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World War I

World War I. 1. The Beginning. By 1914 tensions in Europe had risen and many believed the continent was on the brink of war. b. Four factors contributed to this problem Militarism Europe had undergone a massive military buildup during the period of the late 1800s into the early 1900s

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World War I

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  1. World War I

  2. 1. The Beginning • By 1914 tensions in Europe had risen and many believed the continent was on the brink of war

  3. b. Four factors contributed to this problem • Militarism • Europe had undergone a massive military buildup during the period of the late 1800s into the early 1900s • European countries had colonized around the world and were now wanting to protect their own interest • Left all sides anxious • Remember the larger the population of a country the bigger army it could amass

  4. ii. Alliances • Nations entered into alliances with other nations • Two major alliances • Triple Alliance: Germany, Austria-Hungary and Italy • The Triple Entente: France, Russia and Great Britain

  5. iii. Imperialism • Quest to build empires fuelled ill will among the nations • Germany, France, Russia and Great Britain all saw themselves as imperial nations • Did not think they could stand by while a rival gained power

  6. iv. Nationalism • Nationalism: Strong devotion to one’s national group or culture • Movement led to formation of new countries like Germany and Italy and struggles for power • Strongest national tensions were in the Balkans in a nation called Serbia

  7. 4. Pan-Slavic Nationalism • Pan-Slavism: the idea of a unified Slavic race under the protection of Russia • This would give Russia access to the much wanted warm water seaports • Russians supported liberation movements of the Slavic peoples such as Serbians, Croats, Slovaks, and Poles, etc….

  8. 2. Austria-Hungary and Serbia • 1908 • Austria-Hungary took the Slavic territories of Bosnia-Herzegovina from the weak Ottoman Empire • Serbia appealed to Russia for help, but Russia was just coming off a defeat by Japan and was unable to help

  9. b. The Balkan Wars • Began in 1912 and was between the Balkan countries and the Ottoman Empire • Serbia wanted Albania in exchange for fighting on the Russian side • They did not get it

  10. iii. 1913, Albania was made independent and off limits to Serbia • Russia was not able to influence or help out Serbia • Serbians were angry • Russia was left humiliated iv. Russia had no power in Europe • Russians vow never to be again humiliated • Were ready for a war in order to save their honor

  11. 3. War Breaks Out • June 28, 1914 • Archduke Franz Ferdinand visits Sarajevo • Was the next in line for the Austrian-Hungarian throne • While driving through the city with his wife Sophie, they are assassinated by GavriloPrincip • Was a member of a Serbian national group called the Black Hand

  12. Franz Ferdinand and Sophie GavriloPrincip

  13. iii. Austria-Hungary blamed Serbia and made a list of demands for Serbia to agree to • Terms were humiliating to Serbia and she refused to agree to them iv. Austria declared war on July 28, 1914

  14. b. Mobilization • Russia will side with Serbia and began to prepare for war • Russia’s mobilization was seen as a threat and Germany (all of Austria-Hungary) mobilizes against Russia • Germany will declare war on Russia and then France

  15. c. Schlieffen Plan • Germany had developed a plan to help prevent fighting a war on two fronts • Plan was called Schieffen Plan • Called for Germany to quickly defeat France in the west and then head east to fight Russia

  16. iii. Quickest way to France was through Belgium • Belgium was neutral country • Germany invades and causes Great Britain to enter the war iv. Great Britain joins in on France’s and Russia’s side

  17. d. Two Powers • Central Powers: Germany and Austria-Hungary • Allied Powers: Great Britain, France, Russia and Serbia

  18. 4. Stalemate • 1914 • By the end of 1914 two trench systems stretched hundreds of miles across Europe • The Western Front was the dead lock region in western Europe

  19. The War Effort

  20. 1. Trench Warfare • Life in the Trench • Soldiers lived there • Wet and dirty • Bullets, bombs and grenades would go off all around you • Many times dead bodies stayed where they were at • Rats and lice were present

  21. vi. “Over the Tops” • Soldiers were sent over the trench and ran towards the enemy lines through no man’s land • Many were gunned down before they ever made it to the other side

  22. b. Trench warfare made the development of new technology necessary

  23. 2. New Warfare • Poison Gas • Different kinds of gas could do different things i.e.: choke, blind or burn victims • This led to the development of gas masks

  24. b. Rapid fire machine guns

  25. c. Tanks • Armored vehicles • Pioneered by the British

  26. d. Aircraft • First used to observe enemy positions • Eventually guns and bombs were attached e. Even with all of this technology neither side was able to gain an adventure

  27. 3. The Home Front • Government Action • War was also being waged at home • Governments took action • Factories produced military equipment • Citizens would conserve food • Governments tried to control public opinion • Governments would censor newspaper reports

  28. 4. Used propaganda • Information used to influence opinion • Encouraged support of the war • Used posters, pamphlets, and articles

  29. b. Women and the War Effort • With men away fighting the war on the various fronts, women at home filled positions that were once occupied by men • Jobs • Work in factories • Help send food and weapons • Served as nurses • All of these things would help transform the public view of what women could do

  30. 4. Western Front Battles • Battle of Verdun • Verdun was a French fortress • Purpose of the battle was to kill and injure as many French soldiers as possible • Lasted from February to December 1914 • Around 400,000 French casualties and just as many Germans • Ended in a stalemate

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