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Édouard Daladier | A Wisdom Archive on Édouard Daladier |  | Édouard Daladier A selection of articles related to Édouard Daladier |  |
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| ARTICLES RELATED TO Édouard Daladier |  |  |  | Édouard Daladier: Encyclopedia II - Paul Painlevé - Later political careerFollowing Painlevé's resignation, Briand formed a new government with Painlevé as Minister for War. Though Briand was defeated by Raymond Poincaré in 1926, Painlevé continued in office. Poincaré stabilised the franc with a return to the gold standard, but ultimately acceded power to Briand. Painlevé remained in office as Minister for War until July 1929.
Though he was proposed for President of France in 1932, Painlevé withdrew before the election. He became Minister of Air later that year, making proposals for an international ...
See also:Paul Painlevé, Paul Painlevé - Early life, Paul Painlevé - Mathematical work, Paul Painlevé - First period as French Prime Minister, Paul Painlevé - Second period as French Prime Minister, Paul Painlevé - Later political career, Paul Painlevé - Painlevé's First Government September 12–November 16 1917, Paul Painlevé - Painlevé's Second Ministry April 17–October 29 1925, Paul Painlevé - Painlevé's Third Ministry October 29–November 28 1925 Read more here: » Paul Painlevé: Encyclopedia II - Paul Painlevé - Later political career |
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|  |  |  | Édouard Daladier: Encyclopedia II - Paul Painlevé - Mathematical workIt is well known that some differential equations can be solved using the elementary algebraic operations involving the trigonometric and exponential functions (sometimes called elementary functions). It is further known that many interesting special functions arise as solutions of linear second order ordinary differential equations. Around the turn of the century, Painlevé and É. Picard and B. Gambier showed that of the class of nonlinear second order ordinary differential equations with polynomial coefficients, those which possess a cert ...
See also:Paul Painlevé, Paul Painlevé - Early life, Paul Painlevé - Mathematical work, Paul Painlevé - First period as French Prime Minister, Paul Painlevé - Second period as French Prime Minister, Paul Painlevé - Later political career, Paul Painlevé - Painlevé's First Government September 12–November 16 1917, Paul Painlevé - Painlevé's Second Ministry April 17–October 29 1925, Paul Painlevé - Painlevé's Third Ministry October 29–November 28 1925 Read more here: » Paul Painlevé: Encyclopedia II - Paul Painlevé - Mathematical work |
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|  |  |  | Édouard Daladier: Encyclopedia II - Neville Chamberlain - Outbreak of warOn September 1, 1939, the armies of Germany invaded Poland. Many in the United Kingdom expected war, but the government did not wish to make a formal declaration unless it had the support of France. France's intentions were unclear at that point, and the government could only give Germany an ultimatum: if Hitler withdrew his troops within two days, Britain would help to open talks between Germany and Poland. When Chamberlain announced this in the House on September 2, there was a massive outcry. The prominent Conservative former minister Leo ...
See also:Neville Chamberlain, Neville Chamberlain - Overview, Neville Chamberlain - Early life, Neville Chamberlain - Lord Mayor of Birmingham, Neville Chamberlain - Early ministerial career, Neville Chamberlain - Becoming the heir apparent, Neville Chamberlain - Formation of the National Government, Neville Chamberlain - Return to the Exchequer, Neville Chamberlain - Appointment as Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain - Domestic policy, Neville Chamberlain - Relations with Ireland, Neville Chamberlain - Palestine White Paper, Neville Chamberlain - European policy, Neville Chamberlain - Outbreak of war, Neville Chamberlain - War premiership, Neville Chamberlain - Fall and resignation, Neville Chamberlain - Lord President of the Council and death, Neville Chamberlain - Legacy, Neville Chamberlain - Notes Read more here: » Neville Chamberlain: Encyclopedia II - Neville Chamberlain - Outbreak of war |
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|  |  |  | Édouard Daladier: Encyclopedia II - History of Germany - Germany since 1945For details, see the main History of Germany since 1945 article.
