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World war

A world war is an international conflict that involves most or all of the world's major powers.[1] Conventionally, the term is reserved for two major international conflicts that occurred during the first half of the 20th century, World War I (1914–1918) and World War II (1939–1945), although some historians have also characterised other global conflicts as world wars, such as the Nine Years' War, the War of the Spanish Succession, the Seven Years' War, the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, the Cold War, and the War on Terror.

United States Army infantry supported by a tank advancing through an enemy-occupied town during World War II, the most recent conflict to widely be considered a "world war"

Etymology Edit

The Oxford English Dictionary cited the first known usage in the English language to a Scottish newspaper, The People's Journal, in 1848: "A war among the great powers is now necessarily a world-war." The term "world war" is used by Karl Marx and his associate, Friedrich Engels,[2] in a series of articles published around 1850 called The Class Struggles in France. Rasmus B. Anderson in 1889 described an episode in Teutonic mythology as a "world war" (Swedish: världskrig), justifying this description by a line in an Old Norse epic poem, "Völuspá: folcvig fyrst I heimi" ("The first great war in the world").[3] German writer August Wilhelm Otto Niemann used the term "world war" in the title of his anti-British novel, Der Weltkrieg: Deutsche Träume (The World War: German Dreams) in 1904, published in English as The Coming Conquest of England.

The term "first world war" was first used in September 1914 by German biologist and philosopher Ernst Haeckel, who claimed that "there is no doubt that the course and character of the feared 'European War' ... will become the first world war in the full sense of the word",[4] citing a wire service report in the Indianapolis Star on 20 September 1914. In English, the term "First World War" had been used by Lt-Col. Charles à Court Repington, as a title for his memoirs (published in 1920); he had noted his discussion on the matter with a Major Johnstone of Harvard University in his diary entry of September 10, 1918.[5][6]

The term "World War I" was coined by Time magazine on page 28b of its June 12, 1939 issue. In the same article, on page 32, the term "World War II" was first used speculatively to describe the upcoming war. The first use for the actual war came in its issue of September 11, 1939.[7] One week earlier, on September 4, the day after France and the United Kingdom declared war on Germany, the Danish newspaper Kristeligt Dagblad used the term on its front page, saying "The Second World War broke out yesterday at 11 a.m."[8]

Speculative fiction authors had been noting the concept of a Second World War in 1919 and 1920, when Milo Hastings wrote his dystopian novel, City of Endless Night.

Other languages have also adopted the "world war" terminology; for example, in French, "world war" is translated as guerre mondiale; in German, Weltkrieg (which, prior to the war, had been used in the more abstract meaning of a global conflict); in Italian, guerra mondiale; in Spanish and Portuguese, guerra mundial; in Danish and Norwegian, verdenskrig; in Russian, мировая война (mirovaya voyna); and in Finnish, maailmansota.

History Edit

First World War Edit

 
French Army soldiers holding a position in the ruins of a church during the Second Battle of the Marne, part of World War I

World War I occurred from 1914 to 1918. In terms of human technological history, the scale of World War I was enabled by the technological advances of the second industrial revolution and the resulting globalization that allowed global power projection and mass production of military hardware. It had been recognized that the complex system of opposing military alliances (the German and Austro-Hungarian Empires against the British, Russian, and French Empires) was likely, if war broke out, to lead to a worldwide conflict. That caused a very minute conflict between two countries to have the potential to set off a domino effect of alliances, triggering a world war. The fact that the powers involved had large overseas empires virtually guaranteed that such a war would be worldwide, as the colonies' resources would be a crucial strategic factor. The same strategic considerations also ensured that the combatants would strike at each other's colonies, thus spreading the wars far more widely than those of pre-Columbian times.[further explanation needed]

War crimes were perpetrated in World War I. Chemical weapons were used in the war despite the Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907 having outlawed the use of such weapons in warfare. The Ottoman Empire was responsible for the Armenian genocide, during the First World War, as well as other war crimes.

