The greatest day in history: how the great war really ended
"As the first of many books to commemorate the ninetieth anniversary of Armistice Day 1918, this volume sets an example that will be hard to equal... Reading it is like looking into a photograph album full of vivid snaps of the world taken during a week of high tension, crisis, celebration, tra...
Gespeichert in:
Format: | Buch |
---|---|
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York [u.a.]
Public Affairs [u.a.]
2008
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Zusammenfassung: | "As the first of many books to commemorate the ninetieth anniversary of Armistice Day 1918, this volume sets an example that will be hard to equal... Reading it is like looking into a photograph album full of vivid snaps of the world taken during a week of high tension, crisis, celebration, tragedy, and illusion." --Daily Mail (UK) |
Beschreibung: | XII, 304, [16] S. Ill. |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804138012534112256 |
---|---|
adam_text | CONTENTS
List of Illustrations x
Acknowledgements
xii
Chapter One: Monday,
4
November
1918
ι
The New Zealanders capture
Le
Quesnoy; Wilfred Owen killed;
a Californian in the RAF; Herbert Sulzbach of the German
guns; General Ludendorff s nervous breakdown; General
Gröner
summoned to Berlin; mutiny at Kiel; the Kaiser strafed
in Belgium; Lloyd George in Paris; General Pershing opposes
the Armistice; Private Graham advances to the attack.
Chapter Two: Tuesday,
5
November
1918 23
General Rawlinson takes
10,000
prisoners; Private
Hulme
sees the women s fear; Harry Truman picks a poppy; Douglas
MacArthur shot through the sleeve; Captain
de
Gaulle in
prison camp; General
Gröner
champions the monarchy;
Prince
Heinrich
flees for his life; Hindenburg considers the
Kaiser s death; Sulzbach shells a French village; the Scots
Guards capture Bermeries; Captain Glubb sees a dead German;
President Wilson celebrates the news from Europe.
Chapter Three: Wednesday,
6
November
1918 40
Prince Max discusses an Armistice; mutiny at
Wilhelmshaven;
Bolshevists behind the German lines; the French watch the
Germans go; starving women cut up a mule; Flora
Sandes
THE GREATEST DAY IN HISTORY
fights for Serbia; General
von Lettow-Vorbeck
invades
Rhodesia; President Wilson loses the election; Matthias
Erzberger accepts a poisoned chalice; the Armistice
commission sets out from Berlin.
Chapter Four: Thursday,
7
November
1918 57
Hindenburg telegraphs
Foch;
the Armistice commission
arrives at Spa; Brigadier MacArthur captured as a spy;
Teilhard
de Chardin
marches towards Alsace; Captain Hitchcock
approaches the Scheldt;
Wilhelmshaven
mutineers take up
arms;
Konrad
Adenauer wants to shoot the Bolshevists; the
king of Bavaria flees; Roy Howard gets a scoop; the United
States celebrates prematurely; Darryl Zanuck fails to see action;
J. B. Priestley captures a German teenager; Fen Noakes doubts
the news; the Armistice commission crosses the French lines.
Chapter Five: Friday,
8
November
1918 80
The Germans taken to
Compiègne;
Armistice terms spelled
out; German troops fear castration; two Leinsters killed in
friendly fire; Lord
Curzon
at Lille; Cecil Cox gives his enemy
a biscuit;
Ludwig
Wittgenstein mourns his British friend;
Thomas Mann fears for Munich; an Englishman in
Bayreuth;
Prince Max wants the Kaiser out; the Kaiser resists; Prince
Max is adamant; Princess
Blücher in
Berlin; Richard Strauss
at the Opera House; Captain
von Helldorf
unable to cross the
lines; General
Gröner
at Spa.
Chapter
6:
Saturday,
9
November
1918 105
Hindenburg comes round; the Kaiser learns some home
truths; revolution in Berlin; Admiral Wemyss visits the ruins
of Soissons;
HMS
Britannia torpedoed off Cape Trafalgar;
a Canadian Iroquois wins the Military Cross; an American
officer reassures a chambermaid; the Kaiser proposes a partial
abdication; Prince Max forestalls him; the Kaiser plans a
last stand; Princess
Blücher
watches the revolution;
Philipp
Scheidemann
declares a republic;
Karl Liebknecht
follows
suit; the Kaiser contemplates suicide; Lloyd George exults;
vi
Contents
Princess
Blücher
tries to sleep; Ludendorff acquires a false
beard;
Marlene
Dietrich loathes the mob; Kurt Weill enjoys the
excitement; General
Gröner
studies the Armistice terms; the
Kaiser agrees to abdicate; Vladimir Lenin gloats.
