spirits today, opened in Tiraspol, but sustained growth failed to materialise. After the First WorldWar, Moldova became part of Romania. Although the new government immediately introduced agricultural [...] businesses that processed agricultural products, such as mills and oil presses. After the Second WorldWar, the country once again passed into Russian hands and the government in Moscow launched a comprehensive [...] has since been in a severe, ongoing economic crisis. Related Links WIKIPEDIA: Economy of Moldova World Atlas: What are the biggest industries in Moldova? Chișinău. Old Station (oldchisinau.com) Moldova
intellectual exploitation as the Habsburg version of colonialism. Nevertheless, at the start of WorldWar I, Bosnia was still a poor, predominantly agrarian country. There were no factory jobs to absorb [...] of Yugoslavian industry in the 1970s. Related Links WIKIPEDIA: Economy of Bosnia and Herzegovina World Atlas: What are the biggest industries in Bosnia and Herzegovina? Bosanski Brod. Railway Station Bosnia
underdeveloped and had virtually no roads or railways. Education levels were extremely low. Following WorldWar I, Italian companies began extracting petroleum; beyond that, industry consisted of a handful of [...] national collapse with looting, starvation and disorder. Related Links WIKIPEDIA: Economy of Albania World Atlas: The biggest industries in Albania Tirana. 'Stalin' Textile Combine
and Slovenes”, becoming the poorest region of the first Yugoslavian state. In the period up to WorldWar II, a few factories for processing foods, cotton and tobacco were established, mainly in Skopje [...] severely than the other constituent republics. Related Links WIKIPEDIA: Economy of North Macedonia World Atlas: What are the major natural resources of North Macedonia? Bitola. 'Dragor' Flour mill North
Imperial War Musem Eisenerz (A). Ore Mountaine Adventure Essen (D) Zollverein Coking Plant WHS. Ice Ring Essen (D). Zollverein Coking Plant WHS. Swimming Pool Essen (D). Zollverein Mine World Heritage [...] German Technical Museum Birmingham (GB). Museum of the Jewellery Quarter Blaenavon (GB). Iron Work World Heritage Site Blegny (B). Blegny Mine WHS Bocholt (D). Textile Works LWL Industrial Museum Bochum
housed in the imposing building of a socially-owned enterprise built before the First WorldWar. Victorinox, the world’s largest manufacturer of pocket knives, is based in Switzerland, while the Austrian [...] the foundation for grinding technologies that were to set worldwide standards after the Second WorldWar. Today, the cutlery industry is characterized by a strongly bipolar structure. There are workshops [...] museums devoted to cutlery, whereas new players such as Portugal did not (yet) enter this level of awareness with history. Moreover, the global pattern of the cutlery trade has changed. Machines that Solingen
revived, initially mining of pyrite, in demand on account of its sulphur content, and shortly before WorldWar I the American Cyprus Mining Company reopened the ancient copper mine at Skouriotissa. The Hellenic [...] near Mitseros in the Troodos Mountains starting in the 1920s. Copper mining was suspended during WorldWar II and again during the Greek-Turkish conflict in 1974. In the aftermath, the island, which attained [...] centres of Kouklia, Kolossi and Episkopi were no longer able to withstand the competition from the New World. The occupation of this strategically important island by Britain in 1878 finally delivered substantial
ordered one ship, as the construction time was too long for them. When the strategic situation after WorldWar II made a base in the Mediterranean superfluous, Britain withdrew from the island, and Malta became [...] only a small part of the island’s gross domestic product. Related Links WIKIPEDIA: Economy of Malta World Atlas: What are the biggest industries in Malta? Floriana. Tram Station at Piazza St Anna
the area of brown coal mining, another industry requiring a huge amount of land. During the First WorldWar, the AEG power company set up the Zschornewitz brown coal works in the east-German coalmining area [...] in Wörlitz combined the beautiful with the useful, for the Enlightenment Prince hoped to make the world a better place by means of reason. Prince Franz reformed agriculture according to the latest state
after WorldWar I led to the founding of the “Kingdom of Serbs, Croatians and Slovenes”, which also included the former Habsburg Voyvodina, the “bread basket” north of the Danube. However, the war’s devastation [...] back and forth between farmyard and factory: a special class of worker-peasants emerged. Following WorldWar II, the massive efforts of the “Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia” delivered rapid successes [...] railway from Belgrade to Sarajevo in Bosnia through the rugged Sargan Mountains, begun before the War, was finally completed, and copper mining in Bor and cotton processing flourished. However, industry