Second World War Edit

 
British Army mechanized infantry passing a destroyed Wehrmacht tank during Operation Overlord, part of World War II

The Second World War occurred from 1939 to 1945 and is the only conflict in which nuclear weapons have been used; both Hiroshima and Nagasaki, in the Japanese Empire, were devastated by atomic bombs dropped by the United States. Nazi Germany, led by Adolf Hitler, was responsible for genocides, most notably the Holocaust, the killing of about 6,000,000 Jews and the killing of 11,000,000 others who were persecuted by the Nazis, including Romani people and homosexuals.[9] The United States, the Soviet Union, and Canada deported and interned minority groups within their own borders and, largely because of the conflict, many ethnic Germans were later expelled from Eastern Europe. Japan was responsible for attacking neutral nations without a declaration of war, such as the attack on Pearl Harbor. It is also known for its brutal treatment and killing of Allied prisoners of war and the inhabitants of Asia. It also used Asians as forced laborers and was responsible for the Nanjing Massacre in which 250,000 civilians were brutally murdered by Japanese troops. Noncombatants suffered at least as badly as or worse than combatants, and the distinction between combatants and noncombatants was often blurred by the belligerents of total war in both conflicts.[10]

The outcome of the war had a profound effect on the course of world history. The old European empires collapsed or they were dismantled as a direct result of the crushing costs of the war and in some cases, their fall was caused by the defeat of imperial powers. The United States became firmly established as the dominant global superpower, along with its close competitor and ideological foe, the Soviet Union. The two superpowers exerted political influence over most of the world's nation-states for decades after the end of the Second World War. The modern international security, economic, and diplomatic system was created in the aftermath of the war.[10]

Institutions such as the United Nations were established to collectivize international affairs, with the explicit goal of preventing another outbreak of general war. The wars had also greatly changed the course of daily life. Technologies developed during wartime had a profound effect on peacetime life as well, such as by advances in jet aircraft, penicillin, nuclear energy, and electronic computers.[10]

Potential Third World War Edit

 
U.S. Army paratroopers landing in a field in West Germany during Exercise Reforger 1984, a Cold War-era NATO military exercise used to prepare for potential conventional warfare against the Warsaw Pact; such a conflict was expected to be World War III.

Since the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki during the Second World War, there has been a widespread and prolonged fear of a potential third world war between nuclear-armed powers.[11][12] It is often suggested that it would become a nuclear war, and be more devastating and violent than both the First and Second World Wars. Albert Einstein is often quoted as having said in 1947 that "I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones."[13][14][15][16] It has been anticipated and planned for by military and civil authorities, and it has also been explored in fiction in many countries. Scenarios have ranged from conventional warfare to limited or total nuclear warfare.[citation needed]

Various former government officials, politicians, authors, and military leaders (including James Woolsey,[citation needed] Alexandre de Marenches,[17] Eliot Cohen,[18] and Subcomandante Marcos[19]) have attempted to apply the labels of the "Third World War" and the "Fourth World War" to various past and present global wars since the end of the Second World War, such as the Cold War and the War on Terror respectively. However, none of the wars have commonly been deemed world wars.[citation needed]

During the early 21st century, the war in Afghanistan (2001–2021), the Arab Spring (2010–2012), the Syrian civil war (2011–present), the war in Iraq (2013–2017), the Russo-Ukrainian War (2014–present), the Yemeni Civil War (2014–present), and their worldwide spillovers are sometimes described as proxy wars waged by the United States and Russia,[20][21][22][23] which led some commentators[who?] to characterize the situation as a "proto-world war", with many countries embroiled in overlapping conflicts.[24]

Other global conflicts Edit

 
An artist's depiction of the Prussian Army clashing with the Imperial Russian Army at the Battle of Zorndorf, part of the Seven Years' War, which some historians consider to be an early world war

The Late Bronze Age collapse has been described as "World War Zero" by some historians.[25][26]

