Wars of religion, of alliances, of rebellion, of aggrandisement, of dynastic intrigue or ambition— wars in which the personal element was often the predominant factor — tend to be replaced by Frontier wars, ie wars arising out of the expansion of... Frontiers - Page 5by Marquess George Nathaniel Curzon Curzon of Kedleston - 1908 - 58 pagesFull view - About this book
| Marquess George Nathaniel Curzon Curzon of Kedleston - 1907 - 72 pages
...aggrandisement, of dynastic intrigue or ambition — wars in which the personal element was often the predominant factor — tend to be replaced by Frontier...and irreconcilable collision with those of another. To take the experience of the past half-century alone. The Franco-German War was a war for a Frontier,... | |
| Marquess George Nathaniel Curzon Curzon of Kedleston - 1908 - 70 pages
...intrigue or ambition—wars in which the personal element was often Ithe predominant factor—tend to be replaced by Frontier wars, ie wars arising out...and irreconcilable collision with those of another. To take the experience of the past half-century alone. The Franco-German War was a war for a Frontier,... | |
| Jonathan Haslam - 2002 - 278 pages
...attention to the particular problem of frontiers. Consciously following Mackinder, Curzon referred to "wars arising out of the expansion of states and kingdoms,...into sharp and irreconcilable collision with those of another."58 In a passage also very reminiscent of both Malthus and Mackinder, he argued that "with... | |
| Charles King - 2004 - 324 pages
...aggrandisement, of dynastic intrigue or ambition — wars in which the personal element was often the predominant factor — tend to be replaced by Frontier...and irreconcilable collision with those of another. Lord Curzon, 1<)O~J Sharing the common vision of their regional cooperation as a part of the integration... | |
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