Paris 1919: Six Months

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Margaret Macmillan historian and professor at Oxford University and great-granddaughter of David Lloyd Georges, in her historical non-fiction novel book titled Paris 1919: Six months that changed the world, she narrates the six months after world war one, when President Woodrow Wilson, British Prime Minister David Lloyd Georges, and French Prime minister George Clemenceau when they all met in Paris and tried to create lasting peace between them.
At the beginning of the book Macmillan expresses, the importance of the Paris peace conference because of its influenced decision that was made there and sometimes things that were looked over during the conference still govern how countries behave towards each other. The conference was impactful because …show more content…

For instance, Germany was no longer stable with revolutions sprouting up all over, along with Russia was also going through its own revelation, so the Paris conference of 1919 had to deal with the demand to quell this rebellion that were often conflicting with each other and try not to accidentally start another war in the process. As a result, many smaller wars broke out, at this point, Macmillan quotes Winston Churchill from 1919 when he said, "When the war of giants is over the wars of the pygmies will begin. The conference also had to deal settling the war, like drawing boundaries and dealing with the economics of the war, like taxing Germany for starting the war, but they also had to deal with many problems that came in eaday because many of the world's leaders were all gathered in one place. The parties involved were also under a lot of pressure to get Europe under control, because of all the revolution that were popping up all over the world, in the U.S there were strikes, in Germany many people were starving after the war and were rebelling against the government, and in Russia the Bolsheviks had overthrown the government. Also during negotiations rebellions were also used as a threat when something didn't go a country's way like Queen Maria of Romania who wanted ¾ of Hungary and if she didn't the people of Romania would most likely rebel and the rebellion would spread to the

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