Professor Robert Gerwarth
University College Dublin
In the first half of the twentieth century, Europe experienced an unparalleled pandemic of civil wars resulting in millions of deaths. Civil war, as much as inter-state war, was a defining feature of the period for many European societies, ranging from Ireland in the west to Russia in the east, and from Finland in the north to Spain and Greece in the south - and many more in-between. While civil war had been a prominent and recurring element of modern Europe's history, from the seventeenth century to the twenty-first, they acquired a particular density in an era which has come to be primarily associated with the inter-state conflicts of the two world wars. This two-part lecture series will explore some of the connections between these seemingly unconnected national, imperial and regional struggles, within which the dividing lines lay as much within societies as between them.
The second lecture will discuss how these civil wars created transnational milieus of humanitarians, ‘experts’ on, and practioners of violence whose experiences across frontiers established an archive of knowledge that shaped the forms of, and responses to, future conflicts, both in Europe and beyond.
There will be a drinks reception after the lecture.
Places are limited, so please confirm your attendance by emailing martin.conway@history.ox.ac.uk