Some historians consider the Seven Years' War (1756–1763) to have been a world war. Also considered the "Void Century". Historians Richard F. Hamilton and Holger H. Herwig include it among a list of eight world wars, including the two generally agreed-upon world wars plus these six others: the Nine Years' War (1689–1697), the War of the Spanish Succession (1701–1714), the War of the Austrian Succession (1740–1748), the Seven Years' War (1756–1763), the French Revolutionary Wars (1792–1802), and the Napoleonic Wars (1803–1815).[27] British historian John Robert Seeley dubbed all of those wars between France and Great Britain (later the UK) between 1689 and 1815 (including the American Revolutionary War from 1775 to 1783) as the Second Hundred Years' War, echoing an earlier period of conflict between France and England known as the Hundred Years' War (1337–1453).[28] Although that period included the War of the Quadruple Alliance (1718–1720) in which France and Great Britain were on the same side. Some writers have referred to the American Revolutionary War alone as a world war.[28]

Other historians suggest even earlier conflicts to be world wars. For example, Russian ethnologist L. N. Gumilyov called the Byzantine–Sasanian War of 602–628 "the World War of the 7th century" because it evolved into a war between the fourfold alliance of the Chinese Empire, the Western Turkic Khaganate, the Khazars, and the Byzantine Empire against a triple union of the Sasanian Empire, the Avars, and the Eastern Turkic Kaganates, with proxy conflicts in Afro-Eurasia (like the Aksumite–Persian wars) and across the Old World.[29] Others consider that the Ottoman–Portuguese confrontations and Ottoman–Habsburg wars can be considered as world conflicts, prototypes of the "Great Game" in Eurasia and the Scramble for Africa, but between two main power-projecting and religious blocs, that being the Ottomans, as holders of the Muslim Caliph title, and the Habsburgs, as emperors of Christendom.[30][31]

However, the Americas and Oceania were not involved in those conflicts, in which case, other historians consider the Thirty Years' War and Eighty Years' War as the first global conflict, pitting the Spanish Empire and the Portuguese Empire against the French colonial empire, Dutch Empire, British Empire, and their allies (mostly Protestants) across the 5 continents.[32][33][34][35]

Another possible example is the Second Congo War (1998–2003) even though it was only waged on one continent. It involved nine nations and led to ongoing low-intensity warfare despite an official peace and the first democratic elections in 2006. It has frequently been referred to as "Africa's World War".[36]

Event Casualties lowest estimate Casualties highest estimate Location From To Duration (years)
 
Nine Years' War[27][37][38][39]
680,000[27] Europe, North America, South America, Asia 1688 1697 9
 
War of the Spanish Succession[27][38]
700,000[40] 1,251,000[41] Europe, North America, South America, Africa 1701 1714 13
 
War of the Austrian Succession[27][42]
359,000[27] Europe, North America, South America, India 1740 1748 8
 
Seven Years' War[43][44]
992,000[27] 1,500,000[45] Europe, North America, South America, Africa, Asia 1754 1763 9
 
American Revolutionary War[28]
217,000 262,000 North America, Gibraltar, Balearic Islands, India, Africa, Caribbean Sea, Atlantic Ocean, Indian Ocean 1775 1783 8
 
French Revolutionary Wars[27]
663,000[27] Europe, Egypt, Middle East, Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean, Indian Ocean 1792 1802 9
 
Napoleonic Wars[43][46]
1,800,000[27] 7,000,000[47] Europe, Atlantic Ocean, Mediterranean Sea, North Sea, Río de la Plata, French Guiana, West Indies, Indian Ocean, North America, South Caucasus 1803 1815 13
 
