Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Greeks" ¶ 2
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

aftermath and Greco-Turkish
In the aftermath of the Balkan Wars, World War I and the Greco-Turkish War ( 1919-1922 ) most of its Turkish and Bulgarian population emigrated, and many Greeks from Bulgaria and Turkey settled in the area, as prescribed by the Treaty of Lausanne.

aftermath and War
* 1918 Japan announces that it is deploying troops to Siberia in the aftermath of World War I.
The U. S. experienced tense relations with Britain and its colonial government in Canada in the aftermath of the Civil War.
* Cisplatine War ( 1825 1828 ): Armed conflict over an area known as Banda Oriental or " Eastern Shore " between the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata and Empire of Brazil in the aftermath of the United Provinces ' emancipation from Spain.
During the aftermath of the Second World War, Pasternak had composed a series of poems on Gospel themes.
* 1925 World War I aftermath: The final Locarno Treaty is signed in London, establishing post-war territorial settlements.
First, in the aftermath of the Second World War, the convention, drawing on the inspiration of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights can be seen as part of a wider response of the Allied Powers in delivering a human rights agenda through which it was believed that the most serious human rights violations which had occurred during the Second World War ( most notably, the Holocaust ) could be avoided in the future.
Since that law was repealed in the aftermath of World War II, the present Emperor Akihito became the first crown prince for over a thousand years to have an empress outside the previously eligible circle.
Griffith applied all the ideas for film staging that he had worked out in his Biograph films to a bigoted white southerner's epic view of the Civil War and its aftermath.
In the aftermath of World War II, the victory of the Allies over the Axis powers led to the collapse of multiple fascist regimes in Europe.
This myth was invoked, in considerably different circumstances, in the aftermath of Germany's defeat in World War I.
In September 1945, Radbruch published a short paper Fünf Minuten Rechtsphilosophie ( five minutes of legal philosophy ), that was influential in shaping the jurisprudence of values ( Wertungsjurisprudenz ), prevalent in the aftermath of World War II as a reaction against legal positivism.
Although many of his friends and relations were killed in the Civil War, Ashley survived to see its brutal aftermath.
Hoover realized that he was in a unique position to collect information about the Great War and its aftermath.
Many of the basic ideas that animated the movement developed in the aftermath of the Second World War and the atrocities of The Holocaust, culminating in the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in Paris by the United Nations General Assembly in 1948.
In the aftermath of the atrocities of World War II there was increased concern in the social and legal protection of human rights as fundamental freedoms.
It is estimated that in the aftermath of World War II between 13 and 16 million ethnic Germans were expelled from the territories of Eastern Germany ( present-day part of Poland ), the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia, Hungary, Croatia, Serbia ( mostly from the Vojvodina region ), the Kaliningrad Oblast ( formerly northern part of East Prussia ) area of Russia, Lithuania, Romania and other East European countries.
Hezbollah posters in the aftermath of the 2006 Lebanon War
This first statement of the previously uncodified rules and articles of war led to the first prosecution for war crimes — in the case of United States prisoners of war held in cruel and depraved conditions at Andersonville, Georgia, in which the Confederate commandant of that camp was tried and hanged, the only Confederate soldier to be punished by death in the aftermath of the entire Civil War.
The official Soviet archival records do not contain comprehensive figures for some categories of victims, such as those of ethnic deportations or of German population transfers in the aftermath of World War II.
* 1918 President Woodrow Wilson announces his " Fourteen Points " for the aftermath of World War I.
His close association with the Congress dates from 1919, in the immediate aftermath of World War I.
In the immediate aftermath of the Second World War, the US Occupation authorities initially encouraged the formation of independent unions.
In the aftermath of the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, Lebanon became home to more than 110, 000 Palestinian refugees.
The aftermath of the First World War left many issues to be settled, including the exact position of national boundaries and which country particular regions would join.

