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Merchants of Death (1934) covers the history of the Arms industry. Featured companies include DuPont, Colt, Remington, Vickers, Schneider-Creusot, Krupp, and Škoda Works. Individuals include Hiram Maxim and Basil Zaharoff. Arms profits before and during World War I are compared. [4]:159 The growth of Japanese armaments is covered.
1934 December 6–7, 10; 1934 December 17–18; 1935 June; 1935 June 15–19; 1935 July 25-August 20; Brandes, Stuart D (1997), Warhogs: A History of War Profits in America. Cole, Wayne S (1962), Senator Gerald P. Nye and American Foreign Relations. Coulter, Matthew Ware. The Senate Munitions Inquiry of the 1930s: Beyond the Merchants of Death ...
Diagnosis Murder: The Death Merchant, a medical mystery novel by Lee Goldberg, in the media franchise Diagnosis: Murder; Merchants of Death, a 1934 exposé about the arms industry, discussed at Merchants of death; Merchants of Death, a comic book title published by Eclipse Comics, see List of Eclipse Comics publications
In 1934, while an instructor at the University of Chicago, he wrote Merchants of Death, a study on the weapons industry, together with F. C. Hanighen. [1] [2] His book was followed by the Revolt Against War (1937), an anti-war book. Engelbrecht died in 1939 from a heart attack while travelling by train from New York City to Washington D.C. [3]
Citing an unnamed European security source and other anonymous sources familiar with the matter, the WSJ wrote that Bout, dubbed "the merchant of death" is trying to broker the sale of small arms ...
Basil Zaharoff (born Zacharias Basileios Zacharoff; 6 October 1849 – 27 November 1936 [2]) was a Greek arms dealer and industrialist.One of the richest men in the world during his lifetime, Zaharoff was described as both a "merchant of death" and a "mystery man of Europe". [3]
Could the U.S. stomach trading a notorious arms trafficker for a WNBA player allegedly caught carrying vape cartridges with marijuana oil?
Viktor Bout, the so-called “Merchant of Death” and the inspiration for the 2005 Nicolas Cage film, “Lord of War,” is who Russia received back from the U.S. on Thursday in a prisoner swap ...