Chapter
7:
Sunday,
10
November
1918 133
Princess
Blücher
watches the fighting; the Kaiser steals away;
the Armistice commission discovers its whereabouts; the
Leinsters near Fontenoy; the Prince of Wales near Mons;
Howard Vincent O Brien passes
Zeebrugge;
Harry Truman
hates the Hun; George Coles hears the guns in prison camp;
the Germans strip the fat from human bodies; Princess
Blücher
flees;
Wilhelmshaven
celebrates the republic; Hindenburg
addresses the army; Corporal Hitler weeps; Maude Onions
plays the organ;
Foch
demands an answer; the Chancellor
responds; the Kaiser seeks asylum; President Wilson decodes a
cable; the Germans want to talk.
Chapter
8:
Monday,
11
November
1918,
the early hours
162
The Armistice signed; the fighting continues; the Canadians take
Mons; atrocity near Valenciennes; German troops raped; the RAF
stands down; Captain Glubb misses the war already; Herbert Sulzbach
hates to surrender; the Kaiser booed in Holland; Harry Truman fires
off his ammunition; George Coles in prison camp; an Australian
woman in Leipzig; Erich Maria Remarque poses as an officer;
Henry Asquith attends a funeral; President Wilson hears the news;
Americans killed in the advance; the generals refuse to call it off; the
British push on from Mons; Ernst Kielmayer longs for home;
Georg
Bucher
in a gas attack; fighting continues right up to the wire.
Chapter
9:
Monday,
11
November
1918,11
a.m.
191
A Boer hears the news; the Grenadiers still have a score to
settle; peace in Malplaquet; euphoria nearby; the Leinsters
don t even cheer;
Lessines
stormed at two minutes to eleven;
the last men to die; American troops still haven t heard; Eddie
Rickenbacker watches from the air;
Georg Bucher
distrusts
the Americans; Octave Delaluque blows his bugle; a machine
vii
THE GREATEST DAY IN HISTORY
gunner bows to the South Africans; General Pershing drinks
from a German helmet; Paris goes wild;
HMS
Amazon
still doesn t know; Dickie Dixon terrifies his mother; the
crowd mob Buckingham Palace; Winston Churchill watches
the excitement;
Vera Brittain
too sad to care; Olive Wells
excused her homework; Virginia
Woolf
emotional;
Bertrand
Russell watches in wonder; Agatha Christie refuses to dance;
an Austrian internee fears another war; the bells ring in
Southwold; no tea in Liverpool; the Yanks march through
Southampton; Etonians celebrate in Windsor; pacifists
attacked in Cambridge; Napoleon Ill s widow exults; global
party.
Chapter
10:
Monday,
11
November
1918,
afternoon
225
Stunned silence on the Western Front; Douglas Haig at
Cambrai;
the Germans loot Brussels; starvation in Berlin;
Clemenceau
in Paris; Dwight Eisenhower misses the action; a
British officer in America; a lynch mob in Kansas; President
Wilson addresses Congress; Chaim Weizmann at No.
10;
King George goes for a drive; the Owens get a telegram; a
German spy in Liverpool; Eamon
de Valera
in Lincoln Gaol;
Lord French in Dublin; Allied rape in Boulogne; the Austrian
Emperor bows out; Lady Susan Townley assaults the Kaiser.
