Die Geschichte der baltischen StaatenUniversity of California Press, 1974. 1. 1. - 265페이지 "Georg von Rauch (1904 - 1991) was a Baltic German historian specializing in Russia and the Baltic states. Rauch was born in Pskov, the son of Kornelius von Rauch, who was serving in the Russian army; in 1911 the family moved to Sangaste in southern Estonia, then part of the Russian Empire. Rauch graduated from the University of Tartu with a degree in history in 1927, leaving for Germany in 1939. He joined the staff of the University of Marburg, where he taught Russian history, in 1946, becoming a professor in 1953. In 1958 he accepted an offer from the University of Kiel, where he became head of the Institute on East European History. His pioneering history of the Soviet Union was translated into other languages and became a standard textbook. His son was the anarchist Georg von Rauch, killed by the police in 1971."--Wikipedia. |
목차
The Early Stages of Independence | 76 |
Baltic Politics in the 1920s | 107 |
New Developments in the 1930s | 146 |
The Baltic States and the two Great Power Blocs | 189 |
The Past and the Future | 235 |
242 | |
B List of Presidents and Premiers | 256 |
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agreement alliance August Baltic area Baltic entente Baltic German Baltic German community Baltic provinces Baltic territories Baltische Baltische Landeswehr became Berlin bloc Bolshevik British cent Centre Communist conference constitution Council countries Courland course cultural December delegates district eastern elections envoy established Estonian and Latvian Estonian Government February Finland force Foreign Minister Hitler independence initiative Jaan Tõnisson Jelgava Kaunas Klaipeda Klaipeda territory Kremlin Laidoner Latgale Latvia and Estonia Latvian Government Latvian Social Democrats leaders League Liberation Lithuanian Government Livonia Maapäev March Meanwhile ment military minority Molotov Moscow Munters Narva nationalist negotiations non-aggression pact November occupied October onwards organisations parliament parliamentary Päts peasants period Petrograd Poland Polish political politicians population Premier President Red Army representatives Republic Riga Saaremaa September Smetona Socialist Soviet Government Soviet Russians Soviet Union subsequently Tallinn Tartu Tautininkai three Baltic tion Tõnisson treaty troops Ulmanis Vilnius Voldemaras western workers Zhdanov