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World War I

World War I. Inevitability of war. June 28, 1914 Archduke Francis Ferdinand of Austria assassinated July 5, 1914 Germany issues A-H “blank check” pledging military assistance if A-H goes to war against Russia July 23, 1914 Austria issues Serbia an ultimatum. The inevitability of war.

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World War I

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  1. World War I

  2. Inevitability of war • June 28, 1914 Archduke Francis Ferdinand of Austria assassinated • July 5, 1914 Germany issues A-H “blank check” • pledging military assistance if A-H goes to war against Russia • July 23, 1914 Austria issues Serbia an ultimatum

  3. The inevitability of war • July 28, 1914 A-H declares war on Serbia • July 29, 1914 Russia orders full mobilization of its troops • August 1,1914 Germany declares war on Russia • August 2, 1914 Germany demands Belgium declare access to German troops

  4. “Belgium is a country, not a road” • King Albert I of Belgium denied permission • August 2, 1914 Germany declared war on France • Why??? • The Schlieffen Plan! • August 4, 1914 Great Britain declared war on Germany for violating Belgian neutrality

  5. 1914 – 1915 Illusions and Stalemate • Many Europeans were excited about war • “Defend yourself against the aggressors” • Domestic differences were put aside • Parties and celebrations were held at the start.

  6. 1914 – 1915 Illusions and Stalemate • War would be over in a few weeks • Ignored the length and brutality of the American Civil War (prototype to World War I)

  7. 1914 – 1915 Illusions and Stalemate • Belief that Modern industrial war could not be conducted for more than a few months • “Home by Christmas”

  8. 1914 – 1915 Illusions and Stalemate • “Fatal attraction of war” • Exhilarating release from every day life • A glorious adventure • War would rid the nations of selfishness • Spark a national re-birth based on heroism

  9. The Schlieffen Plan’s Destructive Nature

  10. The Schlieffen Plan • Invade western front 1st; quickly defeat French • After defeating France concentrate on the Eastern front • Avoid fighting a 2 front war

  11. The Schlieffen Plan’s Destructive Nature • Germany made vast encircling movement throughBelgium to enter Paris • Underestimated speed of the British mobilization • Quickly sent troops to France

  12. The Schlieffen Plan’s Destructive Nature • Sept 6-10, 1914 • Battle of Marne • Stopped the Germans but French troops were exhausted • Both sides dug trenches for shelter STALEMATE War of Attrition: Waiting out enemy until they give up [stop supplies!]

  13. The Trenches • Trenches dug from English Channel to Switzerland • 6,250 miles • 6 to 8 feet deep • Immobilized both sides for 4 years

  14. The Trenches

  15. Life in the Trenches • Elaborate systems of defense • barbed wire • Concrete machine gun nests • Mortar batteries • Troops lived in holes underground

  16. Life in the Trenches • Boredom • Soldiers read to pass the time • Sarah Bernhardt came out to the front to read poetry to the soldiers

  17. “Death is everywhere” • “We all had on us the stench of dead bodies.” Death numbed the soldier’s minds. • Shell shock • Psychological devastation

  18. “Death is everywhere” • Mustard gas • Carried by the wind • Burned out soldier’s lungs • Deadly in the trenches where it would sit at the bottom

  19. Life in the Trenches • Trench warfare baffled military leaders • Attempt a breakthrough • Then return to a war of movement • Millions of young men sacrificed attempting the breakthrough

  20. Battle of Verdun • Germany wanted to inflict heavy losses and capture Verdun • 10 months • 700,000 men killed • Extremely costly and deadly. Almost 1 million injured.