Germans frequently refer to 1945 as the Stunde Null (zero hour) to describe the near-total collapse of their country. At the Potsdam Conference, Germany was divided into four military occupation zones by the Allies, see Partitions of Germany; the three western zones would form the Federal Republic of Germany (commonly known as West Germany), while part of the Soviet zone became the German Democratic Republic (commonly known as East Germany), b ...
See also:History of Germany, History of Germany - The Germans and the Romans, History of Germany - Holy Roman Empire, History of Germany - Middle Ages, History of Germany - Reformation and Thirty Years War, History of Germany - End of the Holy Roman Empire, History of Germany - German Confederation, History of Germany - Restoration and Revolution, History of Germany - North German Confederation, History of Germany - German Empire, History of Germany - Age of Bismarck, History of Germany - Wilhelminian Era, History of Germany - Weimar Republic, History of Germany - Third Reich, History of Germany - Nazi revolution or 'Seizure of Power', History of Germany - Expansion and defeat, History of Germany - Germany since 1945 Read more here: » History of Germany: Encyclopedia II - History of Germany - Germany since 1945 |
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|  |  |  | Édouard Daladier: Encyclopedia II - Neville Chamberlain - Early lifeChamberlain was the eldest son of the second marriage of Joseph Chamberlain, Lord Mayor of Birmingham, and a half-brother to Austen, later Sir Austen Chamberlain. Joseph's first wife had died shortly after giving birth to Austen; Neville's mother also died in childbirth in 1875 when Neville was six years old. The Chamberlain children found their relations with their father strained, and Neville grew up developing strong bonds with those siblings who were closest to him in age, most notably his sisters Ida and Hilda, to who ...
See also:Neville Chamberlain, Neville Chamberlain - Overview, Neville Chamberlain - Early life, Neville Chamberlain - Lord Mayor of Birmingham, Neville Chamberlain - Early ministerial career, Neville Chamberlain - Becoming the heir apparent, Neville Chamberlain - Formation of the National Government, Neville Chamberlain - Return to the Exchequer, Neville Chamberlain - Appointment as Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain - Domestic policy, Neville Chamberlain - Relations with Ireland, Neville Chamberlain - Palestine White Paper, Neville Chamberlain - European policy, Neville Chamberlain - Outbreak of war, Neville Chamberlain - War premiership, Neville Chamberlain - Fall and resignation, Neville Chamberlain - Lord President of the Council and death, Neville Chamberlain - Legacy, Neville Chamberlain - Notes Read more here: » Neville Chamberlain: Encyclopedia II - Neville Chamberlain - Early life |
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|  |  |  | Édouard Daladier: Encyclopedia II - Neville Chamberlain - Lord Mayor of BirminghamAlthough he would campaign for his father and brother during elections, Chamberlain first entered politics for himself in 1911 when he was elected as a councillor to Birmingham City Council and immediately became Chair of the Town Planning Committee. The same year he married Anne Vere. Under Chamberlain's direction, Birmingham soon adopted and brought into law one of the first town planning schemes in Britain. In 1913, Chamberlain took charge of a committee looking at housing conditions. The interim report of the committee could not be implemented immediately because of the war, but it did much to ...
See also:Neville Chamberlain, Neville Chamberlain - Overview, Neville Chamberlain - Early life, Neville Chamberlain - Lord Mayor of Birmingham, Neville Chamberlain - Early ministerial career, Neville Chamberlain - Becoming the heir apparent, Neville Chamberlain - Formation of the National Government, Neville Chamberlain - Return to the Exchequer, Neville Chamberlain - Appointment as Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain - Domestic policy, Neville Chamberlain - Relations with Ireland, Neville Chamberlain - Palestine White Paper, Neville Chamberlain - European policy, Neville Chamberlain - Outbreak of war, Neville Chamberlain - War premiership, Neville Chamberlain - Fall and resignation, Neville Chamberlain - Lord President of the Council and death, Neville Chamberlain - Legacy, Neville Chamberlain - Notes Read more here: » Neville Chamberlain: Encyclopedia II - Neville Chamberlain - Lord Mayor of Birmingham |
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|  |  |  | Édouard Daladier: Encyclopedia II - History of Germany - Third ReichMain articles: Nazi Germany, Holocaust, World War II
History of Germany - Nazi revolution or 'Seizure of Power'.
