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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Strategos autokrator; staatsrechtliche Studien zur griechischen Geschichte des 5. und 4. Jahrhunderts ...

Scheele, Martin, January 1932 (has links)
Inaug.-Diss.--Leipzig. / Vita. "Literaturverzeichnis mit Angabe der im Text vorkommenden Abkürzungen": p. [v]-vi.
12

To eikosiena stē zōgraphikē symvolē stē meletē tēs eikonographias tou agōna /

Mykoniatēs, Ē. G. January 1979 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Aristoteleiou Panepistēmiou Thessalonikēs, 1979. / Includes indexes. Includes bibliographical references (p. [177]-186).
13

Etude sur le climat de la Grèce Précipitation, stabilité du climat depuis les temps historiques ...

Mariolopoulos, Ēlias G., January 1925 (has links)
Thèse-Université de Paris. / Bibliographie: 61-62.
14

De deisidaemonia veterum quaestiones ...

Babick, Clemens Johann, January 1891 (has links)
Inaug.-diss.--Leipzig. / Vita.
15

The history of the Chalcidic league

West, Allen Brown, January 1918 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin, 1912. / Imprint date on cover: 1919. Bibliography: p. 175-176.
16

To 1848 stēn Hellada

Brekēs, Spyros L. January 1984 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Philosophikē Scholē tou Panepistēmiou Athēnōn, 1983. / Title on added t.p.: The year 1848 in Greece. Summaries in English, German, and French. Includes bibliographical references (p. 11-19) and index.
17

De rebus a graecis inde ab anno 410 usque ad annum 403 a. Chr. n. gestis quaestiones historicae ...

Boerner, Adolf, January 1894 (has links)
Dissertatio inauguralis. - Goettingen.
18

Studien zur griechischen Geschichte im sechsten und fünften Jahrzehnt des vierten Jahrhunderts v. Chr. ...

Pokorny, Erich, January 1913 (has links)
Inaug.-Diss.--Greifswald. / "Literatur-verzeichnis", p. [xi]-xvi.
19

De graecorum diis non referentibus speciem humanam

Visser, Marinus Willem de, January 1900 (has links)
Specimen litterarium inaug. -- Leyden.
20

Greece between East and West: a survey and an historical interpretation

Manolas, Spiro Constantinos January 1960 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)—-Boston University. / Greece's difficulties are not new nor entirely Greek and they became acute, from time to time, as a result of unusual circumstances. Deep problems underlie the fluctuating currents of Greek history, and the Great Powers have been party to many of Greece's difficulties, while Greece's neighbors have been instruments of Great Power machtpolitik in the Balkans. Greece's tragedy has been fourfold: first, its territory occupies the peninsula which commands an arena of intensepolitical rivalry. Second, since its creation it has been a small and poor nation occupying a strategic geographic position. Third, Greek liberation was made possible by the aid of many Powers that continued to retain their "interest" in Greece. Lastly, Greek nationalism which found fertile soil in the "Great Idea" with the belief that for survival the little kingdom had to strengthen itself economically and politically by absorbing adjacent lands. These lands, however, more often than not, were inhabited predominantly by Greeks who were faced with absorption or annihilation by a reawakening of Slavic Balkan peoples or renascent Ottoman nationalism. This situation led to a fervent and natural desire for enosis by exohellenes and the historical anagke and almost religious passion felt by the Greek Government to effect a union so long sought after and for so long desired. From the outset the Greeks were caught between East and West, for Greece's independence and later the extension of its boundaries could be realized only at the expense of Turkey and the policies of Austro-Hungary and England. For Austria, a continental Power, this meant maintenance of Metternich's "consecrated structure"; for England, an insular Power, it meant maintenance of the integrity of the Ottoman Empire since its dissolution would not only disrupt the equilibrium of Europe but its dismemberment would remove the last substantial political bulwark to Russian expansion. It is not surprising that Castlereagh could set aside his doctrine of noninterference in the Greek issue since, as in the Lowlands, its application would have threatened British interests. At the same time, Greece could expect little from Russia, for concessions from that quarter, notwithstanding the Tsarist ruse of protecting co-religionists would be at the expense of PanSlavism and Tsarist expansion. Furthermore, being non "Catholic," Greece could expect no sympathy from Catholic powers. Finally, her early boundaries, like most boundaries in the Near East, reflected neither a political nor an economic necessity but were drawn to guarantee weakness and rivalry and became an object of power politics. This inherent situation has brought Greece periodic chastisements and unsolicited transgressions by the Great Powers with serious effects on her domestic life as well as her inter-national position. Historically, Austria-Hungary, England, France, and Germany, individually or in collusion, had prevented Russian domination of the Balkans and the Near East; but recent history proved more favorable to the Soviet Union until Soviet designs against Greece and Turkey after World War II forced the United States to take a series of decisive actions best described as the "Truman Doctrine" which caused international Communism to suffer in Greece its first and only major defeat in the post-war period. As a result, Greece found a new protector in the United States, but at the same time fell more securely into the Western orbit. In 1841, Sir Edmund Lyons, the British Minister to Athens, made the prophetic statement, "A Greece truly independent is an absurdity. Greece is Russian or she is English; and since she must not be Russian, it is necessary that she be English." In 1947, the Truman Doctrine reaffirmed this dictum with the modification that since Greece cannot be English, it is necessary that she be "American."

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