There will be no new episode of the podcast this week. We will return with episode 161, Kaiserschlacht, next week.
Year: 2019
160: The Fourteen Points
Leon Trotsky challenged the Allies either to enter peace negotiations or state what great purpose justifies continuing the fighting. Socialists in Germany have called for peace without annexation or indemnities. The new Austrian Emperor has put out peace feelers.
So what are the Allies fighting for? What do they require in exchange for peace? On January 8, 1918, Woodrow Wilson lays out his Fourteen Points, a set of Allied demands that must be met to end the fighting.
- Listen now:
Playlist:
Fanfare
Opening War Theme
Florentiner Marsch
Composed in 1907 by Julius Fučík. Public domain.
Performed by the United States Marine Band. Public domain recording. Source.
Closing War Theme
Except when otherwise indicated, the contents of this podcast are © and ℗ 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 by Mark Painter, all rights reserved. Some music and sound effects used by arrangement with Pond 5.
159: The Liberal Crisis
In the United Kingdom, its dominions, and in France, 1917 sees the same kinds of erosion of democracy and civil liberties as we have seen in the USA.
Is this the price a free society has to pay to fight a modern war?
- Listen now:
Playlist:
Fanfare
Opening War Theme
Valse de Paris
Closing War Theme
Except when otherwise indicated, the contents of this podcast are © and ℗ 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 by Mark Painter, all rights reserved. Some music and sound effects used by arrangement with Pond 5.
158: So Thoroughly Policed
In the United States, the war brings change. New Federal agencies are created to coordinate military production and distribution of food and fuel.
More troubling are attacks on anti-war expression, including the Espionage Act of 1917.
- Listen now:
Playlist:
Fanfare
Opening War Theme
Kismet Rag
Composed in 1913 by Scott Joplin and Scott Hayden. Public domain.
Performed by Tony Wilkinson and used pursuant to a Creative Commons CC BY 3.0 license. Source.
Closing War Theme
Except when otherwise indicated, the contents of this podcast are © and ℗ 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 by Mark Painter, all rights reserved. Some music and sound effects used by arrangement with Pond 5.
157: A Path Strewn with Roses
The peace terms were so extreme, even may Bolsheviks resisted agreeing to them. But when the Germans, their patience exhausted, began marching deeper into Russia, virtually unopposed, Lenin persuaded the Central Committee to agree to the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk.
Domestically, the Constituent Assembly had been forcibly dissolved. Bolshevik rule over Russia can now only be contested by force of arms.
- Listen now:
Playlist:
Fanfare
Opening War Theme
String Quartet No. 2
Composed in 1907 by César Cui. Public domain.
Performed by Steve’s Bedroom Band and used pursuant to a Creative Commons CC BY 3.0 license. Source.
Closing War Theme
Except when otherwise indicated, the contents of this podcast are © and ℗ 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 by Mark Painter, all rights reserved. Some music and sound effects used by arrangement with Pond 5.
156: Locomotives for Heads
The new Bolshevik government installed in Russia by the October Revolution was not regarded at the time as permanent, but merely as a new provisional government.
Lenin and the Bolsheviks, however, were intent on keeping power. One means of accomplishing this would be to end the war, which was the Bolsheviks’ signature campaign promise. And so, an armistice was quickly arranged.
- Listen now:
Playlist:
Fanfare
Opening War Theme
Piano Concerto No. 2 in G
Composed in 1880 by Pyotr Ilych Tchaikovsky. Public domain.
Public domain recording. Source.
Closing War Theme
Except when otherwise indicated, the contents of this podcast are © and ℗ 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 by Mark Painter, all rights reserved. Some music and sound effects used by arrangement with Pond 5.
155: A Lake of Blood
In the nation of Iran (which English speakers of the time called “Persia”), both Britain and Russia have a military presence, with Turkish troops crossing the border. As a result, Iran suffered famine, disease, and hardship during the war, despite formally remaining neutral.
In Greece, the question of whether to join the Allies split the government and led to what is known as the “National Schism.”
- Listen now:
Playlist:
Fanfare
Opening War Theme
String Quartet in F Major
Composed in 1903 by Maurice Ravel. Public domain.
Performed by The Musicians from Marlboro and used pursuant to a Creative Commons CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 license. Source.
Closing War Theme
Except when otherwise indicated, the contents of this podcast are © and ℗ 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 by Mark Painter, all rights reserved. Some music and sound effects used by arrangement with Pond 5.
Reminder
Just a reminder that there will be no new episode this week. We will return next week with episode 155. See you then!
154: The Balfour Declaration
By early 1917, the British are advancing into Ottoman Palestine, with an assist from the Arab Revolt.
Later in the year, as British troops approach Jerusalem, the British Government declares its support for “a national home for the Jewish people.” It is not clear exactly what that means.
- Listen now:
Playlist:
Fanfare
Opening War Theme
“Hatikvah”
Composed in 1888 by Samuel Cohen and Naftali Herz Imber. Public domain.
Performed by the United States Navy Band. Public domain recording. Source.
“Hava Nagila”
Composed in 1915 by Abraham Zevi Idelsohn. Public Domain.
Closing War Theme
Except when otherwise indicated, the contents of this podcast are © and ℗ 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 by Mark Painter, all rights reserved. Some music and sound effects used by arrangement with Pond 5.
153: The Visionary and the Evangelist
In 1917, just as the U.S. enters the Great War, the evangelist Billy Sunday, the biggest name in American religion, holds his largest revival ever in New York City.
On the other side of the Atlantic, in Portugal, three peasant children tell a story of visions of the Virgin Mary that will amaze, fascinate, and sometimes divide Catholics for the rest of the century.
- Listen now:
Playlist:
Fanfare
Opening War Theme
“Bringing in the Sheaves”
Composed in 1880 by George Minor and Knowles Shaw. Public Domain.
“When the Roll is Called Up Yonder”
Composed in 1893 by James Milton Black. Public Domain.
Ave Maria
Composed in 1825 by Franz Schubert. Public Domain.
Performed by Bradley Chapman and used pursuant to a Creative Commons CC BY 3.0 license. Source.
Except when otherwise indicated, the contents of this podcast are © and ℗ 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 by Mark Painter, all rights reserved. Some music and sound effects used by arrangement with Pond 5.