Chapter 11 Test: The First World War
... 21. The Germans violated the __________________________________ because they hoped they could knock Great Britain out of the war before the U.S. was able to send troops over to Europe. ...
... 21. The Germans violated the __________________________________ because they hoped they could knock Great Britain out of the war before the U.S. was able to send troops over to Europe. ...
Affirmative Action - University of Nebraska Omaha
... informing countries around the world that Germany was establishing a war zone Germany did this in response to Britain’s naval blockade of Germany. “The waters round Great Britain and Ireland, including the English Channel, are hereby proclaimed a war region. On and after February 18th every enemy me ...
... informing countries around the world that Germany was establishing a war zone Germany did this in response to Britain’s naval blockade of Germany. “The waters round Great Britain and Ireland, including the English Channel, are hereby proclaimed a war region. On and after February 18th every enemy me ...
World War One Nationalism Triumphs in Europe
... ii. Germany was sending 15 year olds in to battle iii. Many casualties, food shortages, failure to win – upset people ...
... ii. Germany was sending 15 year olds in to battle iii. Many casualties, food shortages, failure to win – upset people ...
Ch. 16 Section 2 Notes I. 1914 to 1915: Illusions and Stalemate
... A. The United States tried to stay neutral in the first years of World War I. This became more difficult as the war dragged on. B. The naval war between Britain and Germany became the reason why the United States joined the war. In order to keep supplies from reaching their enemies, each country enf ...
... A. The United States tried to stay neutral in the first years of World War I. This became more difficult as the war dragged on. B. The naval war between Britain and Germany became the reason why the United States joined the war. In order to keep supplies from reaching their enemies, each country enf ...
WORLD WAR I - hhhsuspreap
... • Germany and Austria-Hungary joined the Ottoman Empire and Bulgaria to form the Central Powers. ...
... • Germany and Austria-Hungary joined the Ottoman Empire and Bulgaria to form the Central Powers. ...
Treaty of Versailles
... The Treaty of Versailles On May 7, 1919, the Versailles Treaty was handed over to Germany with the instructions that they had only three weeks to accept the Treaty. Considering that in many ways the Versailles Treaty was meant to punish Germany, Germany of course found much fault with the Treaty ...
... The Treaty of Versailles On May 7, 1919, the Versailles Treaty was handed over to Germany with the instructions that they had only three weeks to accept the Treaty. Considering that in many ways the Versailles Treaty was meant to punish Germany, Germany of course found much fault with the Treaty ...
End of War/Treaty of Versailles
... details of the Versailles Treaty had been debated and finalized at the Paris Peace Conference, which opened on January 18, 1919 - just over two months after the fighting on the Western Front ended. ...
... details of the Versailles Treaty had been debated and finalized at the Paris Peace Conference, which opened on January 18, 1919 - just over two months after the fighting on the Western Front ended. ...
World War I Test Review
... Alexander Kerensky Head of Russian provisional government after abdication of the Czar Armenian massacre ...
... Alexander Kerensky Head of Russian provisional government after abdication of the Czar Armenian massacre ...
Events leading to World War II
... Just as the U.S. had been in a depression, most other countries in Europe had also. Germany acquired a lot of debt because it had to pay for much of the damage from World War I. This economic depression was one of the many factors that allowed Hitler to rise to power. ...
... Just as the U.S. had been in a depression, most other countries in Europe had also. Germany acquired a lot of debt because it had to pay for much of the damage from World War I. This economic depression was one of the many factors that allowed Hitler to rise to power. ...
World War I - Region One
... statistics on army recruitment and military losses, for Germany, her allies, and her opponents. They knew that the German army had reached its peak size in the Summer of 1918 - from that point onwards new recruitment would be unable to replace losses. They knew France had peaked in 1917, and that Gr ...
... statistics on army recruitment and military losses, for Germany, her allies, and her opponents. They knew that the German army had reached its peak size in the Summer of 1918 - from that point onwards new recruitment would be unable to replace losses. They knew France had peaked in 1917, and that Gr ...
MC Review08 1914
... 15. Following the abdication of the tsar, and collapse of the Provisional Government, who led the Red Guard in the October Revolution? A) Leon Bronstein or Trotsky C) Boyars and soviets E) Rasputin B) Women’s battalion of death D) Russian Orthodox Church 16. Vladimir Ulyanov (Lenin) was A) committe ...
... 15. Following the abdication of the tsar, and collapse of the Provisional Government, who led the Red Guard in the October Revolution? A) Leon Bronstein or Trotsky C) Boyars and soviets E) Rasputin B) Women’s battalion of death D) Russian Orthodox Church 16. Vladimir Ulyanov (Lenin) was A) committe ...
