The Anarchy is the name given to a period of instability and civil war in England that has come largely unmatched anywhere else in the industrialized world between 1950 and 1956. Also referred to as the Second English Civil War, it is seen as the capstone end to England's position as the French Empire's subject state living in a position of anger over their loss in the Forty Days Campaign, and their reemergence as a new country backed by the United States of America. The Anarchy claimed the lives of nearly five million Englishmen, as well as 27,000 Scottish soldiers, 22,000 Irish soldiers, 54,000 French soldiers and 49,000 American soldiers.
Attributes | Values |
---|
rdfs:label
| - The Anarchy (Napoleon's World)
|
rdfs:comment
| - The Anarchy is the name given to a period of instability and civil war in England that has come largely unmatched anywhere else in the industrialized world between 1950 and 1956. Also referred to as the Second English Civil War, it is seen as the capstone end to England's position as the French Empire's subject state living in a position of anger over their loss in the Forty Days Campaign, and their reemergence as a new country backed by the United States of America. The Anarchy claimed the lives of nearly five million Englishmen, as well as 27,000 Scottish soldiers, 22,000 Irish soldiers, 54,000 French soldiers and 49,000 American soldiers.
|
dcterms:subject
| |
abstract
| - The Anarchy is the name given to a period of instability and civil war in England that has come largely unmatched anywhere else in the industrialized world between 1950 and 1956. Also referred to as the Second English Civil War, it is seen as the capstone end to England's position as the French Empire's subject state living in a position of anger over their loss in the Forty Days Campaign, and their reemergence as a new country backed by the United States of America. The Anarchy claimed the lives of nearly five million Englishmen, as well as 27,000 Scottish soldiers, 22,000 Irish soldiers, 54,000 French soldiers and 49,000 American soldiers.
|