Why is the consensus that WW2 started on September 1, 1939 and not July 7, 1937?











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Looking at Wikipedia, dates given are 1 September 1939 – 2 September 1945, which end in the defeat of Japan.



However why is the starting date when Germany invaded Poland and not when the Japanese invaded China in the Sino-Japanese war on July 7, 1937, which then ends on 2 September 1945 (same) date as WW2?



Why is it considered that WW2 started on September 1, 1939 and not July 7, 1937?



EDIT: (As per request by @sempaiscuba) Another argument that could be put forward for 1937:



China was first to sign UN charter as first victim of aggression by an Axis power



So it could be argued that at the time of signing in 1945 consensus was that start was 1937... Otherwise, it should be Poland.










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    @JBentley Unfortunately, the title now no longer matches the body of the question, which only references Wikipedia.
    – sempaiscuba
    Nov 11 at 14:07






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    No. My argument is exactly what I said above. China was merely the first of the nations present at the 1945 San Francisco Conference to have been attacked by an Axis power.
    – sempaiscuba
    Nov 11 at 14:28








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    You might find this post on our meta site helpful.
    – sempaiscuba
    Nov 11 at 14:29








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    @MatasVaitkevicius If you want the body of your question to match the title, you need to cite more than just Wikipedia. If your question is "Why is the consensus that ...", Then ask that question, and cite a source that demonstrates that the consensus exists (although in that case, you will probably find that your source also answers your question).
    – sempaiscuba
    Nov 11 at 14:43

















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Looking at Wikipedia, dates given are 1 September 1939 – 2 September 1945, which end in the defeat of Japan.



However why is the starting date when Germany invaded Poland and not when the Japanese invaded China in the Sino-Japanese war on July 7, 1937, which then ends on 2 September 1945 (same) date as WW2?



Why is it considered that WW2 started on September 1, 1939 and not July 7, 1937?



EDIT: (As per request by @sempaiscuba) Another argument that could be put forward for 1937:



China was first to sign UN charter as first victim of aggression by an Axis power



So it could be argued that at the time of signing in 1945 consensus was that start was 1937... Otherwise, it should be Poland.










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    @JBentley Unfortunately, the title now no longer matches the body of the question, which only references Wikipedia.
    – sempaiscuba
    Nov 11 at 14:07






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    No. My argument is exactly what I said above. China was merely the first of the nations present at the 1945 San Francisco Conference to have been attacked by an Axis power.
    – sempaiscuba
    Nov 11 at 14:28








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    You might find this post on our meta site helpful.
    – sempaiscuba
    Nov 11 at 14:29








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    @MatasVaitkevicius If you want the body of your question to match the title, you need to cite more than just Wikipedia. If your question is "Why is the consensus that ...", Then ask that question, and cite a source that demonstrates that the consensus exists (although in that case, you will probably find that your source also answers your question).
    – sempaiscuba
    Nov 11 at 14:43















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Looking at Wikipedia, dates given are 1 September 1939 – 2 September 1945, which end in the defeat of Japan.



However why is the starting date when Germany invaded Poland and not when the Japanese invaded China in the Sino-Japanese war on July 7, 1937, which then ends on 2 September 1945 (same) date as WW2?



Why is it considered that WW2 started on September 1, 1939 and not July 7, 1937?



EDIT: (As per request by @sempaiscuba) Another argument that could be put forward for 1937:



China was first to sign UN charter as first victim of aggression by an Axis power



So it could be argued that at the time of signing in 1945 consensus was that start was 1937... Otherwise, it should be Poland.










share|improve this question















Looking at Wikipedia, dates given are 1 September 1939 – 2 September 1945, which end in the defeat of Japan.



However why is the starting date when Germany invaded Poland and not when the Japanese invaded China in the Sino-Japanese war on July 7, 1937, which then ends on 2 September 1945 (same) date as WW2?



Why is it considered that WW2 started on September 1, 1939 and not July 7, 1937?



EDIT: (As per request by @sempaiscuba) Another argument that could be put forward for 1937:



China was first to sign UN charter as first victim of aggression by an Axis power



So it could be argued that at the time of signing in 1945 consensus was that start was 1937... Otherwise, it should be Poland.







world-war-two europe asia sino-japanese-war






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edited Nov 11 at 14:55

























asked Nov 8 at 13:15









Matas Vaitkevicius

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    @JBentley Unfortunately, the title now no longer matches the body of the question, which only references Wikipedia.
    – sempaiscuba
    Nov 11 at 14:07






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    No. My argument is exactly what I said above. China was merely the first of the nations present at the 1945 San Francisco Conference to have been attacked by an Axis power.
    – sempaiscuba
    Nov 11 at 14:28








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    You might find this post on our meta site helpful.
    – sempaiscuba
    Nov 11 at 14:29








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    @MatasVaitkevicius If you want the body of your question to match the title, you need to cite more than just Wikipedia. If your question is "Why is the consensus that ...", Then ask that question, and cite a source that demonstrates that the consensus exists (although in that case, you will probably find that your source also answers your question).
    – sempaiscuba
    Nov 11 at 14:43
















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    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – Mark C. Wallace
    Nov 10 at 19:59






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    @JBentley Unfortunately, the title now no longer matches the body of the question, which only references Wikipedia.
    – sempaiscuba
    Nov 11 at 14:07






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    No. My argument is exactly what I said above. China was merely the first of the nations present at the 1945 San Francisco Conference to have been attacked by an Axis power.
    – sempaiscuba
    Nov 11 at 14:28








  • 1




    You might find this post on our meta site helpful.
    – sempaiscuba
    Nov 11 at 14:29








  • 2




    @MatasVaitkevicius If you want the body of your question to match the title, you need to cite more than just Wikipedia. If your question is "Why is the consensus that ...", Then ask that question, and cite a source that demonstrates that the consensus exists (although in that case, you will probably find that your source also answers your question).
    – sempaiscuba
    Nov 11 at 14:43










1




1




Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Mark C. Wallace
Nov 10 at 19:59




Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Mark C. Wallace
Nov 10 at 19:59




1




1




@JBentley Unfortunately, the title now no longer matches the body of the question, which only references Wikipedia.
– sempaiscuba
Nov 11 at 14:07




@JBentley Unfortunately, the title now no longer matches the body of the question, which only references Wikipedia.
– sempaiscuba
Nov 11 at 14:07




1




1




No. My argument is exactly what I said above. China was merely the first of the nations present at the 1945 San Francisco Conference to have been attacked by an Axis power.
– sempaiscuba
Nov 11 at 14:28






No. My argument is exactly what I said above. China was merely the first of the nations present at the 1945 San Francisco Conference to have been attacked by an Axis power.
– sempaiscuba
Nov 11 at 14:28






1




1




You might find this post on our meta site helpful.
– sempaiscuba
Nov 11 at 14:29






You might find this post on our meta site helpful.
– sempaiscuba
Nov 11 at 14:29






2




2




@MatasVaitkevicius If you want the body of your question to match the title, you need to cite more than just Wikipedia. If your question is "Why is the consensus that ...", Then ask that question, and cite a source that demonstrates that the consensus exists (although in that case, you will probably find that your source also answers your question).
– sempaiscuba
Nov 11 at 14:43






@MatasVaitkevicius If you want the body of your question to match the title, you need to cite more than just Wikipedia. If your question is "Why is the consensus that ...", Then ask that question, and cite a source that demonstrates that the consensus exists (although in that case, you will probably find that your source also answers your question).
– sempaiscuba
Nov 11 at 14:43












6 Answers
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Actually, good arguments can be put forward for both dates as the the 'start' of World War 2. In fact a number of other dates have also been suggested for the 'start' of World War 2, including:





  • Japan seizing Manchuria from China in 1931.


  • Italy’s invasion and defeat of Abyssinia (Ethiopia) in 1935

  • Adolf Hitler’s re-militarization of Germany’s Rhineland in 1936

  • The Spanish Civil War (1936–1939)

  • Germany’s occupation of Czechoslovakia in 1938


One can even argue that the Second World War was simply a continuation of the First World War that had formally ended with the Treaty of Versailles in 1919!





However, it is generally accepted that the German invasion of Poland marked the date when the war became a truly global World War. That act drew the European powers and their global empires into the war. Those empires included states on every inhabited continent, making the war 'global'.



From that date, a 'world war' would continue until the war ended with Japan’s surrender in September 1945.






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    @NeilMeyer British Guiana for one. I happen to know that 22 Guianese personnel served in the Royal Air Force, and at least 40 in the Royal Navy. E. R. Braithwaite famously served as a pilot in the RAF.
    – sempaiscuba
    Nov 9 at 12:38






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    it's to be noted, that the formal declaration of war by France and Britain didn't result in active participation of these countries in war.
    – Trish
    Nov 9 at 14:49






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    @NeilMeyer Brasil was part of the allies.
    – Trish
    Nov 9 at 14:50






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    If you don't think any fighting happened in South America, check out the Battle of the River Plate.
    – DJClayworth
    Nov 10 at 16:28


















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Because it was the participation of the British and French empires, beginning with Declarations of War against Germany on Sept. 3, 1939, that turned several isolated regional conflicts into a World War.



The other conflicts of the 1930's had either already substantially ceased (as the Italo-Ethiopian and Spanish Civil wars) or been strictly regional affairs as in the Sino-Japanese War.



Because of the u-boat warfare between Germany and the British Empire, the conflict that started in Poland was immediately being fought on (and under) the seas of the North and South Atlantic as well as in Central and Western Europe. Additionally Commonwealth troops from as far away as Canada, Newfoundland, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand were mobilized into theatres stretching from the British Isles to the Middle East, and then India and the Pacific.






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  • The point of no return, in other words.
    – ceejayoz
    Nov 9 at 16:17






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    OTOH, it could still be considered basically a European war until December 1941, when the Japanese attacked not only Pearl Harbor, but the Phillipines, Malaya, Borneo, &c.
    – jamesqf
    Nov 9 at 17:46










  • @jamesqf Axis powers invaded Africa in 1940. Likewise Axis powers invaded the USSR in June of 1941. Japan was a part of the Axis powers from 1936, reaffirmed in 1937, 1939, and 1940. While Japan did sign a non-aggression pact w/ the Soviet Union in 1941, it was still militarily bound to the Axis powers. LIkewise, China received significant aid from the USSR and the US in the 2nd Sino-Japanese War up until it was simply folded into "WWII" after the US joined the fight against Japan and the other Axis powers. I would consider it a European front/conflict, but not a war unto itself.
    – TylerH
    Nov 9 at 21:36












  • @TylerH: On Sept. 26, 1939, the German cruiser Admiral Graf Spee began commerce raiding in the South Atlantic and Indian Ocean, sinking nine merchant vessels. On Dec. 13 that year it was sunk in the River Plate estuary between Argentina and Uruguay.
    – Pieter Geerkens
    Nov 9 at 23:34








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    @jamesqf ", it could still be considered basically a European war" Given that it had brought in Africa, North America, South America, Asia, Europe and Oceania (5 of the 6 populated continents) when the British and French empires went to war; no, it can't really be considered basically a European war at all. It didn't bring in the United states of America (which Americans tend to consider the requirement for a world war) but the rest of the world doesn't really use that metric.
    – UKMonkey
    Nov 12 at 15:17




















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Short Answer



The Wikipedia entry for World War II uses the start date of 1 September 1939 because Wiki is applying the Wikipedia definition of the term "world war" as a basis, for internal consistency. One must start with a definition of that term to formulate an answer as to why.




Long Answer



Many good answers here already - each with valid points to consider, and any one of which I could accept if I had posted the question (and a +1 from me on more than one of them). However, the definition of World War has not yet been addressed (i.e. when is it appropriate to use the term World War in connection with an international conflict?).




Definition

The various definitions of the term itself include no objective criteria (e.g. 60% of nations of the globe, or 60% of the land-mass of the globe, etc.) but rather subjective criteria. For example, if using Merriam-Webster's definition (my emphasis added):




a war engaged in by all or most of the principal nations of the world




... one must first decide what constitutes a principal nation, and then, if they are not all engaged in finding ways to kill each other, we move to the next qualifier, most, and then try to decide how many is "most"? 50.00001% or more? Does most require a two-thirds majority? Three-quarters?



With such subjective measures and no objective qualifications, one then turns to historical usage of the term to find a less subjective answer. Who first uses the term, and when? Are those sources considered authoritative?



From the Wikipedia entry on World War, there is much to be learned about the historical use of the term, which may provide an acceptable (if not definitive) answer to this question. It comes down to this: When does an international conflict become a World War? Definition from Wiki:




A world war is a large-scale war involving many of the countries of the world or many of the most powerful and populous ones. World wars span multiple countries on multiple continents, with battles fought in many theaters. While a variety of global conflicts have been subjectively deemed "world wars", such as the Cold War and the War on Terror, the term is widely and generally accepted only as it is retrospectively applied to two major international conflicts that occurred during the 20th century: World War I (1914–1918) and World War II (1939–1945).







Origins

Origin of the term (also from the same Wiki, my emphasis added below):




The Oxford English Dictionary cited the first known usage in the English language to a Scottish newspaper: the People's Journal in 1848: "A war among the great powers is now necessarily a world-war." The term "world war" had been used in 1850 by Karl Marx and his associate, Friedrich Engels, in The Class Struggles in France. Rasmus B. Anderson in 1889 described an episode in Teutonic mythology as a “world war” (Swedish: världskrig), justifying this description by a line in an Old Norse epic poem, "Völuspá: folcvig fyrst i heimi" ("The first great war in the world".) German writer August Wilhelm Otto Niemann had used the term "world war" in the title of his anti-British novel, Der Weltkrieg: Deutsche Träume (The World War: German Dreams) in 1904, published in English as The Coming Conquest of England.



In English, the term "First World War" had been used by Charles à Court Repington, as a title for his memoirs (published in 1920); he had noted his discussion on the matter with a Major Johnstone of Harvard University in his diary entry of September 10, 1918.



The term "World War I" was coined by Time magazine on page 28b of its June 12, 1939 issue. In the same article, on page 32, the term "World War II" was first used speculatively to describe the upcoming war. The first use for the actual war came in its issue of September 11, 1939. One week earlier, on September 4, the day after France and the United Kingdom declared war on Germany, the Danish newspaper Kristeligt Dagblad used the term on its front page, saying "The Second World War broke out yesterday at 11 a.m."







