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The McMahon–Hussein letter of 24 October 1915. George Antonius—who had been the first to publish the correspondence in full—described this letter as "by far the most important in the whole correspondence, and may perhaps be regarded as the most important international document in the history of the Arab national movement... is still invoked as the main piece of evidence on which the ...
In the spring of 1915, the letter was answered in kind by 155 Germanic feminists including Augspurg and Heymann who had sent the earlier letter from Germany. Margarethe Lenore Selenka , Minna Cauer , and Helene Stöcker were among the German signers; Rosa Mayreder , Marianne Fickert, Ernestine Federn, and Ernestine von Fürth were in the group ...
Sir Edward Hamilton Westrow Hulse, 7th Baronet (31 August 1889 – 12 March 1915) was an officer in the British Army during the First World War. He had his letters published posthumously detailing his account of the fighting on the Western Front , describing events such as the Christmas Truce .
Captain Hulse's letter narrated by David Jones. Private Ronald Mackinnon letter from the truce of 1916. Newspaper articles and clippings about the Christmas Truce at Newspapers.com; The evolution of trust (An interactive visualisation of the Christmas truce as well as the evolution of trust) Alexandre Lafon: Christmas Truce, in: 1914-1918-online.
The "Lansdowne letter" called for Britain to negotiate a peace with Germany during the First World War. It was published by a London newspaper and written by Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice, 5th Marquess of Lansdowne, a former foreign secretary and war minister. Lansdowne came under withering criticism, with few supporters, and the government rejected ...
The declaration was contained in a letter dated 2 November 1917 from the United Kingdom's Foreign Secretary Arthur Balfour to Lord Rothschild, a leader of the British Jewish community, for transmission to the Zionist Federation of Great Britain and Ireland. The text of the declaration was published in the press on 9 November 1917.
Meeting first in 1909–1910, by 1912 she was Asquith's constant correspondent and companion. Between that point and 1915, he wrote her some 560 letters, at a rate of up to four a day. [95] Although it remains uncertain whether or not they were lovers, [96] she became of central importance to him. [97]
"To my people" was a typical headline of war manifestoes; it was used by Prussia upon its entry into the Sixth Coalition against Napoleon in 1813, in the Austrian declaration of war on Prussia in 1866 and in the announcement of the Italian entry into World War I (against Austria-Hungary) in 1915.