Sara Moore is an independent scholar who has published three books to critical acclaim; Peace without Victory for the Allies, How Hitler Came to Power and The Fourth Reich? The EU - an Emerging German Empire.
PRAISE FOR HOW HITLER CAME TO POWER (howhitlercametopower.com)
Professor Forrest Capie (Author of the latest volume of History of the Bank of England)
"Sara Moore's Book (How Hitler Came to Power) deserves wide attention. The fuller understanding, to which Moore contributes is essential in order to avoid dangers of not recognising similar warning signs when they appear in our contemporary world"
Andrew Roberts (International best selling historical author)
"A very welcome reappraisal of a vital period of history"
THE FOURTH REICH? THE EU - AN EMERGING GERMAN EMPIRE
The Fourth Reich? The EU - an Emerging German Empire, published August 2016, draws upon new research including diplomatic papers from Germany, the UK, Russia and America. Sara Moore argues that Germany has continued to build a dominant position in Europe, using military force, aggressive diplomacy and now economic strength. This has continued even during periods that our ordinary history books describe as 'defeats'.
In The Fourth Reich? The EU – An Emerging German Empire, Moore argues that Germany has not abandoned the Bismarckian dream of a 'pan European Empire stretching from the Atlantic to the Urals and beyond'. Drawing upon new research including diplomatic papers from Germany, the UK, Russia and America, she argues that Germany has continued to build a dominant position in Europe, using military force, aggressive diplomacy and now economic strength. This has continued even during periods that our ordinary history books describe as 'defeats'.New appraisal of history demonstrates 150 years of Germany’s imperial ambitions
using evidence from the German historian Fritz Fischer, whose 1961 book Griff nach der Weltmacht (Grasp at World Power) Moore argues that blame for the first world war falls squarely upon Germany. She also argues that the Versailles treaty was not the punitive peace it has been portrayed – and the Germans paid only a tiny proportion of their reparations. After the second world war Britain and France again failed to win the peace, while Germany recovered with alacrity – in 1947 its industrial capacity was 11% higher than in 1936 – even while its own population were still suffering greatly.
Endorsed by Professor Jeremy Black (Exeter University) and Forrest Capie (official historian of the Bank of England, 2004-2010) the book sets out to demonstrate that the general consensus of the last 150 years is false.