Accepted Usage

The Wiki section on Other global conflicts lists wars which, while global, have not been given the term "world war" (especially World War in capitals, which Merriam-Webster declares to be reserved for WWI and WWII, thus far in history anyway). Why were these other global conflicts not called World War X, Y or Z? Because no one did call them that. And no one does. Though anyone could. It is a socio-political term, not an objective or empirical one. It is a coined phrase. Those who coined it get to shape or influence how it is used. Like D-Day ... every operation prior to 6 June 1944 had a D-Day (day of commencing operations) and an H-Hour (starting hour). After June 6th, the term became synonymous with Operation Overlord and no one thinks of it in any other manner now.






Specific Case: Start of WWII

In reading through the definitions and accepted use of the term, the consensus seems to be that there were global conflicts transpiring before 1 September 1939, but the tipping point to qualify it as a World War (among those who define or shape language or terminology, at least in a popular cultural sense) came when hostilities broke out 1 September 1939 when Germany invaded Poland, which, by treaty, resulted in war being declared by the UK and France (and their respective world-spanning empires, thanks sempaiscuba) on 3 September 1939. Why not use September 3rd then? Because technically a state of war existed upon Germany's invasion of Poland (by way of treaty) 1 September 1939.



As a parallel example of a technical state of war, refer to Roosevelt's Day of Infamy speech given to the US Congress 8 December 1941 (a day after the attack on Pearl Harbor) in which he said in conclusion of his remarks (my emphasis added):




I ask that the Congress declare that since the unprovoked and dastardly attack by Japan on Sunday, December 7, 1941, a state of war has existed between the United States and the Japanese Empire.




The US Congress declared war on Japan 8 December 1941, but that was a legal formality. A state of war existed upon the attack 7 December 1941 (and also by virtue of Japan's declaration of war on the US and UK 7 December, though delivered after the attack started - the attack itself started the state of war). This same logic can be applied to the state of war in Europe between Germany, Poland, the UK and France which commenced 1 September 1939 when hostilities began.



Those who coined the phrase "World War II" applied it to that war which started between those four nations and their global empires when Germany invaded Poland 1 September 1939. And it stuck. And it became accepted as such. It can also be rejected as such.




Commentary

While Questions that ask "Why..." often invite opinions (and some good ones have been expressed here in some Answers and Comments), this Question can be addressed from a marginally historic perspective, and that is by examining the historical use of the term World War II, when it came into use and by whom, what are its roots in previous usage for other global conflicts (etc.) - hence why I chose to post this Answer from that standpoint. I think this approach can keep the Question grounded in terms that are not primarily opinion-based (even though use of the term may well be challenged as opinion- or politically-based) in hopes that by doing so this Question can remain open for years to come with many more great Answers and Comments added (which at some future date others may refer back to for historical perspective by the way) without fear of having this closed for being opinion-based.






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    On September 1, 1939, Japan, China, Germany, and Poland were belligerents in two separate conflicts. That isn't a world war by the Wikipedia definition. It's iffy if September 3, 1939 qualifies, given the neutrality of the US, the USSR, and Italy.
    – David Thornley
    Nov 8 at 16:50






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    @DavidThornley there is no objective criteria to the use of the term with regards to any definition (even in Wiki's own definition), but rather a consensus among sources using the term for any given purpose (political being the most obvious, not historical). When did the term come into use, and upon what world events was that usage based. Those are the only measures that can reasonably be applied. The exact number of belligerents is not a hard and fast figure, rather the character or nature of the conflict seem more prominent to the language arbiters in this case.
    – Kerry L
    Nov 8 at 17:01










  • My intention is not to propose a start date. I'm pointing out that the period of September 1 through September 2 in 1939 does not constitute a world war by the standards given. Indeed, in your comment, you're talking about common usage (and September 1, 1939 is a commonly stated start date) instead of the criteria.
    – David Thornley
    Nov 9 at 16:42






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    @DavidThornley it's a fuzzy issue. Your observations are valid, and so are many others here.
    – Kerry L
    Nov 9 at 16:44






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    Looks good. At least keep the second paragraph of EDIT:
    – David Thornley
    Nov 12 at 16:36


















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As to why en.wikipedia lists particular start dates, I commend to you en.wikipedia’s arcane consensus policies, the article’s page history and talk page history. For why anglophone editors from the global north construe the texts they read to support their edit warring, I supply the following:



Popular conceptions of history reflect myth-making, national imaginations, language barriers and politics.



As the phrase “world war two” isn’t a technical or theoretical concept in history—compare to “imperialist wars” which is baggage laden—we should look to the reasons in popular history.



Firstly, the world system has concentrated imperialist power in “the global north.” Japan has a notorious unwillingness to tolerate public discourse on its war with China, this being viewed as a political issue related to which class ought to control the economy.



That leaves European powers and the anglophone settler states. These cultures are heavily Eurocentric. Britain and France in particular have large associated language communities—many of which are former colonies pulled into 1939—which emphasise 1939. Polish remembrance is obvious. German culture was specifically disciplined for 1939. Other states: Denmark, Norway, Netherlands, Belgium, Yugoslavia, Greece; were pulled into the 1939 war. The former Soviet Union memorialised anti Hitlerism and so also engaged in 1939 myth making.



China seems to be engaged in an exceptionalism connected to anti-Japanese anti-imperialism, and so doesn’t need “WWII” as a myth: the Sino-Japanese wars as the birth of the PRC suffices without needing a grand narrative of World War.



The US is slightly different, with a strong pull to 1941 for local reasons.



Centring social myth on 1939 reinforces the centrality of the global north’s Eurocentric myths, as essentially “the world.” The world naturally being France, Germany, the UK, their colonies and European victims. Given the decline of national imperialisms whose metropoles were European, 1945-1980, there are strong “dying empire” reasons to memorialise WWII on European terms: consider the UK’s war myths and imperial “decline.” Correspondingly the Great Patriotic War as an antifascist war in the Soviet Union was essential myth making, and the idea of a “popular front” against fascism harkens to 1939 for WWII. (The Soviet Union being transnational imperialism.)



Historians are unlikely to set a flag in the ground over sloppy nationalist posturing on a term which isn’t relevant. For long duration histories of world systems, that a period of war between metropole states existed 1914-1945 matters. At closer focuses who exactly was at war with whom matters more than a label.



It is a popular term whose meaning is political and no answer particularly interests historians. In fact, comparing why people support answers is more interesting than the idea of any particular start date.






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    I agree with your second-to-last paragraph. As another example, while history classes in Italy still try to teach about the first, the second and the third Independence War, Italians generally just talk about "Risorgimento", without detailing any more - and that's just a little over 150 years ago. In Italy, WWI was actually called "the fourth Independece War" for a while, before the concept of "two world wars" became dominant.
    – Simone
    Nov 8 at 15:18








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    Your last sentence / paragraph is in my view the crux of the matter. Agree.
    – Kerry L
    Nov 8 at 16:10






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    Actually, for the whole of postwar Soviet Union, ( as well as for modern Russia as far as I am aware) it is taught that the WW2 started on June 21,1941 and ended on May 9, 1945.
    – Gnudiff
    Nov 8 at 19:25






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    @Gnudiff Anecdotally, when I attended school in the post-Soviet Russia we were taught both of those dates: September 1, 1939 for WW2 and June 22, 1941 for the so-called Great Patriotic War. Admittedly a much greater emphasis was on the latter and the Eastern Front.
    – undercat
    Nov 8 at 21:05






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    @undercat That was a bit more complicated in my experience, because my (Soviet) school books talked about WW2 and Great Patriotic War interchangeably -- without notifying that the one was a subset of the other. The whole issue was somewhat muddled (apparently on purpose) -- the talk was about GPW, but WW2 was also used quite a lot in press and literature as far as I was able to read them at that time, with the implication that they were the same. Also, for example, in Soviet English classes, when translating to English, we were taught to use WW2 rather than GPW when translating the term.
    – Gnudiff
    Nov 8 at 21:20




















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As the World War II Article says:




Japan, which aimed to dominate Asia and the Pacific, was at war with China by 1937[5][b]—though neither side had declared war on the other. World war is generally said to have begun on 1 September 1939,[6] with the invasion of Poland by Germany and subsequent declarations on Germany by France and the United Kingdom.






So, formal declarations occurred at the later date, and gathered more directly attacking sides, enough to call it a "World War", where before it was China + Soviets + USA vs. Japan. Although, from @chepner's comment, that alliance did not involve formal war declarations:




The US did not declare war on anyone until December 1941. The USSR didn't declare war on Japan until August 1945.




From Second Sino-Japanese War, as of the 09:16, 16 October 2018‎ DimensionQualm revision... At the start of the second paragraph, it says the following:




China fought Japan with aid from the Soviet Union and the United States.




Although, even though that sentence is placed early in the page, it may be talking about events that occurred after the war merged with World War II.






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    The US did not declare war on anyone until December 1941. The USSR didn't declare war on Japan until August 1945.
    – chepner
    Nov 8 at 16:01










  • @chepner - Right. Gonna update that to clarify...
    – Malandy
    Nov 8 at 17:28










  • Although the United States did not formally declare war until it came under attack, the President declared a state of “national emergency” on September 8, 1939. This was far from the total war that was to come, but it did involve US and German ships firing on each other. And the United States has often fought wars without formally declaring them.
    – Davislor
    Nov 8 at 20:27












  • @Davislor - I don't know how you want me to integrate that, so go ahead and edit it in, and we'll let the community decide.
    – Malandy
    Nov 8 at 20:44


















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Isn't that just a matter of perspective?



I wonder what the Russian text books say is the start date?



There are so many good candidates!




  • September 1st 1939: Germany invaded Poland

  • September 17th 1939: Russia invaded Poland in partnership with Germany

  • November 30th 1939: Russia invaded Finland (a disastrous war which helped convince Germany that the Russian army sucked)?

  • June 22nd 1941: the day Germany invaded Russia


For Germany, it was definitely September 1st 1939.



For Italy, the war probably began on October 3rd 1935 when they invaded Ethiopia.



For America, the war began December 7th 1941.



For Britain (and France), the war began September 3rd 1939.



For China, July 7th 1937.



For Japan, it is less clear: they executed a series of creeping expansion all through the 1900s, until it all blew up in their faces.



I think what I am trying to say is, dates really aren't as important as high school history teachers make them out to be. Yes, you need to know the dates, but more importantly, we must understand how the EVENTS that took place on those dates affected each other and the world we all live in today.



Because, like it or not, all of us are living in the shadows of events that took place hundreds of years ago. I would say our politics, our culture, even our lives are shaped by those events.






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    Fun fact: you can put down September 11, 1941 as the date the US entered the war, as Roosevelt told the USN to wage war in the North Atlantic. That war remained undeclared for months. Yet another date to consider.
    – David Thornley
    Nov 8 at 16:52






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    Another fun fact: a Russian text book would likely have no mention of something called World War Two, but rather The Great Patriotic War.
    – Kerry L
    Nov 8 at 17:51






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    @KerryL While my childhood's Soviet textbooks used mostly GPW, the term was used interchangeably with WW2 both in them and in lots of other places -- forcing the unspecified implication that they were the same, even though they weren't. Until 1991, we were taught that WW2 started in June 22,1941 and ended on May 9, 1945 (Victory day celebration in the USSR), despite the fact that it was "only" GPW-part of WW2. Granted, I was not a history addict, so I might have missed, if the difference was explained somewhere, but if I was thinking GPW=WW2, I was among the majority.
    – Gnudiff
    Nov 8 at 21:28










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up vote
154
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accepted










Actually, good arguments can be put forward for both dates as the the 'start' of World War 2. In fact a number of other dates have also been suggested for the 'start' of World War 2, including:





  • Japan seizing Manchuria from China in 1931.


  • Italy’s invasion and defeat of Abyssinia (Ethiopia) in 1935

  • Adolf Hitler’s re-militarization of Germany’s Rhineland in 1936

  • The Spanish Civil War (1936–1939)

  • Germany’s occupation of Czechoslovakia in 1938


One can even argue that the Second World War was simply a continuation of the First World War that had formally ended with the Treaty of Versailles in 1919!





However, it is generally accepted that the German invasion of Poland marked the date when the war became a truly global World War. That act drew the European powers and their global empires into the war. Those empires included states on every inhabited continent, making the war 'global'.



From that date, a 'world war' would continue until the war ended with Japan’s surrender in September 1945.






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – Mark C. Wallace
    Nov 8 at 18:47






  • 2




    @NeilMeyer British Guiana for one. I happen to know that 22 Guianese personnel served in the Royal Air Force, and at least 40 in the Royal Navy. E. R. Braithwaite famously served as a pilot in the RAF.
    – sempaiscuba
    Nov 9 at 12:38






  • 1




    it's to be noted, that the formal declaration of war by France and Britain didn't result in active participation of these countries in war.
    – Trish
    Nov 9 at 14:49






  • 3




    @NeilMeyer Brasil was part of the allies.
    – Trish
    Nov 9 at 14:50






  • 6




    If you don't think any fighting happened in South America, check out the Battle of the River Plate.
    – DJClayworth
    Nov 10 at 16:28















up vote
154
down vote



accepted










Actually, good arguments can be put forward for both dates as the the 'start' of World War 2. In fact a number of other dates have also been suggested for the 'start' of World War 2, including:





  • Japan seizing Manchuria from China in 1931.


  • Italy’s invasion and defeat of Abyssinia (Ethiopia) in 1935

  • Adolf Hitler’s re-militarization of Germany’s Rhineland in 1936

  • The Spanish Civil War (1936–1939)

  • Germany’s occupation of Czechoslovakia in 1938


One can even argue that the Second World War was simply a continuation of the First World War that had formally ended with the Treaty of Versailles in 1919!





However, it is generally accepted that the German invasion of Poland marked the date when the war became a truly global World War. That act drew the European powers and their global empires into the war. Those empires included states on every inhabited continent, making the war 'global'.



From that date, a 'world war' would continue until the war ended with Japan’s surrender in September 1945.






