[A] well-structured and thoroughly researched chronicle of events . The British in Interwar Germany provides an overview of a significant episode of Britain's engagement as a great power in Europe, in the first half of the twentieth century. Journal of Modern History
AcknowledgementsNote on ReferencesIntroductionPart I - The Armistice and the Peace1. The British Occupied Area of the Rhineland during the Armistice: December 1918-January 19202. The Reluctant Assumption of Continental Commitments, 1919Part II - Enforcing the Treaty, 1920-19223. The Plebiscites, 1920-224. Danzig: 'The Gibraltar of the North'5. The British Element in the Inter-Allied Military Control Commissions6. Britain and the Rhineland, 1920-1922Part III - The Ruhr Crisis, 1923-1924: The Turning Point7. The French Occupation of the Ruhr and German Passive Resistance, January-September 19238. France's Hollow Victory9. The Impact of the Ruhr Crisis on the Inter-Allied Control Commission, 1923-1924Part IV - After the Ruhr Crisis, 1924-193010. The Consequences of the Dawes Plan and the Locarno Treaties for the Occupation and the IAMCC, 1924-192711. The British in the Wiesbaden Bridgehead, 1926-1930ConclusionNotesList of AbbreviationsGlossarySelect BiographyIndex
David Williamson is a former head of History and is now a freelance writer and Lecturer.