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Chapter 23 Exam Student: 1. Before World War I, the Triple Alliance
Chapter 23 Exam Student: 1. Before World War I, the Triple Alliance

... A. Britain, France, and Russia B. Germany, the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and Italy C. Britain, France, and Italy D. Germany, the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and the Ottoman Empire E. France, Britain, and the United States ...
Progressives and World War I
Progressives and World War I

... 4) Public opinion (domestic political considerations) played an important role in the making of the treaty. 5) Provisions of the Versailles Treaty (June, 1919): a) Germany surrendered Alsace-Lorraine, Rhineland demilitarized, Saar under French control for 15 years, Germany ceded land to Poland, Germ ...
Was the failure of the Schlieffen plan the main reason
Was the failure of the Schlieffen plan the main reason

... £2,700 million.) The French proved to be a determined ally who were prepared to make great sacrifices rather than surrender as seen, for example at Verdun. Until the Revolution of November 1917 took her out of the war, Russia, with her great reserves of manpower, took much strain off the Allies on ...
World War I - Ms. Mac`s Class
World War I - Ms. Mac`s Class

... their own nation and you should promote your nation’s interest above all others  Sometimes nationalists assert their nation is more superior than others  Encouraged rivalries between several European countries  Led to creation of new independent states in the Balkans  Austria-Hungary was compose ...
Print › Chapter 19: The World War I Era (1914
Print › Chapter 19: The World War I Era (1914

... killed more people than the Great War, known today as World War I (WWI), at somewhere between 20 and 40 million people. It has been cited as the most devastating epidemic in recorded world history American troops arriving in France from military training camp in Kansas brought this with them; Of the ...
9. The Impact of WWI
9. The Impact of WWI

... June 28, 1914. By the first of August all five of the great European powers were at war. _____________________________ – Causes of the war that took years to develop. _____________________________ – Competitions between European nations. The five great European powers (Great Britain, France, Germany ...
World War I
World War I

... Empire all lost territory • 5) League of Nations was created. • 6). Germany’s military was limited to 100,000 men. ...
WW I Power Point - Madison County Schools
WW I Power Point - Madison County Schools

... personal habits. The government ordered them to get permission to travel or change residences. Ohio later passed a law prohibiting teaching the German language in public schools. In Cincinnati, where 58 percent of residents were of German heritage, an ordinance was passed changing German street name ...
World War I The Road to War The United States Declares War
World War I The Road to War The United States Declares War

...  Republicans, angry about being left off the team sent to the peace conference, rejected the plan. They feared it would drag the US into another unwanted war ...
WWI PowerPoint
WWI PowerPoint

... alliances to protect themselves from being taken over by an imperialist nation. ...
File
File

... 2. World War II was a continuation of World War I because of the harsh punishment of Germany and the weakness of the League of Nations 3. Hitler was able to rise to power in Germany by “blaming the Allies” for many of the economic & political troubles in Germany after WWI ...
Chapter 11, Section 1: World War I Begins
Chapter 11, Section 1: World War I Begins

... -Alliance system pulls one nation after another into war. ...
Chapter 11, Section 1: World War I Begins
Chapter 11, Section 1: World War I Begins

... -Alliance system pulls one nation after another into war. ...
WORLD WAR I BEGINS Chapter 11 Section 1 Pages 370-407
WORLD WAR I BEGINS Chapter 11 Section 1 Pages 370-407

... • Germans ignored Wilson’s call for peace and threatened to sink all ships entering British waters • Zimmerman Note-telegram from the German foreign minister to the German ambassador in Mexico that was intercepted by British agents – Telegram promised that if war with the United Sates broke out, Ger ...
Goal 8
Goal 8

... – European nations lost almost an entire generation of young men. – France, where most of the fighting took place, was in ruins. – Great Britain was deeply in debt to the U.S. and lost its place as the world’s financial center. – The reparations forced on Germany by the Treaty of Versailles were cri ...
File
File

... down By 1917, 5.5 million Russian soldiers had been wounded, killed or taken prisoner Vladimir Lenin led a Communist Revolution and overthrew the new government Signed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, ending Russia’s involvement in World War I ...
US Emerges as a World Power
US Emerges as a World Power

... • US merchant ships were being sunk by German u-boats • Sinking of the Lusitania • British blockade of European ports, but American investors and business traded with the Allies • Russian Revolution • Zimmerman note (last straw) ...
World War I
World War I

...  Promote insubordination ...
Ch_7World War I post - Hialeah Senior High School
Ch_7World War I post - Hialeah Senior High School

... The Archduke Franz Ferdinand who had been the heir to the throne of Austria-Hungary was assassinated while visiting Serbia. Gavrilo Princip stepped from the crowd and shot the Archduke and his wife Sophie. He was a member of the Black Hand. Austria-Hungary declared war against Serbia. Germany obliga ...
Lesson 18-2: The United States In World War I
Lesson 18-2: The United States In World War I

... • Americans thought of World War I as a European conflict with little effect on their country. ...
American History Unit 15 – World War One Test
American History Unit 15 – World War One Test

... b. Germany continued to attack Allied ships without warning, especially the Lusitania. c. German submarines continued to be used as spies for the Central Powers. d. The German navy continued to attack numerous American passenger ships. 11. How was America able to transport its troops to Europe safel ...
WORLD WAR ONE
WORLD WAR ONE

... 3. Territory - New nations formed from land owned by Central Powers, land returned to France, France & GB take control in Middle East • Countries of Czechoslovakia, Poland, Austria, Hungary and Yugoslavia are created • Austria-Hungary & Ottoman Empire all lose lands = end of Empires • New countries ...
The Crisis of the Imperial Order 1900-1929
The Crisis of the Imperial Order 1900-1929

... • New York replaced London as the world's financial center • The Allies also faced increasing demands for self-rule from their colonies • They no longer controlled sufficient military and economic resources to shape world affairs as before. ...
World War I and Russian Revolution
World War I and Russian Revolution

... Germany will also set up a blockade and they will use U-boats to sink ships carrying food and arms to the British. May 1915 Lusitania (British passenger liner) was sunk off the coast of Ireland. By late 1915 the war became a stalemate on land as well as on sea. War of Attrition: A slow wearing-down ...
THE END OF THE GREAT WAR
THE END OF THE GREAT WAR

... 4. Germany couldn't take this, at the end not very successful, offensive. The fighting spirit vanished while that decisive  victory, so often promised, didn't arrive. ﴾The Allied armies, on the other hand gained new confidence from each blow that  was beaten off﴿ There existed a growing discontent  ...
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Aftermath of World War I



The aftermath of World War I saw drastic political, cultural, and social change across Europe, Asia, Africa, and even in areas outside those that were directly involved. Four empires collapsed due to the war, old countries were abolished, new ones were formed, boundaries were redrawn, international organizations were established, and many new and old ideologies took a firm hold in people's minds.World War I also had the effect of bringing political transformation to Germany and the United Kingdom by bringing near-universal suffrage to these two European powers, turning them into mass electoral democracies for the first time in history (see United Kingdom general election, 1918 and German federal election, 1919).
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