Greece . OLYMPUS.—The Mountain of the Gods. 23 EPIRUS.—Jannina, the Citadel of Mi Pasha. brought forward as a gov-erning principle the ideathat a distributive justicewould be the guaranteefor the peace of theworld, and that all thePowers must break awayfrom their dearest or eventheir most normal ambi-tions in order to thinkonly of some means ofarriving at a definitepacification of the peoples,Italy remained faithful tothe old theories, so dearto all imperialists, accord-ing to which the victorneed have no other anxi-ety than to aggrandizehimself to the the bases ofthe League o


Greece . OLYMPUS.—The Mountain of the Gods. 23 EPIRUS.—Jannina, the Citadel of Mi Pasha. brought forward as a gov-erning principle the ideathat a distributive justicewould be the guaranteefor the peace of theworld, and that all thePowers must break awayfrom their dearest or eventheir most normal ambi-tions in order to thinkonly of some means ofarriving at a definitepacification of the peoples,Italy remained faithful tothe old theories, so dearto all imperialists, accord-ing to which the victorneed have no other anxi-ety than to aggrandizehimself to the the bases ofthe League of Nationswere laid in a mutualconfidence, which day byday was to preclude morecompletely the dangers ofa new conflict, and wasnormally expected to re-sult in an abandonmentof standing armies, whichwere to be rendered use-less from now on. Italyformulated her claims onher need of possessingStrategic frontiers, a n d1) a s o s for her navalforces; in short, all theguarantees which a statedemands which s


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, bookidgreece00puau, bookyear1920