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – Mark C. Wallace
    Nov 8 at 18:47






  • 2




    @NeilMeyer British Guiana for one. I happen to know that 22 Guianese personnel served in the Royal Air Force, and at least 40 in the Royal Navy. E. R. Braithwaite famously served as a pilot in the RAF.
    – sempaiscuba
    Nov 9 at 12:38






  • 1




    it's to be noted, that the formal declaration of war by France and Britain didn't result in active participation of these countries in war.
    – Trish
    Nov 9 at 14:49






  • 3




    @NeilMeyer Brasil was part of the allies.
    – Trish
    Nov 9 at 14:50






  • 6




    If you don't think any fighting happened in South America, check out the Battle of the River Plate.
    – DJClayworth
    Nov 10 at 16:28













up vote
154
down vote



accepted







up vote
154
down vote



accepted






Actually, good arguments can be put forward for both dates as the the 'start' of World War 2. In fact a number of other dates have also been suggested for the 'start' of World War 2, including:





  • Japan seizing Manchuria from China in 1931.


  • Italy’s invasion and defeat of Abyssinia (Ethiopia) in 1935

  • Adolf Hitler’s re-militarization of Germany’s Rhineland in 1936

  • The Spanish Civil War (1936–1939)

  • Germany’s occupation of Czechoslovakia in 1938


One can even argue that the Second World War was simply a continuation of the First World War that had formally ended with the Treaty of Versailles in 1919!





However, it is generally accepted that the German invasion of Poland marked the date when the war became a truly global World War. That act drew the European powers and their global empires into the war. Those empires included states on every inhabited continent, making the war 'global'.



From that date, a 'world war' would continue until the war ended with Japan’s surrender in September 1945.






share|improve this answer














Actually, good arguments can be put forward for both dates as the the 'start' of World War 2. In fact a number of other dates have also been suggested for the 'start' of World War 2, including:





  • Japan seizing Manchuria from China in 1931.


  • Italy’s invasion and defeat of Abyssinia (Ethiopia) in 1935

  • Adolf Hitler’s re-militarization of Germany’s Rhineland in 1936

  • The Spanish Civil War (1936–1939)

  • Germany’s occupation of Czechoslovakia in 1938


One can even argue that the Second World War was simply a continuation of the First World War that had formally ended with the Treaty of Versailles in 1919!





However, it is generally accepted that the German invasion of Poland marked the date when the war became a truly global World War. That act drew the European powers and their global empires into the war. Those empires included states on every inhabited continent, making the war 'global'.



From that date, a 'world war' would continue until the war ended with Japan’s surrender in September 1945.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 8 at 16:49

























answered Nov 8 at 13:26









sempaiscuba

44.6k5156198




44.6k5156198








  • 2




    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – Mark C. Wallace
    Nov 8 at 18:47






  • 2




    @NeilMeyer British Guiana for one. I happen to know that 22 Guianese personnel served in the Royal Air Force, and at least 40 in the Royal Navy. E. R. Braithwaite famously served as a pilot in the RAF.
    – sempaiscuba
    Nov 9 at 12:38






  • 1




    it's to be noted, that the formal declaration of war by France and Britain didn't result in active participation of these countries in war.
    – Trish
    Nov 9 at 14:49






  • 3




    @NeilMeyer Brasil was part of the allies.
    – Trish
    Nov 9 at 14:50






  • 6




    If you don't think any fighting happened in South America, check out the Battle of the River Plate.
    – DJClayworth
    Nov 10 at 16:28














  • 2




    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – Mark C. Wallace
    Nov 8 at 18:47






  • 2




    @NeilMeyer British Guiana for one. I happen to know that 22 Guianese personnel served in the Royal Air Force, and at least 40 in the Royal Navy. E. R. Braithwaite famously served as a pilot in the RAF.
    – sempaiscuba
    Nov 9 at 12:38






  • 1




    it's to be noted, that the formal declaration of war by France and Britain didn't result in active participation of these countries in war.
    – Trish
    Nov 9 at 14:49






  • 3




    @NeilMeyer Brasil was part of the allies.
    – Trish
    Nov 9 at 14:50






  • 6




    If you don't think any fighting happened in South America, check out the Battle of the River Plate.
    – DJClayworth
    Nov 10 at 16:28








2




2




Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Mark C. Wallace
Nov 8 at 18:47




Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Mark C. Wallace
Nov 8 at 18:47




2




2




@NeilMeyer British Guiana for one. I happen to know that 22 Guianese personnel served in the Royal Air Force, and at least 40 in the Royal Navy. E. R. Braithwaite famously served as a pilot in the RAF.
– sempaiscuba
Nov 9 at 12:38




@NeilMeyer British Guiana for one. I happen to know that 22 Guianese personnel served in the Royal Air Force, and at least 40 in the Royal Navy. E. R. Braithwaite famously served as a pilot in the RAF.
– sempaiscuba
Nov 9 at 12:38




1




1




it's to be noted, that the formal declaration of war by France and Britain didn't result in active participation of these countries in war.
– Trish
Nov 9 at 14:49




it's to be noted, that the formal declaration of war by France and Britain didn't result in active participation of these countries in war.
– Trish
Nov 9 at 14:49




3




3




@NeilMeyer Brasil was part of the allies.
– Trish
Nov 9 at 14:50




@NeilMeyer Brasil was part of the allies.
– Trish
Nov 9 at 14:50




6




6




If you don't think any fighting happened in South America, check out the Battle of the River Plate.
– DJClayworth
Nov 10 at 16:28




If you don't think any fighting happened in South America, check out the Battle of the River Plate.
– DJClayworth
Nov 10 at 16:28










up vote
43
down vote













Because it was the participation of the British and French empires, beginning with Declarations of War against Germany on Sept. 3, 1939, that turned several isolated regional conflicts into a World War.



The other conflicts of the 1930's had either already substantially ceased (as the Italo-Ethiopian and Spanish Civil wars) or been strictly regional affairs as in the Sino-Japanese War.



Because of the u-boat warfare between Germany and the British Empire, the conflict that started in Poland was immediately being fought on (and under) the seas of the North and South Atlantic as well as in Central and Western Europe. Additionally Commonwealth troops from as far away as Canada, Newfoundland, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand were mobilized into theatres stretching from the British Isles to the Middle East, and then India and the Pacific.






share|improve this answer























  • The point of no return, in other words.
    – ceejayoz
    Nov 9 at 16:17






  • 4




    OTOH, it could still be considered basically a European war until December 1941, when the Japanese attacked not only Pearl Harbor, but the Phillipines, Malaya, Borneo, &c.
    – jamesqf
    Nov 9 at 17:46










  • @jamesqf Axis powers invaded Africa in 1940. Likewise Axis powers invaded the USSR in June of 1941. Japan was a part of the Axis powers from 1936, reaffirmed in 1937, 1939, and 1940. While Japan did sign a non-aggression pact w/ the Soviet Union in 1941, it was still militarily bound to the Axis powers. LIkewise, China received significant aid from the USSR and the US in the 2nd Sino-Japanese War up until it was simply folded into "WWII" after the US joined the fight against Japan and the other Axis powers. I would consider it a European front/conflict, but not a war unto itself.
    – TylerH
    Nov 9 at 21:36












  • @TylerH: On Sept. 26, 1939, the German cruiser Admiral Graf Spee began commerce raiding in the South Atlantic and Indian Ocean, sinking nine merchant vessels. On Dec. 13 that year it was sunk in the River Plate estuary between Argentina and Uruguay.
    – Pieter Geerkens
    Nov 9 at 23:34








  • 5




    @jamesqf ", it could still be considered basically a European war" Given that it had brought in Africa, North America, South America, Asia, Europe and Oceania (5 of the 6 populated continents) when the British and French empires went to war; no, it can't really be considered basically a European war at all. It didn't bring in the United states of America (which Americans tend to consider the requirement for a world war) but the rest of the world doesn't really use that metric.
    – UKMonkey
    Nov 12 at 15:17

















up vote
43
down vote













Because it was the participation of the British and French empires, beginning with Declarations of War against Germany on Sept. 3, 1939, that turned several isolated regional conflicts into a World War.



The other conflicts of the 1930's had either already substantially ceased (as the Italo-Ethiopian and Spanish Civil wars) or been strictly regional affairs as in the Sino-Japanese War.



Because of the u-boat warfare between Germany and the British Empire, the conflict that started in Poland was immediately being fought on (and under) the seas of the North and South Atlantic as well as in Central and Western Europe. Additionally Commonwealth troops from as far away as Canada, Newfoundland, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand were mobilized into theatres stretching from the British Isles to the Middle East, and then India and the Pacific.






share|improve this answer























  • The point of no return, in other words.
    – ceejayoz
    Nov 9 at 16:17






  • 4




    OTOH, it could still be considered basically a European war until December 1941, when the Japanese attacked not only Pearl Harbor, but the Phillipines, Malaya, Borneo, &c.
    – jamesqf
    Nov 9 at 17:46










  • @jamesqf Axis powers invaded Africa in 1940. Likewise Axis powers invaded the USSR in June of 1941. Japan was a part of the Axis powers from 1936, reaffirmed in 1937, 1939, and 1940. While Japan did sign a non-aggression pact w/ the Soviet Union in 1941, it was still militarily bound to the Axis powers. LIkewise, China received significant aid from the USSR and the US in the 2nd Sino-Japanese War up until it was simply folded into "WWII" after the US joined the fight against Japan and the other Axis powers. I would consider it a European front/conflict, but not a war unto itself.
    – TylerH
    Nov 9 at 21:36












  • @TylerH: On Sept. 26, 1939, the German cruiser Admiral Graf Spee began commerce raiding in the South Atlantic and Indian Ocean, sinking nine merchant vessels. On Dec. 13 that year it was sunk in the River Plate estuary between Argentina and Uruguay.
    – Pieter Geerkens
    Nov 9 at 23:34








  • 5




    @jamesqf ", it could still be considered basically a European war" Given that it had brought in Africa, North America, South America, Asia, Europe and Oceania (5 of the 6 populated continents) when the British and French empires went to war; no, it can't really be considered basically a European war at all. It didn't bring in the United states of America (which Americans tend to consider the requirement for a world war) but the rest of the world doesn't really use that metric.
    – UKMonkey
    Nov 12 at 15:17















up vote
43
down vote










up vote
43
down vote









Because it was the participation of the British and French empires, beginning with Declarations of War against Germany on Sept. 3, 1939, that turned several isolated regional conflicts into a World War.



The other conflicts of the 1930's had either already substantially ceased (as the Italo-Ethiopian and Spanish Civil wars) or been strictly regional affairs as in the Sino-Japanese War.



Because of the u-boat warfare between Germany and the British Empire, the conflict that started in Poland was immediately being fought on (and under) the seas of the North and South Atlantic as well as in Central and Western Europe. Additionally Commonwealth troops from as far away as Canada, Newfoundland, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand were mobilized into theatres stretching from the British Isles to the Middle East, and then India and the Pacific.






share|improve this answer














Because it was the participation of the British and French empires, beginning with Declarations of War against Germany on Sept. 3, 1939, that turned several isolated regional conflicts into a World War.



The other conflicts of the 1930's had either already substantially ceased (as the Italo-Ethiopian and Spanish Civil wars) or been strictly regional affairs as in the Sino-Japanese War.



Because of the u-boat warfare between Germany and the British Empire, the conflict that started in Poland was immediately being fought on (and under) the seas of the North and South Atlantic as well as in Central and Western Europe. Additionally Commonwealth troops from as far away as Canada, Newfoundland, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand were mobilized into theatres stretching from the British Isles to the Middle East, and then India and the Pacific.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 8 at 15:30

























answered Nov 8 at 13:59









Pieter Geerkens

37k6105178




37k6105178












  • The point of no return, in other words.
    – ceejayoz
    Nov 9 at 16:17






  • 4




    OTOH, it could still be considered basically a European war until December 1941, when the Japanese attacked not only Pearl Harbor, but the Phillipines, Malaya, Borneo, &c.
    – jamesqf
    Nov 9 at 17:46










  • @jamesqf Axis powers invaded Africa in 1940. Likewise Axis powers invaded the USSR in June of 1941. Japan was a part of the Axis powers from 1936, reaffirmed in 1937, 1939, and 1940. While Japan did sign a non-aggression pact w/ the Soviet Union in 1941, it was still militarily bound to the Axis powers. LIkewise, China received significant aid from the USSR and the US in the 2nd Sino-Japanese War up until it was simply folded into "WWII" after the US joined the fight against Japan and the other Axis powers. I would consider it a European front/conflict, but not a war unto itself.
    – TylerH
    Nov 9 at 21:36












  • @TylerH: On Sept. 26, 1939, the German cruiser Admiral Graf Spee began commerce raiding in the South Atlantic and Indian Ocean, sinking nine merchant vessels. On Dec. 13 that year it was sunk in the River Plate estuary between Argentina and Uruguay.
    – Pieter Geerkens
    Nov 9 at 23:34








  • 5




    @jamesqf ", it could still be considered basically a European war" Given that it had brought in Africa, North America, South America, Asia, Europe and Oceania (5 of the 6 populated continents) when the British and French empires went to war; no, it can't really be considered basically a European war at all. It didn't bring in the United states of America (which Americans tend to consider the requirement for a world war) but the rest of the world doesn't really use that metric.
    – UKMonkey
    Nov 12 at 15:17




















  • The point of no return, in other words.
    – ceejayoz
    Nov 9 at 16:17






  • 4




    OTOH, it could still be considered basically a European war until December 1941, when the Japanese attacked not only Pearl Harbor, but the Phillipines, Malaya, Borneo, &c.
    – jamesqf
    Nov 9 at 17:46










  • @jamesqf Axis powers invaded Africa in 1940. Likewise Axis powers invaded the USSR in June of 1941. Japan was a part of the Axis powers from 1936, reaffirmed in 1937, 1939, and 1940. While Japan did sign a non-aggression pact w/ the Soviet Union in 1941, it was still militarily bound to the Axis powers. LIkewise, China received significant aid from the USSR and the US in the 2nd Sino-Japanese War up until it was simply folded into "WWII" after the US joined the fight against Japan and the other Axis powers. I would consider it a European front/conflict, but not a war unto itself.
    – TylerH
    Nov 9 at 21:36












  • @TylerH: On Sept. 26, 1939, the German cruiser Admiral Graf Spee began commerce raiding in the South Atlantic and Indian Ocean, sinking nine merchant vessels. On Dec. 13 that year it was sunk in the River Plate estuary between Argentina and Uruguay.
    – Pieter Geerkens
    Nov 9 at 23:34








  • 5




    @jamesqf ", it could still be considered basically a European war" Given that it had brought in Africa, North America, South America, Asia, Europe and Oceania (5 of the 6 populated continents) when the British and French empires went to war; no, it can't really be considered basically a European war at all. It didn't bring in the United states of America (which Americans tend to consider the requirement for a world war) but the rest of the world doesn't really use that metric.
    – UKMonkey
    Nov 12 at 15:17


















