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The Consequences of War and Depression WHAP/Napp Objective: To identify and explain the causes and effects of World War I Do Now: What was the Congress of Vienna and how did the Congress attempt to maintain peace in Europe? Cues: Notes: I. Conflict in Europe A. Obvious divisioncompeting states, a long standing-feature of Europe B. Rivalries further sharpened as both Italy and Germany achieved unification C. Since defeat of Napoleon in 1815, a fragile and fluctuating balance of power had maintained the peace D. By early 20th century, two rival alliancesTriple Alliance of Germany, Austria, and Italy and Triple Entente of Russia, France, and Britain E. Alliances transformed a minor incident in the Balkans into a conflagration that consumed all of Europe F. June 28,1914Serbian nationalist assassinated heir to Austrian throne, Archduke Franz Ferdinand G. To rulers of Austria, nationalism of Serbian Slavs was a mortal threat to cohesion of their fragile multinational empire H. Behind Austriaits powerful ally, Germany; behind Serbia lay Russia I. A system of alliances intended to keep the peace created obligations that drew Great Powers of Europe into a general war by early August 1914 J. Causes of WWI nationalism, imperialism, militarism, alliances (MAIN) K. Submarines, tanks, airplanes, poison gas, machine guns, and barbed wire L. Italy had joined France and Britain and Russia, now known as Allied Powers but Russia dropped out in 1917 after Bolshevik Revolution M. Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Ottomans now Central Powers N. U.S.A., after seeking to avoid involvement, joined war in 1917 when German submarines threatened American shipping O. Some 2 million Americans helped turn tide in favor of British and French P. Ground relentlessly on for more than four years before ending in a German defeat in November 1918 Q. “Trench Warfare” stalemate on Western Frontrats, lice, disease, this “total war,” required mobilization of each country’s entire population R. In factories, women replaced the men who had left for the battlefront S. Led to widespread disillusionmentwar seemed to mock Enlightenment T. Collapse of German, Russian, and Austrian empiresnew map of Central Europe with independent Poland, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, and others U. “National self-determination,” championed by U.S. President Wilson V. In Russia, strains of war triggered a vast revolutionary upheaval that brought radical Bolsheviks to power in 1917 W. Treaty of Versailles, concluded the war in 1919, proved to have established conditions that generated a second world war only twenty years later X. “War Guilt” ClauseGermany blamedlost colonies, pay reparations Summaries: Cues: II. Consequences A. During war, Ottoman authorities suspected some of Armenian population collaborating with Russian enemy, massacred or deported 1 million B. War also brought a final end to a declining Ottoman Empire, creating the modern map of the Middle East C. Arabs emerged from Turkish rule, but for a time fell under control of British or French, who were acting on behalf of League of Nations D. First World War brought U.S.A. to center stage as a global power E. Woodrow Wilson’s Fourteen PointsIdea for League of Nations, international peacekeeping“collective security”but U.S. did not join F. Women increasingly gained the right to vote III. Depression A. American stock market initially crashed on October 24, 1929 B. Banks closed and many people lost life’s savingshigh unemployment C. Germany and Austria had to make huge reparation payments and were able to do so only with extensive U.S. loans D. Britain and France, which were much indebted to U.S., depended on those reparations to repay their loans E. Much as Europe’s worldwide empires had globalized the war, so too its economic linkages globalized the Great Depression F. U.S.A.’s response to Great Depression came in form of President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal (1933-1942) G. Reflected the thinking of the British economist, John Maynard Keynes H. Keynes argued that government actions and spending programs could moderate severe economic contractions IV. Rise of Fascism A. Between 1919 and 1945, a new political ideology B. Intensely nationalistic and condemned individualism, and was anti-liberal, anti-feminist, antidemocratic, anti-communist C. Spain, fascist movement led to a bitter civil war (1936-1939rise of Franco D. The fascist alternative took shape first in Italysome believed that Italy had not gained territory it deserved from Treaty of Versailles E. Benito Mussolini (1883-1945)and Black Shirtsswept to power in 1922 Fearful of communism, big business threw its support to Mussolini F. Symbol was the fasces, bundle of birch rods bound together around an axe, represented power and strength in unity and derived from ancient Rome G. Nazi Party under the leadership of Adolf Hitler (1889-1945) By 1933, the Nazis had achieved national power H. As W.W.I ended, German imperial state collapsed and a new government known as the Weimar Republic was left to negotiate the peace settlement I. Weimar Republic blamed for terms of Treaty of Versailles and Depression J. National Socialist, or Nazi, Party intense German nationalism, bitter hatred for Jews, opposition to communism, against Treaty of Versailles K. If World War I and Great Depression brought about political and economic collapse of Europe, Nazis represented a moral collapse within the West Summaries: Questions: What aspects of Europe's nineteenth-century history contributed to W.W.I? In what ways did W.W.I mark new departures in the history of twentieth century? In what ways was the Great Depression a global phenomenon? In what ways did fascism challenge the ideas and practices of European liberalism and democracy? What was distinctive about the German expression of fascism? 