The New Europe
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The New Europe, subtitled "A Weekly Review of Foreign Politics," was a weekly political magazine published in the United Kingdom between 1916 and 1920.[1]
Funded by David Davies,[1] it spread ideas related to federalism, such as the emancipation of various Slavic nations from the Central Powers.[1][2] It was founded by the political activist and historian Robert William Seton-Watson, Henry Wickham Steed, Ronald Montagu Burrows and Frederic William Whyte, with the help of Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk.[3] Others involved with the magazine included Erskine Childers, Anatole France,[4] the brothers Reginald "Rex" Leeper and Allen Leeper,[5] Oscar Browning, James Frazer,[4] Bernard Pares, Samuel Hoare, Leonard Woolf[4] and Salvador de Madariaga.[6]