In order to secure a majority for his NSDAP in the Reichstag, Hitler called for new elections. On the evening of 27 February 1933, a fire was laid in the Reichstag building. Hitler was swift to paint an alleged Communist uprising on the wall, and convinced President Hindenburg to sign the Reichstag Fire Decree. This decree, which would remain in force until 1945, repealed important political and human rights of the Weimar constitution. Communist agitation was banned ...
See also:History of Germany, History of Germany - The Germans and the Romans, History of Germany - Holy Roman Empire, History of Germany - Middle Ages, History of Germany - Reformation and Thirty Years War, History of Germany - End of the Holy Roman Empire, History of Germany - German Confederation, History of Germany - Restoration and Revolution, History of Germany - North German Confederation, History of Germany - German Empire, History of Germany - Age of Bismarck, History of Germany - Wilhelminian Era, History of Germany - Weimar Republic, History of Germany - Third Reich, History of Germany - Nazi revolution or 'Seizure of Power', History of Germany - Expansion and defeat, History of Germany - Germany since 1945 Read more here: » History of Germany: Encyclopedia II - History of Germany - Third Reich |
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|  |  |  | Édouard Daladier: Encyclopedia II - History of Germany - Weimar RepublicMain article: Weimar Republic
On 28 June 1919 the Treaty of Versailles was signed. Germany was to cede Alsace-Lorraine, Eupen-Malmédy, North Schleswig, and the Memel area. Poland was restored and Posen, West Prussia, and Upper Silesia were returned after plebiscites and independence uprisings. All German colonies were to be handed over to the Allies. The left and right banks of the Rhine were to be permanently demilitarised. The industrially important Saarland was to be governed by the League of Nations for 15 years and its co ...
See also:History of Germany, History of Germany - The Germans and the Romans, History of Germany - Holy Roman Empire, History of Germany - Middle Ages, History of Germany - Reformation and Thirty Years War, History of Germany - End of the Holy Roman Empire, History of Germany - German Confederation, History of Germany - Restoration and Revolution, History of Germany - North German Confederation, History of Germany - German Empire, History of Germany - Age of Bismarck, History of Germany - Wilhelminian Era, History of Germany - Weimar Republic, History of Germany - Third Reich, History of Germany - Nazi revolution or 'Seizure of Power', History of Germany - Expansion and defeat, History of Germany - Germany since 1945 Read more here: » History of Germany: Encyclopedia II - History of Germany - Weimar Republic |
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|  |  |  | Édouard Daladier: Encyclopedia II - History of Germany - German Confederation
History of Germany - Restoration and Revolution.
Main articles: German Confederation, The Revolutions of 1848 in the German states
After the fall of Napoleon, European monarchs and statesmen convened in the Vienna in 1814 for the reorganization of European affairs, under the leadership of the Austrian Prince Metternich. The political principles agreed upon at this Congress of Vienna included the restoration, legitimacy and solidarity of rulers ...
See also:History of Germany, History of Germany - The Germans and the Romans, History of Germany - Holy Roman Empire, History of Germany - Middle Ages, History of Germany - Reformation and Thirty Years War, History of Germany - End of the Holy Roman Empire, History of Germany - German Confederation, History of Germany - Restoration and Revolution, History of Germany - North German Confederation, History of Germany - German Empire, History of Germany - Age of Bismarck, History of Germany - Wilhelminian Era, History of Germany - Weimar Republic, History of Germany - Third Reich, History of Germany - Nazi revolution or 'Seizure of Power', History of Germany - Expansion and defeat, History of Germany - Germany since 1945 Read more here: » History of Germany: Encyclopedia II - History of Germany - German Confederation |
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|  |  |  | Édouard Daladier: Encyclopedia II - History of Germany - North German ConfederationMain article: North German Confederation
In 1867 the German Confederation was dissolved. In its place the North German Confederation (German Norddeutscher Bund) was established, under the leadership of Prussia. Austria was excluded, and would remain outside German affairs for most of the remaining 19th and the 20th centuries.
The North German Confederation was a transitory group that existed from 1867 to 1871, between the dissolution of the German Confederation and the founding of the German Empire. With it, Prussia established control over the 22 states of n ...