Chapter
11:
Monday,
11
November
1918,
evening
256
A British spy in Holland; a prisoner of war meets the Kaiser;
British prisoners feed German children; a German girl fancies
Private Bickerton; British nurses in Serbia; celebrations in
Egypt; rejoicing in Palestine; mess games in India;
Mahatma
Gandhi almost volunteers; excitement in Australia; angry
Boers in Cape Town; Manhattan lightens up; Martin
Niemöller
raises his periscope; Ernest Hemingway counts his wounds;
unearthly quiet in Belgium; pandemonium in France; bagpipes
in Rouen;
Pennsylvanián
Quakers in Troyes; influenza in
Lille; bereaved parents in Wimereux;
André Maurois
receives
a gift; Maurice Chevalier sings in Paris; the Kaiser sits down
to dinner; the Grand Fleet splices the mainbrace; Winston
vui
Contents
Churchill
dines at No.
io;
King George takes another bow;
bitterness at the
Ritz;
Siegfried Sassoon picks a quarrel;
Maynard Keynes fears the economic consequences;
Noël
Coward has a thrilling evening; bombed children fear the
fireworks; President Wilson has a ball; Harry Truman can t
sleep; Adolf Hitler decides to enter politics.
Bibliography
289
Index
295
ix
|
adam_txt |
CONTENTS
List of Illustrations x
Acknowledgements
xii
Chapter One: Monday,
4
November
1918
ι
The New Zealanders capture
Le
Quesnoy; Wilfred Owen killed;
a Californian in the RAF; Herbert Sulzbach of the German
guns; General Ludendorff's nervous breakdown; General
Gröner
summoned to Berlin; mutiny at Kiel; the Kaiser strafed
in Belgium; Lloyd George in Paris; General Pershing opposes
the Armistice; Private Graham advances to the attack.
Chapter Two: Tuesday,
5
November
1918 23
General Rawlinson takes
10,000
prisoners; Private
Hulme
sees the women's fear; Harry Truman picks a poppy; Douglas
MacArthur shot through the sleeve; Captain
de
Gaulle in
prison camp; General
Gröner
champions the monarchy;
Prince
Heinrich
flees for his life; Hindenburg considers the
Kaiser's death; Sulzbach shells a French village; the Scots
Guards capture Bermeries; Captain Glubb sees a dead German;
President Wilson celebrates the news from Europe.
Chapter Three: Wednesday,
6
November
1918 40
Prince Max discusses an Armistice; mutiny at
Wilhelmshaven;
Bolshevists behind the German lines; the French watch the
Germans go; starving women cut up a mule; Flora
Sandes
THE GREATEST DAY IN HISTORY
fights for Serbia; General
von Lettow-Vorbeck
invades
Rhodesia; President Wilson loses the election; Matthias
Erzberger accepts a poisoned chalice; the Armistice
commission sets out from Berlin.
Chapter Four: Thursday,
7
November
1918 57
Hindenburg telegraphs
Foch;
the Armistice commission
arrives at Spa; Brigadier MacArthur captured as a spy;
Teilhard
de Chardin
marches towards Alsace; Captain Hitchcock
approaches the Scheldt;
Wilhelmshaven
mutineers take up
arms;
Konrad
Adenauer wants to shoot the Bolshevists; the
king of Bavaria flees; Roy Howard gets a scoop; the United
States celebrates prematurely; Darryl Zanuck fails to see action;
J. B. Priestley captures a German teenager; Fen Noakes doubts
the news; the Armistice commission crosses the French lines.
Chapter Five: Friday,
8
November
1918 80
The Germans taken to
Compiègne;
Armistice terms spelled
out; German troops fear castration; two Leinsters killed in
friendly fire; Lord
Curzon
at Lille; Cecil Cox gives his enemy
a biscuit;
Ludwig
Wittgenstein mourns his British friend;
Thomas Mann fears for Munich; an Englishman in
Bayreuth;
Prince Max wants the Kaiser out; the Kaiser resists; Prince
Max is adamant; Princess
Blücher in
Berlin; Richard Strauss
at the Opera House; Captain
von Helldorf
unable to cross the
lines; General
Gröner
at Spa.
Chapter
6:
Saturday,
9
November
1918 105
Hindenburg comes round; the Kaiser learns some home
truths; revolution in Berlin; Admiral Wemyss visits the ruins
of Soissons;
HMS
Britannia torpedoed off Cape Trafalgar;
a Canadian Iroquois wins the Military Cross; an American
officer reassures a chambermaid; the Kaiser proposes a partial
abdication; Prince Max forestalls him; the Kaiser plans a
last stand; Princess
Blücher
watches the revolution;
Philipp
Scheidemann
declares a republic;
Karl Liebknecht
follows
suit; the Kaiser contemplates suicide; Lloyd George exults;
vi
Contents
Princess
Blücher
tries to sleep; Ludendorff acquires a false
beard;
Marlene
Dietrich loathes the mob; Kurt Weill enjoys the
excitement; General
Gröner
studies the Armistice terms; the
Kaiser agrees to abdicate; Vladimir Lenin gloats.
