Trench Warfare in WWI
... Technology turned WWI into an Industrial War. Military tactics were unable to stay up with the changes in technology. ...
... Technology turned WWI into an Industrial War. Military tactics were unable to stay up with the changes in technology. ...
WWI ALL 2010-2011
... 1st Battle of the Marne – 1st battle of World War I and started trench warfare Allies – Britain, France, Italy, Russia, Portugal, Greece, Serbia, Romania, Montenegro, and USA Battle of the Sommes – 5 month battle with +1,000,000 soldiers killed, including +60,000 British soldiers in 1 day. Battle of ...
... 1st Battle of the Marne – 1st battle of World War I and started trench warfare Allies – Britain, France, Italy, Russia, Portugal, Greece, Serbia, Romania, Montenegro, and USA Battle of the Sommes – 5 month battle with +1,000,000 soldiers killed, including +60,000 British soldiers in 1 day. Battle of ...
Unit 7 – World War I
... 1. The long and short term causes of World War I 2. How was the US brought into WWI? Describe at least two events that affected the American decision for war. 3. Name three goals Wilson had for the peace. Did he achieve them? Why or why not? 4. How did American participation in WWI change the U.S. a ...
... 1. The long and short term causes of World War I 2. How was the US brought into WWI? Describe at least two events that affected the American decision for war. 3. Name three goals Wilson had for the peace. Did he achieve them? Why or why not? 4. How did American participation in WWI change the U.S. a ...
World War I
... Austria-Hungary had recently annexed Bosnia, many Serbians lived in Bosnia and resented A-H’s control; wanted to reunite with Serbia. Ferdinand was in Sarajevo, the capital of Bosnia, and his assassin, Gavrilo Princip, was a Serbian nationalist. ...
... Austria-Hungary had recently annexed Bosnia, many Serbians lived in Bosnia and resented A-H’s control; wanted to reunite with Serbia. Ferdinand was in Sarajevo, the capital of Bosnia, and his assassin, Gavrilo Princip, was a Serbian nationalist. ...
2-The-Outbreak-of-World-War-I
... ■ That which has driven the masses of Europe into the trenches and to the battlefields is not their inner longing for war; it must be traced to the cutthroat competition for military equipment, for more efficient armies, for larger warships, for more powerful cannon. You cannot build up a standing a ...
... ■ That which has driven the masses of Europe into the trenches and to the battlefields is not their inner longing for war; it must be traced to the cutthroat competition for military equipment, for more efficient armies, for larger warships, for more powerful cannon. You cannot build up a standing a ...
Aftermath of World War I Student
... Development of New Nations Austria-Hungary: Austria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia recognized as independent nations ...
... Development of New Nations Austria-Hungary: Austria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia recognized as independent nations ...
Veiszlemlein 1 John Veiszlemlein Mr. Dovico APUSH 4 March 2009
... alliances led Germany, Bulgaria, and the Ottoman Empire to side with AustroHungary and the United Kingdom, Russia, Japan, France, Italy, Greece, Montenegro, and the United States to ally with Serbia. ...
... alliances led Germany, Bulgaria, and the Ottoman Empire to side with AustroHungary and the United Kingdom, Russia, Japan, France, Italy, Greece, Montenegro, and the United States to ally with Serbia. ...
world war i
... Unlike earlier wars, World War I was fought across a large part of the world and involved many countries. Britain, France and Russia faced Germany and it’s allies on the Western Front. Germany also fought against Russia on the Eastern Front. There was fighting in Turkey and the Middle East and in No ...
... Unlike earlier wars, World War I was fought across a large part of the world and involved many countries. Britain, France and Russia faced Germany and it’s allies on the Western Front. Germany also fought against Russia on the Eastern Front. There was fighting in Turkey and the Middle East and in No ...
Conclusion of War Slideshow
... ... Germany not merely provoked, but planned the most devastating war the earth has ever seen... She deliberately embarked upon it, not to defend herself against assailants, but to aggrandize herself at the expense of her neighbours. I cannot think of a worse crime. [The aim of the Treaty is] to com ...