See also:History of Germany, History of Germany - The Germans and the Romans, History of Germany - Holy Roman Empire, History of Germany - Middle Ages, History of Germany - Reformation and Thirty Years War, History of Germany - End of the Holy Roman Empire, History of Germany - German Confederation, History of Germany - Restoration and Revolution, History of Germany - North German Confederation, History of Germany - German Empire, History of Germany - Age of Bismarck, History of Germany - Wilhelminian Era, History of Germany - Weimar Republic, History of Germany - Third Reich, History of Germany - Nazi revolution or 'Seizure of Power', History of Germany - Expansion and defeat, History of Germany - Germany since 1945 Read more here: » History of Germany: Encyclopedia II - History of Germany - North German Confederation |
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|  |  |  | Édouard Daladier: Encyclopedia II - History of Germany - German EmpireMain article: German Empire
History of Germany - Age of Bismarck.
Differences between France and Prussia over the accession to the Spanish throne of a German candidate - whom France opposed - led to the Franco-Prussian War (1870-71). Following a French declaration of war, joint southern-German and Prussian troops, under the command of Moltke, invaded France in 1870. The French army was finally forced to capitulate by the fortress of Sedan. French Emperor Napoleon III was taken prisoner and the Secon ...
See also:History of Germany, History of Germany - The Germans and the Romans, History of Germany - Holy Roman Empire, History of Germany - Middle Ages, History of Germany - Reformation and Thirty Years War, History of Germany - End of the Holy Roman Empire, History of Germany - German Confederation, History of Germany - Restoration and Revolution, History of Germany - North German Confederation, History of Germany - German Empire, History of Germany - Age of Bismarck, History of Germany - Wilhelminian Era, History of Germany - Weimar Republic, History of Germany - Third Reich, History of Germany - Nazi revolution or 'Seizure of Power', History of Germany - Expansion and defeat, History of Germany - Germany since 1945 Read more here: » History of Germany: Encyclopedia II - History of Germany - German Empire |
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|  |  |  | Édouard Daladier: Encyclopedia II - Neville Chamberlain - Early ministerial careerIn December 1916, Chamberlain was in London when he received a message asking him to meet the new Prime Minister, David Lloyd George. In a brief meeting, Lloyd George offered Chamberlain the new position of Director of National Service, with responsibility for co-ordinating conscription and ensuring that essential war industries were able to function with sufficient workforces. Chamberlain had been recommended for the position by, among others, his brother Austen, and he agreed to accept the post; despite several interviews, however, he was ...
See also:Neville Chamberlain, Neville Chamberlain - Overview, Neville Chamberlain - Early life, Neville Chamberlain - Lord Mayor of Birmingham, Neville Chamberlain - Early ministerial career, Neville Chamberlain - Becoming the heir apparent, Neville Chamberlain - Formation of the National Government, Neville Chamberlain - Return to the Exchequer, Neville Chamberlain - Appointment as Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain - Domestic policy, Neville Chamberlain - Relations with Ireland, Neville Chamberlain - Palestine White Paper, Neville Chamberlain - European policy, Neville Chamberlain - Outbreak of war, Neville Chamberlain - War premiership, Neville Chamberlain - Fall and resignation, Neville Chamberlain - Lord President of the Council and death, Neville Chamberlain - Legacy, Neville Chamberlain - Notes Read more here: » Neville Chamberlain: Encyclopedia II - Neville Chamberlain - Early ministerial career |
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|  |  |  | Édouard Daladier: Encyclopedia II - Neville Chamberlain - Becoming the heir apparentIn the 1929 general election, Chamberlain changed his constituency from Ladywood to Edgbaston and held it easily, but the Conservative Party lost the election and entered a period of internal conflict. In 1930, Chamberlain became Chairman of the Conservative Party for a year and was widely seen as the next leader. However, Stanley Baldwin survived the conflict over his leadership and retained it for another seven years. During this period, Chamberlain became the founder and first head of the ...
