England and France had long stood as rivals and outright enemies for many
centuries. Massive campaigns had been fought between the two in the
Hundred Years' War, Seven Years' War, Napoleon's Wars, just to list a few.
In the seventeenth and eighteenth century, England had grown to dominance
and merged with Scotland and Ireland into Great Britain, only to have its
American colonies lost by French intervention. Britain struck back by
ending Napoleon's empire, and then, over the course of the nineteenth
century, the two political juggernauts came to something of a truce.
Please click the
icon to follow us on Facebook.First used in 1844, Entente-Cordiale
("cordial understanding") became the term for the common interest and
mutual advantages between France and Britain. The two had even worked as
allies in the Crimean War to halt the expansion of the Russian Empire, but
old colonial rivals kept them apart.
Even by 1900, the happy agreements toward peace between the two were still
informal. Britain had long enjoyed its policy of Splendid Isolation,
focusing on its empire and leaving alone the matters of the Continent.
However, with the taxing and often humbling Boer Wars and the growth of
German power both in Europe and in Africa, Britain looked back toward
Europe to reevaluate its position. Talks were held about Britain
potentially becoming a member of Germany's Triple Alliance, but Edward VII
nixed the idea in preference to isolation. The position of neutrality
became more and more difficult to maintain as Britain's new ally Japan and
France's longtime ally Russia turned toward war in 1904. Diplomats led by
British Foreign Secretary Lord Lansdowne and French foreign minister
Theophile Delcasse scrambled in an attempt to sort out the colonial
matters that still plagued France and England to draw up a fashionable
alliance. For a time, an agreement looked promising, but arguments over
Newfoundland fishing rights broke down talks. Finally, two months after
Russia and Japan had gone to war, the talks ended with simple neutrality
as the best the France and Britain could muster.
While the old empires watched, young empires came fully onto the scene.
Japan won the war effectively against Russia, whose people erupted in
revolt. US President Theodore Roosevelt ended the war with the Treaty of
Portsmouth through back channel diplomacy that won him the Nobel Peace
Prize in 1906. Britain returned to its policies of isolation and
protecting her vast empire. France, meanwhile, made brisk attempts to aid
Russia and to coax Italy away from Germany's Triple Alliance, which it did
by supporting the Italo-Turkish War in 1911.
The web of international treaties and alliances broke with the single shot
that killed the Archduke Ferdinand. Austria-Hungary invaded Serbia, Russia
invaded Austria-Hungary, Germany invaded Russia, and France declared war
on Germany. With Britain and its neutral ally Belgium diplomatically out
of the war without antagonism, German command saw fit to alter the
Schlieffen Plan and assault the French forces more directly rather than
invade through innocent Belgium. Initially, the French stood in a mighty
defense against the German onslaught, but the German wehrmacht enabled the
resources to roll the trench warfare backward toward Paris. With the
collapse of Russia and Italy quickly changing sides, the war ended in 1917
with the Treaty of Berlin inside a suddenly powerful Germany. Britain and
the United States felt grateful for being spared the massive bloodshed of
the war and in fact prospering as Europe hurried to rebuild.
Renewed nationalism in the decaying Austro-Hungarian Empire spurred its
collapse in 1931 as the Great Depression ground on. Socialism, which had
been long nurtured in France and triumphant in Russia, took the losing
countries of the war by storm. A grand socialist alliance grew powerful as
the nearly fascist monarchies of Germany and Japan struggled. In 1942, the
World War broke out as Stalin invaded Poland and much of Eastern Europe in
an attempt to "liberate and unify the workers of the world". His
expansionism continued into the Middle East while France fought to take
German colonies in Africa, and Italy fell to civil war. Britain was
finally drawn into the war it had always feared when the French
Mediterranean fleet struck Egypt and blockaded the Suez Canal while other
troops occupied disputed territories in West Africa. Socialist riots broke
out in India, and the widespread war caused Britain simply to evacuate one
of its greatest jewels. The United States, too, lost its neutrality as
Russia pressed through Japanese forces in China and made a surprise attack
on Midway Island.
Bitter warfare continued to 1952 when Russia finally capitulated under the
onslaught of American atomic bombs and it became known that Josef Stalin
had died due to heart failure.