Yahoo Suche Web Suche

  1. amazon.de wurde im letzten Monat von mehr als 1.000.000 Nutzern besucht

    Entdecken Sie Bücher von Topautoren und finden Sie das richtige Buch für Ihre Bedürfnisse. Wählen Sie aus einer großen Auswahl an Sprachbüchern zu Toppreisen. Jetzt kaufen!

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Sir Ralph Norman Angell (* 26. Dezember 1872 in Holbeach als Ralph Norman Angell Lane; † 7. Oktober 1967 in Croydon) war ein britischer Schriftsteller und Publizist. Er erhielt 1933 den Friedensnobelpreis als Mitglied der Exekutivkommission des Völkerbundes und des Nationalen Friedensrats.

  2. Sir Ralph Norman Angell (26 December 1872 – 7 October 1967) was an English Nobel Peace Prize winner. He was a lecturer, journalist, author and Member of Parliament [1] for the Labour Party . Angell was one of the principal founders of the Union of Democratic Control.

  3. The Great Illusion is a book by Norman Angell, first published in the United Kingdom in 1909 under the title Europe's Optical Illusion and republished in 1910 and subsequently in various enlarged and revised editions under the title The Great Illusion.

    • A. H. Snow, Norman Angell
    • 1909
  4. 14. Jan. 2019 · How did the Nobel Peace Prize Laureate of 1933, who argued that war was no longer profitable, come to support a transatlantic defence alliance? This article traces his political evolution from idealistic pacifist to realistic pacifist and his role in the creation of NATO.

    • Michael Rühle
  5. His experience with the American temper in the Spanish-American War, with French chauvinism in the Dreyfus affair, and with British jingoism in the Boer War prompted his first book Patriotism under Three Flags: A Plea for Rationalism in Politics (1903).

  6. The British journalist and author Norman Angell is the only person to have been awarded the Peace Prize for publishing a book. In 1910 he wrote The Great Illusion, of which over two million copies were sold and which was translated into 25 languages.

  7. 16. Juli 2009 · Sir Norman Angell, pioneer both of international relations as a distinct discipline and of the theory of globalization, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, and one of the 20th century's leading internationalist campaigners on both sides of the Atlantic, lived the great illusion in three senses.