See also:Neville Chamberlain, Neville Chamberlain - Overview, Neville Chamberlain - Early life, Neville Chamberlain - Lord Mayor of Birmingham, Neville Chamberlain - Early ministerial career, Neville Chamberlain - Becoming the heir apparent, Neville Chamberlain - Formation of the National Government, Neville Chamberlain - Return to the Exchequer, Neville Chamberlain - Appointment as Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain - Domestic policy, Neville Chamberlain - Relations with Ireland, Neville Chamberlain - Palestine White Paper, Neville Chamberlain - European policy, Neville Chamberlain - Outbreak of war, Neville Chamberlain - War premiership, Neville Chamberlain - Fall and resignation, Neville Chamberlain - Lord President of the Council and death, Neville Chamberlain - Legacy, Neville Chamberlain - Notes Read more here: » Neville Chamberlain: Encyclopedia II - Neville Chamberlain - Becoming the heir apparent |
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|  |  |  | Édouard Daladier: Encyclopedia II - Neville Chamberlain - Palestine White PaperOne of the greatest controversies of Chamberlain's premiership concerned the government's policy on the future of the British Mandate of Palestine. After successive commissions and talks had failed to achieve a consensus, the government argued that the statements in the Balfour Declaration (1917) (that it "view[ed] with favour" a "national home" for Jews in Palestine) now had been achieved since over 450,000 Jews had settled there. A new MacDonald White Paper of 1939, so named after the Secretary of State for the Colonies, Malcolm MacDonald, was then introduced. It proposed a quota of 75,000 further immigrants for the ...
See also:Neville Chamberlain, Neville Chamberlain - Overview, Neville Chamberlain - Early life, Neville Chamberlain - Lord Mayor of Birmingham, Neville Chamberlain - Early ministerial career, Neville Chamberlain - Becoming the heir apparent, Neville Chamberlain - Formation of the National Government, Neville Chamberlain - Return to the Exchequer, Neville Chamberlain - Appointment as Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain - Domestic policy, Neville Chamberlain - Relations with Ireland, Neville Chamberlain - Palestine White Paper, Neville Chamberlain - European policy, Neville Chamberlain - Outbreak of war, Neville Chamberlain - War premiership, Neville Chamberlain - Fall and resignation, Neville Chamberlain - Lord President of the Council and death, Neville Chamberlain - Legacy, Neville Chamberlain - Notes Read more here: » Neville Chamberlain: Encyclopedia II - Neville Chamberlain - Palestine White Paper |
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|  |  |  | Édouard Daladier: Encyclopedia II - Neville Chamberlain - European policyNeville Chamberlain, as with many in Europe who had witnessed the horrors of the First World War and its aftermath, was committed to peace at almost any price. Across the political spectrum in the major Western Democracies, there was a sense that war could, and should, be avoided by concession, negotiation and compromise. The theory was that dictatorships arose where peoples had grievances, and that by removing the source of these grievances, the dictatorship would become less aggressive. Chamberlain, as even his political detractors admitte ...
See also:Neville Chamberlain, Neville Chamberlain - Overview, Neville Chamberlain - Early life, Neville Chamberlain - Lord Mayor of Birmingham, Neville Chamberlain - Early ministerial career, Neville Chamberlain - Becoming the heir apparent, Neville Chamberlain - Formation of the National Government, Neville Chamberlain - Return to the Exchequer, Neville Chamberlain - Appointment as Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain - Domestic policy, Neville Chamberlain - Relations with Ireland, Neville Chamberlain - Palestine White Paper, Neville Chamberlain - European policy, Neville Chamberlain - Outbreak of war, Neville Chamberlain - War premiership, Neville Chamberlain - Fall and resignation, Neville Chamberlain - Lord President of the Council and death, Neville Chamberlain - Legacy, Neville Chamberlain - Notes Read more here: » Neville Chamberlain: Encyclopedia II - Neville Chamberlain - European policy |
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|  |  |  | Édouard Daladier: Encyclopedia II - History of Germany - The Germans and the RomansSee also: Germanic tribes, Confederations of Germanic Tribes, Germania, Germania Inferior, Germania Superior
Between 800 and 70 BC the Germanic tribes in the north migrated into Celtic territory, advancing to the Oder and the Rhine and into southern Germany.