America joins the fight
... States Army who led the American Expeditionary Forces to victory over Germany in World War I, 1917–18 • American Expeditionary Force - consisted of the United States Armed Forces sent to Europe under the command of General John J. Pershing in 1917 to help fight World War I . • Convoy system – a heav ...
... States Army who led the American Expeditionary Forces to victory over Germany in World War I, 1917–18 • American Expeditionary Force - consisted of the United States Armed Forces sent to Europe under the command of General John J. Pershing in 1917 to help fight World War I . • Convoy system – a heav ...
World War I and Aftermath
... The Outbreak of World War I • The Allies–France, Russia, Great Britain, and later • Germany and Austria-Hungary joined the Ottoman Empire and Bulgaria to form the Central Powers. • Germany and France became locked in a stalemate along hundreds of miles of trenches. • The stalemate lasted three year ...
... The Outbreak of World War I • The Allies–France, Russia, Great Britain, and later • Germany and Austria-Hungary joined the Ottoman Empire and Bulgaria to form the Central Powers. • Germany and France became locked in a stalemate along hundreds of miles of trenches. • The stalemate lasted three year ...
What caused World War I, and why did the United States enter the war
... • The United States had a long tradition of staying out of European conflicts. • Yet one-third of Americans had been born in a foreign country and still identified with their homelands Many Americans favored one side or the other. • U.S. public opinion fell into three main groups. Isolationists ...
... • The United States had a long tradition of staying out of European conflicts. • Yet one-third of Americans had been born in a foreign country and still identified with their homelands Many Americans favored one side or the other. • U.S. public opinion fell into three main groups. Isolationists ...
A Third World War I Quiz - Social Studies With A Smile
... a. Woodrow Wilson b. John J. Pershing c. Oliver Wendell Holmes d. Eugene Debs 11. The war came to an end when a. German soldiers surrendered in the Argonne Forest b. An armistice was agreed to c. The German Kaiser stepped down d. Germany’s navy mutinied 12. Which set of events related to World War I ...
... a. Woodrow Wilson b. John J. Pershing c. Oliver Wendell Holmes d. Eugene Debs 11. The war came to an end when a. German soldiers surrendered in the Argonne Forest b. An armistice was agreed to c. The German Kaiser stepped down d. Germany’s navy mutinied 12. Which set of events related to World War I ...
370 Making the Peace: Inadvertently Guaranteeing
... Fresh Allied troops encourage demoralized French and British troops Germans are stopped and eventually pushed back, out of France….. ...
... Fresh Allied troops encourage demoralized French and British troops Germans are stopped and eventually pushed back, out of France….. ...
Chapter 19, *World War I and Its Aftermath
... -Sep. 1918-General Pershing sent over 600,000 American doughboys along with artillery and supplies for the most massive attack in American history -slowly one German position fell at a time -Austria-Hungary surrenders because of a revolution -Ottoman Empire (Turkey) surrenders -revolution in Berlin… ...
... -Sep. 1918-General Pershing sent over 600,000 American doughboys along with artillery and supplies for the most massive attack in American history -slowly one German position fell at a time -Austria-Hungary surrenders because of a revolution -Ottoman Empire (Turkey) surrenders -revolution in Berlin… ...
7 - Moved
... 8. What factors caused the Russian Revolutions in February and October of 1917? What changes emerged initially from these revolutions? The February Revolutions was caused by the inability of police forces to suppress uprisings and a subsequent mutiny of troops. Czar Nicholas II stepped down, forming ...
... 8. What factors caused the Russian Revolutions in February and October of 1917? What changes emerged initially from these revolutions? The February Revolutions was caused by the inability of police forces to suppress uprisings and a subsequent mutiny of troops. Czar Nicholas II stepped down, forming ...
World War I Notes - Garden City Public Schools
... What were the major theatres of the war during the years 1915-181 ...
... What were the major theatres of the war during the years 1915-181 ...
The First World War and the Weimar Republic
... The First World War and the Weimar Republic *Mary Fulbrook, A History of Germany 1918-2000: The Divided ...
... The First World War and the Weimar Republic *Mary Fulbrook, A History of Germany 1918-2000: The Divided ...
Chapter 21
... of European conflicts. • Yet one-third of Americans had been born in a foreign country and still identified with their homelands. ...
... of European conflicts. • Yet one-third of Americans had been born in a foreign country and still identified with their homelands. ...
WWI
... The Changing Map of Europe Wilson’s idea to have borders drawn to encompass people by ethnicity was ignored, especially in the case of Yugoslavia where several ethnicities were forced together. In some other cases borders changed when nations like the Ottoman Empire and AustriaHungary ceased to exi ...
... The Changing Map of Europe Wilson’s idea to have borders drawn to encompass people by ethnicity was ignored, especially in the case of Yugoslavia where several ethnicities were forced together. In some other cases borders changed when nations like the Ottoman Empire and AustriaHungary ceased to exi ...
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).