World War I
15,000,000[48] 65,000,000[49] Global 1914 1918 4
 
World War II
40,000,000[50] 85,000,000[51] Global 1939 1945 6
 
Cold War
Global 1947 1991 44
 
War on Terror
4,500,000[52] 4,600,000[52] Global 2001 2021 20

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Webster, Merriam-. "World War". Merriam-Webster.com. from the original on 11 December 2019. Retrieved 11 November 2019.
  2. ^ Engels, Frederick. "Introduction to Borkheim". from the original on 2018-07-16. Retrieved 2015-03-01.
  3. ^ Rasmus Björn Anderson (translator: Viktor Rydberg), Teutonic Mythology, vol. 1, p. 139 2020-01-26 at the Wayback Machine, London: S. Sonnenschein & Co., 1889 OCLC 626839.
  4. ^ Shapiro & Epstein 2006, p. 329.
  5. ^ Proffitt, Michael (2014-06-13). "Chief Editor's notes June 2014". Oxford English Dictionary's blog. from the original on 2022-04-15. Retrieved 2022-04-25.
  6. ^ . Quite Interesting. Archived from the original on 2014-01-03. Also aired on QI Series I Episode 2, 16 September 2011, BBC Two.
  7. ^ "Grey Friday: TIME Reports on World War II Beginning". TIME. September 11, 1939. from the original on 11 October 2014. Retrieved 20 October 2014. World War II began last week at 5:20 a. m. (Polish time) Friday, September 1, when a German bombing plane dropped a projectile on Puck, fishing village and airbase in the armpit of the Hel Peninsula.
  8. ^ "Den anden Verdenskrig udbrød i Gaar Middags Kl. 11", Kristeligt Dagblad, September 4, 1939, Extra edition.
  9. ^ "Documenting Numbers of Victims of the Holocaust and Nazi Persecution". encyclopedia.ushmm.org. from the original on 2020-02-20. Retrieved 2020-09-05.
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  11. ^ Biggs, Lindy and Hansen, James (editors), 2004, Readings in Technology and Civilisation, ISBN 0-7593-3869-8.
  12. ^ Worland, Rick, 2006, The Horror Film: An Introduction, Blackwell Publishing, ISBN 1-4051-3902-1.
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  17. ^ Andelman, Professor David; Marenches, Comte Alexandre de; Marenches, Count De; Andelman, David (1992). The Fourth World War: Diplomacy and Espionage ... ISBN 0688092187.Book regarding alleged WWIV
  18. ^ "World War IV: Let's call this conflict what it is". 2001. from the original on 2010-03-27. Retrieved 2010-02-04.Why war on terrorism should be called WWIV
  19. ^ Subcomandante Marcos (2001). "The Fourth World War Has Begun". Nepantla: Views from South. 2 (3): 559–572. from the original on 29 October 2014. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  20. ^ Anne Barnard and Karen Shoumali (12 October 2015). "U.S. Weaponry Is Turning Syria Into Proxy War With Russia". The New York Times. from the original on 15 October 2015. Retrieved 14 October 2015.
  21. ^ Martin Pengelly (4 October 2015). "John McCain says US is engaged in proxy war with Russia in Syria". The Guardian. from the original on 12 October 2015. Retrieved 17 October 2015.
  22. ^ Holly Yan and Mark Morgenstein (13 October 2015). "U.S., Russia escalate involvement in Syria". CNN. from the original on 17 October 2015. Retrieved 17 October 2015.
  23. ^ Taub, Amanda (1 October 2015). ""The Russians have made a serious mistake": how Putin's Syria gambit will backfire". Vox. from the original on 22 October 2015. Retrieved 17 October 2015.
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  30. ^ Crowley, Roger Empires of the Sea: The siege of Malta, the battle of Lepanto and the contest for the center of the world, Random House, 2008
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  33. ^ Written by Felix Velazquez Lopez. With the collaboration of several academics from universities in Spain. Produced by Premium Cinema. (2010). «The History of the Greatest Empire Ever Known: Chapter 5, Felipe III (Los Austrias)».
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  44. ^ Hodgson, Quentin E (2001). "The First Global War". SAIS Review. 21 (1): 291–294. doi:10.1353/sais.2001.0016. ISSN 1945-4724. S2CID 154584277. from the original on 2018-06-01. Retrieved 2022-01-20.
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  52. ^ a b
    • "Human Cost of Post-9/11 Wars: Direct War Deaths in Major War Zones, Afghanistan & Pakistan (Oct. 2001 – Aug. 2021); Iraq (March 2003 – Aug. 2021); Syria (Sept. 2014 – May 2021); Yemen (Oct. 2002–Aug. 2021) and Other Post-9/11 War Zones". The Costs of War. Retrieved 10 September 2021.
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Bibliography Edit

