1 / 51

World War I

World War I. Sections 1-2 Ms. Garratt. Pressures for Peace…. Nobel Peace Prize Women’s Suffrage Movement Universal Peace Conference 1899 set up the Hague Tribunal , a world court to settle disputes. (Could not enforce rulings) Olympics. There were 4 long term causes for WWI.

mharmon
Download Presentation

World War I

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. World War I Sections 1-2 Ms. Garratt

  2. Pressures for Peace… • Nobel Peace Prize • Women’s Suffrage Movement • Universal Peace Conference 1899 set up the Hague Tribunal, a world court to settle disputes. (Could not enforce rulings) • Olympics

  3. There were 4 long term causes for WWI

  4. 1. Rise of Nationalism… • Pros and cons of nationalism • Nationalism accentuates rivalries among Great Powers • Fierce rivalry existed among 6 great powers • Leads to competition among nations. • A. Economic Competition for markets and raw materials • B. Territorial disputes – Alsace-Lorraine • C. Competition for overseas empires • Germany wanted its “place in the sun” • Competition for domination of the Balkans • Both Austria-Hungary and Russia competed

  5. 2. Economic & Imperial Rivalries • Brit felt threatened by Germ’s econ growth • By 1900 Germ’s new modern factories out-produced Brit’s older ones • Germ was jealous because it had fewer colonies • “Sun never sets……Germany’s own place in the sun” • Competition for colonies brought Germ & Fr to the brink of war in 1905 & 1911 over Morocco • Wilhelm II also upset the military B/P by challenging British naval superiority • German policies drove Brit & France closer

  6. 3. Arms Race and Militarism… • Glorification of military & keeping large army • War was romanticized • Aggressive Nationalism increased due to competition • Fear of war gave generals power & influence • Their war plans will set in motion….. • They asked for larger defense expenditures for war readiness • Matter of time before armies were used • Jingoism – belligerent foreign policies • Brit was only country w/o large army

  7. 4. Alliances • Alliances were initially intended to maintain the B/P and preserve peace • Bismarck wanted to “isolate” France which was resentful over the loss of Alsace-Lorraine • Bismarck forged Dual Alliance w/ AH in 1879 • Italy joined in 1882 • Became the Triple Alliance • Entered treaty w/Russia in 1881 • Bismarck succeeded in isolating France

  8. Alliances • But Wilhelm fired Bismarck and allowed treaty with Russia to lapse. • Russia responded by entering into alliance with France • Bismarck’s fear of a two-front war now became a possibility • By 1914 there were 2 major alliances • Alliances will drag nations into the war

  9. Alliances in 1914

  10. There were 2 Major Alliances • Central Powers or Triple Alliance • Germ • AH • Italy backs out • Ottoman Empire joins in 1915 • Bulgaria will join • The Allies • France • Brit • Russia

  11. The Balkans – Powder Keg • Nowhere was a dispute more likely than the Balkan Peninsula • Long history of nationalist uprisings & ethnic clashes • Also multinational empires competed there for influence (Russ, AH & Ottomans) • Balkan countries wanted independence • Serbia gained independence & pursued a pan-Slavic foreign policy • Serbia wanted to absorb other Slavic populations • Russia supported Serbia’s pan-Slavism • AH did not because it would stir rebellion among its pop

  12. Serbia & AH on Collision Course • AH does something that outrages Serbia in 1908 • AH annexes Bosnia & Herzegovina which had huge Slavic pops. • Serbia had wanted to absorb those pops as part of Serbia • Serbs vowed to take Bos/Herz away from AH • AH vowed to crush any Serbian effort to undermine its authority in the Balkans

  13. Assassination of Franz Ferdinand • Into this poisoned atmosphere of mutual dislike & mistrust stepped the heir to the AH throne, Franz Ferdinand • VisitedSarajevo, Bosnia • Shot by a Serb, GavriloPrincip • Terrorist group - Black Hand was committed to ridding Bosnia of AH rule

  14. Harsh Ultimatum • Because the assassin was a Serb AH decided to use the murders as an excuse to punish Serbia • AH presented Serbia with an ultimatum containing numerous demands. • Serbia knew that rejecting the ultimatum would result in war so Serbia agreed to most of the demands & agreed to allow an internat’l conference settle others • AH was in no mood to negotiate and declared war • That same day Russia began its mobilization • Alliance systems are activated almost immediately

  15. Review • (1) What were the four long term causes of WWI? • (2) What were two ways in which Germany was altering the B/P in Europe? • (3) Why did France continue to resent Germany? • (4) What were the two alliance systems that developed on the eve of WWI? • (5) What empires were competing for influence in the Balkans? • (6) Why were the Balkans considered a “powder keg” • (7) What were the goals of pan-Slavism • (8) Why did AH seek to punish Serbia