production remained dominant, followed by metal and wood processing operations. After the Second WorldWar, with its widespread devastation, Lithuania once again fell under Russian rule. Unlike in the other [...] Lithuania with electricity today. Construction of the Ignalina nuclear reactor, intended to be the world’s largest, commenced in 1970; today, the plant is no longer operational. Docks for ocean-going fishing [...] computers for military and civilian use. Related Links ERIH Link-List WIKIPEDIA: Economy of Lithuania World Atlas: What are the biggest industries in Lithuania? Šilutė (Heydekrug). Gasworks Lithiania was a
1930s, the industry suffered a severe crisis that lasted until the demand for fish exploded during WorldWar II. The second pillar of Iceland’s industry is based on the utilisation of energy from renewable [...] public protest on account of its environmental impact. Related Links WIKIPEDIA: Economy of Iceland World Atlas: What are the biggest industries in Iceland? Siglufjörður. Fishmeal Factory
than 2% of the German work force were employed in the military sector. In fact, most historians agree now that it was not the big armament companies who finally triggered the outbreak of WorldWar I. The [...] were used rather reluctantly and displayed their full potential only in WorldWar II. Whereas in the first two "industrialised" wars most military innovations had come from civilian sources, now the picture [...] armaments industries have evolved from the small worlds of bronze und iron casting into a multi-faceted, interdisciplinary economic sector. In the Second WorldWar, particularly in Germany, a rather unique measure
result of pressure from the unions: this had sunk even further to around 50 hours by the First WorldWar. Increasing leisure in the evenings, and soon on work-free Sundays, meant that a huge variety of [...] the largest and – after further extensions - allegedly the most impressive cinema palace in the world. Public film shows started in Paris in 1895 and quickly became the leading mass medium. The over-decorated [...] before it was equipped with bowling greens and roundabouts. The famous Big Wheel was built for the World Exhibition of 1897. By contrast the "Tivoli Gardens" in Copenhagen, based on London parks and built
so successful, above all in the low-lying marshlands of East Anglia that, at the end of the Civil War in the 1640s, the country's new leader Oliver Cromwell engaged him once more. When the Dutch began [...] steam engines since their invention. He had three engines built, one of which was the largest in the world with a capacity of around 350 hp. The three steam-driven pumps ran round the clock for around three [...] time to ensure that the new polders remain dry. The largest of the three plants later became the world's first official industrial monument. At the time the overpopulated industrial towns had another
attack anyone who tried to construct them; at times the social conflicts resembled a bloody civil war. The complete production process was now mechanised, from the original ball of fibres to the completed [...] expanding industrial city of Manchester made the county of Lancashire the leading textile region in the world. Hundreds of thousands of workers abandoned the countryside for the cities. The textile industry became
corrugated sheets, marine propellers, armour plating and engineering tools. It was only after the First WorldWar that electric steel was mass manufactured. By that time steel production in Great Britain, the cradle [...] in the south of Scotland and in Wales. By the end of the 19th century Great Britain had become the world's largest producer of iron. The government in France now began to commit all its efforts to producing
advantageous to use a mechanical pick. This was introduced into Belgian coalmines and, after the First WorldWar, into the pits along the Ruhr. Hand labour underground, which had continued almost unchanged since
unsere aktuellen interessanten Angebote informieren. Die beworbenen Waren und Dienstleistungen sind in der Einwilligungserklärung benannt. (2) Für die Anmeldung zu unserem Newsletter verwenden wir das sog. [...] psychischen, wirtschaftlichen, kulturellen oder sozialen Identität dieser natürlichen Person sind. 2. Verarbeitung „Verarbeitung“ ist jeder, mit oder ohne Hilfe automatisierter Verfahren, ausgeführter [...] unserer Website. Personenbezogene Daten sind z. B. Name, Adresse, E-Mail-Adressen, Nutzerverhalten. (2) Bei einer Kontaktaufnahme mit uns per E-Mail oder über ein Kontaktformular werden die von Ihnen mi
verändern, zu ergänzen, zu löschen oder die Veröffentlichung zeitweise oder endgültig einzustellen. 2. Verweise und Links Bei direkten oder indirekten Verweisen auf fremde Webseiten ("Hyperlinks"), die [...] Kraft treten, in dem der Autor von den Inhalten Kenntnis hat und es ihm technisch möglich und zumutbar wäre, die Nutzung im Falle rechtswidriger Inhalte zu verhindern. Der Autor erklärt hiermit ausdrücklich [...] dass zum Zeitpunkt der Linksetzung keine illegalen Inhalte auf den zu verlinkenden Seiten erkennbar waren. Auf die aktuelle und zukünftige Gestaltung, die Inhalte oder die Urheberschaft der gelinkten/verknüpften