Around 58 BC, in a succession of military campaigns the Romans made the Rhine the north-eastern frontier of the Roman Empire, leading to the Romanisation of the left bank of the Rhine and the incorporation of the central European Celtic societies into their Empire. R ...
See also:History of Germany, History of Germany - The Germans and the Romans, History of Germany - Holy Roman Empire, History of Germany - Middle Ages, History of Germany - Reformation and Thirty Years War, History of Germany - End of the Holy Roman Empire, History of Germany - German Confederation, History of Germany - Restoration and Revolution, History of Germany - North German Confederation, History of Germany - German Empire, History of Germany - Age of Bismarck, History of Germany - Wilhelminian Era, History of Germany - Weimar Republic, History of Germany - Third Reich, History of Germany - Nazi revolution or 'Seizure of Power', History of Germany - Expansion and defeat, History of Germany - Germany since 1945 Read more here: » History of Germany: Encyclopedia II - History of Germany - The Germans and the Romans |
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|  |  |  | Édouard Daladier: Encyclopedia II - Neville Chamberlain - Relations with IrelandWhen Chamberlain became Prime Minister, relations between the United Kingdom and the Irish Free State had been heavily strained for some years. The government of Eamon de Valera, seeking to transform the country into an independent republic, had proposed a new constitution, Bunreacht na hÉireann. The constitution was adopted at the end of 1937, turning the Free State into Éire, an internally republican state which only retained the monarchy as an organ for external relations. The British government accepted the changes, formally stating that it did not regard them as fundamentally alt ...
See also:Neville Chamberlain, Neville Chamberlain - Overview, Neville Chamberlain - Early life, Neville Chamberlain - Lord Mayor of Birmingham, Neville Chamberlain - Early ministerial career, Neville Chamberlain - Becoming the heir apparent, Neville Chamberlain - Formation of the National Government, Neville Chamberlain - Return to the Exchequer, Neville Chamberlain - Appointment as Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain - Domestic policy, Neville Chamberlain - Relations with Ireland, Neville Chamberlain - Palestine White Paper, Neville Chamberlain - European policy, Neville Chamberlain - Outbreak of war, Neville Chamberlain - War premiership, Neville Chamberlain - Fall and resignation, Neville Chamberlain - Lord President of the Council and death, Neville Chamberlain - Legacy, Neville Chamberlain - Notes Read more here: » Neville Chamberlain: Encyclopedia II - Neville Chamberlain - Relations with Ireland |
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|  |  |  | Édouard Daladier: Encyclopedia II - Neville Chamberlain - Domestic policyChamberlain's domestic policy, which receives little attention from historians today, was considered highly significant and radical at the time. Achievements included the Factory Act 1937, which consolidated and tightened many existing measures and sought to improve working conditions by limiting the number of hours that minors and women could work and setting workplace regulation standards. The Housing Act 1938 provided subsidies that encouraged slum clearance and the relief of overcrowding, as well as maintaining rent controls for cheap ho ...
See also:Neville Chamberlain, Neville Chamberlain - Overview, Neville Chamberlain - Early life, Neville Chamberlain - Lord Mayor of Birmingham, Neville Chamberlain - Early ministerial career, Neville Chamberlain - Becoming the heir apparent, Neville Chamberlain - Formation of the National Government, Neville Chamberlain - Return to the Exchequer, Neville Chamberlain - Appointment as Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain - Domestic policy, Neville Chamberlain - Relations with Ireland, Neville Chamberlain - Palestine White Paper, Neville Chamberlain - European policy, Neville Chamberlain - Outbreak of war, Neville Chamberlain - War premiership, Neville Chamberlain - Fall and resignation, Neville Chamberlain - Lord President of the Council and death, Neville Chamberlain - Legacy, Neville Chamberlain - Notes Read more here: » Neville Chamberlain: Encyclopedia II - Neville Chamberlain - Domestic policy |
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|  |  |  | Édouard Daladier: Encyclopedia II - Neville Chamberlain - Formation of the National GovernmentImage:Ramseymac.jpg
While the Conservative Party settled internal matters, the Labour Government faced a massive economic crisis as currencies collapsed and speculators turned towards the United Kingdom. Matters were not helped by the publication of the May Report, which revealed that the budget was unbalanced. The revelation triggered a crisis of confidence in the pound, and Labour ministers grappled with the proposed budget cuts. Given the possibility that the Government could fall, Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald met regularly with ...
