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Natural borders are not to be confused with landscape borders, which are also geographical features that demarcate political boundaries. Although landscape borders, like natural borders, also take forms of forests, water bodies, and mountains, they are manmade instead of natural. Installing a
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criticized the concept of natural borders. Specifically, Toynbee criticized this concept as providing a justification for launching additional wars so that countries can attain their natural borders. Toynbee also pointed out how once a country attained one set of natural borders, it could
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Expanding until natural borders are reached, and maintaining those borders once conquered, have been a major policy goal for a number of states. For example, the
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The Pivot of the Four
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Natural borders can be a source of territorial disputes when they shift. One such example is the
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subsequently aim to attain another, further set of natural borders; for instance, the
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built an extensive defensive forest in its northern border to thwart the nomadic
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State boundaries which follow geographic features such as rivers, mountains, etc.
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or their subdivisions which is concomitant with natural formations such as
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expanded continuously until it reached certain natural borders: first the
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Grand Duchy of
Lithuania, Ruthenia and Samogithia in 1386–1434
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A Political and Social
History of Modern Europe, volume 1
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157:sought to expand its borders towards the Alps, the
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