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VERSAILLES CONFERENCE TIMELINE December 14, 1918: Wilson arrives in Paris but soon leaves to tour England and Italy January 10-20, 1919: Foch & Clemenceau propose independent Rhenish buffer state January 25: Conference agrees unanimously to establish a League of Nations January 30: Wilson promises Orlando to accept Italian annexation of Trentino & Trieste February 14-March 4: Wilson returns to USA but cannot persuade Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge to support Covenant March 24: Big Four begin talks over German borders April 28: Big Four adopt Rhineland compromise June 28: Signing of the Treaty of Versailles
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Woodrow Wilson despised his predecessor, William Howard Taft, as a champion of “dollar diplomacy.” But Taft DID support international courts of arbitration, and in 1916, 70% of U.S. voters supported a “League of Nations.” Teddy Roosevelt was almost the only leader to champion unrestricted national sovereignty.
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France and Britain had promised Italy the Trentino, with 230,000 German-speakers, the mostly Italian port of Trieste, and Istria & Dalmatia, with 1.3 million South Slavs. Wilson and Orlando quarreled over Fiume….
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Austrian ethnographic map from 1910 Ochre= Italians Lt. green= Croats Dk. green, Slovenes See Nicolson, pp. 159-65
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“Can It Survive?” (Literary Digest, July 1919) On March 3, 1919, Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge had published an open letter rejecting any treaty that included the Covenant
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The Big Four argued about German borders from March 24 to April 28
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The impact of the Treaty of Versailles on Germany (France occupied the Rhineland until 1930, the Saarland until 1935)
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Sir William Orpen, “The Signing of Peace in the Hall of Mirrors, Versailles, 28 June 1919”
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Delegation of French wounded at the signing ceremony for the Treaty of Versailles, 28 June 1919
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KEY DECISIONS AT VERSAILLES IN 1919 National self-determination for Poles, “Czechoslovaks”, “Yugoslavs”, Romanians, Latvians, Lithuanians, & Estonians Formation of a “League of Nations” dedicated to “collective security” (but key votes must be unanimous) Italy gains the south Tirol but must renounce Dalmatia; the status of Fiume remains disputed Great Britain gains control of Germany’s African colonies, Palestine, Jordan, and Iraq as “League of Nations Mandates”; France gains Syria, Lebanon, and Cameroon Germany must pay war reparations equal to the entire cost of the war and reduce its army to 100,000 men
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European language groups, 1910 Postwar borders, 1921
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“Red Parliament! Vote Social Democratic” (Budapest, 1919) Bela Kun led the Soviet Republic of Hungary from March to August 1919
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Hungarian nationalist poster from 1919: The red worker is horrified because his uprising has smashed Hungary to pieces
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Admiral Miklos Horthy, “Regent” of Hungary, 1919-1944
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“Be Vigilant!” (1920): The threats include capitalist minions in Finnland and the Baltic Republics and Ukrainian nationalists
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Polish peasants with their scythes volunteer to fight in the Russo-Polish War, 1920
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The front line in the Russo-Polish War in June 1920, at the height of Polish success (final border in black)
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Field Marshal Jozef Pilsudski, Polish chief of state, 1918-1922; dictator, 1926-1935
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Gabriele d’Annunzio, the Italian poet and war hero who led volunteers into Fiume in September 1919, the first “duce”
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Fascist Black Shirts March on Rome, October 1922
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Benito Mussolini (1883-1945): ex-Marxist, combat veteran, founder of the Fascist Party, Prime Minister of Italy (1922-1943), il duce. He advocated rule by the “aristocracy of the trenches.”
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Greek Prime Minister Venizelos and “Megali Hellas” (1920)
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General Mustapha Kemal at Gallipoli in 1915, later known as “Kemal Ataturk”
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Turkish cavalry moves toward the front in the Greco-Turkish War of 1919-1922--- 1.5 million Greeks fled Asia Minor, & 500,000 Muslims fled Greece
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Czechoslovakia was the only successful new democracy (the arrival of Thomas Masaryk in Prague, December 21, 1918)
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Already by 1922, it was clear that only the green countries supported the Versailles settlement
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