Four Polands, One International System: Multicultural Polonia Restituta and the Peace Negotiations of 1918-1921
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Author:
Davion, Isabelle
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-citation: Res Gestae. Czasopismo Historyczne. 2024, T. 19, s. 139-146
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-iso: en
Subject:
Paris Peace ConferenceAmerican Relief Administration
right of peoples to selfdetermination
collective security
democracy
modernity
Date: 2024
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In the eyes of the French and Anglo-Saxon peacemakers at the end of World War I, the Polish
case presented specific challenges. The three parts of the restored state, to whom we will adjoin
the French Polonia, make it difficult to find homogeneity between the country and the people. In
these conditions, the following question arises: How does one build an organised governmental
machine and, most urgently, a united army that would be able to respond to the Soviet threat?
The Allied and Associated Powers had different answers, but one single statement when it came
to Poland: it was “a nation struggling to become a state, with perhaps a greater number of more
difficult problems than have ever faced up any other nation at any one time.” (Hoover Library &
Archives, Gibson (Hugh S.) papers)


