The evaluation of each of the two world wars and each country is important both politically and economically. Therefore, this book is very important for academics and researchers who want to understand the events occurred during the two world wars from a less prejudiced point of view. However, although this book contains many books and detailed information, this book is best appreciated as an introduction to the history of Eastern Europe and Central Europe during the two world wars. This book consists of 10 chapters including Polish, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Yugoslavia, Romania, Bulgaria, Albania.
Eastern, Southern Europe (Civil War), Eastern, Southern Hemisphere, East Coast, South Pacific, South Pacific, South Pacific, Central Europe, the Arctic Circle, Central Europe (Political Zone of World War I) Eastern Europe Tropical Political Zone West Coast Far East and Western Europe Northwestern Europe (Political Zone) Bay, Persian Gulf Region Western North World, North East Southeast Asia (Civil War Background) North Africa, North Africa
With the emergence of the expansion process, the nature of Europe and Central Europe and Eastern Europe is gaining attention. Different from Western Europe and Eastern Europe since the Charlemagne era, the roots of the dichotomy can be seen long before the Cold War. Until 1918 Eastern Europe was regarded as a Russian empire including Slavic, Hungarian and Austrian. After World War I, as Oak pointed out, the Eastern label of geography and geography ideology is increasingly applied throughout the nationwide system of the region, with a remarkable isolation effect. Eastern Europe with a primitive and quarrel appeared from the Baltic Sea to the Balkan Peninsula. (Okey 1992: 120-1) This external boundary reflects the cultural boundary between civilization and barbarism. Due to World War II, the boundary between Germany and Slavic, and between Western Europe and Eastern Europe was greatly reduced. As Bugge points out
It is often emphasized that the two world wars began in the first war in Central Europe and Eastern Europe, especially Serbia. Of course, this is true in terms of the formal and direct origin of the conflict, but if you want to imagine the entire background of the war and explain the real problem, you need two important qualifications. First, even in 1914, the basic anxiety of Central and Eastern Europe was not limited to Serbia and Serbs, nor was it limited to the Balkans liberated from Turkish rule. The Serbian problem or the Yugoslavia problem is not only part of the Balkans issue but also part of the general national problem of the Danube Region being dominated by the Habsburg Monarchy.