  21. Battle of Verdun • 10 months • 700,000 men killed • French lost some ground but not very much. • Germany lost 336K • France lost 362K

  22. The changes of war • New weapons crippled the “frozen front” • Poison gas (mustard gas) • Hand grenades • Flame throwers • Tanks • Airplanes • Subs

  23. The changes of war • Airplanes • Dog fights in the air • Bombing inaccurate • Romanticized the battlefields • Paris and London bombed • Pilots fired pistols and threw hand grenades

  24. The Eastern Front • Russian army moved into Eastern Germany on August 30, 1914 • Defeated • The Austrians kicked out of Serbia • Italians attacked Austria in 1915 • G. came to Austrian aid and pushed Russians back 300 miles into own territory

  25. The Eastern Front • Much more mobile more than the West • But loss of life still very high • 1915: 2.5 million Russians killed, captured, or wounded

  26. The Eastern Front • Germany and Austria Hungary joined by Bulgaria in Sept. 1915 • Attacked and eliminated Serbia from war

  27. The Home Front • Women took war factory jobs • Support by females back home vital to the war effort (supplies, medicine, ammo) • Received lower wages than males • Food shortages made running a household difficult

  28. The Home Front • Censorship • Not told about high death toll • Romanticized the battlefields “soldiers have died a beautiful death, in noble battle, we shall rediscover poetry…epic and chivalrous”

  29. The Home Front • Censorship “Newspapers described troops as itching to go over the top.” “Government reported to the press that life in the trenches promoted good health and clear air”

  30. The Home Front • “On Leave” Troops would stay together so they could sympathize with each other

  31. The Home Front • Impossible to hide death • Women in mourning • Badly wounded soldiers returned home • Opposition began to emerge

  32. The war winds down… • U.S. joins the war on the Allied side 1915 - Sinking of Lusitania 1915 - Unrestrained sub-warfare by Germany 1917 – Zimmerman Note (next last slide) U.S. wouldn’t get paid back if France/Britain lose • 1917 – Russia surrenders (a separate peace) • Russia was experiencing the Russian Revolution (Bolshevik Revolution) • Ultimately leads to a civil war (1918-1923) between Bolsheviks (“Red Army”) and those opposing the revolution (“White Army” mostly Monarchists). • In 1922, The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics is formed (USSR); Also called The Soviet Union

  33. We intend to begin on the first of February unrestricted submarine warfare. We shall endeavor in spite of this to keep the United States of America neutral. In the event of this not succeeding, we make Mexico a proposal of alliance on the following basis: make war together, make peace together, generous financial support and an understanding on our part that Mexico is to reconquer the lost territory in Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona. The settlement in detail is left to you. You will inform the President of the above most secretly as soon as the outbreak of war with the United States of America is certain and add the suggestion that he should, on his own initiative, invite Japan to immediate adherence and at the same time mediate between Japan and ourselves. Please call the President's attention to the fact that the ruthless employment of our submarines now offers the prospect of compelling England in a few months to make peace." Signed, ZIMMERMANN

  34. The war ends • 1917 – Russia surrenders (a separate peace) • U.S. joins the war on the Allied side • Nov. 11, 1918 Armistice Day!!! • Treaty of Versailles: Treaty that ended WWI

  35. Death Toll of WarThe most accepted figure for deaths caused by the war = 20,000,000 (20 million) Around 55 die/hour for 50 months 20,000 Dead at Battle of Somme in 1 day

  36. Social Impact • Men lost limbs and were mutilated • Birthrate fell markedly • Injured unable to work • Ethnic hostility • Influenza epidemic (killed around 50million) • Dropped the U.S. life expectancy by 12 years (in 1 year) • Effected young adults (usually great immune system) • Poverty and massive rebuilding needed throughout Europe (helps the States!)

  37. Psychological impact • “Never such innocence again” • Bitterness towards aristocratic officers whose lives were never in danger • Existentialist movement • Extraordinary melancholy throughout much of Europe (France, Russia, Armenia)

  38. Internationalism: We can solve our disputes through international groups, not war. • Woodrow Wilson attempts to start the League of Nations(international body to prevent war) • Anti-colonialism: Colonizing foreign lands and stripping natives of autonomy is a mistake • Treaty of Versailles: Treaty that vastly favors Allied powers and places extraordinary debt on Germany [some claim this is what leads to Hitler’s rise to power].

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