  16. Germany • Kaiser Wilhelm II was outraged at the murder of a royal heir • Gave AH assurance of German backing. • Rather than urge caution the Kaiser advised Franz Joseph to take a firm stand

  17. Russia • Russia was the champion of pan-Slavism – the idea that all Slavs share a common heritage. • Serbia looked to Russia for support. • Czar Nicholas II urged the Kaiser to convince AH to soften its demands • When this did not work – Russia began to mobilize • Germ responded by declaring war on Russia

  18. France Russia then turned to France Germany demanded that France remain neutral France hoped to get even with Germany for the 1870 Franco-Prussian War When France refused to remain neutral Germ declared war on France

  19. Britain • Brit was cautious at first until Germany violated Belgium neutrality • Britain was obligated by treaty to maintain Belgium neutrality • Why did Germ violate Belg neutrality?

  20. Schlieffen Plan • Germ militarists developed a plan to avoid a two-front war, the Schlieffen Plan • The plan called for attacking & defeating France quickly & then rushing east to fight Russia. • Germ felt confident since Russ was so backward & it wouldn’t be able to mobilize in time so it launched attack against France & went thru neutral Belgium • Early on it appeared Germany might be successful • However, Germ was stopped at the First Battle of the Marne-

  21. The Schlieffen Plan

  22. First Battle of the Marne • Considered one of the most important events of the war because it left the Schlieffen Plan in ruins & Germany was forced to fight a two-front war. • The French successfully stopped the Germans and Russia attacked Germany

  23. Whose Fault? • Each side thought its cause was just • AH wanted to punish Serbia • Germ felt must stand by its ally, AH • Russ felt duty to stand by Serbia & saw ultimatum as attempt to oppress slavs • Fr felt need to support Russ or face Germ alone • Brit obligated to defend Belgium neutrality • Intensive jingoism • Jubilation once war was declared

  24. Activity #1 • You will be assigned a country. • You will explain & defend your assigned country’s position/decision to go to war. • You may use the text for preparation • After completing your position you will debate the other three members of your group. • Germany • Russia • France • Britain

  25. War is Declared! • Jubilation • Jingoism • Workers turn back on socialist views

  26. Different type of war: Trench Warfare • Stalemate on the Western Front. • Parallel trenches • Battles of Verdun and Somme resulted in millions dead., • Each side only gained a few miles for all its casualties • No man’s land

  27. Eastern Front • War more mobile than West • Russians poorly equipped & trained • Battle of Tannenberg • Russian Revolution was major turning pt. • Treaty of Brest-Litovsk • Turning Point: Germans throw their weight to the Western front

  28. New or Improved Weaponry • Poison Gas • Tanks • Machine Guns • Submarine • Airplanes

  29. Major Turning Points of the War • Russian Revolution 1917 • US Entry in the war 1917 • What effect did these events have on the war?

  30. US Neutrality • Official US policy • Immigrants often took sides • Loans made to Allies tied us to them • Brit cut Transatlantic cable to control info & vilify Germ • Neutrality was threatened due to submarine warfare & particularly the Lusitania incident

  31. What changed US policy? • Pressure to enter the war was due to 3 factors: • (1) unrestricted sub warfare • (2) Zimmerman Telegram • (3) Desire to play a role in peace process

  32. Unrestricted Sub Warfare • Lusitania • Why USW? Due to Brit blockade & because Germ did not really consider the US neutral • Wilson refused to disallow Americans from traveling the seas • This caused S/S Bryan to resign

  33. Propaganda

  34. Zimmerman Telegram • Germany promised Mexico to help it regain land lost in the Mexican-American war if it joined alliance

  35. Zimmerman Telegram

  36. British Betrayal in the Middle East

  37. Fourteen Points

  38. Paris Peace Talks • Big Four

  39. Treaty of Versailles • Secret agreements (Sykes-Picot Agreement) • Self-determinationapplied to eastern Europe but not colonies • Harsh terms for Germ • - forced to pay reparations for damages & pensions • Germ stripped of overseas colonies in Africa & Asia • Military reduced • Land taken from east & west

  40. Why the US did not join the League? • US Senate must ratify all treaties • Was divided between reservations & irreconciables • Reservations were willing to sign if treaty were modified • Irreconciables were staunchly isolationist • Because Wilson attacked Republicans & was unwilling to compromise Senate rejected US participation in LON

  41. “Americans Awake! Shall we bind ourselves to the War Breeding Covenant? It Impairs American sovereignty! Surrenders the Monroe Doctrine! Entangles us in European and Asian intrigues”

  42. Unfilled Ambitions = Trouble • Italy – wanted territory in Austria that it was promised in secret treaties • Japan – wanted “equality of races” clause in Versailles Treaty – also wanted its claims in China recognized • Russ was excluded from peace talks – resented new Baltic States on its borders • All these nations would wait for an opportunity to revise settlements in their favor

More Related