External links Edit

  • , an interview with philosopher Jean Baudrillard

world, other, uses, disambiguation, world, international, conflict, that, involves, most, world, major, powers, conventionally, term, reserved, major, international, conflicts, that, occurred, during, first, half, 20th, century, world, 1914, 1918, world, 1939,. For other uses see World war disambiguation A world war is an international conflict that involves most or all of the world s major powers 1 Conventionally the term is reserved for two major international conflicts that occurred during the first half of the 20th century World War I 1914 1918 and World War II 1939 1945 although some historians have also characterised other global conflicts as world wars such as the Nine Years War the War of the Spanish Succession the Seven Years War the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars the Cold War and the War on Terror United States Army infantry supported by a tank advancing through an enemy occupied town during World War II the most recent conflict to widely be considered a world war Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 First World War 2 2 Second World War 3 Potential Third World War 4 Other global conflicts 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksEtymology EditThe Oxford English Dictionary cited the first known usage in the English language to a Scottish newspaper The People s Journal in 1848 A war among the great powers is now necessarily a world war The term world war is used by Karl Marx and his associate Friedrich Engels 2 in a series of articles published around 1850 called The Class Struggles in France Rasmus B Anderson in 1889 described an episode in Teutonic mythology as a world war Swedish varldskrig justifying this description by a line in an Old Norse epic poem Voluspa folcvig fyrst I heimi The first great war in the world 3 German writer August Wilhelm Otto Niemann used the term world war in the title of his anti British novel Der Weltkrieg Deutsche Traume The World War German Dreams in 1904 published in English as The Coming Conquest of England The term first world war was first used in September 1914 by German biologist and philosopher Ernst Haeckel who claimed that there is no doubt that the course and character of the feared European War will become the first world war in the full sense of the word 4 citing a wire service report in the Indianapolis Star on 20 September 1914 In English the term First World War had been used by Lt Col Charles a Court Repington as a title for his memoirs published in 1920 he had noted his discussion on the matter with a Major Johnstone of Harvard University in his diary entry of September 10 1918 5 6 The term World War I was coined by Time magazine on page 28b of its June 12 1939 issue In the same article on page 32 the term World War II was first used speculatively to describe the upcoming war The first use for the actual war came in its issue of September 11 1939 7 One week earlier on September 4 the day after France and the United Kingdom declared war on Germany the Danish newspaper Kristeligt Dagblad used the term on its front page saying The Second World War broke out yesterday at 11 a m 8 Speculative fiction authors had been noting the concept of a Second World War in 1919 and 1920 when Milo Hastings wrote his dystopian novel City of Endless Night Other languages have also adopted the world war terminology for example in French world war is translated as guerre mondiale in German Weltkrieg which prior to the war had been used in the more abstract meaning of a global conflict in Italian guerra mondiale in Spanish and Portuguese guerra mundial in Danish and Norwegian verdenskrig in Russian mirovaya vojna mirovaya voyna and in Finnish maailmansota History EditFirst World War Edit Main article World War I nbsp French Army soldiers holding a position in the ruins of a church during the Second Battle of the Marne part of World War IWorld War I occurred from 1914 to 1918 In terms of human technological history the scale of World War I was enabled by the technological advances of the second industrial revolution and the resulting globalization that allowed global power projection and mass production of military hardware It had been recognized that the complex system of opposing military alliances the German and Austro Hungarian Empires against the British Russian and French Empires was likely if war broke out to lead to a worldwide conflict That caused a very minute conflict between two countries to have the potential to set off a domino effect of alliances triggering a world war The fact that the powers involved had large overseas empires virtually guaranteed that such a war would be worldwide as the colonies resources would be a crucial strategic factor The same strategic considerations also ensured that the combatants would strike at each other s colonies thus spreading the wars far more widely than those of pre Columbian times further explanation