The point of no return, in other words.
– ceejayoz
Nov 9 at 16:17




The point of no return, in other words.
– ceejayoz
Nov 9 at 16:17




4




4




OTOH, it could still be considered basically a European war until December 1941, when the Japanese attacked not only Pearl Harbor, but the Phillipines, Malaya, Borneo, &c.
– jamesqf
Nov 9 at 17:46




OTOH, it could still be considered basically a European war until December 1941, when the Japanese attacked not only Pearl Harbor, but the Phillipines, Malaya, Borneo, &c.
– jamesqf
Nov 9 at 17:46












@jamesqf Axis powers invaded Africa in 1940. Likewise Axis powers invaded the USSR in June of 1941. Japan was a part of the Axis powers from 1936, reaffirmed in 1937, 1939, and 1940. While Japan did sign a non-aggression pact w/ the Soviet Union in 1941, it was still militarily bound to the Axis powers. LIkewise, China received significant aid from the USSR and the US in the 2nd Sino-Japanese War up until it was simply folded into "WWII" after the US joined the fight against Japan and the other Axis powers. I would consider it a European front/conflict, but not a war unto itself.
– TylerH
Nov 9 at 21:36






@jamesqf Axis powers invaded Africa in 1940. Likewise Axis powers invaded the USSR in June of 1941. Japan was a part of the Axis powers from 1936, reaffirmed in 1937, 1939, and 1940. While Japan did sign a non-aggression pact w/ the Soviet Union in 1941, it was still militarily bound to the Axis powers. LIkewise, China received significant aid from the USSR and the US in the 2nd Sino-Japanese War up until it was simply folded into "WWII" after the US joined the fight against Japan and the other Axis powers. I would consider it a European front/conflict, but not a war unto itself.
– TylerH
Nov 9 at 21:36














@TylerH: On Sept. 26, 1939, the German cruiser Admiral Graf Spee began commerce raiding in the South Atlantic and Indian Ocean, sinking nine merchant vessels. On Dec. 13 that year it was sunk in the River Plate estuary between Argentina and Uruguay.
– Pieter Geerkens
Nov 9 at 23:34






@TylerH: On Sept. 26, 1939, the German cruiser Admiral Graf Spee began commerce raiding in the South Atlantic and Indian Ocean, sinking nine merchant vessels. On Dec. 13 that year it was sunk in the River Plate estuary between Argentina and Uruguay.
– Pieter Geerkens
Nov 9 at 23:34






5




5




@jamesqf ", it could still be considered basically a European war" Given that it had brought in Africa, North America, South America, Asia, Europe and Oceania (5 of the 6 populated continents) when the British and French empires went to war; no, it can't really be considered basically a European war at all. It didn't bring in the United states of America (which Americans tend to consider the requirement for a world war) but the rest of the world doesn't really use that metric.
– UKMonkey
Nov 12 at 15:17






@jamesqf ", it could still be considered basically a European war" Given that it had brought in Africa, North America, South America, Asia, Europe and Oceania (5 of the 6 populated continents) when the British and French empires went to war; no, it can't really be considered basically a European war at all. It didn't bring in the United states of America (which Americans tend to consider the requirement for a world war) but the rest of the world doesn't really use that metric.
– UKMonkey
Nov 12 at 15:17












up vote
30
down vote













Short Answer



The Wikipedia entry for World War II uses the start date of 1 September 1939 because Wiki is applying the Wikipedia definition of the term "world war" as a basis, for internal consistency. One must start with a definition of that term to formulate an answer as to why.




Long Answer



Many good answers here already - each with valid points to consider, and any one of which I could accept if I had posted the question (and a +1 from me on more than one of them). However, the definition of World War has not yet been addressed (i.e. when is it appropriate to use the term World War in connection with an international conflict?).




Definition

The various definitions of the term itself include no objective criteria (e.g. 60% of nations of the globe, or 60% of the land-mass of the globe, etc.) but rather subjective criteria. For example, if using Merriam-Webster's definition (my emphasis added):




a war engaged in by all or most of the principal nations of the world




... one must first decide what constitutes a principal nation, and then, if they are not all engaged in finding ways to kill each other, we move to the next qualifier, most, and then try to decide how many is "most"? 50.00001% or more? Does most require a two-thirds majority? Three-quarters?



With such subjective measures and no objective qualifications, one then turns to historical usage of the term to find a less subjective answer. Who first uses the term, and when? Are those sources considered authoritative?



From the Wikipedia entry on World War, there is much to be learned about the historical use of the term, which may provide an acceptable (if not definitive) answer to this question. It comes down to this: When does an international conflict become a World War? Definition from Wiki:




A world war is a large-scale war involving many of the countries of the world or many of the most powerful and populous ones. World wars span multiple countries on multiple continents, with battles fought in many theaters. While a variety of global conflicts have been subjectively deemed "world wars", such as the Cold War and the War on Terror, the term is widely and generally accepted only as it is retrospectively applied to two major international conflicts that occurred during the 20th century: World War I (1914–1918) and World War II (1939–1945).







Origins

Origin of the term (also from the same Wiki, my emphasis added below):




The Oxford English Dictionary cited the first known usage in the English language to a Scottish newspaper: the People's Journal in 1848: "A war among the great powers is now necessarily a world-war." The term "world war" had been used in 1850 by Karl Marx and his associate, Friedrich Engels, in The Class Struggles in France. Rasmus B. Anderson in 1889 described an episode in Teutonic mythology as a “world war” (Swedish: världskrig), justifying this description by a line in an Old Norse epic poem, "Völuspá: folcvig fyrst i heimi" ("The first great war in the world".) German writer August Wilhelm Otto Niemann had used the term "world war" in the title of his anti-British novel, Der Weltkrieg: Deutsche Träume (The World War: German Dreams) in 1904, published in English as The Coming Conquest of England.



In English, the term "First World War" had been used by Charles à Court Repington, as a title for his memoirs (published in 1920); he had noted his discussion on the matter with a Major Johnstone of Harvard University in his diary entry of September 10, 1918.



The term "World War I" was coined by Time magazine on page 28b of its June 12, 1939 issue. In the same article, on page 32, the term "World War II" was first used speculatively to describe the upcoming war. The first use for the actual war came in its issue of September 11, 1939. One week earlier, on September 4, the day after France and the United Kingdom declared war on Germany, the Danish newspaper Kristeligt Dagblad used the term on its front page, saying "The Second World War broke out yesterday at 11 a.m."







Accepted Usage

The Wiki section on Other global conflicts lists wars which, while global, have not been given the term "world war" (especially World War in capitals, which Merriam-Webster declares to be reserved for WWI and WWII, thus far in history anyway). Why were these other global conflicts not called World War X, Y or Z? Because no one did call them that. And no one does. Though anyone could. It is a socio-political term, not an objective or empirical one. It is a coined phrase. Those who coined it get to shape or influence how it is used. Like D-Day ... every operation prior to 6 June 1944 had a D-Day (day of commencing operations) and an H-Hour (starting hour). After June 6th, the term became synonymous with Operation Overlord and no one thinks of it in any other manner now.






Specific Case: Start of WWII

In reading through the definitions and accepted use of the term, the consensus seems to be that there were global conflicts transpiring before 1 September 1939, but the tipping point to qualify it as a World War (among those who define or shape language or terminology, at least in a popular cultural sense) came when hostilities broke out 1 September 1939 when Germany invaded Poland, which, by treaty, resulted in war being declared by the UK and France (and their respective world-spanning empires, thanks sempaiscuba) on 3 September 1939. Why not use September 3rd then? Because technically a state of war existed upon Germany's invasion of Poland (by way of treaty) 1 September 1939.



As a parallel example of a technical state of war, refer to Roosevelt's Day of Infamy speech given to the US Congress 8 December 1941 (a day after the attack on Pearl Harbor) in which he said in conclusion of his remarks (my emphasis added):




I ask that the Congress declare that since the unprovoked and dastardly attack by Japan on Sunday, December 7, 1941, a state of war has existed between the United States and the Japanese Empire.




The US Congress declared war on Japan 8 December 1941, but that was a legal formality. A state of war existed upon the attack 7 December 1941 (and also by virtue of Japan's declaration of war on the US and UK 7 December, though delivered after the attack started - the attack itself started the state of war). This same logic can be applied to the state of war in Europe between Germany, Poland, the UK and France which commenced 1 September 1939 when hostilities began.



Those who coined the phrase "World War II" applied it to that war which started between those four nations and their global empires when Germany invaded Poland 1 September 1939. And it stuck. And it became accepted as such. It can also be rejected as such.




Commentary

While Questions that ask "Why..." often invite opinions (and some good ones have been expressed here in some Answers and Comments), this Question can be addressed from a marginally historic perspective, and that is by examining the historical use of the term World War II, when it came into use and by whom, what are its roots in previous usage for other global conflicts (etc.) - hence why I chose to post this Answer from that standpoint. I think this approach can keep the Question grounded in terms that are not primarily opinion-based (even though use of the term may well be challenged as opinion- or politically-based) in hopes that by doing so this Question can remain open for years to come with many more great Answers and Comments added (which at some future date others may refer back to for historical perspective by the way) without fear of having this closed for being opinion-based.






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    On September 1, 1939, Japan, China, Germany, and Poland were belligerents in two separate conflicts. That isn't a world war by the Wikipedia definition. It's iffy if September 3, 1939 qualifies, given the neutrality of the US, the USSR, and Italy.
    – David Thornley
    Nov 8 at 16:50






  • 2




    @DavidThornley there is no objective criteria to the use of the term with regards to any definition (even in Wiki's own definition), but rather a consensus among sources using the term for any given purpose (political being the most obvious, not historical). When did the term come into use, and upon what world events was that usage based. Those are the only measures that can reasonably be applied. The exact number of belligerents is not a hard and fast figure, rather the character or nature of the conflict seem more prominent to the language arbiters in this case.
    – Kerry L
    Nov 8 at 17:01










  • My intention is not to propose a start date. I'm pointing out that the period of September 1 through September 2 in 1939 does not constitute a world war by the standards given. Indeed, in your comment, you're talking about common usage (and September 1, 1939 is a commonly stated start date) instead of the criteria.
    – David Thornley
    Nov 9 at 16:42






  • 1




    @DavidThornley it's a fuzzy issue. Your observations are valid, and so are many others here.
    – Kerry L
    Nov 9 at 16:44






  • 1




    Looks good. At least keep the second paragraph of EDIT:
    – David Thornley
    Nov 12 at 16:36















up vote
30
down vote













Short Answer



The Wikipedia entry for World War II uses the start date of 1 September 1939 because Wiki is applying the Wikipedia definition of the term "world war" as a basis, for internal consistency. One must start with a definition of that term to formulate an answer as to why.




Long Answer



Many good answers here already - each with valid points to consider, and any one of which I could accept if I had posted the question (and a +1 from me on more than one of them). However, the definition of World War has not yet been addressed (i.e. when is it appropriate to use the term World War in connection with an international conflict?).




Definition

The various definitions of the term itself include no objective criteria (e.g. 60% of nations of the globe, or 60% of the land-mass of the globe, etc.) but rather subjective criteria. For example, if using Merriam-Webster's definition (my emphasis added):




a war engaged in by all or most of the principal nations of the world




... one must first decide what constitutes a principal nation, and then, if they are not all engaged in finding ways to kill each other, we move to the next qualifier, most, and then try to decide how many is "most"? 50.00001% or more? Does most require a two-thirds majority? Three-quarters?



With such subjective measures and no objective qualifications, one then turns to historical usage of the term to find a less subjective answer. Who first uses the term, and when? Are those sources considered authoritative?



From the Wikipedia entry on World War, there is much to be learned about the historical use of the term, which may provide an acceptable (if not definitive) answer to this question. It comes down to this: When does an international conflict become a World War? Definition from Wiki:




A world war is a large-scale war involving many of the countries of the world or many of the most powerful and populous ones. World wars span multiple countries on multiple continents, with battles fought in many theaters. While a variety of global conflicts have been subjectively deemed "world wars", such as the Cold War and the War on Terror, the term is widely and generally accepted only as it is retrospectively applied to two major international conflicts that occurred during the 20th century: World War I (1914–1918) and World War II (1939–1945).







Origins

Origin of the term (also from the same Wiki, my emphasis added below):




The Oxford English Dictionary cited the first known usage in the English language to a Scottish newspaper: the People's Journal in 1848: "A war among the great powers is now necessarily a world-war." The term "world war" had been used in 1850 by Karl Marx and his associate, Friedrich Engels, in The Class Struggles in France. Rasmus B. Anderson in 1889 described an episode in Teutonic mythology as a “world war” (Swedish: världskrig), justifying this description by a line in an Old Norse epic poem, "Völuspá: folcvig fyrst i heimi" ("The first great war in the world".) German writer August Wilhelm Otto Niemann had used the term "world war" in the title of his anti-British novel, Der Weltkrieg: Deutsche Träume (The World War: German Dreams) in 1904, published in English as The Coming Conquest of England.



In English, the term "First World War" had been used by Charles à Court Repington, as a title for his memoirs (published in 1920); he had noted his discussion on the matter with a Major Johnstone of Harvard University in his diary entry of September 10, 1918.



The term "World War I" was coined by Time magazine on page 28b of its June 12, 1939 issue. In the same article, on page 32, the term "World War II" was first used speculatively to describe the upcoming war. The first use for the actual war came in its issue of September 11, 1939. One week earlier, on September 4, the day after France and the United Kingdom declared war on Germany, the Danish newspaper Kristeligt Dagblad used the term on its front page, saying "The Second World War broke out yesterday at 11 a.m."







Accepted Usage

The Wiki section on Other global conflicts lists wars which, while global, have not been given the term "world war" (especially World War in capitals, which Merriam-Webster declares to be reserved for WWI and WWII, thus far in history anyway). Why were these other global conflicts not called World War X, Y or Z? Because no one did call them that. And no one does. Though anyone could. It is a socio-political term, not an objective or empirical one. It is a coined phrase. Those who coined it get to shape or influence how it is used. Like D-Day ... every operation prior to 6 June 1944 had a D-Day (day of commencing operations) and an H-Hour (starting hour). After June 6th, the term became synonymous with Operation Overlord and no one thinks of it in any other manner now.