Chapter
7:
Sunday,
10
November
1918 133
Princess
Blücher
watches the fighting; the Kaiser steals away;
the Armistice commission discovers its whereabouts; the
Leinsters near Fontenoy; the Prince of Wales near Mons;
Howard Vincent O'Brien passes
Zeebrugge;
Harry Truman
hates the Hun; George Coles hears the guns in prison camp;
the Germans strip the fat from human bodies; Princess
Blücher
flees;
Wilhelmshaven
celebrates the republic; Hindenburg
addresses the army; Corporal Hitler weeps; Maude Onions
plays the organ;
Foch
demands an answer; the Chancellor
responds; the Kaiser seeks asylum; President Wilson decodes a
cable; the Germans want to talk.
Chapter
8:
Monday,
11
November
1918,
the early hours
162
The Armistice signed; the fighting continues; the Canadians take
Mons; atrocity near Valenciennes; German troops raped; the RAF
stands down; Captain Glubb misses the war already; Herbert Sulzbach
hates to surrender; the Kaiser booed in Holland; Harry Truman fires
off his ammunition; George Coles in prison camp; an Australian
woman in Leipzig; Erich Maria Remarque poses as an officer;
Henry Asquith attends a funeral; President Wilson hears the news;
Americans killed in the advance; the generals refuse to call it off; the
British push on from Mons; Ernst Kielmayer longs for home;
Georg
Bucher
in a gas attack; fighting continues right up to the wire.
Chapter
9:
Monday,
11
November
1918,11
a.m.
191
A Boer hears the news; the Grenadiers still have a score to
settle; peace in Malplaquet; euphoria nearby; the Leinsters
don't even cheer;
Lessines
stormed at two minutes to eleven;
the last men to die; American troops still haven't heard; Eddie
Rickenbacker watches from the air;
Georg Bucher
distrusts
the Americans; Octave Delaluque blows his bugle; a machine
vii
THE GREATEST DAY IN HISTORY
gunner bows to the South Africans; General Pershing drinks
from a German helmet; Paris goes wild;
HMS
Amazon
still doesn't know; Dickie Dixon terrifies his mother; the
crowd mob Buckingham Palace; Winston Churchill watches
the excitement;
Vera Brittain
too sad to care; Olive Wells
excused her homework; Virginia
Woolf
emotional;
Bertrand
Russell watches in wonder; Agatha Christie refuses to dance;
an Austrian internee fears another war; the bells ring in
Southwold; no tea in Liverpool; the Yanks march through
Southampton; Etonians celebrate in Windsor; pacifists
attacked in Cambridge; Napoleon Ill's widow exults; global
party.
Chapter
10:
Monday,
11
November
1918,
afternoon
225
Stunned silence on the Western Front; Douglas Haig at
Cambrai;
the Germans loot Brussels; starvation in Berlin;
Clemenceau
in Paris; Dwight Eisenhower misses the action; a
British officer in America; a lynch mob in Kansas; President
Wilson addresses Congress; Chaim Weizmann at No.
10;
King George goes for a drive; the Owens get a telegram; a
German spy in Liverpool; Eamon
de Valera
in Lincoln Gaol;
Lord French in Dublin; Allied rape in Boulogne; the Austrian
Emperor bows out; Lady Susan Townley assaults the Kaiser.
