GOMBÁR, Eduard. The Fall of the Ottoman Empire. In Bárta, M., Kovář, M. (eds.). Civilisations: Collapse and Regeneration. Addressing the Nature of Change and Transformation in History. Praha: Academia, 2019, p. 487–508. ISBN 978-80-200-2907-2.
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Basic information
Original name The Fall of the Ottoman Empire
Name in Czech Zánik Osmanské říše
Authors GOMBÁR, Eduard.
Edition Praha, Civilisations: Collapse and Regeneration. Addressing the Nature of Change and Transformation in History, p. 487–508, 22 pp. 2019.
Publisher Academia
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Chapter(s) of a specialized book
Field of Study 60101 History
Country of publisher Czech Republic
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
Organization unit University of Finance and Administration
ISBN 978-80-200-2907-2
Keywords (in Czech) Osmaská říše, Východní otázka, Rusko, Velká Británie, Francie
Keywords in English Ottoman Empire; Eastern Question; Russia; Great Britain; France
Tags International impact, Reviewed
Changed by Changed by: prof. PhDr. Eduard Gombár, CSc., učo 5011. Changed: 23/12/2022 14:04.
Abstract
The fall of the Ottoman Empire after the First World War led to the fact that the Islamic world, with the exception of republican Turkey, the Shah’s Iran, and stagnant Afghanistan, was controlled by the European Great Powers, namely Great Britain and France, in the form of colonies, protectorates, and the League of Nations’ mandates. This development was reminiscent of the fate of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy, after whose collapse Central Europe became an unstable area, over which the Great Powers fought.
Abstract (in Czech)
The fall of the Ottoman Empire after the First World War led to the fact that the Islamic world, with the exception of republican Turkey, the Shah’s Iran, and stagnant Afghanistan, was controlled by the European Great Powers, namely Great Britain and France, in the form of colonies, protectorates, and the League of Nations’ mandates. This development was reminiscent of the fate of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy, after whose collapse Central Europe became an unstable area, over which the Great Powers fought.
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