See also:Neville Chamberlain, Neville Chamberlain - Overview, Neville Chamberlain - Early life, Neville Chamberlain - Lord Mayor of Birmingham, Neville Chamberlain - Early ministerial career, Neville Chamberlain - Becoming the heir apparent, Neville Chamberlain - Formation of the National Government, Neville Chamberlain - Return to the Exchequer, Neville Chamberlain - Appointment as Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain - Domestic policy, Neville Chamberlain - Relations with Ireland, Neville Chamberlain - Palestine White Paper, Neville Chamberlain - European policy, Neville Chamberlain - Outbreak of war, Neville Chamberlain - War premiership, Neville Chamberlain - Fall and resignation, Neville Chamberlain - Lord President of the Council and death, Neville Chamberlain - Legacy, Neville Chamberlain - Notes Read more here: » Neville Chamberlain: Encyclopedia II - Neville Chamberlain - Formation of the National Government |
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|  |  |  | Édouard Daladier: Encyclopedia II - Neville Chamberlain - Return to the ExchequerAfter the 1931 general election, Chamberlain became Chancellor of the Exchequer a second time. As Chancellor, Chamberlain hoped to introduce protective tariffs, but the economic situation threatened government unity; at the general election, the parties supporting the government had agreed to ask for a "Doctor's mandate" to enact any legislation necessary to resolve the economic situation. Now the government, made up of Conservatives, Liberals, National Labour, and Liberal Nationals, faced a major crisis. The government agreed that no immedi ...
See also:Neville Chamberlain, Neville Chamberlain - Overview, Neville Chamberlain - Early life, Neville Chamberlain - Lord Mayor of Birmingham, Neville Chamberlain - Early ministerial career, Neville Chamberlain - Becoming the heir apparent, Neville Chamberlain - Formation of the National Government, Neville Chamberlain - Return to the Exchequer, Neville Chamberlain - Appointment as Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain - Domestic policy, Neville Chamberlain - Relations with Ireland, Neville Chamberlain - Palestine White Paper, Neville Chamberlain - European policy, Neville Chamberlain - Outbreak of war, Neville Chamberlain - War premiership, Neville Chamberlain - Fall and resignation, Neville Chamberlain - Lord President of the Council and death, Neville Chamberlain - Legacy, Neville Chamberlain - Notes Read more here: » Neville Chamberlain: Encyclopedia II - Neville Chamberlain - Return to the Exchequer |
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|  |  |  | Édouard Daladier: Encyclopedia II - Neville Chamberlain - Appointment as Prime MinisterDespite financial controversies, when Baldwin retired after the abdication of Edward VIII and the Coronation of George VI, it was Chamberlain who was invited to "kiss hands"1 and succeed him. He became Prime Minister of the United Kingdom on May 28, 1937, and leader of the Conservative Party a few days later.
Some historians have claimed that Chamberlain was not even a Conservative at all, arguing that his technocratic approach to government, commitment to social reform through state interventionism, and disdain for benign ...
See also:Neville Chamberlain, Neville Chamberlain - Overview, Neville Chamberlain - Early life, Neville Chamberlain - Lord Mayor of Birmingham, Neville Chamberlain - Early ministerial career, Neville Chamberlain - Becoming the heir apparent, Neville Chamberlain - Formation of the National Government, Neville Chamberlain - Return to the Exchequer, Neville Chamberlain - Appointment as Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain - Domestic policy, Neville Chamberlain - Relations with Ireland, Neville Chamberlain - Palestine White Paper, Neville Chamberlain - European policy, Neville Chamberlain - Outbreak of war, Neville Chamberlain - War premiership, Neville Chamberlain - Fall and resignation, Neville Chamberlain - Lord President of the Council and death, Neville Chamberlain - Legacy, Neville Chamberlain - Notes Read more here: » Neville Chamberlain: Encyclopedia II - Neville Chamberlain - Appointment as Prime Minister |
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