Germany, Turkey, and Armenia

audiobook

Germany, Turkey, and Armenia

by Anonymous

EN·~3 hours·8 chapters

Chapters

8 total
1

INTRODUCTION.

27:57
2

A. THE INVASION OF PERSIA.

4:21
3

B. THE SIX ARMENIAN VILAYETS.

53:00
4

C. CILICIA AND NORTHERN SYRIA.

1:04:51
5

D. ALEPPO.

32:24
6

E. PLACES OF EXILE.

17:13
7

APPENDIX. - Reports by Mohammedan Officers in the Turkish Army as to incidents witnessed by them.

9:38
8

Colophon - Availability

0:42

Description

This work brings together a carefully chosen set of documents that shed light on Germany’s response to the atrocities committed against the Armenian people during the First World War. By presenting reports, memoranda, and previously unpublished papers, the author reveals how many German officials and citizens were aware of the horrors, yet public debate was clouded by misinformation and indifference. The collection highlights the stark contrast between outspoken German sympathizers who demanded an end to the violence and a broader press narrative that downplayed or distorted the facts.

Through candid analysis of diplomatic correspondence and newspaper excerpts, the book shows how the German government could have intervened but chose not to, and how prevailing stereotypes about Armenians were propagated to justify inaction. Readers gain a nuanced view of the political and cultural forces at play, offering a deeper understanding of a little‑examined chapter of wartime history.

Details

Full title

Germany, Turkey, and Armenia A Selection of Documentary Evidence Relating to the Armenian Atrocities from German and other Sources

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (201K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net/ for Project Gutenberg (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

Release date

2015-07-08

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

A

Anonymous

Some of literature’s most enduring works were created without a known name attached, which gives them an extra sense of mystery. In many cases, the missing identity shifts attention away from the writer and onto the story, ideas, or tradition behind the work.

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