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The Rise and Fall of Great Powers (part 2): Economic Change and Military Conflict, 1500-2000

(british) Kennedy

219K7.55

"The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers" is divided into two volumes. It makes a comprehensive comparison of the military and economic status of various countries after 1500 AD. It covers many theoretical issues such as military and national power, economic development cycles, etc. It is a comprehensive analysis of the decline and fall of the national power of the great powers from a global perspective. It provides a large amount of detailed information for contemporary readers who are eager to understand the changing trends in the economic, military and other national power comparisons of the major powers. The focus of "The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers" has not departed from the traditional areas of history - economic history and military history, but its connotation has undergone qualitative changes. As the author Paul Kennedy said, "The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers" is not a military history, nor is it an economic history.

The Rise and Fall of Great Powers (part 1): Economic Change and Military Conflict, 1500-2000

(british) Kennedy

227K0

Introduction to "The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers (Part 1)": "The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers" is divided into two volumes. It makes a comprehensive comparison of the military and economic status of various countries after 1500 AD. It covers many theoretical issues such as military and national power, economic development cycles, etc. It is a work that comprehensively analyzes the ebb and flow of the national power of the great powers from a global perspective. It provides a large amount of detailed information for contemporary readers who are eager to understand the changing trends in the economic, military and other national power comparisons of the major powers. The focus of "The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers" has not departed from the traditional areas of history - economic history and military history, but its connotation has undergone qualitative changes. As the author Paul Kennedy said, "The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers" is not a military history, nor is it an economic history.