needed War crimes were perpetrated in World War I Chemical weapons were used in the war despite the Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907 having outlawed the use of such weapons in warfare The Ottoman Empire was responsible for the Armenian genocide during the First World War as well as other war crimes Second World War Edit Main article World War II nbsp British Army mechanized infantry passing a destroyed Wehrmacht tank during Operation Overlord part of World War IIThe Second World War occurred from 1939 to 1945 and is the only conflict in which nuclear weapons have been used both Hiroshima and Nagasaki in the Japanese Empire were devastated by atomic bombs dropped by the United States Nazi Germany led by Adolf Hitler was responsible for genocides most notably the Holocaust the killing of about 6 000 000 Jews and the killing of 11 000 000 others who were persecuted by the Nazis including Romani people and homosexuals 9 The United States the Soviet Union and Canada deported and interned minority groups within their own borders and largely because of the conflict many ethnic Germans were later expelled from Eastern Europe Japan was responsible for attacking neutral nations without a declaration of war such as the attack on Pearl Harbor It is also known for its brutal treatment and killing of Allied prisoners of war and the inhabitants of Asia It also used Asians as forced laborers and was responsible for the Nanjing Massacre in which 250 000 civilians were brutally murdered by Japanese troops Noncombatants suffered at least as badly as or worse than combatants and the distinction between combatants and noncombatants was often blurred by the belligerents of total war in both conflicts 10 The outcome of the war had a profound effect on the course of world history The old European empires collapsed or they were dismantled as a direct result of the crushing costs of the war and in some cases their fall was caused by the defeat of imperial powers The United States became firmly established as the dominant global superpower along with its close competitor and ideological foe the Soviet Union The two superpowers exerted political influence over most of the world s nation states for decades after the end of the Second World War The modern international security economic and diplomatic system was created in the aftermath of the war 10 Institutions such as the United Nations were established to collectivize international affairs with the explicit goal of preventing another outbreak of general war The wars had also greatly changed the course of daily life Technologies developed during wartime had a profound effect on peacetime life as well such as by advances in jet aircraft penicillin nuclear energy and electronic computers 10 Potential Third World War EditMain article World War III nbsp U S Army paratroopers landing in a field in West Germany during Exercise Reforger 1984 a Cold War era NATO military exercise used to prepare for potential conventional warfare against the Warsaw Pact such a conflict was expected to be World War III Since the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki during the Second World War there has been a widespread and prolonged fear of a potential third world war between nuclear armed powers 11 12 It is often suggested that it would become a nuclear war and be more devastating and violent than both the First and Second World Wars Albert Einstein is often quoted as having said in 1947 that I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones 13 14 15 16 It has been anticipated and planned for by military and civil authorities and it has also been explored in fiction in many countries Scenarios have ranged from conventional warfare to limited or total nuclear warfare citation needed Various former government officials politicians authors and military leaders including James Woolsey citation needed Alexandre de Marenches 17 Eliot Cohen 18 and Subcomandante Marcos 19 have attempted to apply the labels of the Third World War and the Fourth World War to various past and present global wars since the end of the Second World War such as the Cold War and the War on Terror respectively However none of the wars have commonly been deemed world wars citation needed During the early 21st century the war in Afghanistan 2001 2021 the Arab Spring 2010 2012 the Syrian civil war 2011 present the war in Iraq 2013 2017 the Russo Ukrainian War 2014 present the Yemeni Civil War 2014 present and their worldwide spillovers are sometimes described as proxy wars waged by the United States and Russia 20 21 22 23 which led some commentators who to characterize the situation as a proto world war with many countries embroiled in overlapping conflicts 24 Other global conflicts Edit nbsp An artist s depiction of the Prussian Army clashing with the Imperial Russian Army at the Battle of Zorndorf part of the Seven Years War which some historians consider to be an early world warThe Late Bronze Age