aftermath and 1919
Map showing Yugoslavia in 1919 in the aftermath of World War I before the treaties of Treaty of Neuilly-sur-Seine | Neuilly, Treaty of Trianon | Trianon and Treaty of Rapallo | Rapallo ( note that this map does not reflect any internationally established borders or armistice lines-it only reflect opinion of the researchers from London Geographical Institute about issue how final borders will look after Paris Peace Conference )
This group was established in the aftermath of the November beginning of the German Revolution of 1918 1919, when Communists, anarchists and pro-republic supporters had fought in the streets for control of the government.
In 1919 he left Cambridge to take the Savilian Chair of Geometry at Oxford in the aftermath of the Bertrand Russell affair during World War I.
The aftermath of the war and the Paris Peace Conference, 1919 affected the Olympic Games not only due to new states being created, but also by sanctions against the nations that lost the war and were blamed for starting it.
Legislation was enacted in the aftermath of the 1919 police strikes, forbidding British police from both taking industrial action, and discussing the possibility with colleagues.
The League of Nations mandated territories acquired as a result of the Treaty of Versailles ( 1919 ) became a further responsibility of the Colonial Office in the aftermath of the First World War.
Established in 1919 in the aftermath of World War I, the Institute of International Education was created to catalyze educational exchange.
In the aftermath of the genocide, Gorky's mother died of starvation in Yerevan in 1919.
In the aftermath of World War I, the short-lived Republic of Tarnobrzeg was declared here, and in 1919, it became part of Lwow Voivodeship of the newly independent Second Polish Republic.
In 1919, Javakhishvili succeeded the noted chemist Petre Melikishvili as the second rector of the university: he served until June 1926, when, in the aftermath of anti-Soviet August Uprising of 1924, tolerance of non-Marxist intellectuals began to contract.
A formal realignment of Church and state relationships was considered desirable in the aftermath of the political instability of 1918 and the adoption of the Weimar constitution for the Reich along with the new constitutions in the German states in 1919.
In the aftermath of the Third Partition of Poland ( 1795 ) and the November Uprising ( 1830 1831 ), the university was closed down and suspended its operation until 1919.
In the aftermath of World War I the university saw failed attempts to restart it by Lithuania ( December 1918 ) and invading Soviet forces ( March 1919 ).
The poem was written in 1919 in the aftermath of the First World War.
In 1918 / 1919, Chinese pressure on the young Mongolian state increased, as Russia was struggling with the aftermath of World War I, the October Revolution, and the beginning civil war.
In the aftermath of the Riot of 1919, one of the city's worst racial episodes, the school's administration ( comprising black and white members ) staunchly defended the city's African American community, and praised its students ' restraint.
The Soviet Sphere includes sculptures of the four leaders of Lithuanian Communists, executed in the aftermath of the 1926 Lithuanian coup d ' état, and activists of the Lithuanian Soviet War of 1918 1919.
The immediate postwar period was a turbulent time for him — his financial situation was dire, and the death of his sister Meta on 12 March 1919 as the result of an injury sustained during skirmishes between the Spartacists and nationalist troops in Berlin showed how volatile the situation in Germany was in the aftermath of the November Revolution.
The Khilafat movement ( 1919 1924 ) was a pan-Islamic, political protest campaign launched by Muslims in British India to influence the British government and to protect the Ottoman Empire during the aftermath of World War I.
Ironically, it was his old Ohio party comrade and prison mate, Alfred Wagenknecht who was elected to head the rival Communist Labor Party of America ( CLA ) in the aftermath of the failed effort to win control of the Socialist Party at its August 1919 Convention.
Within Weimar Germany, the Prussian Province of Silesia was divided into the provinces of Upper Silesia and Lower Silesia in 1919 in the aftermath of World War I. Silesian Uprisings of Poles against Germans occurred in Upper Silesia from 1919 and 1920.
In the aftermath of World War I the territory of the Younger Line merged with that of the Elder Line in 1919 as the Republic of Reuss, which in its turn became part of the new state of Thuringia on 1 May 1920.

1.287 seconds.