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ID146044
Title ProperGermany’s ocean greyhounds and the royal navy’s first battle cruisers
Other Title Information an historiographical problem
LanguageENG
AuthorSeligmann, Matthew S
Summary / Abstract (Note)Recently some revisionist historians have contested the evidential basis for the argument put forward by their post-revisionist colleagues that the growth of the German mercantile marine, most particularly ships capable of being transformed into armed commerce raiders, was viewed with alarm in the British Admiralty and played a significant part in shaping British naval policy before 1914. Looking in detail at their reasoning, this assessment demonstrates that the rejection of this argument is based upon a faulty and incomplete understanding of the documentary record. Moreover, it is driven by a desire to defend the thesis that they have previously articulated that the expansion of German maritime power played a limited role in British defence policy before 1914. However, their objections do not withstand detailed scrutiny. Whatever might have been the British view of the long-term threat posed by Russia and France, Germany’s growing strength, including in merchant shipping, loomed large as a security problem in the decade and a half before 1914. The wartime activities of German commerce raiders, notably the Kronprinz Wilhelm, suggest that fears of a German commerce war were entirely rational.
`In' analytical NoteDiplomacy and Statecraft Vol. 27, No.1; Mar 2016: p.162-182
Journal SourceDiplomacy and Statecraft Vol: 27 No 1
Key WordsGermany ;  Royal Navy ;  Ocean Greyhounds ;  Battle Cruisers ;  Historiographical Problem


 
 
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