insult.

— Jeet Heer (@HeerJeet) November 10, 2018

Hunt3r, Sunday, 11 November 2018 15:58 (seven years ago)

well, i didn't mean the "insult" part, i meant the scale of ww1 relative to ww2 in popular perceptions

Hunt3r, Sunday, 11 November 2018 15:59 (seven years ago)

I was somewhat astonished to read casualty numbers in WWI vs those in WWII: overall the total number killed in the latter dwarfs the former but France was fully engaged in battle for all of WWI vs their swift surrender in WWII. Once people also understand what France went through the first time it becomes easier to understand why there was not as much drive to fight Germany to the death again (a nation that remained in the throes of a violent nationalistic sickness that one defeat wasn’t enough to cast away.)

omar little, Sunday, 11 November 2018 16:09 (seven years ago)

I doubt trump knows a single thing about that war

omar little, Sunday, 11 November 2018 16:10 (seven years ago)

i remember my dad at a memorial day parade in the 70s trying to explain to 5 or 6 y/o me why the (very few) wwi veterans were so important and notable because of the immensity of the great war in world history.

Hunt3r, Sunday, 11 November 2018 16:15 (seven years ago)

His wife is Slovenian yet he still blamed the Baltic states for the crimes they committed in Yugoslavia. 'Cause it sounds just like the Balkans, duh!

xp

pomenitul, Sunday, 11 November 2018 16:17 (seven years ago)


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