... ... Germany not merely provoked, but planned the most devastating war the earth has ever seen... She deliberately embarked upon it, not to defend herself against assailants, but to aggrandize herself at the expense of her neighbours. I cannot think of a worse crime. [The aim of the Treaty is] to com ...
WWI Canadian Battles Entering the War • As part of the Schlieffen
... WWI Canadian Battles Entering the War ...
... WWI Canadian Battles Entering the War ...
Imperialism - Aff - aise
... war, where Alsace and Lorraine were taken by Germany. This gave Russia a free hand in southeast Europe. The alliance also gave security for Russia to extend control across Siberia to the Pacific. Russia had made the decision to construct the Trans-Siberian railway. Anglo- Japanese Alliance 1902 was ...
... war, where Alsace and Lorraine were taken by Germany. This gave Russia a free hand in southeast Europe. The alliance also gave security for Russia to extend control across Siberia to the Pacific. Russia had made the decision to construct the Trans-Siberian railway. Anglo- Japanese Alliance 1902 was ...
The Origins of World War One
... A single country’s entrance into a conflict always brought with it the threat of support from the alliance partners ...
... A single country’s entrance into a conflict always brought with it the threat of support from the alliance partners ...
World War I - Region One
... • A u-boat sank the Irish Mail packet Leinster, at a cost of 451 lives (many civilians), while the Germans were negotiating the armistice. • Germany troops deliberately destroyed French coal mines in the Pas-de-Calais and Nord departments during the closing days of the war – again, while the Germans ...
... • A u-boat sank the Irish Mail packet Leinster, at a cost of 451 lives (many civilians), while the Germans were negotiating the armistice. • Germany troops deliberately destroyed French coal mines in the Pas-de-Calais and Nord departments during the closing days of the war – again, while the Germans ...
World War I Review Bingo
... - Wilson’s idea that people can choose their own type of government. - A military alliance between Great Britain, France, and Russian in the years preceding WWI. - The name of the treaty that ended the war between Germany and Russia during WWI. - An agreement to stop fighting; such as the one signed ...
... - Wilson’s idea that people can choose their own type of government. - A military alliance between Great Britain, France, and Russian in the years preceding WWI. - The name of the treaty that ended the war between Germany and Russia during WWI. - An agreement to stop fighting; such as the one signed ...
WORLD WAR 1 - ebruggeman
... and that a policeman had approached him just as he was to throw the bomb. 2nd Vaso Cubrilovic: told investigation that felt sorry for the Duchess; said that he was badly placed. 3rd Nedeljko Cabrinovic: threw a bomb. Wearing a long black coat and a black hat, he asked a policeman to tell him which c ...
... and that a policeman had approached him just as he was to throw the bomb. 2nd Vaso Cubrilovic: told investigation that felt sorry for the Duchess; said that he was badly placed. 3rd Nedeljko Cabrinovic: threw a bomb. Wearing a long black coat and a black hat, he asked a policeman to tell him which c ...
The Origins of World War One
... resort by the invention of the internal combustion engine.. But the police and the courts do not weigh profound causes. They seek a specific cause for each accidentdriver error, excessive speed, drunkeness, faulty brakes, bad road surface. So it is with ...
... resort by the invention of the internal combustion engine.. But the police and the courts do not weigh profound causes. They seek a specific cause for each accidentdriver error, excessive speed, drunkeness, faulty brakes, bad road surface. So it is with ...
Lesson 18-2: The United States In World War I
... • What contributions did Americans make in Europe? • How did the war end? ...
... • What contributions did Americans make in Europe? • How did the war end? ...
assassinated in Sarajevo by Serbian
... In the early hours of this day Germany came upon the decision of asking the Al I i es for an armistice. Just three days later sent a telegraph to Woodrow Wilson in Washington bC. asking for an armistice. On the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month we observe a two minutes silence ...
... In the early hours of this day Germany came upon the decision of asking the Al I i es for an armistice. Just three days later sent a telegraph to Woodrow Wilson in Washington bC. asking for an armistice. On the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month we observe a two minutes silence ...
