Report on the international conference “The War That Never Ended. Postwar Continuity and New Challenges in the Aftermath of the Habsburg and Ottoman Empires, 1918–1923”, Kraków –Przemyśl, 24–26 October 2019.

The International Conference “The War That Never Ended. Postwar Continuity and New Challenges in the Aftermath of the Habsburg and Ottoman Empires, 1918–1923” was organized on 24–26 October 2019 in Kraków and Przemyśl, and was an excellent opportunity to discuss the phenomenon of key years 1918–1923 in the history of countries that arose from the ruins of the Habsburg Monarchy and the Ottoman Empire. The truce in Compiegne (11.11.1918), as it has been proven many times in historiography, had only a symbolic significance for Central and Eastern and Southeastern Europe and did not bring conclusive decisions for the region. This area became a place of numerous conflicts over borders, ethnic and social frictions, resettlement of people, involvement of intellectuals in politics or even violence aiming at a physical elimination of entire groups and communities. It turns out that the new nation-states in this formation period strongly benefited from the imperial heritage of their predecessors, despite the declaration that they would be paving new roads. The conference gathered almost 40 speakers from many European countries as well as from Canada and the United States of America.

see the article on the SHS website