The document summarizes the causes and course of World War 1. It discusses the rise of nationalism, militarism, imperialism and alliances in Europe which contributed to tensions prior to 1914. It then describes the key events that triggered the war, including the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, and outlines the major battles and use of new weapons technology on the Western and Eastern fronts between 1914-1918. It concludes by noting the enormous human and political costs of the war, and how the peace settlement laid the groundwork for future conflicts.
9. German Unification
• Otto von Bismarck
undertook unification
not by liberal “speeches
and votes” but by
conservative “iron and
blood.”
• Wars vs. Denmark
(1864), Austria (1866),
and France (1870–1871)
Otto von Bismarck
10. German Unification
Franco-Prussian War,
1870–1871:
• Prussians occupied
Paris.
• Wilhelm I was
crowned
Kaiser at Versailles.
The ultimate blow to French pride was the proclamation
of the German Empire in the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles.
21. Militarism: Armed forces doubled, 1890-1914. British
military spending +117%, German spending +158%.
22. June 28, 1914: Hapsburg
heir to Austria-Hungary
Archduke Franz
Ferdinand assassinated by
Serbian Black Hand
terrorist Gavrilo Princip.
23. WAR!
Serbia (10)
Austria-Hungary (6)
Russia (5)
Germany (1)
France (4)
Belgium (9)
Britain (2)
Ottoman Turks (8)
Italy (7)
ultimatum
assassination
back-up
support
mobilizes (WAR!)
WAR!
Schlieffen Plan
Schlieffen Plan
has treaty
alliance
Bulgaria (12)
The Outbreak of the Great War
--------------
24. Allied Powers:
Britain (2)
France (4)
Russia (5)
Italy (7)
Belgium (9)
Serbia (10)
Romania (11)
Central Powers:
Germany (1)
Austria-Hungary (6)
Ottoman Empire (8)
Bulgaria (12)
USA (3) IN April 1917
________ OUT March 1918
25. Modern war fought with
destructive new weapons:
• machine guns
• artillery
• poison gas
• barbed wire
• electrified wire
• flamethrowers
• tanks
• airplanes
• airships
• submarines
28. • 4 years and 3 months (1 Aug 1914 – 11 Nov 1918)
• 8.5-10.8 million military dead; 7 million civilians killed
• 21.2 million wounded
• $186 billion (approx. $2.5 trillion today)
• 98% of French men aged 20-50 served (8.5 of 8.7 million)
• Serbia lost 17-28% of pop. Ottoman Empire lost 13-15%.
38. Germany lost most African colonies early on but General
Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck harassed 300,000 Allied troops in
East Africa with just 14,000 German guerrillas until 1918.
42. Ottoman Turks feared their Armenian Christian minority
would aid Russia and ordered the Armenian Genocide
(1915-6), the death march deportation of 1.5 million people.
94. In 1915, the Germans sank the British Lusitania
causing strong American protest.
95. Sussex Pledge
May 1916
German promise to U.S. to limit submarine warfare:
• passenger ships would not be targeted
• merchant ships would not be sunk until the presence of
weapons had been established, if necessary by a search
of the ship
• merchant ships would not be sunk without provision for
the safety of passengers and crew
• rescinded February 1917; unrestricted submarine
warfare resumed
96. Massive offensives failed to
breakthrough strong
defenses.
In 1916, there were about
700,000 casualties at the
Battle of Verdun, and
1,000,000 at the Battle of
the Somme including
60,000 British on first day.
98. April 1917: USA entered war “to make the world safe
for democracy” after resumption of German
submarine warfare.
99. World War I was a total war
that required a complete
national mobilization.
Planned economies
rationed food and resources
and regulated
transportation.
Germany suffered severe
food shortages with rations
20% or less of peacetime
consumption. Around
500,000 civilians died from
malnutrition.
106. Women played major roles on the
home front, taking over jobs
previously held only by men,
including factory and trucking jobs.
Women were 43% of the Russian
labor forces by 1917.
Women won suffrage in Britain,
Germany, Russia, USA, and
elsewhere after the war.
109. Mar 3, 1918: Lenin surrendered
vast Russian territory to Germany
in Treaty of Brest-Litovsk.
Germany shifted troops to the
Western Front and launched a
Spring Offensive. They got within
firing range of Paris but lost
momentum.
112. Aug. 8: American reinforcements
turned the tide against Germany.
113. Sept.–Nov. 1918: U.S. Doughboys in Meuse–
Argonne/Hundred Days’ offensive
• over 1
million
Americans
participated
• deadliest
campaign in
American
history
• 26K killed
• over 120K
casualties
120. 11 a.m., November 11, 1918
Nov. 11: A new German government under socialist
Friedrich Ebert signed an armistice.
121. Human Cost of the War
• 9-11 million combatants killed
• 7 million civilians killed
• 20 million soldiers and civilians wounded
• 7-12 million killed in Russian Civil War
• 50-100 million killed by Spanish Flu Pandemic
• 8.5 of 8.7 million French men aged 20-50 served
• Serbia lost 17-28% of population,
• Ottoman Empire lost 13-15% of population
• Total =
77,000,000-130,000,000 MILLION DEAD
122.
123.
124. Total collapse of traditional order in Central and Eastern Europe
• 304 years of Romanov rule ended in Russia. The Bolshevik
Revolution triggered fear of a global communist tide.
125. Total collapse of traditional order in Central and Eastern Europe
• 642 years of Hapsburg rule ended in Austria-Hungary.
126. Total collapse of traditional order in Central and Eastern Europe
• 393 years of Hohenzollern rule ended in Prussia.
127. Total collapse of traditional order in Central and Eastern Europe
• 623 years Ottoman rule ended.
128. 11 a.m., November 11, 1918
The German right-wing later believed the stab-in-the-back
myth that German army did not lose but was betrayed by
Jewish and socialist "November criminals".
135. Peace terms of the Treaty of Versailles were imposed by the Allies.
Germany was not allowed to negotiate.
136. Germany was demilitarized and lost territory, colonies, resources.
The Article 231 War Guilt Clause placed blame on Germany. The
exact amount of war reparations was to be determined later.
137. The League of Nations grew from Wilson's idealism. It was meant
to prevent future wars but had no power to enforce decisions.
League mandates were established in former German and
Ottoman territories.
138. New political borders in Europe and Middle East sowed the seeds
of future conflicts.
144. Britain and France carved
up Ottoman Empire into
spheres of influence in
1916 Sykes-Picot
Agreement.
Britain promised Jews a
home in Palestine in the
Zionist 1917 Balfour
Declaration.
Ibn Saud formed Saudi
Arabia in 1932.
145. World War I undermined
the previously held idea of
human progress.
146.
147.
148.
149.
150.
151.
152.
153.
154.
155.
156. The failure to satisfy all stakeholders in the peace process opened the
door to further instability …
157.
158. … and laid the foundations for the even more destructive Second World
War a generation later.