首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
文章检索
  按 检索   检索词:      
出版年份:   被引次数:   他引次数: 提示:输入*表示无穷大
  收费全文   7775篇
  免费   220篇
各国政治   428篇
工人农民   207篇
世界政治   492篇
外交国际关系   323篇
法律   4857篇
中国共产党   1篇
中国政治   23篇
政治理论   1567篇
综合类   97篇
  2020年   76篇
  2019年   102篇
  2018年   148篇
  2017年   166篇
  2016年   175篇
  2015年   136篇
  2014年   147篇
  2013年   868篇
  2012年   222篇
  2011年   218篇
  2010年   174篇
  2009年   180篇
  2008年   211篇
  2007年   184篇
  2006年   202篇
  2005年   152篇
  2004年   170篇
  2003年   164篇
  2002年   173篇
  2001年   309篇
  2000年   286篇
  1999年   224篇
  1998年   89篇
  1997年   109篇
  1996年   86篇
  1995年   84篇
  1994年   92篇
  1993年   85篇
  1992年   160篇
  1991年   183篇
  1990年   160篇
  1989年   175篇
  1988年   151篇
  1987年   145篇
  1986年   165篇
  1985年   130篇
  1984年   127篇
  1983年   129篇
  1982年   78篇
  1981年   78篇
  1980年   59篇
  1979年   111篇
  1978年   66篇
  1977年   64篇
  1976年   56篇
  1975年   67篇
  1974年   82篇
  1973年   77篇
  1972年   68篇
  1971年   61篇
排序方式: 共有7995条查询结果,搜索用时 15 毫秒
171.
172.
173.
174.
175.
SOUTH ASIA     
For nearly a hundred years, to many foreigners “Peking” meant the foreign legation quarter and its colourful western inhabitants. The article gives details of the extraordinary life they led a stone's throw from the Emperor's palace in a city that remained virtually untouched by the modern world. After the Boxer Rising of 1900, the legation quarter became a Treaty Port with its own laws and administration. That status continued through the First World War and beyond. But just as the foreigners were at last beginning to value Peking's uniqueness, the end was in sight. Life changed a lot after the 1937 Japanese invasion of China and, for many, internment followed the attack on Pearl Harbour. But the end came when Treaty port status was abolished for good at the end of the War  相似文献   
176.
177.
Under Presidents Dwight Eisenhower and Lyndon Johnson, the United States refrained from intervening during the three major Cold War crises in the Soviet bloc in 1953, 1956, and 1968. The uprisings in the German Democratic Republic and Hungary came at a contentious stage of the Cold War. In 1968 East–West relations were again groping towards détente and, the Czechoslovak Communist Party unleashed an ambitious reform agenda under Alexander Dub?ek. On 20 August, a massive military invasion by Warsaw Pact forces squashed the reform spirit. All three challenges to Soviet control on the periphery of its Cold War empire followed power struggles in the Kremlin and intimations of a slackening of the reigns of control in Moscow. Eastern Europe was terra incognita for most Americans, and the United States had never pursued an active policy in Eastern Europe. All three crisis scenarios were overshadowed by crises in other parts of the world—part of larger arcs of crises the superpowers were confronting simultaneously. The three crises also coincided, domestically, with intense presidential election politics. Washington ultimately respected the Yalta arrangements and tolerated the Soviet sphere of influence in Eastern Europe. Next to grudging respect for the Yalta outcomes, the ultimate spectre of mutual destruction in a nuclear war “compelled” the superpowers towards co-existence and, ultimately, in 1989, the satellite states had to liberate themselves.  相似文献   
178.
179.
180.
Summary

Mediating Conflict in the Swiss Diets of the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries

The Helvetic Confederation developed in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries as a web of alliances between the most important urban and peasant republics (Orte) in the area of present‐day Switzerland. The only form of mediating conflicts laid down in the alliances was by tribunals of arbitration; but these were never recognised by all the Orte in the web of alliances and proved inadequate in the face of growing antagonisms and coalitions throughout the Confederacy. It became necessary to have recourse to political arrangements involving the interested parties. The forum for these arrangements was the Diets, meetings of deputies of all members of the Confederacy. These more or less represented the most important political forces. Difficulties arose only when there was no consensus in individual Orten and when the official deputies to the Diet represented only the magistrates (Obrigkeiten). In such cases it could happen, especially in matters of foreign policy, that individual groups went their own way and thwarted the decisions of the Diet. It usually took a long time to arrive at a consensus in the Diets because the deputies were bound by an ‘imperative mandate’ and the minority would mostly not accept the will of the majority. In the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries participation and the achievement of consensus were the conditions of joint action of the Helvetic Confederation.  相似文献   
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号