Describe your most significant achievement. Tell us about how you planned and executed this task and how did this achievement impact you. (300 words max) It wasn’t till the third year of college that this ‘soccer playing ghissu’ decided to change his appellation to ‘a leader’ by contesting in the elections for the post of Councillor in the Student Affairs Council. The challenges: first‚ winning the elections; and second‚ performing the roles and shouldering the responsibilities of a senator.
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Versailles was certainly the shooting star in French history. Louis XIV‚ the sun king wanted to build a grand place to escape Parisian mobs and to keep an eye out on his scheming nobles. When his chief minister Cardinal Mazarin died in 1661‚ the 22-year old was prepared to show his kingdom his power. However‚ in exceptionally bad timing‚ his finance minister‚ Nicolas Fouquet‚ had finished his new palace‚ Vaux-le-Vicomte‚ and invited Louis XIV to his new palace for a weekend of extravagant entertainment
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Versailles Peace Conference A lot had happened during World War 1. The event that lit the fuse was the assassination of the archduke Franz Ferdinand‚ heir to the Austro-Hungarian Empire. But what we are going to talk mainly about is the resolution to the war‚ which is the peace conference that took place in Paris‚ France. This is where the Allied leaders and the Central Powers met to consider peace terms between the controversy states. The main question would be as to why did President Wilson have
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Did the Treaty of Versailles make World War II inevitable? JANUARY 8‚ 2008 STUDENT ID: 081404078 ABSTRACT This essay analyses the origins of the Second World War by briefly summarizing the events from 1919-1939. However‚ most emphasis is put on the amount of responsibility the Treaty of Versailles deserves for the outbreak of war. Other than analysing the Treaty of Versailles on its own‚ it also analyses the effects of the 1929 Wall Street Crash on the world‚ the
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Ananya Sharma ‘The Treaty of Versailles’ was too harsh. Do you agree? In some ways the Treaty of Versailles was Too Harsh on Germany and in many ways it was also fair. Some historians also argue that the Treaty of Versailles was in fact too lenient. The Treaty was too harsh on Germany as it crippled them‚ economically and physically. They had to accept all the war guilt when technically it wasn’t their fault. It angered many citizens of Germany as they were being blamed for crimes they had
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The Treaty of Versailles was signed in Paris‚ at the Palace of Versailles. The three main representatives were Clemenceau‚ Lloyd-George and Wilson‚ and these became known as ‘the Big Three’. Clemenceau represented France‚ and‚ voted for by the public‚ had to please those who supported him. So in a country that had lost so much‚ he wanted to get all he could from Germany to satisfy the angry nation and make them as weak as possible to protect France in the future. Lloyd-George was Great Britain’s
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Treaty of Versailles‚ Analytical Essay What is the treaty? In June 28‚ 1919‚ met in the Palace of Versailles and signed a peace treaty which when into force on January 10 officially ending the Great War. Leaders from key ally countries such France‚ Great Britain‚ Italy and the United States (US) took part‚ imposing punitive measure on the scapegoat central power‚ Germany. Woodrow Wilson and a group of handpicked representatives on behalf of the US attended to negotiate their terms to be enlisted
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directly violated the regulations of the Treaty of Versailles. Firstly‚ Hitler broke one of the major rules by building up his army to over 1 million people. The treaty stated that an army of over 100‚000 me was prohibited. He at first expanded his army in secret‚ but in 1935‚ he openly had a massive rearmament rally. Hitler also broke the treaty by moving his troops into Rhineland (a demilitarized zone). Of course another major act that challenged the treaty was when Hitler convinced the German Parliament
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resentment over the treaty of Versailles in explaining the rise to power by the Nazis in Germany 1919 - 1933 There is a general agreement among historians that several factors contributed to Hitler’s rise to power in Germany by 1933. However‚ there is debate over which‚ if any‚ was the most important factor. Some argue that the Treaty of Versailles was the most significant due to the fact that it was associated with defeat and was discrediting the Republican government who singed it. The treaty was also blamed
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force the Germany and Austria-Hungary to surrender. The Treaty of Versailles was the peace negotiation agreement between the Central Powers and the Allied Powers that brought World War I to the end‚ it blamed all responsibility of war on Germany‚ as the treaty punished the Germany greatly. The Treaty of Versailles pointed the entire fault of war solely to the
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