Specific Case: Start of WWII

In reading through the definitions and accepted use of the term, the consensus seems to be that there were global conflicts transpiring before 1 September 1939, but the tipping point to qualify it as a World War (among those who define or shape language or terminology, at least in a popular cultural sense) came when hostilities broke out 1 September 1939 when Germany invaded Poland, which, by treaty, resulted in war being declared by the UK and France (and their respective world-spanning empires, thanks sempaiscuba) on 3 September 1939. Why not use September 3rd then? Because technically a state of war existed upon Germany's invasion of Poland (by way of treaty) 1 September 1939.



As a parallel example of a technical state of war, refer to Roosevelt's Day of Infamy speech given to the US Congress 8 December 1941 (a day after the attack on Pearl Harbor) in which he said in conclusion of his remarks (my emphasis added):




I ask that the Congress declare that since the unprovoked and dastardly attack by Japan on Sunday, December 7, 1941, a state of war has existed between the United States and the Japanese Empire.




The US Congress declared war on Japan 8 December 1941, but that was a legal formality. A state of war existed upon the attack 7 December 1941 (and also by virtue of Japan's declaration of war on the US and UK 7 December, though delivered after the attack started - the attack itself started the state of war). This same logic can be applied to the state of war in Europe between Germany, Poland, the UK and France which commenced 1 September 1939 when hostilities began.



Those who coined the phrase "World War II" applied it to that war which started between those four nations and their global empires when Germany invaded Poland 1 September 1939. And it stuck. And it became accepted as such. It can also be rejected as such.




Commentary

While Questions that ask "Why..." often invite opinions (and some good ones have been expressed here in some Answers and Comments), this Question can be addressed from a marginally historic perspective, and that is by examining the historical use of the term World War II, when it came into use and by whom, what are its roots in previous usage for other global conflicts (etc.) - hence why I chose to post this Answer from that standpoint. I think this approach can keep the Question grounded in terms that are not primarily opinion-based (even though use of the term may well be challenged as opinion- or politically-based) in hopes that by doing so this Question can remain open for years to come with many more great Answers and Comments added (which at some future date others may refer back to for historical perspective by the way) without fear of having this closed for being opinion-based.






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    On September 1, 1939, Japan, China, Germany, and Poland were belligerents in two separate conflicts. That isn't a world war by the Wikipedia definition. It's iffy if September 3, 1939 qualifies, given the neutrality of the US, the USSR, and Italy.
    – David Thornley
    Nov 8 at 16:50






  • 2




    @DavidThornley there is no objective criteria to the use of the term with regards to any definition (even in Wiki's own definition), but rather a consensus among sources using the term for any given purpose (political being the most obvious, not historical). When did the term come into use, and upon what world events was that usage based. Those are the only measures that can reasonably be applied. The exact number of belligerents is not a hard and fast figure, rather the character or nature of the conflict seem more prominent to the language arbiters in this case.
    – Kerry L
    Nov 8 at 17:01










  • My intention is not to propose a start date. I'm pointing out that the period of September 1 through September 2 in 1939 does not constitute a world war by the standards given. Indeed, in your comment, you're talking about common usage (and September 1, 1939 is a commonly stated start date) instead of the criteria.
    – David Thornley
    Nov 9 at 16:42






  • 1




    @DavidThornley it's a fuzzy issue. Your observations are valid, and so are many others here.
    – Kerry L
    Nov 9 at 16:44






  • 1




    Looks good. At least keep the second paragraph of EDIT:
    – David Thornley
    Nov 12 at 16:36













up vote
30
down vote










up vote
30
down vote









Short Answer



The Wikipedia entry for World War II uses the start date of 1 September 1939 because Wiki is applying the Wikipedia definition of the term "world war" as a basis, for internal consistency. One must start with a definition of that term to formulate an answer as to why.




Long Answer



Many good answers here already - each with valid points to consider, and any one of which I could accept if I had posted the question (and a +1 from me on more than one of them). However, the definition of World War has not yet been addressed (i.e. when is it appropriate to use the term World War in connection with an international conflict?).




Definition

The various definitions of the term itself include no objective criteria (e.g. 60% of nations of the globe, or 60% of the land-mass of the globe, etc.) but rather subjective criteria. For example, if using Merriam-Webster's definition (my emphasis added):




a war engaged in by all or most of the principal nations of the world




... one must first decide what constitutes a principal nation, and then, if they are not all engaged in finding ways to kill each other, we move to the next qualifier, most, and then try to decide how many is "most"? 50.00001% or more? Does most require a two-thirds majority? Three-quarters?



With such subjective measures and no objective qualifications, one then turns to historical usage of the term to find a less subjective answer. Who first uses the term, and when? Are those sources considered authoritative?



From the Wikipedia entry on World War, there is much to be learned about the historical use of the term, which may provide an acceptable (if not definitive) answer to this question. It comes down to this: When does an international conflict become a World War? Definition from Wiki:




A world war is a large-scale war involving many of the countries of the world or many of the most powerful and populous ones. World wars span multiple countries on multiple continents, with battles fought in many theaters. While a variety of global conflicts have been subjectively deemed "world wars", such as the Cold War and the War on Terror, the term is widely and generally accepted only as it is retrospectively applied to two major international conflicts that occurred during the 20th century: World War I (1914–1918) and World War II (1939–1945).







Origins

Origin of the term (also from the same Wiki, my emphasis added below):




The Oxford English Dictionary cited the first known usage in the English language to a Scottish newspaper: the People's Journal in 1848: "A war among the great powers is now necessarily a world-war." The term "world war" had been used in 1850 by Karl Marx and his associate, Friedrich Engels, in The Class Struggles in France. Rasmus B. Anderson in 1889 described an episode in Teutonic mythology as a “world war” (Swedish: världskrig), justifying this description by a line in an Old Norse epic poem, "Völuspá: folcvig fyrst i heimi" ("The first great war in the world".) German writer August Wilhelm Otto Niemann had used the term "world war" in the title of his anti-British novel, Der Weltkrieg: Deutsche Träume (The World War: German Dreams) in 1904, published in English as The Coming Conquest of England.



In English, the term "First World War" had been used by Charles à Court Repington, as a title for his memoirs (published in 1920); he had noted his discussion on the matter with a Major Johnstone of Harvard University in his diary entry of September 10, 1918.



The term "World War I" was coined by Time magazine on page 28b of its June 12, 1939 issue. In the same article, on page 32, the term "World War II" was first used speculatively to describe the upcoming war. The first use for the actual war came in its issue of September 11, 1939. One week earlier, on September 4, the day after France and the United Kingdom declared war on Germany, the Danish newspaper Kristeligt Dagblad used the term on its front page, saying "The Second World War broke out yesterday at 11 a.m."







Accepted Usage

The Wiki section on Other global conflicts lists wars which, while global, have not been given the term "world war" (especially World War in capitals, which Merriam-Webster declares to be reserved for WWI and WWII, thus far in history anyway). Why were these other global conflicts not called World War X, Y or Z? Because no one did call them that. And no one does. Though anyone could. It is a socio-political term, not an objective or empirical one. It is a coined phrase. Those who coined it get to shape or influence how it is used. Like D-Day ... every operation prior to 6 June 1944 had a D-Day (day of commencing operations) and an H-Hour (starting hour). After June 6th, the term became synonymous with Operation Overlord and no one thinks of it in any other manner now.






Specific Case: Start of WWII

In reading through the definitions and accepted use of the term, the consensus seems to be that there were global conflicts transpiring before 1 September 1939, but the tipping point to qualify it as a World War (among those who define or shape language or terminology, at least in a popular cultural sense) came when hostilities broke out 1 September 1939 when Germany invaded Poland, which, by treaty, resulted in war being declared by the UK and France (and their respective world-spanning empires, thanks sempaiscuba) on 3 September 1939. Why not use September 3rd then? Because technically a state of war existed upon Germany's invasion of Poland (by way of treaty) 1 September 1939.



As a parallel example of a technical state of war, refer to Roosevelt's Day of Infamy speech given to the US Congress 8 December 1941 (a day after the attack on Pearl Harbor) in which he said in conclusion of his remarks (my emphasis added):




I ask that the Congress declare that since the unprovoked and dastardly attack by Japan on Sunday, December 7, 1941, a state of war has existed between the United States and the Japanese Empire.




The US Congress declared war on Japan 8 December 1941, but that was a legal formality. A state of war existed upon the attack 7 December 1941 (and also by virtue of Japan's declaration of war on the US and UK 7 December, though delivered after the attack started - the attack itself started the state of war). This same logic can be applied to the state of war in Europe between Germany, Poland, the UK and France which commenced 1 September 1939 when hostilities began.



Those who coined the phrase "World War II" applied it to that war which started between those four nations and their global empires when Germany invaded Poland 1 September 1939. And it stuck. And it became accepted as such. It can also be rejected as such.




Commentary

While Questions that ask "Why..." often invite opinions (and some good ones have been expressed here in some Answers and Comments), this Question can be addressed from a marginally historic perspective, and that is by examining the historical use of the term World War II, when it came into use and by whom, what are its roots in previous usage for other global conflicts (etc.) - hence why I chose to post this Answer from that standpoint. I think this approach can keep the Question grounded in terms that are not primarily opinion-based (even though use of the term may well be challenged as opinion- or politically-based) in hopes that by doing so this Question can remain open for years to come with many more great Answers and Comments added (which at some future date others may refer back to for historical perspective by the way) without fear of having this closed for being opinion-based.






share|improve this answer














Short Answer



The Wikipedia entry for World War II uses the start date of 1 September 1939 because Wiki is applying the Wikipedia definition of the term "world war" as a basis, for internal consistency. One must start with a definition of that term to formulate an answer as to why.




Long Answer



Many good answers here already - each with valid points to consider, and any one of which I could accept if I had posted the question (and a +1 from me on more than one of them). However, the definition of World War has not yet been addressed (i.e. when is it appropriate to use the term World War in connection with an international conflict?).




Definition

The various definitions of the term itself include no objective criteria (e.g. 60% of nations of the globe, or 60% of the land-mass of the globe, etc.) but rather subjective criteria. For example, if using Merriam-Webster's definition (my emphasis added):




a war engaged in by all or most of the principal nations of the world




... one must first decide what constitutes a principal nation, and then, if they are not all engaged in finding ways to kill each other, we move to the next qualifier, most, and then try to decide how many is "most"? 50.00001% or more? Does most require a two-thirds majority? Three-quarters?



With such subjective measures and no objective qualifications, one then turns to historical usage of the term to find a less subjective answer. Who first uses the term, and when? Are those sources considered authoritative?



From the Wikipedia entry on World War, there is much to be learned about the historical use of the term, which may provide an acceptable (if not definitive) answer to this question. It comes down to this: When does an international conflict become a World War? Definition from Wiki:




A world war is a large-scale war involving many of the countries of the world or many of the most powerful and populous ones. World wars span multiple countries on multiple continents, with battles fought in many theaters. While a variety of global conflicts have been subjectively deemed "world wars", such as the Cold War and the War on Terror, the term is widely and generally accepted only as it is retrospectively applied to two major international conflicts that occurred during the 20th century: World War I (1914–1918) and World War II (1939–1945).







Origins

Origin of the term (also from the same Wiki, my emphasis added below):




The Oxford English Dictionary cited the first known usage in the English language to a Scottish newspaper: the People's Journal in 1848: "A war among the great powers is now necessarily a world-war." The term "world war" had been used in 1850 by Karl Marx and his associate, Friedrich Engels, in The Class Struggles in France. Rasmus B. Anderson in 1889 described an episode in Teutonic mythology as a “world war” (Swedish: världskrig), justifying this description by a line in an Old Norse epic poem, "Völuspá: folcvig fyrst i heimi" ("The first great war in the world".) German writer August Wilhelm Otto Niemann had used the term "world war" in the title of his anti-British novel, Der Weltkrieg: Deutsche Träume (The World War: German Dreams) in 1904, published in English as The Coming Conquest of England.



In English, the term "First World War" had been used by Charles à Court Repington, as a title for his memoirs (published in 1920); he had noted his discussion on the matter with a Major Johnstone of Harvard University in his diary entry of September 10, 1918.



The term "World War I" was coined by Time magazine on page 28b of its June 12, 1939 issue. In the same article, on page 32, the term "World War II" was first used speculatively to describe the upcoming war. The first use for the actual war came in its issue of September 11, 1939. One week earlier, on September 4, the day after France and the United Kingdom declared war on Germany, the Danish newspaper Kristeligt Dagblad used the term on its front page, saying "The Second World War broke out yesterday at 11 a.m."







Accepted Usage

The Wiki section on Other global conflicts lists wars which, while global, have not been given the term "world war" (especially World War in capitals, which Merriam-Webster declares to be reserved for WWI and WWII, thus far in history anyway). Why were these other global conflicts not called World War X, Y or Z? Because no one did call them that. And no one does. Though anyone could. It is a socio-political term, not an objective or empirical one. It is a coined phrase. Those who coined it get to shape or influence how it is used. Like D-Day ... every operation prior to 6 June 1944 had a D-Day (day of commencing operations) and an H-Hour (starting hour). After June 6th, the term became synonymous with Operation Overlord and no one thinks of it in any other manner now.






Specific Case: Start of WWII

In reading through the definitions and accepted use of the term, the consensus seems to be that there were global conflicts transpiring before 1 September 1939, but the tipping point to qualify it as a World War (among those who define or shape language or terminology, at least in a popular cultural sense) came when hostilities broke out 1 September 1939 when Germany invaded Poland, which, by treaty, resulted in war being declared by the UK and France (and their respective world-spanning empires, thanks sempaiscuba) on 3 September 1939. Why not use September 3rd then? Because technically a state of war existed upon Germany's invasion of Poland (by way of treaty) 1 September 1939.



As a parallel example of a technical state of war, refer to Roosevelt's Day of Infamy speech given to the US Congress 8 December 1941 (a day after the attack on Pearl Harbor) in which he said in conclusion of his remarks (my emphasis added):




I ask that the Congress declare that since the unprovoked and dastardly attack by Japan on Sunday, December 7, 1941, a state of war has existed between the United States and the Japanese Empire.




The US Congress declared war on Japan 8 December 1941, but that was a legal formality. A state of war existed upon the attack 7 December 1941 (and also by virtue of Japan's declaration of war on the US and UK 7 December, though delivered after the attack started - the attack itself started the state of war). This same logic can be applied to the state of war in Europe between Germany, Poland, the UK and France which commenced 1 September 1939 when hostilities began.