The world at War: Causes of World War I
... longest single battle of World War I. The casualties from Verdun and the impact the battle had on the French Army was a primary reason for the British starting the Battle of the Somme in July 1916 in an effort to take German pressure off of the French at ...
... longest single battle of World War I. The casualties from Verdun and the impact the battle had on the French Army was a primary reason for the British starting the Battle of the Somme in July 1916 in an effort to take German pressure off of the French at ...
Section II: The War is Fought (Pages 618-623)
... President Wilson had kept the U.S. out of the war, but… In 1917, the Germans resumed “unrestricted submarine warfare” – sinking 5 American ships in a month. And, the British intercepted a message from Germany to Mexico (The Zimmerman Telegram). In it Germany promised if Mexico helped them fight the ...
... President Wilson had kept the U.S. out of the war, but… In 1917, the Germans resumed “unrestricted submarine warfare” – sinking 5 American ships in a month. And, the British intercepted a message from Germany to Mexico (The Zimmerman Telegram). In it Germany promised if Mexico helped them fight the ...
World War 1 Global involvement
... war on the Ottoman Empire bringing it into the First World War on the side of the Central Powers. Initially the Ottoman war effort concentrated on fighting the Russians in the Caucasus, protecting its European territories and the coast of western Anatolia. Sinai, Palestine and Mesopotamia (Iraq) wer ...
... war on the Ottoman Empire bringing it into the First World War on the side of the Central Powers. Initially the Ottoman war effort concentrated on fighting the Russians in the Caucasus, protecting its European territories and the coast of western Anatolia. Sinai, Palestine and Mesopotamia (Iraq) wer ...
Reading Essentials and Study Guide World War I and the Russian
... betrayed their German and Austrian allies in the Triple Alliance by attacking Austria in May 1915. Italy then joined France, Great Britain, and Russia. The alliance of the three nations had previously been known as the Triple Entente, but the new group was called the Allied Powers, or Allies. The Ge ...
... betrayed their German and Austrian allies in the Triple Alliance by attacking Austria in May 1915. Italy then joined France, Great Britain, and Russia. The alliance of the three nations had previously been known as the Triple Entente, but the new group was called the Allied Powers, or Allies. The Ge ...
Allies of World War I
The Allies of World War I, also known as the Entente Powers, were the countries that opposed the Central Powers during the First World War.The members of the original Entente Alliance of 1907 were the French Republic, the British Empire and the Russian Empire; Italy ended its alliance with the Central Powers and entered the war on the side of the Entente in 1915. Japan was another important member. Belgium, Serbia, Greece, Montenegro, and Romania were secondary members of the Entente.The 1920 Treaty of Sèvres defines as the Principal Allied Powers: British Empire, French Republic, Italy and Japan. The Allied Powers comprised – together with the Principal Allied Powers – Armenia, Belgium, Greece, Hejaz, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Serb-Croat-Slovene state and Czechoslovakia.The United States of America declared war on Germany in 1917 on the grounds that Germany had violated U.S. neutrality by attacking international shipping and because of the Zimmermann Telegram sent to Mexico. The U.S. entered the war as an ""associated power"", rather than as a formal ally of France and the United Kingdom, in order to avoid ""foreign entanglements"". Although the Ottoman Empire and Bulgaria severed relations with the United States, neither declared war on her.Although the Dominions and Crown Colonies of the British Empire made significant contributions to the Allied war effort, they did not have independent foreign policies during World War I. The five-member British War Cabinet (BWC) exercised operational control of British Empire forces. However, the Dominion governments controlled recruiting, and did remove personnel from front-line duties as they saw fit.From early 1917 the BWC was superseded by the Imperial War Cabinet, which had Dominion representation. The Australian Corps and Canadian Corps were placed for the first time under the command of Australian and Canadian Lieutenant Generals John Monash and Arthur Currie, respectively, who reported in turn to British generals. In April 1918 operational control of all Entente forces on the Western Front passed to the new supreme commander, Ferdinand Foch.The only countries represented in the 1918 armistice which ended combat on the Western Front were Britain, France and Germany.