collapse has been described as World War Zero by some historians 25 26 Some historians consider the Seven Years War 1756 1763 to have been a world war Also considered the Void Century Historians Richard F Hamilton and Holger H Herwig include it among a list of eight world wars including the two generally agreed upon world wars plus these six others the Nine Years War 1689 1697 the War of the Spanish Succession 1701 1714 the War of the Austrian Succession 1740 1748 the Seven Years War 1756 1763 the French Revolutionary Wars 1792 1802 and the Napoleonic Wars 1803 1815 27 British historian John Robert Seeley dubbed all of those wars between France and Great Britain later the UK between 1689 and 1815 including the American Revolutionary War from 1775 to 1783 as the Second Hundred Years War echoing an earlier period of conflict between France and England known as the Hundred Years War 1337 1453 28 Although that period included the War of the Quadruple Alliance 1718 1720 in which France and Great Britain were on the same side Some writers have referred to the American Revolutionary War alone as a world war 28 Other historians suggest even earlier conflicts to be world wars For example Russian ethnologist L N Gumilyov called the Byzantine Sasanian War of 602 628 the World War of the 7th century because it evolved into a war between the fourfold alliance of the Chinese Empire the Western Turkic Khaganate the Khazars and the Byzantine Empire against a triple union of the Sasanian Empire the Avars and the Eastern Turkic Kaganates with proxy conflicts in Afro Eurasia like the Aksumite Persian wars and across the Old World 29 Others consider that the Ottoman Portuguese confrontations and Ottoman Habsburg wars can be considered as world conflicts prototypes of the Great Game in Eurasia and the Scramble for Africa but between two main power projecting and religious blocs that being the Ottomans as holders of the Muslim Caliph title and the Habsburgs as emperors of Christendom 30 31 However the Americas and Oceania were not involved in those conflicts in which case other historians consider the Thirty Years War and Eighty Years War as the first global conflict pitting the Spanish Empire and the Portuguese Empire against the French colonial empire Dutch Empire British Empire and their allies mostly Protestants across the 5 continents 32 33 34 35 Another possible example is the Second Congo War 1998 2003 even though it was only waged on one continent It involved nine nations and led to ongoing low intensity warfare despite an official peace and the first democratic elections in 2006 It has frequently been referred to as Africa s World War 36 Event Casualties lowest estimate Casualties highest estimate Location From To Duration years nbsp Nine Years War 27 37 38 39 680 000 27 Europe North America South America Asia 1688 1697 9 nbsp War of the Spanish Succession 27 38 700 000 40 1 251 000 41 Europe North America South America Africa 1701 1714 13 nbsp War of the Austrian Succession 27 42 359 000 27 Europe North America South America India 1740 1748 8 nbsp Seven Years War 43 44 992 000 27 1 500 000 45 Europe North America South America Africa Asia 1754 1763 9 nbsp American Revolutionary War 28 217 000 262 000 North America Gibraltar Balearic Islands India Africa Caribbean Sea Atlantic Ocean Indian Ocean 1775 1783 8 nbsp French Revolutionary Wars 27 663 000 27 Europe Egypt Middle East Atlantic Ocean Caribbean Indian Ocean 1792 1802 9 nbsp Napoleonic Wars 43 46 1 800 000 27 7 000 000 47 Europe Atlantic Ocean Mediterranean Sea North Sea Rio de la Plata French Guiana West Indies Indian Ocean North America South Caucasus 1803 1815 13 nbsp World War I 15 000 000 48 65 000 000 49 Global 1914 1918 4 nbsp World War II 40 000 000 50 85 000 000 51 Global 1939 1945 6 nbsp Cold War Global 1947 1991 44 nbsp War on Terror 4 500 000 52 4 600 000 52 Global 2001 2021 20See also Edit nbsp World portalNeocolonialism New Imperialism Revolutionary wave List of largest empires First wave of European colonization List of military conflicts spanning multiple wars List of wars and anthropogenic disasters by death toll Military history Political history of the worldReferences Edit Webster Merriam World War Merriam Webster com Archived from the original on 11 December 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Wars on Human Health PDF Costs of War Watson Institute of International amp Public Affairs Archived from the original PDF on 9 June 2023 Bibliography EditShapiro Fred R Epstein Joseph 2006 The Yale Book of Quotations Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 10798 2 Willmott H P 2003 World War I Dorling Kindersley ISBN 978 0 7894 9627 0 OCLC 52541937 External links EditThis is the Fourth World War an interview with philosopher Jean Baudrillard Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title World war amp oldid 1177046520, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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