Those who coined the phrase "World War II" applied it to that war which started between those four nations and their global empires when Germany invaded Poland 1 September 1939. And it stuck. And it became accepted as such. It can also be rejected as such.




Commentary

While Questions that ask "Why..." often invite opinions (and some good ones have been expressed here in some Answers and Comments), this Question can be addressed from a marginally historic perspective, and that is by examining the historical use of the term World War II, when it came into use and by whom, what are its roots in previous usage for other global conflicts (etc.) - hence why I chose to post this Answer from that standpoint. I think this approach can keep the Question grounded in terms that are not primarily opinion-based (even though use of the term may well be challenged as opinion- or politically-based) in hopes that by doing so this Question can remain open for years to come with many more great Answers and Comments added (which at some future date others may refer back to for historical perspective by the way) without fear of having this closed for being opinion-based.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 12 at 18:10

























answered Nov 8 at 15:26









Kerry L

2,897943




2,897943








  • 2




    On September 1, 1939, Japan, China, Germany, and Poland were belligerents in two separate conflicts. That isn't a world war by the Wikipedia definition. It's iffy if September 3, 1939 qualifies, given the neutrality of the US, the USSR, and Italy.
    – David Thornley
    Nov 8 at 16:50






  • 2




    @DavidThornley there is no objective criteria to the use of the term with regards to any definition (even in Wiki's own definition), but rather a consensus among sources using the term for any given purpose (political being the most obvious, not historical). When did the term come into use, and upon what world events was that usage based. Those are the only measures that can reasonably be applied. The exact number of belligerents is not a hard and fast figure, rather the character or nature of the conflict seem more prominent to the language arbiters in this case.
    – Kerry L
    Nov 8 at 17:01










  • My intention is not to propose a start date. I'm pointing out that the period of September 1 through September 2 in 1939 does not constitute a world war by the standards given. Indeed, in your comment, you're talking about common usage (and September 1, 1939 is a commonly stated start date) instead of the criteria.
    – David Thornley
    Nov 9 at 16:42






  • 1




    @DavidThornley it's a fuzzy issue. Your observations are valid, and so are many others here.
    – Kerry L
    Nov 9 at 16:44






  • 1




    Looks good. At least keep the second paragraph of EDIT:
    – David Thornley
    Nov 12 at 16:36














  • 2




    On September 1, 1939, Japan, China, Germany, and Poland were belligerents in two separate conflicts. That isn't a world war by the Wikipedia definition. It's iffy if September 3, 1939 qualifies, given the neutrality of the US, the USSR, and Italy.
    – David Thornley
    Nov 8 at 16:50






  • 2




    @DavidThornley there is no objective criteria to the use of the term with regards to any definition (even in Wiki's own definition), but rather a consensus among sources using the term for any given purpose (political being the most obvious, not historical). When did the term come into use, and upon what world events was that usage based. Those are the only measures that can reasonably be applied. The exact number of belligerents is not a hard and fast figure, rather the character or nature of the conflict seem more prominent to the language arbiters in this case.
    – Kerry L
    Nov 8 at 17:01










  • My intention is not to propose a start date. I'm pointing out that the period of September 1 through September 2 in 1939 does not constitute a world war by the standards given. Indeed, in your comment, you're talking about common usage (and September 1, 1939 is a commonly stated start date) instead of the criteria.
    – David Thornley
    Nov 9 at 16:42






  • 1




    @DavidThornley it's a fuzzy issue. Your observations are valid, and so are many others here.
    – Kerry L
    Nov 9 at 16:44






  • 1




    Looks good. At least keep the second paragraph of EDIT:
    – David Thornley
    Nov 12 at 16:36








2




2




On September 1, 1939, Japan, China, Germany, and Poland were belligerents in two separate conflicts. That isn't a world war by the Wikipedia definition. It's iffy if September 3, 1939 qualifies, given the neutrality of the US, the USSR, and Italy.
– David Thornley
Nov 8 at 16:50




On September 1, 1939, Japan, China, Germany, and Poland were belligerents in two separate conflicts. That isn't a world war by the Wikipedia definition. It's iffy if September 3, 1939 qualifies, given the neutrality of the US, the USSR, and Italy.
– David Thornley
Nov 8 at 16:50




2




2




@DavidThornley there is no objective criteria to the use of the term with regards to any definition (even in Wiki's own definition), but rather a consensus among sources using the term for any given purpose (political being the most obvious, not historical). When did the term come into use, and upon what world events was that usage based. Those are the only measures that can reasonably be applied. The exact number of belligerents is not a hard and fast figure, rather the character or nature of the conflict seem more prominent to the language arbiters in this case.
– Kerry L
Nov 8 at 17:01




@DavidThornley there is no objective criteria to the use of the term with regards to any definition (even in Wiki's own definition), but rather a consensus among sources using the term for any given purpose (political being the most obvious, not historical). When did the term come into use, and upon what world events was that usage based. Those are the only measures that can reasonably be applied. The exact number of belligerents is not a hard and fast figure, rather the character or nature of the conflict seem more prominent to the language arbiters in this case.
– Kerry L
Nov 8 at 17:01












My intention is not to propose a start date. I'm pointing out that the period of September 1 through September 2 in 1939 does not constitute a world war by the standards given. Indeed, in your comment, you're talking about common usage (and September 1, 1939 is a commonly stated start date) instead of the criteria.
– David Thornley
Nov 9 at 16:42




My intention is not to propose a start date. I'm pointing out that the period of September 1 through September 2 in 1939 does not constitute a world war by the standards given. Indeed, in your comment, you're talking about common usage (and September 1, 1939 is a commonly stated start date) instead of the criteria.
– David Thornley
Nov 9 at 16:42




1




1




@DavidThornley it's a fuzzy issue. Your observations are valid, and so are many others here.
– Kerry L
Nov 9 at 16:44




@DavidThornley it's a fuzzy issue. Your observations are valid, and so are many others here.
– Kerry L
Nov 9 at 16:44




1




1




Looks good. At least keep the second paragraph of EDIT:
– David Thornley
Nov 12 at 16:36




Looks good. At least keep the second paragraph of EDIT:
– David Thornley
Nov 12 at 16:36










up vote
11
down vote













As to why en.wikipedia lists particular start dates, I commend to you en.wikipedia’s arcane consensus policies, the article’s page history and talk page history. For why anglophone editors from the global north construe the texts they read to support their edit warring, I supply the following:



Popular conceptions of history reflect myth-making, national imaginations, language barriers and politics.



As the phrase “world war two” isn’t a technical or theoretical concept in history—compare to “imperialist wars” which is baggage laden—we should look to the reasons in popular history.



Firstly, the world system has concentrated imperialist power in “the global north.” Japan has a notorious unwillingness to tolerate public discourse on its war with China, this being viewed as a political issue related to which class ought to control the economy.



That leaves European powers and the anglophone settler states. These cultures are heavily Eurocentric. Britain and France in particular have large associated language communities—many of which are former colonies pulled into 1939—which emphasise 1939. Polish remembrance is obvious. German culture was specifically disciplined for 1939. Other states: Denmark, Norway, Netherlands, Belgium, Yugoslavia, Greece; were pulled into the 1939 war. The former Soviet Union memorialised anti Hitlerism and so also engaged in 1939 myth making.



China seems to be engaged in an exceptionalism connected to anti-Japanese anti-imperialism, and so doesn’t need “WWII” as a myth: the Sino-Japanese wars as the birth of the PRC suffices without needing a grand narrative of World War.



The US is slightly different, with a strong pull to 1941 for local reasons.



Centring social myth on 1939 reinforces the centrality of the global north’s Eurocentric myths, as essentially “the world.” The world naturally being France, Germany, the UK, their colonies and European victims. Given the decline of national imperialisms whose metropoles were European, 1945-1980, there are strong “dying empire” reasons to memorialise WWII on European terms: consider the UK’s war myths and imperial “decline.” Correspondingly the Great Patriotic War as an antifascist war in the Soviet Union was essential myth making, and the idea of a “popular front” against fascism harkens to 1939 for WWII. (The Soviet Union being transnational imperialism.)



Historians are unlikely to set a flag in the ground over sloppy nationalist posturing on a term which isn’t relevant. For long duration histories of world systems, that a period of war between metropole states existed 1914-1945 matters. At closer focuses who exactly was at war with whom matters more than a label.



It is a popular term whose meaning is political and no answer particularly interests historians. In fact, comparing why people support answers is more interesting than the idea of any particular start date.






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    I agree with your second-to-last paragraph. As another example, while history classes in Italy still try to teach about the first, the second and the third Independence War, Italians generally just talk about "Risorgimento", without detailing any more - and that's just a little over 150 years ago. In Italy, WWI was actually called "the fourth Independece War" for a while, before the concept of "two world wars" became dominant.
    – Simone
    Nov 8 at 15:18








  • 1




    Your last sentence / paragraph is in my view the crux of the matter. Agree.
    – Kerry L
    Nov 8 at 16:10






  • 2




    Actually, for the whole of postwar Soviet Union, ( as well as for modern Russia as far as I am aware) it is taught that the WW2 started on June 21,1941 and ended on May 9, 1945.
    – Gnudiff
    Nov 8 at 19:25






  • 3




    @Gnudiff Anecdotally, when I attended school in the post-Soviet Russia we were taught both of those dates: September 1, 1939 for WW2 and June 22, 1941 for the so-called Great Patriotic War. Admittedly a much greater emphasis was on the latter and the Eastern Front.
    – undercat
    Nov 8 at 21:05






  • 2




    @undercat That was a bit more complicated in my experience, because my (Soviet) school books talked about WW2 and Great Patriotic War interchangeably -- without notifying that the one was a subset of the other. The whole issue was somewhat muddled (apparently on purpose) -- the talk was about GPW, but WW2 was also used quite a lot in press and literature as far as I was able to read them at that time, with the implication that they were the same. Also, for example, in Soviet English classes, when translating to English, we were taught to use WW2 rather than GPW when translating the term.
    – Gnudiff
    Nov 8 at 21:20

















up vote
11
down vote













As to why en.wikipedia lists particular start dates, I commend to you en.wikipedia’s arcane consensus policies, the article’s page history and talk page history. For why anglophone editors from the global north construe the texts they read to support their edit warring, I supply the following:



Popular conceptions of history reflect myth-making, national imaginations, language barriers and politics.



As the phrase “world war two” isn’t a technical or theoretical concept in history—compare to “imperialist wars” which is baggage laden—we should look to the reasons in popular history.



Firstly, the world system has concentrated imperialist power in “the global north.” Japan has a notorious unwillingness to tolerate public discourse on its war with China, this being viewed as a political issue related to which class ought to control the economy.



That leaves European powers and the anglophone settler states. These cultures are heavily Eurocentric. Britain and France in particular have large associated language communities—many of which are former colonies pulled into 1939—which emphasise 1939. Polish remembrance is obvious. German culture was specifically disciplined for 1939. Other states: Denmark, Norway, Netherlands, Belgium, Yugoslavia, Greece; were pulled into the 1939 war. The former Soviet Union memorialised anti Hitlerism and so also engaged in 1939 myth making.



China seems to be engaged in an exceptionalism connected to anti-Japanese anti-imperialism, and so doesn’t need “WWII” as a myth: the Sino-Japanese wars as the birth of the PRC suffices without needing a grand narrative of World War.



The US is slightly different, with a strong pull to 1941 for local reasons.



Centring social myth on 1939 reinforces the centrality of the global north’s Eurocentric myths, as essentially “the world.” The world naturally being France, Germany, the UK, their colonies and European victims. Given the decline of national imperialisms whose metropoles were European, 1945-1980, there are strong “dying empire” reasons to memorialise WWII on European terms: consider the UK’s war myths and imperial “decline.” Correspondingly the Great Patriotic War as an antifascist war in the Soviet Union was essential myth making, and the idea of a “popular front” against fascism harkens to 1939 for WWII. (The Soviet Union being transnational imperialism.)



Historians are unlikely to set a flag in the ground over sloppy nationalist posturing on a term which isn’t relevant. For long duration histories of world systems, that a period of war between metropole states existed 1914-1945 matters. At closer focuses who exactly was at war with whom matters more than a label.



It is a popular term whose meaning is political and no answer particularly interests historians. In fact, comparing why people support answers is more interesting than the idea of any particular start date.






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    I agree with your second-to-last paragraph. As another example, while history classes in Italy still try to teach about the first, the second and the third Independence War, Italians generally just talk about "Risorgimento", without detailing any more - and that's just a little over 150 years ago. In Italy, WWI was actually called "the fourth Independece War" for a while, before the concept of "two world wars" became dominant.
    – Simone
    Nov 8 at 15:18








  • 1




    Your last sentence / paragraph is in my view the crux of the matter. Agree.
    – Kerry L
    Nov 8 at 16:10






  • 2




    Actually, for the whole of postwar Soviet Union, ( as well as for modern Russia as far as I am aware) it is taught that the WW2 started on June 21,1941 and ended on May 9, 1945.
    – Gnudiff
    Nov 8 at 19:25






  • 3




    @Gnudiff Anecdotally, when I attended school in the post-Soviet Russia we were taught both of those dates: September 1, 1939 for WW2 and June 22, 1941 for the so-called Great Patriotic War. Admittedly a much greater emphasis was on the latter and the Eastern Front.
    – undercat
    Nov 8 at 21:05






  • 2




    @undercat That was a bit more complicated in my experience, because my (Soviet) school books talked about WW2 and Great Patriotic War interchangeably -- without notifying that the one was a subset of the other. The whole issue was somewhat muddled (apparently on purpose) -- the talk was about GPW, but WW2 was also used quite a lot in press and literature as far as I was able to read them at that time, with the implication that they were the same. Also, for example, in Soviet English classes, when translating to English, we were taught to use WW2 rather than GPW when translating the term.
    – Gnudiff
    Nov 8 at 21:20















up vote
11
down vote










up vote
11
down vote









As to why en.wikipedia lists particular start dates, I commend to you en.wikipedia’s arcane consensus policies, the article’s page history and talk page history. For why anglophone editors from the global north construe the texts they read to support their edit warring, I supply the following:



Popular conceptions of history reflect myth-making, national imaginations, language barriers and politics.



