Burden Of Guilt

How Germany Shattered the Last Days of Peace, Summer 1914

Daniel Allen Butler

228 x 156 mm, 256, 16-page photo section, 9781935149279, £20.00, Hardback, Casemate
September 15, 2010

Currently in stock.

• A revisionist account which lays ‘war guilt’ firmly at Germany’s door

The conflagration that consumed Europe in August 1914 had been a long time in coming—and yet it need never have happened at all. For though all the European powers were prepared to accept a war as a resolution to the tensions which were brewing across the Continent, only one nation wanted war to come: Imperial Germany. Germany alone possessed the opportunity and the power to determine that a war in eastern Europe would become The Great War, which swept across the Continent and nearly destroyed a thousand years of European civilisation.

For nearly nine decades it has been argued that the responsibility for the First World War was a shared one, spread among all the Great Powers. Now historian Daniel Allen Butler (author of The Other Side of the Night and The First Jihad) has substantively challenged that point of view, establishing that the Treaty of Versailles was actually a fair judgement: Germany did indeed bear the true responsibility for the Great War.

Working from government archives and records, as well as personal papers and memoirs of the men who made the decisions that carried Europe to war, Butler interweaves the events of summer 1914 with portraits of the monarchs, diplomats, prime ministers, and other national leaders involved in the 1914 crisis. He explores the national policies and goals these men were pursuing, and shows how the Imperial German government was presented with opportunities to contain the spreading crisis—opportunities unlike those of any other nation involved—yet each time, the German government consciously and deliberately chose the path which virtually assured that the Continent would go up in flames.

The Burden of Guilt is a work destined to become an essential part of the library of the First World War, vital to understanding not only the “how” but also the “why” behind this pivotal event.

Reviews

When the ‘war to end all wars’ finally concluded on November 11 1918, the allies drew up the Treaty of Versailles. The pact humiliated the German people by slicing up their territory, eliminating their Navy, and transforming their army into nothing more than a glorified police force. This embarrassment on the world stage infuriated the German people, including one little known paper-hanger in Berlin named Adolf Hitler.

MILITARY HERITAGE, 10/12/2010


It is a well argued and written case for blaming the Germans alone for allowing World War I to happen.

CROSS & COCKADE INTERNATIONAL, 1/12/2010


Historians have contended for nearly a century that responsibility for the war was a shared one between the Great Powers; Butler, in his thought provoking book, challenges that view.

SOLDIER, 1/12/2010


What could have emerged as a somewhat dry political story is here vibrantly brought to life and pulls no punches in its unambiguous conclusions.

THE ARMOURER MILITARIA MAGAZINE, 1/1/2011


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