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HISTORY 395 HISTORY OF THE FIRST WORLD WAR

HISTORY 395 HISTORY OF THE FIRST WORLD WAR. Dr. Nancy Fitch Summer 2008. Maps Used in the PowerPoints. Unless otherwise noted all of the maps are from: Martin Gilbert, Atlas of World War I: The Complete History (New York: Oxford University Press, 1994). Europe on the Eve of World War I.

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HISTORY 395 HISTORY OF THE FIRST WORLD WAR

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  1. HISTORY 395HISTORY OF THE FIRST WORLD WAR Dr. Nancy Fitch Summer 2008

  2. Maps Used in the PowerPoints • Unless otherwise noted all of the maps are from: • Martin Gilbert, Atlas of World War I: The Complete History (New York: Oxford University Press, 1994)

  3. Europe on the Eve of World War I • Cultural Climate in Europe: • Intense Nationalism, especially in the Austria-Hungarian Empire • Social Darwinism – the idea that competition to promote the superior race good • Yellow Journalism – wars sell newspapers • Arms Race – who has the biggest guns, the most battleships • Imperial Competition – planting flags in Africa, Asia, and the Asian Pacific

  4. The Great Game in Central Asia • India British • Egypt – British for all intents and purposes • Russia and Britain divided Persia into sphere’s of influence in 1907 • Britain and Russia controlled oil in area • Ottoman Empire center of ongoing competition

  5. EUROPEAN FEARS AND AIMS BEFORE 1914 • Russia – protect Christians in Eastern Europe and the Ottoman Empire • Russia – Warm water port • Germany – Desire for territory in East • France – Alsace and Lorraine • Eastern and Central European ethnic groups – their own relatively homogenous states • Italy – territory within the Austria-Hungarian Empire • All landlocked states – ports, access to the sea for military and economic reasons

  6. War Breaks Out in July- August 1914 • Secret Alliance Systems • Austria declares war on Serbia • Serbia calls on Russia • Austria calls on German • Russia calls on France • Germany violates Belgian neutrality, provoking England

  7. MAJOR COMBATTANTS IN 1914 • The Central Powers • Austria-Hungary • Germany • Ottoman Empire (later in 1914) • The “Entente” Powers • Russia • France • Great Britain • Italy (1915) • The United States (1917)

  8. The Generals’ Plans • The Schlieffen Plan • Plan 17

  9. The Limits of von Schlieffen’s Plan • German Generals from Alfred von Schlieffen to Helmut von Moltke had doubts Schlieffen Plan would work • Suggested Germans abandon Alsace and significant part of East Prussia • Supplies threatened if had to lay siege at any of the forts in Belgium and France – attack must be rapid • Germany greatly outnumbered in terms of uniformed, trained soldiers • France – Peacetime draft • Great Britain – Voluntary Army • Germany, Austria-Hungary – small peacetime armies

  10. German Hopes: Time and Big Guns • Big Bertha – • Named for Bertha Krupp von Bohlen • 420 mm howitzer • Transported in pieces and assembled in place • Devastating in Belgium, less successful in other battles – vulnerable when entente powers knew where they were

  11. French Big Guns • Soixante quinze (75 mm gun • First hydraulic dual recoil mechanism • Could fire 20-30 rounds per minute • Terrific except maximum angle of fire 16 degrees

  12. More French Guns • French 155 mm long gun • No recoil mechanism • Accurate indirect fire impossible • Heavy and range was much shorter than German guns

  13. German Big Guns • German 105 mm howitzer • Hydraulic mechanism beneath barrel • Light and portable • Angle of fire 45 degrees • Entente powers had no comparable weapon

  14. Other German Big Guns • Top: German 150 mm howitzer • Had hydraulic recoil • Allowed Germany to dominate battlefield in early years of war • Bottom: German 220 mm howitzer • Big but portable • ¼ of Germany’s heavy weapons • Maybe the best of the big guns

  15. Von Schlieffen’s Plan in action

  16. War on the Eastern Front • Russia Mobilizes faster than expected • German Railroads as integral to Schlieffen’s strategy • Early use weakens Right Wing • Germany wins early battles at Tannenberg and Masurian Lakes • Battle of Lödz

  17. Battle of the Marne • Germans closing to within 23 miles of Paris • Paris aerial reconnaisance detects weak right wing – departing from Schlieffen Plan gives Entente their opportunity • Germans retreat and dig in for long stalemate

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