As the phrase “world war two” isn’t a technical or theoretical concept in history—compare to “imperialist wars” which is baggage laden—we should look to the reasons in popular history.



Firstly, the world system has concentrated imperialist power in “the global north.” Japan has a notorious unwillingness to tolerate public discourse on its war with China, this being viewed as a political issue related to which class ought to control the economy.



That leaves European powers and the anglophone settler states. These cultures are heavily Eurocentric. Britain and France in particular have large associated language communities—many of which are former colonies pulled into 1939—which emphasise 1939. Polish remembrance is obvious. German culture was specifically disciplined for 1939. Other states: Denmark, Norway, Netherlands, Belgium, Yugoslavia, Greece; were pulled into the 1939 war. The former Soviet Union memorialised anti Hitlerism and so also engaged in 1939 myth making.



China seems to be engaged in an exceptionalism connected to anti-Japanese anti-imperialism, and so doesn’t need “WWII” as a myth: the Sino-Japanese wars as the birth of the PRC suffices without needing a grand narrative of World War.



The US is slightly different, with a strong pull to 1941 for local reasons.



Centring social myth on 1939 reinforces the centrality of the global north’s Eurocentric myths, as essentially “the world.” The world naturally being France, Germany, the UK, their colonies and European victims. Given the decline of national imperialisms whose metropoles were European, 1945-1980, there are strong “dying empire” reasons to memorialise WWII on European terms: consider the UK’s war myths and imperial “decline.” Correspondingly the Great Patriotic War as an antifascist war in the Soviet Union was essential myth making, and the idea of a “popular front” against fascism harkens to 1939 for WWII. (The Soviet Union being transnational imperialism.)



Historians are unlikely to set a flag in the ground over sloppy nationalist posturing on a term which isn’t relevant. For long duration histories of world systems, that a period of war between metropole states existed 1914-1945 matters. At closer focuses who exactly was at war with whom matters more than a label.



It is a popular term whose meaning is political and no answer particularly interests historians. In fact, comparing why people support answers is more interesting than the idea of any particular start date.






share|improve this answer














As to why en.wikipedia lists particular start dates, I commend to you en.wikipedia’s arcane consensus policies, the article’s page history and talk page history. For why anglophone editors from the global north construe the texts they read to support their edit warring, I supply the following:



Popular conceptions of history reflect myth-making, national imaginations, language barriers and politics.



As the phrase “world war two” isn’t a technical or theoretical concept in history—compare to “imperialist wars” which is baggage laden—we should look to the reasons in popular history.



Firstly, the world system has concentrated imperialist power in “the global north.” Japan has a notorious unwillingness to tolerate public discourse on its war with China, this being viewed as a political issue related to which class ought to control the economy.



That leaves European powers and the anglophone settler states. These cultures are heavily Eurocentric. Britain and France in particular have large associated language communities—many of which are former colonies pulled into 1939—which emphasise 1939. Polish remembrance is obvious. German culture was specifically disciplined for 1939. Other states: Denmark, Norway, Netherlands, Belgium, Yugoslavia, Greece; were pulled into the 1939 war. The former Soviet Union memorialised anti Hitlerism and so also engaged in 1939 myth making.



China seems to be engaged in an exceptionalism connected to anti-Japanese anti-imperialism, and so doesn’t need “WWII” as a myth: the Sino-Japanese wars as the birth of the PRC suffices without needing a grand narrative of World War.



The US is slightly different, with a strong pull to 1941 for local reasons.



Centring social myth on 1939 reinforces the centrality of the global north’s Eurocentric myths, as essentially “the world.” The world naturally being France, Germany, the UK, their colonies and European victims. Given the decline of national imperialisms whose metropoles were European, 1945-1980, there are strong “dying empire” reasons to memorialise WWII on European terms: consider the UK’s war myths and imperial “decline.” Correspondingly the Great Patriotic War as an antifascist war in the Soviet Union was essential myth making, and the idea of a “popular front” against fascism harkens to 1939 for WWII. (The Soviet Union being transnational imperialism.)



Historians are unlikely to set a flag in the ground over sloppy nationalist posturing on a term which isn’t relevant. For long duration histories of world systems, that a period of war between metropole states existed 1914-1945 matters. At closer focuses who exactly was at war with whom matters more than a label.



It is a popular term whose meaning is political and no answer particularly interests historians. In fact, comparing why people support answers is more interesting than the idea of any particular start date.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 8 at 15:03

























answered Nov 8 at 14:58









Samuel Russell

9,58233074




9,58233074








  • 2




    I agree with your second-to-last paragraph. As another example, while history classes in Italy still try to teach about the first, the second and the third Independence War, Italians generally just talk about "Risorgimento", without detailing any more - and that's just a little over 150 years ago. In Italy, WWI was actually called "the fourth Independece War" for a while, before the concept of "two world wars" became dominant.
    – Simone
    Nov 8 at 15:18








  • 1




    Your last sentence / paragraph is in my view the crux of the matter. Agree.
    – Kerry L
    Nov 8 at 16:10






  • 2




    Actually, for the whole of postwar Soviet Union, ( as well as for modern Russia as far as I am aware) it is taught that the WW2 started on June 21,1941 and ended on May 9, 1945.
    – Gnudiff
    Nov 8 at 19:25






  • 3




    @Gnudiff Anecdotally, when I attended school in the post-Soviet Russia we were taught both of those dates: September 1, 1939 for WW2 and June 22, 1941 for the so-called Great Patriotic War. Admittedly a much greater emphasis was on the latter and the Eastern Front.
    – undercat
    Nov 8 at 21:05






  • 2




    @undercat That was a bit more complicated in my experience, because my (Soviet) school books talked about WW2 and Great Patriotic War interchangeably -- without notifying that the one was a subset of the other. The whole issue was somewhat muddled (apparently on purpose) -- the talk was about GPW, but WW2 was also used quite a lot in press and literature as far as I was able to read them at that time, with the implication that they were the same. Also, for example, in Soviet English classes, when translating to English, we were taught to use WW2 rather than GPW when translating the term.
    – Gnudiff
    Nov 8 at 21:20
















  • 2




    I agree with your second-to-last paragraph. As another example, while history classes in Italy still try to teach about the first, the second and the third Independence War, Italians generally just talk about "Risorgimento", without detailing any more - and that's just a little over 150 years ago. In Italy, WWI was actually called "the fourth Independece War" for a while, before the concept of "two world wars" became dominant.
    – Simone
    Nov 8 at 15:18








  • 1




    Your last sentence / paragraph is in my view the crux of the matter. Agree.
    – Kerry L
    Nov 8 at 16:10






  • 2




    Actually, for the whole of postwar Soviet Union, ( as well as for modern Russia as far as I am aware) it is taught that the WW2 started on June 21,1941 and ended on May 9, 1945.
    – Gnudiff
    Nov 8 at 19:25






  • 3




    @Gnudiff Anecdotally, when I attended school in the post-Soviet Russia we were taught both of those dates: September 1, 1939 for WW2 and June 22, 1941 for the so-called Great Patriotic War. Admittedly a much greater emphasis was on the latter and the Eastern Front.
    – undercat
    Nov 8 at 21:05






  • 2




    @undercat That was a bit more complicated in my experience, because my (Soviet) school books talked about WW2 and Great Patriotic War interchangeably -- without notifying that the one was a subset of the other. The whole issue was somewhat muddled (apparently on purpose) -- the talk was about GPW, but WW2 was also used quite a lot in press and literature as far as I was able to read them at that time, with the implication that they were the same. Also, for example, in Soviet English classes, when translating to English, we were taught to use WW2 rather than GPW when translating the term.
    – Gnudiff
    Nov 8 at 21:20










2




2




I agree with your second-to-last paragraph. As another example, while history classes in Italy still try to teach about the first, the second and the third Independence War, Italians generally just talk about "Risorgimento", without detailing any more - and that's just a little over 150 years ago. In Italy, WWI was actually called "the fourth Independece War" for a while, before the concept of "two world wars" became dominant.
– Simone
Nov 8 at 15:18






I agree with your second-to-last paragraph. As another example, while history classes in Italy still try to teach about the first, the second and the third Independence War, Italians generally just talk about "Risorgimento", without detailing any more - and that's just a little over 150 years ago. In Italy, WWI was actually called "the fourth Independece War" for a while, before the concept of "two world wars" became dominant.
– Simone
Nov 8 at 15:18






1




1




Your last sentence / paragraph is in my view the crux of the matter. Agree.
– Kerry L
Nov 8 at 16:10




Your last sentence / paragraph is in my view the crux of the matter. Agree.
– Kerry L
Nov 8 at 16:10




2




2




Actually, for the whole of postwar Soviet Union, ( as well as for modern Russia as far as I am aware) it is taught that the WW2 started on June 21,1941 and ended on May 9, 1945.
– Gnudiff
Nov 8 at 19:25




Actually, for the whole of postwar Soviet Union, ( as well as for modern Russia as far as I am aware) it is taught that the WW2 started on June 21,1941 and ended on May 9, 1945.
– Gnudiff
Nov 8 at 19:25




3




3




@Gnudiff Anecdotally, when I attended school in the post-Soviet Russia we were taught both of those dates: September 1, 1939 for WW2 and June 22, 1941 for the so-called Great Patriotic War. Admittedly a much greater emphasis was on the latter and the Eastern Front.
– undercat
Nov 8 at 21:05




@Gnudiff Anecdotally, when I attended school in the post-Soviet Russia we were taught both of those dates: September 1, 1939 for WW2 and June 22, 1941 for the so-called Great Patriotic War. Admittedly a much greater emphasis was on the latter and the Eastern Front.
– undercat
Nov 8 at 21:05




2




2




@undercat That was a bit more complicated in my experience, because my (Soviet) school books talked about WW2 and Great Patriotic War interchangeably -- without notifying that the one was a subset of the other. The whole issue was somewhat muddled (apparently on purpose) -- the talk was about GPW, but WW2 was also used quite a lot in press and literature as far as I was able to read them at that time, with the implication that they were the same. Also, for example, in Soviet English classes, when translating to English, we were taught to use WW2 rather than GPW when translating the term.
– Gnudiff
Nov 8 at 21:20






@undercat That was a bit more complicated in my experience, because my (Soviet) school books talked about WW2 and Great Patriotic War interchangeably -- without notifying that the one was a subset of the other. The whole issue was somewhat muddled (apparently on purpose) -- the talk was about GPW, but WW2 was also used quite a lot in press and literature as far as I was able to read them at that time, with the implication that they were the same. Also, for example, in Soviet English classes, when translating to English, we were taught to use WW2 rather than GPW when translating the term.
– Gnudiff
Nov 8 at 21:20












up vote
7
down vote













As the World War II Article says:




Japan, which aimed to dominate Asia and the Pacific, was at war with China by 1937[5][b]—though neither side had declared war on the other. World war is generally said to have begun on 1 September 1939,[6] with the invasion of Poland by Germany and subsequent declarations on Germany by France and the United Kingdom.






So, formal declarations occurred at the later date, and gathered more directly attacking sides, enough to call it a "World War", where before it was China + Soviets + USA vs. Japan. Although, from @chepner's comment, that alliance did not involve formal war declarations:




The US did not declare war on anyone until December 1941. The USSR didn't declare war on Japan until August 1945.




From Second Sino-Japanese War, as of the 09:16, 16 October 2018‎ DimensionQualm revision... At the start of the second paragraph, it says the following:




China fought Japan with aid from the Soviet Union and the United States.




Although, even though that sentence is placed early in the page, it may be talking about events that occurred after the war merged with World War II.






share|improve this answer



















  • 3




    The US did not declare war on anyone until December 1941. The USSR didn't declare war on Japan until August 1945.
    – chepner
    Nov 8 at 16:01










  • @chepner - Right. Gonna update that to clarify...
    – Malandy
    Nov 8 at 17:28










  • Although the United States did not formally declare war until it came under attack, the President declared a state of “national emergency” on September 8, 1939. This was far from the total war that was to come, but it did involve US and German ships firing on each other. And the United States has often fought wars without formally declaring them.
    – Davislor
    Nov 8 at 20:27












  • @Davislor - I don't know how you want me to integrate that, so go ahead and edit it in, and we'll let the community decide.
    – Malandy
    Nov 8 at 20:44















up vote
7
down vote













As the World War II Article says:




Japan, which aimed to dominate Asia and the Pacific, was at war with China by 1937[5][b]—though neither side had declared war on the other. World war is generally said to have begun on 1 September 1939,[6] with the invasion of Poland by Germany and subsequent declarations on Germany by France and the United Kingdom.






So, formal declarations occurred at the later date, and gathered more directly attacking sides, enough to call it a "World War", where before it was China + Soviets + USA vs. Japan. Although, from @chepner's comment, that alliance did not involve formal war declarations:




The US did not declare war on anyone until December 1941. The USSR didn't declare war on Japan until August 1945.




From Second Sino-Japanese War, as of the 09:16, 16 October 2018‎ DimensionQualm revision... At the start of the second paragraph, it says the following:




China fought Japan with aid from the Soviet Union and the United States.




Although, even though that sentence is placed early in the page, it may be talking about events that occurred after the war merged with World War II.






share|improve this answer



















  • 3




    The US did not declare war on anyone until December 1941. The USSR didn't declare war on Japan until August 1945.
    – chepner
    Nov 8 at 16:01










  • @chepner - Right. Gonna update that to clarify...
    – Malandy
    Nov 8 at 17:28










  • Although the United States did not formally declare war until it came under attack, the President declared a state of “national emergency” on September 8, 1939. This was far from the total war that was to come, but it did involve US and German ships firing on each other. And the United States has often fought wars without formally declaring them.
    – Davislor
    Nov 8 at 20:27












  • @Davislor - I don't know how you want me to integrate that, so go ahead and edit it in, and we'll let the community decide.
    – Malandy
    Nov 8 at 20:44













up vote
7
down vote










up vote
7
down vote









As the World War II Article says:




Japan, which aimed to dominate Asia and the Pacific, was at war with China by 1937[5][b]—though neither side had declared war on the other. World war is generally said to have begun on 1 September 1939,[6] with the invasion of Poland by Germany and subsequent declarations on Germany by France and the United Kingdom.






So, formal declarations occurred at the later date, and gathered more directly attacking sides, enough to call it a "World War", where before it was China + Soviets + USA vs. Japan. Although, from @chepner's comment, that alliance did not involve formal war declarations:




The US did not declare war on anyone until December 1941. The USSR didn't declare war on Japan until August 1945.




