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The '''Great Powers''' are usually taken to be those ]s or political entities that, through their great ] and ] strength, are the arbiters of world diplomacy, and whose opinions must be taken into account by other nations before effecting initiatives. Characteristically, they have the ability to intervene militarily almost anywhere, and they also have ], cultural power, often in the form of economic investment in less developed portions of the world. The '''Great Powers''' are usually taken to be those ]s or political entities that, through their great ] and ] strength, are the arbiters of world diplomacy, and whose opinions must be taken into account by other nations before effecting initiatives. Characteristically, they have the ability to intervene militarily almost anywhere, and they also have ], cultural power, often in the form of economic investment in less developed portions of the world.

During the ], the biggest powers gained more control of the world than before and became labeled as ]s <ref> Viotti, Paul R. and Kaupi, Mark V.; 2001; International Relations and World Politics; Second Edition; Prentice Hall; p4 ] 0-13-017277-4 (see ) </ref>


==History== ==History==

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The Great Powers are usually taken to be those nations or political entities that, through their great economic and military strength, are the arbiters of world diplomacy, and whose opinions must be taken into account by other nations before effecting initiatives. Characteristically, they have the ability to intervene militarily almost anywhere, and they also have soft, cultural power, often in the form of economic investment in less developed portions of the world.

During the Twentieth Century, the biggest powers gained more control of the world than before and became labeled as superpowers

History

Different sets of Great Powers have existed in history, but after 1815, the Concert of Europe formalized France, the United Kingdom, Russia, Austria, and Prussia as the five powers. Of these, the first three had colonial empires outside Europe. Austria was called an empire in a former sense, that of a monarch ruling over kings. Prussia was a newcomer, rising through Frederick the Great's militaristic grand strategy. After the First World War, at the Paris Peace Conference, 1919 four Great Powers were readily recognised: the British Empire (including its Dominions), the United States, France and Italy. The status of Japan requires qualification. They were not part of the Big Four, but were accorded two votes like the Big Four. Their position was highlighted by their race equality proposal, which touched on a number of issues including their status as a Great Power. Although this proposal was defeated as first the British and then the Americans caved into the Australian defence of the White Australia Policy, their successful retention of Shandong and the German islands in the Pacific north of the equator indicated that they had attained the position of a non-white Great Power. Again, after the Second World War in 1945, the United States, the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, France and the Republic of China were formalised as the five powers with permanent seats and veto power in the UN Security Council. Clearly, shifts in great power status tend to follow wars.

Great powers are also often associated with the projection of military power through a particular technology, such as Dreadnoughts or nuclear weapons. A mere large, defensive infantry army, such as the Chinese would have been able to raise during the age of European dominance is not able to project power overseas. Even the U.S. Army and its blockading navy during the Civil War was insufficient at a time when the United States did not have armored ocean-going battleships. Wealth could be a military factor. Britain could not raise a large army quickly, but was able to fund allies to raise them for it during the Napoleonic Wars.

The Congress of Berlin, a peace treaty to a comparatively minor war, included Turkey and Italy at the status of those mentioned in the Concert of Europe. International meetings, which developed during the second half of the nineteenth century, also serve to indicate Great Power status in the absence of peace treaties after wars, such as the different Berlin Conference.

By the end of the Cold War and the era of globalization other nations began to attain international recognition as great power or future great powers. Brazil and India are examples of such nations.

Since the end of the World Wars, the term Great Power has been split up into a number of definite categories. The term Superpower was used to define a nation with overwhelming power over the rest of the world, this term was initially used to describe the United States and Soviet Union. The term Major power (or sometimes Global Power) has also been used to describe nations with great power, yet not as overwhelming as that of a superpower. This system forms a type of hierarchy for powerful nations.

Great Powers throughout modern history

Great Powers throughout Modern History
Country Dates Rise Downfall Notes
Austria/ Austria-Hungary 1526-1918 Battle of Mohács World War One Under the Habsburg Monarchy.
China 1368-1842, 1978-present The founding of the Ming Dynasty. Economic Explosion. The First Opium War (1842) Under the Ming and Qing dynasties. Today under People's Republic of China
Denmark 1568-1648 The start of the Eighty Years' War The Thirty Years' War -
England/ Great Britain/ United Kingdom 1346-1453, 1689-Present The Battle of Crécy (1346), The War of the Grand Alliance (1689) The Battle of Castillon (1453) Under the Plantagenet Dynasty, the Houses of Lancaster, Stuart, Hanover, Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, Windsor, and the British Parliament.
France 1214-Present The Battle of Bouvines - Under the Capetian Dynasty, Valois Dynasty, the House of Bourbon, Napoleon, Napoleon III, and multiple French republics.
Germany 1871-Present German Unification - Under Hohenzollern Dynasty, as Republic of Weimar, Hitler, and now a republic.
India 1990-Present Economic Explosion -
Italy 1861-1945 Italian Unification World War Two Under Savoy Monarchy and later Mussolini
Japan 1905-Present Russo-Japanese War - Slumped post-World War II, but recovered by 1970s.
The Mughal Empire 1526-1739 Invasion of India Social and Religious Strife Pakistan, India, and Afghanistan
The Netherlands 1579-1702 Union of Utrecht Death of William III of Orange -
The Ottoman Empire 1453-1918 Conquest of Constantinople World War One Under Ottoman Dynasty
Poland-Lithuania 1385-1648 Union of Krewo The Deluge -
Portugal 1415-1581 Portuguese Colonization Spanish annexation -
Prussia 1763-1871 Seven Years' War German Unification Under Hohenzollern Dynasty; can be said to be directly succeeded by German power
The Venetian Republic 1381-1516 Triumph in the War of Chioggia. End of the War of the League of Cambrai. Goverend by a mixture of monarchy, oligarchy, and republicanism.
Russia/ The Soviet Union 1721-Present The Great Northern War - Under Romanov Dynasty, Communism, and now a federation; current power from military strength, UN veto, extensive resources, and possession of a vast nuclear stockpile
Spain 1469-1898 Unification of Spain Spanish-American War Under Trastámara, Hapsburg and Bourbon Dynasties
Sweden 1611-1721 The Ingrian War The Great Northern War -
The United States 1898-Present Spanish-American War - -

See also

Power in international relations
Types
Status
Geopolitics
History
Theory
Studies
Organizations and groups by region
Africa
Africa–Asia
Americas
Asia
Europe
Eurasia
North America–Europe
Africa–Asia–Europe
Africa–South America
Oceania–Pacific
Non–regional
Global
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  1. Viotti, Paul R. and Kaupi, Mark V.; 2001; International Relations and World Politics; Second Edition; Prentice Hall; p4 ISBN 0-13-017277-4 (see )
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