Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit
As a non-European I'd like to read more. What exactly should I be googling to get the real history and not the clean history that is commonly told?
Read about the French Revolution and the origin of the nation state.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nation_state

loading story #42667702
Thank you. I wouldn't exactly call France a tiny state. Are there any others that I should specifically be looking at? The Europeans pride themselves as being quote unquote civilized people, did they not have uniform ethnicities within their borders before the founding of their states? If not, then what did define those borders?

Have states such as France ethnically cleansed other peoples from within their borders? If so, then why isn't that mentioned in the well-known histories?

Have you not heard of the Crusades? Or the Inquisition?

[https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joan_of_Arc] [https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_Inquisition]

It did somewhat calm down once the Republic’s formed, but even today there are large conflicts with ‘Normal’ French society and the large scale ghettos from (typically Muslim) immigrants and refugees in France.

Killing is not the only way to ethnically homogenize a population. Other instruments are suppression of ethnic identity, deportation and encouragement of emigration.

The nation state of Turkey's establishment out of the ethnically diverse Ottoman Empire deployed all of the above.

  > Other instruments are suppression of ethnic identity, deportation and encouragement of emigration.
Thank you. Again, though, the histories of the European states don't mention efforts at suppression of ethnic identities, deportation, nor encouragement of emigration - at least not up until the 1930s.

If there are good sources to read about this occurring I would love to read them. Otherwise the insinuations are baseless.

Do the Jews count? [https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antisemitism_in_Europe]

That goes back to at least 1095. Or the Inquisiton? [https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inquisition]

Notably, it was exceptionally common for Religion to overlap almost exactly with Ethnicity (for various reasons), so the fighting between different Sects was often a common proxy for fights between different Ethnic groups too.

Also, since different Ethnic groups tended to ‘own’ different countries, each time there was an invasion, one would either make ground, or get repelled ‘back where you came from’, which also tended to align ethnic groups by borders. Those efforts didn’t generally merit note. If ‘your side’ lost, even if you’d lived there for a couple of generations, of course you’d lose your land and need to flee ‘home’.

Paris is one somewhat notable exception though.

Language is also an interesting proxy for this. Spanish vs French vs German vs English, etc.

still, there was always the ‘European’ Spaniards, vs the Moorish Spaniards, eh? Splits within splits.

Pretty much still does against the Kurds
France is not, and has never been, ethnically homogeneous (I'm French).

It was always a mix of different peoples - Celtic, then Romans when they invaded, then various Germanic peoples (including the Franks that gave the country it's name)... even the standardization of the French language is fairly modern. We had Occitan and Provincal and Breton spoken, it's only in the past ~200 years or so that industrialization has given a "uniform" culture.

What history of WW1 and WW2 did you read that seemed ‘clean’?