From Second Sino-Japanese War, as of the 09:16, 16 October 2018‎ DimensionQualm revision... At the start of the second paragraph, it says the following:




China fought Japan with aid from the Soviet Union and the United States.




Although, even though that sentence is placed early in the page, it may be talking about events that occurred after the war merged with World War II.






share|improve this answer














As the World War II Article says:




Japan, which aimed to dominate Asia and the Pacific, was at war with China by 1937[5][b]—though neither side had declared war on the other. World war is generally said to have begun on 1 September 1939,[6] with the invasion of Poland by Germany and subsequent declarations on Germany by France and the United Kingdom.






So, formal declarations occurred at the later date, and gathered more directly attacking sides, enough to call it a "World War", where before it was China + Soviets + USA vs. Japan. Although, from @chepner's comment, that alliance did not involve formal war declarations:




The US did not declare war on anyone until December 1941. The USSR didn't declare war on Japan until August 1945.




From Second Sino-Japanese War, as of the 09:16, 16 October 2018‎ DimensionQualm revision... At the start of the second paragraph, it says the following:




China fought Japan with aid from the Soviet Union and the United States.




Although, even though that sentence is placed early in the page, it may be talking about events that occurred after the war merged with World War II.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 8 at 17:33

























answered Nov 8 at 13:25









Malandy

718717




718717








  • 3




    The US did not declare war on anyone until December 1941. The USSR didn't declare war on Japan until August 1945.
    – chepner
    Nov 8 at 16:01










  • @chepner - Right. Gonna update that to clarify...
    – Malandy
    Nov 8 at 17:28










  • Although the United States did not formally declare war until it came under attack, the President declared a state of “national emergency” on September 8, 1939. This was far from the total war that was to come, but it did involve US and German ships firing on each other. And the United States has often fought wars without formally declaring them.
    – Davislor
    Nov 8 at 20:27












  • @Davislor - I don't know how you want me to integrate that, so go ahead and edit it in, and we'll let the community decide.
    – Malandy
    Nov 8 at 20:44














  • 3




    The US did not declare war on anyone until December 1941. The USSR didn't declare war on Japan until August 1945.
    – chepner
    Nov 8 at 16:01










  • @chepner - Right. Gonna update that to clarify...
    – Malandy
    Nov 8 at 17:28










  • Although the United States did not formally declare war until it came under attack, the President declared a state of “national emergency” on September 8, 1939. This was far from the total war that was to come, but it did involve US and German ships firing on each other. And the United States has often fought wars without formally declaring them.
    – Davislor
    Nov 8 at 20:27












  • @Davislor - I don't know how you want me to integrate that, so go ahead and edit it in, and we'll let the community decide.
    – Malandy
    Nov 8 at 20:44








3




3




The US did not declare war on anyone until December 1941. The USSR didn't declare war on Japan until August 1945.
– chepner
Nov 8 at 16:01




The US did not declare war on anyone until December 1941. The USSR didn't declare war on Japan until August 1945.
– chepner
Nov 8 at 16:01












@chepner - Right. Gonna update that to clarify...
– Malandy
Nov 8 at 17:28




@chepner - Right. Gonna update that to clarify...
– Malandy
Nov 8 at 17:28












Although the United States did not formally declare war until it came under attack, the President declared a state of “national emergency” on September 8, 1939. This was far from the total war that was to come, but it did involve US and German ships firing on each other. And the United States has often fought wars without formally declaring them.
– Davislor
Nov 8 at 20:27






Although the United States did not formally declare war until it came under attack, the President declared a state of “national emergency” on September 8, 1939. This was far from the total war that was to come, but it did involve US and German ships firing on each other. And the United States has often fought wars without formally declaring them.
– Davislor
Nov 8 at 20:27














@Davislor - I don't know how you want me to integrate that, so go ahead and edit it in, and we'll let the community decide.
– Malandy
Nov 8 at 20:44




@Davislor - I don't know how you want me to integrate that, so go ahead and edit it in, and we'll let the community decide.
– Malandy
Nov 8 at 20:44










up vote
6
down vote













Isn't that just a matter of perspective?



I wonder what the Russian text books say is the start date?



There are so many good candidates!




  • September 1st 1939: Germany invaded Poland

  • September 17th 1939: Russia invaded Poland in partnership with Germany

  • November 30th 1939: Russia invaded Finland (a disastrous war which helped convince Germany that the Russian army sucked)?

  • June 22nd 1941: the day Germany invaded Russia


For Germany, it was definitely September 1st 1939.



For Italy, the war probably began on October 3rd 1935 when they invaded Ethiopia.



For America, the war began December 7th 1941.



For Britain (and France), the war began September 3rd 1939.



For China, July 7th 1937.



For Japan, it is less clear: they executed a series of creeping expansion all through the 1900s, until it all blew up in their faces.



I think what I am trying to say is, dates really aren't as important as high school history teachers make them out to be. Yes, you need to know the dates, but more importantly, we must understand how the EVENTS that took place on those dates affected each other and the world we all live in today.



Because, like it or not, all of us are living in the shadows of events that took place hundreds of years ago. I would say our politics, our culture, even our lives are shaped by those events.






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    Fun fact: you can put down September 11, 1941 as the date the US entered the war, as Roosevelt told the USN to wage war in the North Atlantic. That war remained undeclared for months. Yet another date to consider.
    – David Thornley
    Nov 8 at 16:52






  • 1




    Another fun fact: a Russian text book would likely have no mention of something called World War Two, but rather The Great Patriotic War.
    – Kerry L
    Nov 8 at 17:51






  • 6




    @KerryL While my childhood's Soviet textbooks used mostly GPW, the term was used interchangeably with WW2 both in them and in lots of other places -- forcing the unspecified implication that they were the same, even though they weren't. Until 1991, we were taught that WW2 started in June 22,1941 and ended on May 9, 1945 (Victory day celebration in the USSR), despite the fact that it was "only" GPW-part of WW2. Granted, I was not a history addict, so I might have missed, if the difference was explained somewhere, but if I was thinking GPW=WW2, I was among the majority.
    – Gnudiff
    Nov 8 at 21:28















up vote
6
down vote













Isn't that just a matter of perspective?



I wonder what the Russian text books say is the start date?



There are so many good candidates!




  • September 1st 1939: Germany invaded Poland

  • September 17th 1939: Russia invaded Poland in partnership with Germany

  • November 30th 1939: Russia invaded Finland (a disastrous war which helped convince Germany that the Russian army sucked)?

  • June 22nd 1941: the day Germany invaded Russia


For Germany, it was definitely September 1st 1939.



For Italy, the war probably began on October 3rd 1935 when they invaded Ethiopia.



For America, the war began December 7th 1941.



For Britain (and France), the war began September 3rd 1939.



For China, July 7th 1937.



For Japan, it is less clear: they executed a series of creeping expansion all through the 1900s, until it all blew up in their faces.



I think what I am trying to say is, dates really aren't as important as high school history teachers make them out to be. Yes, you need to know the dates, but more importantly, we must understand how the EVENTS that took place on those dates affected each other and the world we all live in today.



Because, like it or not, all of us are living in the shadows of events that took place hundreds of years ago. I would say our politics, our culture, even our lives are shaped by those events.






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    Fun fact: you can put down September 11, 1941 as the date the US entered the war, as Roosevelt told the USN to wage war in the North Atlantic. That war remained undeclared for months. Yet another date to consider.
    – David Thornley
    Nov 8 at 16:52






  • 1




    Another fun fact: a Russian text book would likely have no mention of something called World War Two, but rather The Great Patriotic War.
    – Kerry L
    Nov 8 at 17:51






  • 6




    @KerryL While my childhood's Soviet textbooks used mostly GPW, the term was used interchangeably with WW2 both in them and in lots of other places -- forcing the unspecified implication that they were the same, even though they weren't. Until 1991, we were taught that WW2 started in June 22,1941 and ended on May 9, 1945 (Victory day celebration in the USSR), despite the fact that it was "only" GPW-part of WW2. Granted, I was not a history addict, so I might have missed, if the difference was explained somewhere, but if I was thinking GPW=WW2, I was among the majority.
    – Gnudiff
    Nov 8 at 21:28













up vote
6
down vote










up vote
6
down vote









Isn't that just a matter of perspective?



I wonder what the Russian text books say is the start date?



There are so many good candidates!




  • September 1st 1939: Germany invaded Poland

  • September 17th 1939: Russia invaded Poland in partnership with Germany

  • November 30th 1939: Russia invaded Finland (a disastrous war which helped convince Germany that the Russian army sucked)?

  • June 22nd 1941: the day Germany invaded Russia


For Germany, it was definitely September 1st 1939.



For Italy, the war probably began on October 3rd 1935 when they invaded Ethiopia.



For America, the war began December 7th 1941.



For Britain (and France), the war began September 3rd 1939.



For China, July 7th 1937.



For Japan, it is less clear: they executed a series of creeping expansion all through the 1900s, until it all blew up in their faces.



I think what I am trying to say is, dates really aren't as important as high school history teachers make them out to be. Yes, you need to know the dates, but more importantly, we must understand how the EVENTS that took place on those dates affected each other and the world we all live in today.



Because, like it or not, all of us are living in the shadows of events that took place hundreds of years ago. I would say our politics, our culture, even our lives are shaped by those events.






share|improve this answer














Isn't that just a matter of perspective?



I wonder what the Russian text books say is the start date?



There are so many good candidates!




  • September 1st 1939: Germany invaded Poland

  • September 17th 1939: Russia invaded Poland in partnership with Germany

  • November 30th 1939: Russia invaded Finland (a disastrous war which helped convince Germany that the Russian army sucked)?

  • June 22nd 1941: the day Germany invaded Russia


For Germany, it was definitely September 1st 1939.



For Italy, the war probably began on October 3rd 1935 when they invaded Ethiopia.



For America, the war began December 7th 1941.



For Britain (and France), the war began September 3rd 1939.



For China, July 7th 1937.



For Japan, it is less clear: they executed a series of creeping expansion all through the 1900s, until it all blew up in their faces.



I think what I am trying to say is, dates really aren't as important as high school history teachers make them out to be. Yes, you need to know the dates, but more importantly, we must understand how the EVENTS that took place on those dates affected each other and the world we all live in today.



Because, like it or not, all of us are living in the shadows of events that took place hundreds of years ago. I would say our politics, our culture, even our lives are shaped by those events.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 9 at 11:57









Lars Bosteen

34.2k8166227




34.2k8166227










answered Nov 8 at 15:52









sofa general

1573




1573








  • 2




    Fun fact: you can put down September 11, 1941 as the date the US entered the war, as Roosevelt told the USN to wage war in the North Atlantic. That war remained undeclared for months. Yet another date to consider.
    – David Thornley
    Nov 8 at 16:52






  • 1




    Another fun fact: a Russian text book would likely have no mention of something called World War Two, but rather The Great Patriotic War.
    – Kerry L
    Nov 8 at 17:51






  • 6




    @KerryL While my childhood's Soviet textbooks used mostly GPW, the term was used interchangeably with WW2 both in them and in lots of other places -- forcing the unspecified implication that they were the same, even though they weren't. Until 1991, we were taught that WW2 started in June 22,1941 and ended on May 9, 1945 (Victory day celebration in the USSR), despite the fact that it was "only" GPW-part of WW2. Granted, I was not a history addict, so I might have missed, if the difference was explained somewhere, but if I was thinking GPW=WW2, I was among the majority.
    – Gnudiff
    Nov 8 at 21:28














  • 2




    Fun fact: you can put down September 11, 1941 as the date the US entered the war, as Roosevelt told the USN to wage war in the North Atlantic. That war remained undeclared for months. Yet another date to consider.
    – David Thornley
    Nov 8 at 16:52






  • 1




    Another fun fact: a Russian text book would likely have no mention of something called World War Two, but rather The Great Patriotic War.
    – Kerry L
    Nov 8 at 17:51






  • 6




    @KerryL While my childhood's Soviet textbooks used mostly GPW, the term was used interchangeably with WW2 both in them and in lots of other places -- forcing the unspecified implication that they were the same, even though they weren't. Until 1991, we were taught that WW2 started in June 22,1941 and ended on May 9, 1945 (Victory day celebration in the USSR), despite the fact that it was "only" GPW-part of WW2. Granted, I was not a history addict, so I might have missed, if the difference was explained somewhere, but if I was thinking GPW=WW2, I was among the majority.
    – Gnudiff
    Nov 8 at 21:28








2




2




Fun fact: you can put down September 11, 1941 as the date the US entered the war, as Roosevelt told the USN to wage war in the North Atlantic. That war remained undeclared for months. Yet another date to consider.
– David Thornley
Nov 8 at 16:52




Fun fact: you can put down September 11, 1941 as the date the US entered the war, as Roosevelt told the USN to wage war in the North Atlantic. That war remained undeclared for months. Yet another date to consider.
– David Thornley
Nov 8 at 16:52




1




1




Another fun fact: a Russian text book would likely have no mention of something called World War Two, but rather The Great Patriotic War.
– Kerry L
Nov 8 at 17:51




Another fun fact: a Russian text book would likely have no mention of something called World War Two, but rather The Great Patriotic War.
– Kerry L
Nov 8 at 17:51




6




6




@KerryL While my childhood's Soviet textbooks used mostly GPW, the term was used interchangeably with WW2 both in them and in lots of other places -- forcing the unspecified implication that they were the same, even though they weren't. Until 1991, we were taught that WW2 started in June 22,1941 and ended on May 9, 1945 (Victory day celebration in the USSR), despite the fact that it was "only" GPW-part of WW2. Granted, I was not a history addict, so I might have missed, if the difference was explained somewhere, but if I was thinking GPW=WW2, I was among the majority.
– Gnudiff
Nov 8 at 21:28




@KerryL While my childhood's Soviet textbooks used mostly GPW, the term was used interchangeably with WW2 both in them and in lots of other places -- forcing the unspecified implication that they were the same, even though they weren't. Until 1991, we were taught that WW2 started in June 22,1941 and ended on May 9, 1945 (Victory day celebration in the USSR), despite the fact that it was "only" GPW-part of WW2. Granted, I was not a history addict, so I might have missed, if the difference was explained somewhere, but if I was thinking GPW=WW2, I was among the majority.
– Gnudiff
Nov 8 at 21:28





protected by Lars Bosteen Nov 10 at 4:47



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