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- Q971076 subject Q7006593.
- Q971076 subject Q7006737.
- Q971076 subject Q7061961.
- Q971076 subject Q8583921.
- Q971076 abstract "The term Debellatio (also debellation) (Latin "defeating, or the act of conquering or subduing", literally, "warring (the enemy) down", from Latin bellum "war") designates the end of a war caused by the absolute destruction of one combatant such as of Palestrina by Pope Boniface VIII.In some cases debellation ends with a complete dissolution and annexation of the defeated state into the victor's national territory, as happened at the end of the Third Punic War with the defeat of Carthage by Rome in the 2nd century BC. The Prussian conquest, dissolution and annexation of the Kingdom of Hanover in 1866 is an example from the modern world.The unconditional surrender of the Third Reich—in the strict sense only the German Armed Forces—at the end of World War II was at the time accepted by most authorities as a case of debellatio as it ended with the complete breakup of the German Reich, including all offices, and two German states being created in its stead (the Federal Republic of Germany and the German Democratic Republic).Other authorities have argued against that, as most of the territory that made up Germany before the Anschluss was not annexed, and the population still existed, the vestiges of the German state continued to exist even though the Allied Control Council governed the territory; and that eventually a fully sovereign German government resumed over a state that never ceased to exist. The Federal Republic of Germany sees itself as the legal successor of the Third Reich.Similarly, the breakaway state of Tamil Eelam, which once controlled much of northern Sri Lanka, was completely destroyed at the end of the Sri Lankan Civil War in 2009, and all of the leadership killed.".
- Q971076 wikiPageExternalLink issue_47-2_patterson.
- Q971076 wikiPageExternalLink 470-750006?OpenDocument.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q1206012.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q128781.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q130596.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q134646.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q154605.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q154681.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q159791.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q164079.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q16957.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q183.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q194465.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q213394.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q2229133.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q242036.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q243133.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q362.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q38872.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q397.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q6334.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q698099.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q7006593.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q7006737.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q7061961.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q713750.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q7318.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q813919.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q834225.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q854.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q8583921.
- Q971076 wikiPageWikiLink Q961190.
- Q971076 comment "The term Debellatio (also debellation) (Latin "defeating, or the act of conquering or subduing", literally, "warring (the enemy) down", from Latin bellum "war") designates the end of a war caused by the absolute destruction of one combatant such as of Palestrina by Pope Boniface VIII.In some cases debellation ends with a complete dissolution and annexation of the defeated state into the victor's national territory, as happened at the end of the Third Punic War with the defeat of Carthage by Rome in the 2nd century BC. ".
- Q971076 label "Debellatio".