Chapter
11:
Monday,
11
November
1918,
evening
256
A British spy in Holland; a prisoner of war meets the Kaiser;
British prisoners feed German children; a German girl fancies
Private Bickerton; British nurses in Serbia; celebrations in
Egypt; rejoicing in Palestine; mess games in India;
Mahatma
Gandhi almost volunteers; excitement in Australia; angry
Boers in Cape Town; Manhattan lightens up; Martin
Niemöller
raises his periscope; Ernest Hemingway counts his wounds;
unearthly quiet in Belgium; pandemonium in France; bagpipes
in Rouen;
Pennsylvanián
Quakers in Troyes; influenza in
Lille; bereaved parents in Wimereux;
André Maurois
receives
a gift; Maurice Chevalier sings in Paris; the Kaiser sits down
to dinner; the Grand Fleet splices the mainbrace; Winston
vui
Contents
Churchill
dines at No.
io;
King George takes another bow;
bitterness at the
Ritz;
Siegfried Sassoon picks a quarrel;
Maynard Keynes fears the economic consequences;
Noël
Coward has a thrilling evening; bombed children fear the
fireworks; President Wilson has a ball; Harry Truman can't
sleep; Adolf Hitler decides to enter politics.
Bibliography
289
Index
295
ix |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV035066222 |
callnumber-first | D - World History |
callnumber-label | D641 |
callnumber-raw | D641 |
callnumber-search | D641 |
callnumber-sort | D 3641 |
callnumber-subject | D - General History |
classification_rvk | NP 4410 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)191926322 (DE-599)BVBBV035066222 |
dewey-full | 940.3 |
dewey-hundreds | 900 - History & geography |
dewey-ones | 940 - History of Europe |
dewey-raw | 940.3 |
dewey-search | 940.3 |
dewey-sort | 3940.3 |
dewey-tens | 940 - History of Europe |
discipline | Geschichte |
discipline_str_mv | Geschichte |
era | Geschichte 1918 gnd |
era_facet | Geschichte 1918 |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV035066222 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T22:02:21Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:21:25Z |
institution | BVB |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016734671 |
oclc_num | 191926322 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 |
owner_facet | DE-12 |
physical | XII, 304, [16] S. Ill. |
psigel | BSBWK1 |
publishDate | 2008 |
publishDateSearch | 2008 |
publishDateSort | 2008 |
publisher | Public Affairs [u.a.] |
record_format | marc |
spelling | The greatest day in history how the great war really ended New York [u.a.] Public Affairs [u.a.] 2008 XII, 304, [16] S. Ill. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier "As the first of many books to commemorate the ninetieth anniversary of Armistice Day 1918, this volume sets an example that will be hard to equal... Reading it is like looking into a photograph album full of vivid snaps of the world taken during a week of high tension, crisis, celebration, tragedy, and illusion." --Daily Mail (UK) Geschichte 1918 gnd rswk-swf Weltkrieg (1914-1918) Armistice Day World War, 1914-1918 Armistices Kriegsende (DE-588)4114316-4 gnd rswk-swf Erster Weltkrieg (DE-588)4079163-4 gnd rswk-swf Erster Weltkrieg (DE-588)4079163-4 s Kriegsende (DE-588)4114316-4 s Geschichte 1918 z DE-604 Best, Nicholas Sonstige oth Digitalisierung BSBMuenchen application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016734671&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | The greatest day in history how the great war really ended Weltkrieg (1914-1918) Armistice Day World War, 1914-1918 Armistices Kriegsende (DE-588)4114316-4 gnd Erster Weltkrieg (DE-588)4079163-4 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4114316-4 (DE-588)4079163-4 |
title | The greatest day in history how the great war really ended |
title_auth | The greatest day in history how the great war really ended |
title_exact_search | The greatest day in history how the great war really ended |
title_exact_search_txtP | The greatest day in history how the great war really ended |
title_full | The greatest day in history how the great war really ended |
title_fullStr | The greatest day in history how the great war really ended |
title_full_unstemmed | The greatest day in history how the great war really ended |
title_short | The greatest day in history |
title_sort | the greatest day in history how the great war really ended |
title_sub | how the great war really ended |
topic | Weltkrieg (1914-1918) Armistice Day World War, 1914-1918 Armistices Kriegsende (DE-588)4114316-4 gnd Erster Weltkrieg (DE-588)4079163-4 gnd |
topic_facet | Weltkrieg (1914-1918) Armistice Day World War, 1914-1918 Armistices Kriegsende Erster Weltkrieg |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016734671&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT bestnicholas thegreatestdayinhistoryhowthegreatwarreallyended |