1. Which of the following answer choices 4. The growing integration of all peoples of best explains why women won the right to the planet into a single economic and vote in many Western societies after World political model and accelerating sharing of War I? cultural symbols is termed (A) Female combat veterans returned home (A) Egalitarianism demanding political equality. (B) Simulacra (B) Female nurses who cared for injured (C) Postmodernism troops in the trenches won broad-based (D) Globalization sympathy. (E) Universalism (C) Crucial contributions in wartime factory production lent legitimacy to ongoing calls 5. As evidence of renewed power and glory for political and social equality. of Italy, Mussolini (D) Feminist movements got their start A) Disregarded the League of Nations. during the First World War. B) Annexed Libya. (E) Immediate granting of the right to vote C) Invaded Ethiopia. to women in Soviet Russia was an D) Supported militarists in the Spanish Civil embarrassment on the world stage for male- War. dominated liberal democracies where the E) All of the above. movement for women's suffrage was decades old. 6. Specific steps taken by Hitler after 1933 that violated the Treaty of Versailles 2. Which belligerent power of the First included all of the following except World War carried out an early exit from A) Remilitarization of Germany in spite of the hostilities and negotiated a separate limits imposed by the peace settlement. peace treaty? B) Retaking the Rhineland, held by France (A) France since the war. (B) The United States C) Withdrawing Germany from the League (C) Russia of Nations. (D) Austria-Hungary D) Signing a nonaggression pact with the (E) Germany Soviet Union. E) Annexing Austria and Sudetenland in 3. Which of the following had NOT spite of the principle of self-determination. experienced fascist aggression or takeover prior to World War II? (A) Ethiopia (B) Czechoslovakia (C) Great Britain (D) Spain (E) China Excerpt from elsa.berkeley.edu The fundamental cause of the Great Depression in the United States was a decline in spending (sometimes referred to as aggregate demand), which led to a decline in production as manufacturers and merchandisers noticed an unintended rise in inventories. The sources of the contraction in spending in the United States varied over the course of the Depression, but they cumulated into a monumental decline in aggregate demand. The American decline was transmitted to the rest of the world largely through the gold standard. However, a variety of other factors also influenced the downturn in various countries. The initial decline in output in the United States in the summer of 1929 is widely believed to have stemmed from tight U.S. monetary policy aimed at limiting stock market speculation. The 1920s had been a prosperous decade, but not an exceptional boom period; wholesale goods prices had remained nearly constant throughout the decade and there had been mild recessions in both 1924 and 1927. The one obvious area of excess was the stock market. Stock prices had risen more than fourfold from the low in 1921 to the peak reached in 1929. In 1928 and 1929, the Federal Reserve had raised interest rates in hopes of slowing the rapid rise in stock prices. These higher interest rates depressed interest-sensitive spending in areas such as construction and automobile purchases, which in turn reduced production. Some scholars believe that a boom in housing construction in the mid-1920s led to an excess supply of housing and a particularly large drop in construction in 1928 and 1929. By the fall of 1929, U.S. stock prices had reached levels that could not be justified by reasonable anticipations of future earnings. As a result, when a variety of minor events led to gradual price declines in October 1929, investors lost confidence and the stock market bubble burst. Panic selling began on “Black Thursday,” October 24, 1929. Many stocks had been purchased on margin that is, using loans secured by only a small fraction of the stocks’ value. As a result, the price declines forced some investors to liquidate their holdings, thus exacerbating the fall in prices. Between their peak in September and their low in November, U.S. stock prices (measured using the Cowles Index) declined 33 percent. Because the decline was so dramatic, this event is often referred to as the Great Crash of 1929. The stock market crash reduced American aggregate demand substantially. Consumer purchases of durable goods and business investment fell sharply after the crash. A likely explanation is that the financial crisis generated considerable uncertainty about future income, which in turn led consumers and firms to put off purchases of durable goods. Although the loss of wealth caused by the decline in stock prices was relatively small, the crash may also have depressed spending by making people feel poorer. As a result of the drastic decline in consumer and firm spending, real output in the United States, which had been declining slowly up to this point, fell rapidly in late 1929 and throughout 1930. Thus, while the Great Crash of the stock market and the Great Depression are two quite separate events, the decline in stock prices was one factor causing the decline in production and employment in the United States. Thesis Statement: Change Over Time: Western Europe: 1815 - 1945 C.E. ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________