Western Civilization - History Of European Society

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

554Chapter 28


after the abdication of Kaiser Wilhelm II, could only
hope that the treaty would be based on the idealistic
Fourteen Points stated in early 1918, in a speech by
U.S. president Woodrow Wilson (who had endorsed
“peace without victory” as late as 1916). Although
dozens of states sent diplomats to Paris, the basic ele-
ments of the treaties were negotiated among represen-
tatives of the “Big Four” wartime allies—chiefly by
Wilson, Premier Georges Clemenceau of France, and


Prime Minister David Lloyd George of Britain, and
sometimes including Premier Vittorio Orlando of Italy.
This was similar to the situation at Vienna in 1815
(where France had initially been excluded from negoti-
ations among the four victorious great powers), with an
important exception: One of the great powers that had
fought long for the allied cause, Russia, was an ex-
cluded pariah state in 1919, governed by Communist
revolutionaries who had negotiated a separate peace.

North

Sea

Black
Sea

Me

dit

erra

nean

Sea

Bal

ti

c

S

e

a

Po R.

Ebro
R.

Seine R. Danube

R.

Dniester
R.

Dniep
er R.

Ad
riat
icS
ea

BESSARABIA
S. TYROL

ALSACE-
LORRAINE

EUPEN-
MALMEDY

N. SCHLESWIG EAST MEMEL
PRUSSIA
CORRIDOR

UPPER
SILESIA

GALICIA

TRANSYLVANIA

SAAR

GREAT
BRITAIN

NORWAY

SWEDEN

FINLAND

ESTONIA

LATVIA
LITHUANIA

POLAND

CZECHOSLOVAKIA

SPAIN

FRANCE

GERMANY
BELGIUM

NETH.

SWITZ.

ITALY

GREECE

ALBANIA

TURKEY

ROMANIA

BULGARIA

YUGOSLAVIA

AUSTRIA
HUNGARY

SOVIET
UNION

LUX.

DENMARK

London

Madrid

Paris

Amsterdam

Oslo Stockholm

Berlin

Danzig

Vienna
Budapest

Bucharest

Rome

Trieste
Fiume

Sofia

Leningrad

Prague

Warsaw

Athens

Copenhagen

Bern

Istanbul

ISTRIA Belgrade

Corsica

Sardinia

Balearic

Isla

nds

Sicily

Crete
By Russia
By Germany

By Bulgaria
By Austria–Hungary

Lost immediately after World War I

0 200 400 Miles

0 200 400 600 Kilometers

MAP 28.1
Europe in 1919
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