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The Great War and the Shaping of the 20 th Century

The Great War and the Shaping of the 20 th Century. Images and Reflections. Other Wars Compared. 58,000 in Vietnam 9.2 M in WWI 4.5 M in all wars from 1800-1914 Shells dropped at Verdun exceeded all missiles in warfare throughout history 6500 killed per day

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The Great War and the Shaping of the 20 th Century

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  1. The Great War and the Shaping of the 20th Century Images and Reflections

  2. Other Wars Compared • 58,000 in Vietnam • 9.2 M in WWI • 4.5 M in all wars from 1800-1914 • Shells dropped at Verdun exceeded all missiles in warfare throughout history • 6500 killed per day • ½ of French males aged 18-32 were casualties

  3. Sgt. James John Regan, killed by IED Feb. 2007 in Iraq “Jimmy and I were so excited to stand up in front of God, our family and friends and declare our love for each other. Only God knows why we were deprived of that opportunity, but it doesn’t change the sentiments I have. Jimmy, we never got to wake up next to each other every morning….[but I] thank God for the opportunity to love and be loved by you.” --Mary McHugh

  4. “War to end all wars…” • No war with a greater sense of enthusiasm • Proximate v. structural causes • WWII is more well-known • Symbol of WWI—trench • New technologies

  5. “Make the world safe for democracy…”

  6. The Moral Center of AP Euro

  7. End of Empires

  8. The Modern World

  9. “The Lost Generation”

  10. Memory

  11. Demonizing & Propaganda

  12. Sources • http://www.firstworldwar.com/index.htm • Paul Fussell, The Great War and Modern Memory • John Mosier, The Myth of the Great War • Modris Eksteins, The Rites of Spring • Niall Ferguson, The Pity of War • John Keegan, The First World War • Jay Winter, The Experience of the First World War • Robert Cowley, ed., The Great War • Alistair Horne, The Price of Glory • David Stevenson, Cataclysm: The First World War as Political Tragedy • Christopher Clark, Sleepwalkers: How Europe Went to War in 1914

  13. Key Questions • Why did the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand set off the greatest conflict in European history (to that point)? • Is the First World War more accurately described as an inevitable build-up of tensions over decades or the result of miscalculation and chance?

  14. Causes of WWI • Militarism and Military Plans • Alliance System • Imperialism • Mass Politics • Intellectual—emphasis on war and struggle • Nationalism

  15. Ingredients of pre-WWI diplomacy • Rigidification of alliance system—two separate alliances • Internal nationalist situation in A-H • Increasing conflict between Russia and A-H in Balkans • Antagonism between France and Germany from Franco-Prussian War • Growing fear leads to dependence on weaker members of alliances • Fear of isolation in G.B. leads to approach with France and Russia • Russian preoccupation with image and power in the Balkans

  16. Bismarck’s Alliance System, 1871-90 • Keep France isolated • Germany’s goal to “remain among three in a world of five” • Divert attention to imperial conquests • Maintain the status quo—war is bad for Germany • No great power can count on the support of another for aggressive war • A complexity of interlocking alliances—”five glass balls in the air” • Avoid a two-front war at all costs

  17. Wilhelm’s “undoing of Bismarck,” 1890-1907 • Germany needs to find “its place in the sun” at “full speed ahead” • Aggressive pursuit of colonies • Naval arms race with England that promotes tension (dreadnoughts) • Neglect of alliance with Russia (personal ties) • Erratic and bombastic personality • “you must shoot your mothers & fathers” • 200 uniforms • visit to Palestine as medieval crusader • almost to Italy as Julius Caesar

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